The King an the Kiss The next morning the sun rose so bright that Irene said the rain had washed his face and let the light out clean.The torrents were still roaring down the side of the mountain, but they were so much smaller as not to be dangerous in the daylight.After an early breakfast, Peter went to his work and Curdie and his mother set out to take the princess home.They had difficulty in getting her dry across the streams, and Curdie had again and again to carry her, but at last they got safe on the broader part of the road, and walked gently down towards the king's house.And what should they see as they turned the last corner but the last of the king's troop riding through the gate!

'Oh, Curdie!' cried Irene, clapping her hands right joyfully,'my king-papa is come.'

The moment Curdie heard that, he caught her up in his arms, and set off at full speed, crying:

come on, mother dear! The king may break his heart before he knows that she is safe.'

Irene clung round his neck and he ran with her like a deer.When he entered the gate into the court, there sat the king on his horse, with all the people of the house about him, weeping and hanging their heads.The king was not weeping, but his face was white as a dead man's, and he looked as if the life had gone out of him.The men-at-arms he had brought with him sat with horror-stricken faces, but eyes flashing with rage, waiting only for the word of the king to do something - they did not know what, and nobody knew what.

The day before, the men-at-arms belonging to the house, as soon as they were satisfied the princess had been carried away, rushed after the goblins into the hole, but found that they had already so skilfully blockaded the narrowest part, not many feet below the cellar, that without miners and their tools they could do nothing.