THE WISHING-POT

by Laurence Housman · from The Field of Clover

fairy tale transformation whimsical Ages 8-14 2681 words 12 min read
Cover: THE WISHING-POT

Adapted Version

CEFR A1 Age 5 512 words 3 min Canon 100/100

Tulip was a kind boy. He walked in the woods.

Tulip walked by the river. He heard a sweet song. He looked up. He saw green feet dancing. The feet were very small. They moved fast. Tulip felt happy. He loved the song. He loved the feet. He felt full of wonder.

The green feet were gone. The song was gone. Tulip felt sad. He looked for her. He looked for many days. He could not find her. He missed her much.

Tulip heard about a pot. It was a Wishing Pot. Old Woman Willow had it. People said the pot was tricky. It could keep you inside. Tulip wanted his lady. He went to Old Woman Willow. He hoped to find her.

Tulip gave coins to Old Woman Willow. He said, "I want her feet." He looked into the pot. He saw the green feet. They danced. They twinkled. They were so pretty.

Tulip was very happy. He wished to be inside. He wished to be with her. He said, "I must come out." He said, "Bell rings, I come out." He said this very clearly. He wanted to be safe.

Tulip was in the pot. The pot was big. He saw the green feet. They danced away. They sang a song. "Catch me!" they sang. Tulip ran after them. He ran very fast.

Tulip thought for a moment. Running was not enough. He saw a shiny stone. It was in the middle. He ran around the stone. He caught the green feet! He held them gently. He was happy.

The green feet changed. Now it was a lady. She was beautiful. She smiled at Tulip. They sat on the stone. They rested there. She was his lady. He felt so happy.

Tulip looked around him. He saw other people. They looked a little lost. They were waiting to go home. Tulip felt sad for them. He knew Old Woman Willow made a mistake.

Ding-dong! The big bell rang. Poof! Tulip was outside the pot again. Old Woman Willow looked very surprised.

Tulip had a clever idea. He thought about the lost people. He wanted to help them. He told Old Woman Willow, "One more wish!" He said, "Go into the pot instead!" He said, "Help the lost people!"

Poof! Old Woman Willow was inside the pot. All the lost people came out! They were so happy. But Tulip felt a little sad. He thought his lady was still inside.

The King heard about Tulip and the pot. His daughter, Princess Lily, was very sad. The King asked Tulip to the castle. Maybe the pot could help Princess Lily.

Princess Lily saw the pot. She smiled! She felt happy. She started to sing. It was a sweet song. It was the same song Tulip heard in the woods. It was the song of the green feet!

Tulip knew it was her! His lady with the green feet was Princess Lily! Tulip was so happy. Princess Lily was so happy. They were so happy. They got married. They lived happily ever after.

Original Story 2681 words · 12 min read

THE WISHING-POT

Tulip was the son of a poor but prudent mother; from the moment of his birth she had trained him to count ten before ever he wanted or asked for anything. An otherwise reckless youth, he acquired an intrinsic value through the practice of this habit. Only once, just as he was reaching, but had not quite reached, years of discretion, did his habit of precaution fail him; and this same failure became in the end the opening of his fortunes.

Bathing one day in the river, to whose banks the woods ran down in steep terraces, he heard a voice come singing along one of the upper slopes; and looking up under the boughs of cedar and sycamore, he saw a pair of green feet go dancing by, up and down like grasshoppers on the prance.

There was such rhythm in them, and such sweetness in the voice, that his heart was out of him before he could harness it to the number ten, and he came out of the water the most natural and forlorn of lovers.

Before he was dressed the green feet and the voice were gone, and before he got home his health and his appetite seemed to have gone also. He pined industriously from day to day, and spent all his hours in searching among the woods by the river side for his lady of the dear green feet. He did not know so much as the size or colour of her face; the sound of her voice alone, and the running up and down of her feet, had, as he told his mother, 'decimated his affections.'

In his trouble he could think of only one possible remedy, and that he counted well over, knowing its risk. Away in the loneliest part of the forest there lived a wise woman, to whom, now and then, folk went for help when everything else had failed them. So he had heard tell of a certain Wishing-Pot that was hers in which people might see the thing they desired most, and into which for a fee she allowed lovers and other poor fools of fortune to look. One thing, however, was told against the virtues of this Wishing-Pot, that though many had had a sight of it, and their wishes revealed to them therein, others had gone and had never again returned to their homes, but had vanished altogether from men's sight, nor had any news ever been heard of them after. There were some wise folk who held that they had only gone elsewhere to seek the fortune that the Wishing-Pot had shown to them. Nevertheless, for the most part the wise woman and her Wishing-Pot had an ill name in that neighbourhood.

To a lover's heart risk gives value; so one fine morning Tulip kissed his mother, counted ten, and set out for the woods.

Towards evening he came to the house of the witch and knocked at the door. 'Good mother,' said he, when she opened to him, 'I have brought you the fee to buy myself a wish over the Wishing-Pot.' 'Ay, surely,' answered the crone, and drew him in.

In one corner of the room stood a great crystal bowl. Nearly round it was, and had a small opening at the top, to which a man might place his eye and look in. To Tulip, as he looked at it, it seemed all coloured fires and falling stars, and a soft crackling sound came from it, as though heat burned in its veins. It threw long shapes and lustres upon the walls, and within innumerable things writhed, and ran, and whiffed in the floating of its vapours.

'You may have two wishes,' said the old witch, 'a one and a two.' And she said the spell that undid the secret of the Pot to the wisher.

Then Tulip bent down his head and looked in, counting softly to himself, and at ten, he let the wish go to his lady of the dear green feet.

The colours changed and sprang, as though stirred and fed with fresh fuel; and down in the depths of the Wishing-Pot he saw the feet of his Beloved go by in twinkling green slippers.

As soon as he saw that he began counting ten in great haste for the second wish. 'O to be inside the Wishing-Pot with her!' was his thought now. He had got to nine, and the wish was almost on his tongue, when he caught sight of the old woman's eye looking at him. And the eye had become like a large green spider, with great long limbs that kept clutching up and out again!

His heart queegled to a jelly at the sight; but the green feet lured him so, that he still thought how to get to them and yet be safe. Surely, to be in the Wishing-Pot and out by the sound of the next Angelus became the shape of his wish. He shut his eyes, cried ten upon the venture, and was in the Wishing-Pot!

The little green feet were trebling over the glass with a sound like running water; and he himself began running at full speed, shot off into the Wishing-Pot like a pellet from a pop-gun. Nothing could he see of his dear but her wee green feet. But above them as they ran he heard showery laughter, and he knew that his lady was there before him, though invisible to the eye.

The Pot, now he was in it, seemed bigger than the biggest dome in the world; to run all round it took him two or three minutes. Away in the centre of its base stood a great opal knob, like the axle to a wheel round which he and the green feet kept circling.

However much he wished and wished, the green feet still kept their distance, for now he was in the Wishing-Pot wishes availed him nothing. The green feet flew faster than his; the light laugh rang further and further away; right across to the other side of the hall his lady had passed from him now.

The magic fires of the crystal leapt and crackled under his tread; now it seemed as if his feet ran on a green lawn, out of which broke crocuses and daffodils, and now roses reddened in the track, and now the purple of grapes spurted across the path like spilled wine. The sound of the green feet and the running of overhead laughter, as they distanced him in front, came nearer and nearer behind him from across the hall. He felt that he must follow and not turn, however beaten he might be.

Presently a voice, that he knew was his Beloved's, cried,—

'Heart that would have me must hatch me!

Feet that would find me must catch me!

Man that would mate me must match me!'

Oh, how? wondered spent feet, and failing heart, and reeling brain. He stumbled slower and slower in the race, till presently with quick innumerable patterings the green feet grew closer, and were overtaking him from the rear.

Warm breath was in his hair,—lips and a hand; he turned, open armed, to snatch the mischievous morsel, but all that he clasped was a gust of air; and he saw the green feet scudding out and away on a fresh start before him.

Again, with laughter, the voice cried,—

'Lap for lap you must wind me:

Equal, before you can find me!

You are a lap behind me!'

Where they raced the surface of the glass sloped slightly to the upward rise of its walls; Tulip shifted his ground, and ran where the footing was leveller toward the centre, and the circle began to go smaller. So he began to gain, till the green slippers, seeing how the advantage had come about, shifted also in their turn.

Thus they ran on; there were no inner posts to mark the course, only the great opal standing in the centre of all formed the pivot of the race, and round and round it, a great way off, they ran.

All at once a big thought came into Tulip's head; he waited not to count ten, but, before Green Slippers knew what he was after, he had reached the opal centre, and was circling it. Then quickly all the laughter stopped; the green feet came twinkling sixteens to the dozens, so as to get round the post before him and away.

One lap, he was before her; two laps, he turned again to her coming, and found her falling into his arms. She blossomed into sight at his touch: from top to toe she was there! All rosy and alive he had her in his clasp, laughing, crying, clinging, yet struggling to be free. She made a most endless handful, till Tulip had caught her by the hair and kissed her between the eyes.

All round and overhead the magic crystal reared up arches of fire, to a roof that dropped like rain, while Tulip and his prize sank down exhausted on the great hub of opal to rest. As he touched it all the secret wonders of the Wishing-Pot were opened and revealed to his gaze.

Crowds and crowds of faces were what he most saw; everywhere that he turned he saw old friends and neighbours who, he thought, had been dead and gone, looking sadly, and shaking long sorrowful faces at him. 'You here too, Tulip?' they seemed forever to be saying. 'Always another, and another; and now you here too!'

There was the dairyman's wife, who had waited seven years to have a child, holding a little will-o'-the-wisp of a thing in her arms. Now and then for a while it would lie still, and then suddenly it would leap up and dart away; and she, poor soul, must up and after it, though the chase were ever so long!

There also was Miller Dick with his broad thumbs, counting over a rich pile of gold, which, ever and anon, spun up into the air, and went strewing itself like dead leaves before the wind. Then he too must needs up and after it, till it was all caught again, and added together, and made right.

There were small playmates of Tulip's childhood, each with its little conceit of treasure: one had a toy, and another a lamb, another a bird; and all of them hunted and caught the thing they loved, and kissed it and again let go. So it went on, over and over again, more sad than the sight of a quaker as he twiddles his thumbs.

Whenever they were at peace for a moment, they turned their eyes his way. 'What, you here too, Tulip?' was always the thing they seemed to be saying.

While Tulip sat looking at them, and thinking of it all, suddenly his lady disappeared, and only her green feet darted from his side and began running round and round in a circle. Then was he just about to set off running after them, when he felt himself caught up to the coloured fires of the roof and sent spinning ungovernably through space. Suddenly he was dumped to the ground, and just as his feet were gathering themselves up under him he heard the Angelus bell ringing from the village below the slopes of the wood.

He was standing again by the side of the Wishing-Pot, and the old woman sat cowering, and blinking her spider-eye at him, too much astonished to speak or move.

Tulip looked at her with a pleasant and engaging air. 'Oh, good mother, what a treat you have given me!' he said. 'How I wish I had money for another wish! what a pity it was ever to have wished myself back again!'

When the old witch heard that she thought still to entrap him, and answered joyfully, 'Why, kind Sir, surely, kind Sir, if you like it you shall look again! Take another wish, and never mind about the money.' So she said the spell once more which opened to him the wonders of the Wishing-Pot.

Then cried Tulip, clapping his hands, 'What better can I wish than to have you in the Wishing-Pot, in the place of all those poor folk whom you have imprisoned with their wishes!'

Hardly was the thing said than done; all the children who had been Tulip's playmates, and Miller Dick with his broad thumbs, and the dairyman's wife, were every one of them out, and the old witch woman was nowhere to be seen.

But Tulip put his eye to the mouth of the Wishing-Pot; and there down below he saw the old witch, running round and round as hard as she could go, pursued by a herd of green spiders. And there without doubt she remains.

And now everybody was happy except Tulip himself; for the children had all of them their toys, and the old miller his gold, and as for the dairyman's wife, she found that she had become the mother of a large and promising infant. But Tulip had altogether lost his lady of the dear green feet, for in thinking of others he had forgotten to think of himself. All the gratitude of the poor people he had saved was nothing to him in that great loss which had left him desolate. For his part he only took the Wishing-Pot up under his arm, and went sadly away home.

But before long the noise of what he had done reached to the king's ears; and he sent for Tulip to appear before him and his Court. Tulip came, carrying the Wishing-Pot under his arm, very downcast and sad for love of the lady of the dear green feet.

At that time all the Court was in half mourning; for the Princess Royal, who was the king's only child, and the most beautiful and accomplished of her sex, had gone perfectly distraught with grief, of which nothing could cure her. All day long she sat with her eyes shut, and tears running down, and folded hands and quiet little feet. And all this came, it was said, from a dream which she could not tell or explain to anybody.

The king had promised that whoever could rouse her from her grief, should have the princess for his wife, and become heir to the throne; and when he heard that there was such a thing in the world as a Wishing-Pot, he thought that something might be done with it.

From Tulip he learned, however, that no one knew the spell which opened the resources of the Wishing-Pot save the old witch woman who was shut up fast for ever in its inside. So it seemed to the king that the Pot could be of no use for curing the princess.

But it was so beautiful, with its shooting stars and coloured fires, that, when Tulip brought it, they carried it in to show to her.

After three hours the princess was prevailed upon to open her eyes; and directly they fell upon the great opal bowl, all at once she started to her feet and began laughing and dancing and singing.

These are the words that they heard her sing,—

'Lap for lap I must wind you;

Equal, before I can find you;

I am a lap behind you!'

Tulip, as soon as he heard the sweetness of that voice, and the words, pushed his way past the king and all his court, to where the princess was. And there over the heads of the crowd he saw his lady of the dear green feet laughing and opening her white arms to him.

As she set eyes on his face the dream of the princess came true, and all her unhappiness passed from her. So they loved and were married, to the astonishment and edification of the whole court; and lived to be greatly loved and admired by all their grandchildren.



Story DNA fairy tale · whimsical

Moral

True love and selflessness can lead to unexpected rewards, but impulsive desires can trap you.

Plot Summary

Tulip, a prudent young man, falls in love with a mysterious woman with green feet. He seeks a witch's Wishing-Pot to find her, wishing himself inside after seeing her feet. Trapped in the Pot, he chases the elusive green feet, discovering other souls endlessly pursuing their desires, realizing the Pot's true nature. Upon his release, Tulip cleverly uses his second wish to trap the witch in the Pot, freeing the others but seemingly losing his love. Later, the King summons him, and his distraught Princess is cured by the Pot's sight, singing the same song as Tulip's beloved, revealing her identity. They marry, and Tulip finds his true love through his selflessness.

Themes

prudence vs. impulselove and pursuitselflessness vs. self-interestthe nature of desire

Emotional Arc

longing to despair to triumph

Writing Style

Voice: third person omniscient
Pacing: moderate
Descriptive: lush
Techniques: repetition of phrases, vivid sensory descriptions, metaphorical language

Narrative Elements

Conflict: person vs person
Ending: happy
Magic: Wishing-Pot, talking animals (implied by green feet/spider eye), transformation (princess from green feet, witch into spiders), magical imprisonment
the green feetthe Wishing-Potthe opal knob

Cultural Context

Origin: English
Era: timeless fairy tale

Reflects common fairy tale tropes of magical objects, quests for love, and moral lessons about desire and consequence.

Plot Beats (15)

  1. Tulip, a prudent young man, hears a singing voice and sees green feet, falling instantly in love.
  2. He pines for days, unable to find the mysterious woman.
  3. He decides to visit a wise woman who owns a dangerous Wishing-Pot, despite its ill reputation.
  4. Tulip pays the fee and uses his first wish to see his beloved's green feet in the Pot.
  5. He makes a second, hasty wish to be inside the Pot with her, adding a condition to be released by the Angelus bell.
  6. Inside the vast Pot, he chases the green feet, which taunt him with a song about matching her pace.
  7. Tulip realizes he must outwit her, not just chase, and circles the central opal to gain an advantage, catching her.
  8. Upon catching her, she transforms into a full woman in his arms, and they rest on the opal.
  9. Tulip then sees the other trapped souls in the Pot, endlessly pursuing their unfulfilled desires, and understands the witch's deception.
  10. He is suddenly expelled from the Pot as the Angelus bell rings, finding himself back with the astonished witch.
  11. Tulip, pretending to want another wish, cunningly wishes the witch into the Pot in place of the prisoners.
  12. The witch is trapped, and all the previous prisoners are freed, but Tulip believes he has lost his beloved.
  13. The King hears of Tulip's deed and summons him, hoping the Pot can cure his distraught Princess.
  14. The Princess, seeing the Pot, is cured and sings the same song as Tulip's beloved, revealing her identity.
  15. Tulip recognizes her voice and words, and they embrace, marry, and live happily ever after.

Characters 4 characters

Tulip ★ protagonist

human young adult male

Of average height and build for a young man, initially appearing somewhat reckless but gaining a thoughtful demeanor. His features are not explicitly detailed, suggesting a common, relatable appearance for a fairy tale hero.

Attire: Simple, practical clothing befitting a poor but prudent young man from a European village. When bathing, he would wear nothing, but otherwise, likely a linen tunic, simple trousers, and sturdy shoes or boots. Later, when summoned to court, he would likely wear his best, though still humble, attire.

Wants: To find and be with the lady of the dear green feet. Later, to save others from the Wishing-Pot and ultimately to reunite with his love.

Flaw: His initial impulsiveness and overwhelming desire for his love, which almost traps him in the Wishing-Pot. His selflessness, which causes him to temporarily lose his love.

Starts as a somewhat reckless youth, becomes a pining lover, then a trapped but clever hero who saves others, and finally, through a twist of fate, finds his beloved and becomes a prince.

A young man carrying a large, glowing crystal pot under his arm.

Prudent (due to his mother's training), reckless (initially), forlorn, determined, clever, selfless, engaging.

Image Prompt & Upload
A young man of average height and slender build, facing forward, full body visible head to toe. He has short, neatly combed brown hair, a clean-shaven, earnest face with kind brown eyes, and a thoughtful expression. He wears a simple, well-maintained cream linen tunic, dark brown breeches, and sturdy leather boots. He carries a large, spherical crystal bowl, glowing with internal colored lights, tucked under his left arm. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.

The Lady of the Dear Green Feet / The Princess Royal ◆ supporting

human young adult female

Of graceful and slender build, she is described as the most beautiful and accomplished of her sex. Her most distinctive feature is her small, delicate feet, which are always seen in twinkling green slippers.

Attire: Initially, only her twinkling green slippers are seen. As the Princess Royal, she would wear exquisite court attire, perhaps a flowing gown of silk or brocade in soft, regal colors, with delicate embroidery. Her green slippers would be a constant feature.

Wants: To be found by her true love. As the princess, to be cured of her inexplicable grief.

Flaw: Her initial invisibility and the mysterious grief that incapacitates her.

Starts as a mysterious, unseen figure, then becomes a grieving princess, and finally, through Tulip's actions, is reunited with her love and finds happiness.

Small, delicate feet in twinkling green slippers.

Mysterious, playful (initially), sorrowful (as the princess), joyful, loving, graceful.

Image Prompt & Upload
A young woman of slender and graceful build, facing forward, full body visible head to toe. She has a beautiful, serene face with gentle eyes and a soft smile. Her long, wavy light brown hair flows elegantly over her shoulders. She wears a flowing, pale green silk gown with delicate silver embroidery along the hem and sleeves. Her small, delicate feet are adorned with twinkling emerald green slippers. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.

The Wise Woman / The Old Witch ⚔ antagonist

human elderly female

An old crone, her most striking feature is her eye, which can transform into a large green spider with long clutching limbs.

Attire: Simple, dark, and practical clothing for an old woman living in a lonely part of the forest. Likely a dark, coarse wool or linen dress, perhaps a shawl or cloak, and sturdy, worn shoes. Nothing ostentatious, but perhaps with a hidden pocket for fees.

Wants: To entrap people in the Wishing-Pot, presumably for her own power or amusement, and to profit from their desires.

Flaw: Her overconfidence and greed, which lead her to offer Tulip a free second wish, ultimately leading to her downfall.

Starts as a powerful, feared figure, attempts to ensnare Tulip, but is outsmarted and trapped within her own Wishing-Pot.

Her eye transforming into a large green spider.

Cunning, greedy, malevolent, deceptive, astonished (at Tulip's cleverness).

Image Prompt & Upload
An elderly woman with a hunched posture, facing forward, full body visible head to toe. She has a wrinkled, sharp-featured face with a cunning, slightly malevolent expression. Her left eye is unnaturally large and green, resembling a spider's eye with visible, long, thin limbs extending slightly from it. Her sparse, grey hair is pulled back messily. She wears a dark, coarse brown wool dress, a tattered black shawl draped over her shoulders, and worn leather boots. Her hands are gnarled and bony. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.

The King ◆ supporting

human adult male

A monarch, likely of a dignified and regal bearing, though currently in 'half mourning' for his daughter. His specific features are not detailed, but would suggest a man of authority and concern.

Attire: Regal but subdued attire, reflecting the 'half mourning' of his court. Perhaps a dark velvet or brocade robe with minimal ornamentation, a simple gold circlet or crown, and fine leather shoes. Not overly ostentatious during this period of grief.

Wants: To cure his daughter's grief and restore her happiness, and to secure the succession to his throne.

Flaw: His inability to cure his daughter's mysterious grief.

Remains largely static, serving as a catalyst for Tulip's final actions and providing the reward for his success.

A king in half-mourning attire, looking worried.

Concerned, loving (towards his daughter), hopeful, pragmatic (regarding the Wishing-Pot), generous (offering his daughter's hand and the throne).

Image Prompt & Upload
A middle-aged king of noble bearing, facing forward, full body visible head to toe. He has a distinguished, slightly worried face with a neatly trimmed grey beard and kind, concerned eyes. He wears a dark, deep blue velvet robe with subtle silver embroidery on the cuffs, a simple gold circlet on his head, and fine black leather boots. His posture is regal but with a hint of sorrow. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Locations 4 locations
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River Bank and Woods

outdoor afternoon Implied pleasant weather for bathing, likely spring or summer.

Steep terraces of woods, featuring cedar and sycamore trees, running down to the river's edge. The ground is likely covered with natural forest floor elements.

Mood: Initially peaceful and natural, then becomes enchanted and mysterious due to the green feet and singing voice.

Tulip first encounters the mysterious green feet and singing voice, sparking his quest.

River Steep wooded terraces Cedar trees Sycamore trees Forest floor
Image Prompt & Upload
A serene river flows gently at the base of steep, forested terraces. Sunlight filters through the dense canopy of ancient cedar and sycamore trees, dappling the rich, earthy forest floor. Exposed tree roots and mossy rocks line the riverbank, which is covered in wild ferns and undergrowth. The air is clear and still. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
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Witch's House

indoor evening Implied cool forest evening, no specific weather mentioned.

A dwelling in the loneliest part of the forest. Inside, it contains a large crystal Wishing-Pot. The room is likely dimly lit, with the pot casting strange lights.

Mood: Eerie, mysterious, and slightly dangerous, with an underlying sense of ancient magic.

Tulip visits the witch to use the Wishing-Pot and makes his first wish.

Witch's dwelling (implied rustic cottage) Large crystal Wishing-Pot Colored fires and falling stars within the pot Long shapes and lustres on the walls
Image Prompt & Upload
The interior of a rustic, dimly lit cottage, deep within a dense, ancient forest. In one corner, a massive, spherical crystal bowl, the 'Wishing-Pot,' glows with internal, shifting colored fires and sparkling lights, casting long, distorted shadows and lustrous patterns across rough-hewn timber walls and a packed earth floor. The air is thick with an ancient, magical presence. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
No image yet

Inside the Wishing-Pot

transitional Magically shifting environment, not tied to natural seasons.

A vast, dome-like space, larger than any earthly dome. The floor changes from a green lawn with crocuses and daffodils to a path with reddening roses and then purple grapes. A great opal knob stands at its center.

Mood: Magical, illusory, disorienting, and ultimately sorrowful due to the trapped souls.

Tulip is transported inside the Wishing-Pot, experiences its illusions, and frees the trapped souls.

Vast dome-like interior Opal knob at the center Shifting ground: green lawn, crocuses, daffodils, roses, purple grapes Magic fires of the crystal underfoot Crowds of sad, trapped people
Image Prompt & Upload
A vast, ethereal dome interior, shimmering with internal light. The ground beneath shifts magically: from a vibrant green lawn dotted with blooming crocuses and daffodils, to a path where crimson roses unfurl, and then to a rich purple expanse resembling spilled wine from crushed grapes. At the distant center, a large, glowing opal knob acts as an axis. The air is filled with a soft, crackling energy. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
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King's Court / Palace Hall

indoor day Indoor setting, no specific weather. Implied fair weather outside for the court to gather.

A formal royal court, likely a grand hall within a palace, filled with courtiers. The atmosphere is initially somber due to the princess's grief.

Mood: Initially somber and formal, transforming into astonishment and joy.

Tulip presents the Wishing-Pot, and the Princess is cured of her grief, revealing her as Tulip's beloved.

Royal throne room or grand hall Courtiers in half-mourning attire King's throne The Wishing-Pot (brought in as an object)
Image Prompt & Upload
A grand, high-ceilinged palace hall, adorned with tapestries depicting heroic deeds and large, arched windows letting in bright daylight. Polished marble floors reflect the light, and ornate columns rise to support a coffered ceiling. Courtiers in elegant, subdued attire stand in hushed groups. In the center, a large, glowing crystal Wishing-Pot is displayed on a pedestal. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.