Page:The Science of Fairy Tales.djvu/253

Rh neck. A great treasure buried in the hill would have been his had he stood the proof; but now the lady will have to wait until a beech tree shall have grown up on the spot and been cut down, and of its timber a cradle made: the child that is rocked in that cradle will have power to save her. This is in effect the story told by Sir John Maundeville concerning the daughter of Hippocrates, the renowned physician, who was said to have been enchanted by Diana on the island of Cos, or (as he calls it) Lango, and given with so much of Mr. William Morris' power in "The Earthly Paradise." "Then listen!" says the damsel in the ruined castle to the seaman whom she meets—

But the horrible apparition of the dragon was too much for the adventurer's courage: