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Saturday, May 8, 2021

Larry's Fairy Tales - Part 5

 Sleeping Beauty

Once upon a time, a king and queen were blessed with a baby boy.  They named him Beau.  The whole kingdom rejoiced, and all the notables of the kingdom were invited to the castle to see their new prince.


(Image from the Disney move Sleeping Beauty, 1959)

Among the guests were the three good fairies.  The first fairy waved his magic feather over the child.  “I give the gift of beauty.  Beau will grow up to be the most handsome man in the land.”  The guests murmured in approval.


(Photo: Victorian man in drag)

The second fairy said, “I give the gift of love.  Beau will love and be loved his whole life long.”  The guests oohed and ahhed at the wisdom of this gift.


(Photo: Victorian man in drag.  Update: actually, it's a fake.  See comments.)

The third fairy lifted his glass of wine, which he had perhaps imbibed a bit too freely.  “I may be last but not least, as they say.  My gift is, Beau will be hung like a …”


(Photo: Victorian man in drag)

At that moment, there was a flash of light and the powerful Wizard of Menlo Park appeared.  “I wasn’t invited,” he said, “but I, too have a gift for the young prince.  On his eighteenth birthday, he will prick his finger – oh, wait, that’s for girls.  For boys, let’s see, on his eighteenth birthday, he will finger his prick and he will die.”  The Wizard laughed, and in another flash of light he disappeared.

    “I don’t understand,” said the queen.  “What did he mean, he will finger his prick?”

    “I’ll explain later, dear,” said the king.


(Image: Thomas Edison, the Wizard of Menlo Park, 1879)

“As I was saying before I was so rudely interrupted,” said the third fairy, “I was about to give my gift.  I’m afraid I’m a little too drunk to undo this terrible curse, but I can soften it.  Beau will not die, but he will fall into a deep sleep until he is awakened by … by true love’s kiss.  I’ll drink to that.”


(Photo: Victorian man in drag)

To prevent the prince from fingering his prick, the king ordered that all the porn in the kingdom be burned.  But the three fairies knew that wouldn’t work.


(Image from the Disney movie Sleeping Beauty, 1959)

For eighteen years, Beau grew up happily attended by knights and squires, who taught him the manly arts of riding, hunting and fighting.  He was also surrounded by pages and stable boys, who taught him everything the king was hoping he wouldn’t find out about.


(Photo: Franklin Schenck by Thomas Eakins, c. 1890)

On his eighteenth birthday, after a noble feast, Beau retired to his room, where he indulged in innocent pleasure.  From behind a curtain, the Wizard watched.

At the climax, the Wizard waved his wand, and Beau sank onto the cushion, apparently lifeless.

    “The French call it la petite mort, the little death,” laughed the Wizard.  “How appropriate.”  Then he disappeared.

    But Beau was not dead, just asleep.


(Sleeping Beauty, drawing by Paul Cadmus, 1950s)

    The three good fairies put everyone else in the castle to sleep, too.


    A hundred years passed.


... To be continued tomorrow.

*    *    *

Note: As in all these fairy tales, the word "fairy" is being used in fun, not as a term of disrespect.  I am not making fun of the men in drag depicted here.  Well, maybe I'm making fun of the third one a little.  Also, I have nothing but admiration for Thomas Edison, the Wizard of Menlo Park, but I couldn't resist using the vintage image of him as a wizard for this story.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

The funny thing is, in the original, it has to be a girl for the most horrifying of reasons. (The prince actually has a child with her while she's asleep. The girl mistakes her mother's finger for a nipple and sucks out the splinter, and that's how she awakens. Oh wait, yeah, that part about how some dude knocked her up while she was asleep. Just, what the hell? Straight people are weird.)

BatRedneck said...

At last another of your fairy tales. Can't wait to read more. Will the prince get to be awakened by a lumberjack with a wolf tail? Will they fly to Oz on a winged centaur? In order to stay posted, make sure to buy our next penny dreadful :-)

Uncle Vic said...

Picture #2 Victorian man in drag is Thomas Edison's head shopped onto another photo..

Unashamed Male said...

I just searched for Thomas Edison and found the original photo that the head came from. You're right. That makes me wonder whether the other "Victorian men in drag" were Photoshopped, too. Oh, well.

Uncle Vic said...

I've seen some that appear authentic.. photoshop is not always a good thing...kind of a shame, really.. can't trust anybody

Xersex said...

nice and interesting!