The Happy Prince – UK English accent

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“The Happy Prince” tells the story of a beautiful statue who, despite his outward appearance of happiness, weeps for the suffering of the poor in the city. A lonely swallow, initially planning to leave for warmer climates, chooses to stay and help the prince by delivering his precious jewels to those in need. Through their selfless acts of kindness, both the prince and the swallow find true happiness, ultimately leading to their eternal reward in paradise.
  1. Why do you think the Happy Prince wanted to help the poor people in the city?
  2. How did the swallow change after he helped the Happy Prince and the people in need?
  3. What do you think the story teaches us about kindness and helping others?

The Happy Prince

A Beautiful Statue

High above the city, there is a statue called the Happy Prince. He is covered in shiny gold, his eyes are made of blue sapphires, and he has a big red ruby on his sword. Everyone in the city loves him.

“Look at the Happy Prince,” a mother tells her crying son. “He never cries. Don’t you want to be like him?”

“Well, at least someone is happy in this town,” a grumpy man says as he looks at the statue.

“He looks like an angel,” say the children in the orphanage.

The Lonely Swallow

One night, a little swallow flies over the city. He is all alone because his friends flew to Egypt weeks ago. The swallow stayed behind because he fell in love with a beautiful reed. But when autumn came, he decided to leave because the reed didn’t want to travel with him.

As he flies over the city, he wonders where he will sleep. He sees the statue of the Happy Prince and decides to rest there, thinking the view will be amazing.

The Prince’s Tears

The swallow lands at the feet of the Happy Prince. Just as he is about to sleep, a drop of water falls on his head. He looks up and sees that the Happy Prince is crying.

“Who are you?” the swallow asks.

“I am the Happy Prince,” the statue replies.

“Why are you crying?” the swallow wonders.

The Happy Prince explains that when he was alive, he lived in a palace where everything was beautiful, and he never cried. But now, as a statue, he can see all the sadness in the city, and it makes him cry.

A Special Mission

The Happy Prince tells the swallow about a poor woman and her sick son. The boy wants oranges, but his mother can’t afford them. The prince asks the swallow to take the ruby from his sword to the woman.

At first, the swallow doesn’t want to help because he plans to go to Egypt. But he feels sorry for the prince and agrees to stay one night to help.

Helping the Poor

The swallow takes the ruby to the woman’s house. He sees the sick boy and the tired mother and gently places the ruby on the table. The boy feels better as the swallow fans him with his wings.

When the swallow returns to the prince, he feels warm inside, even though it’s cold outside. The prince tells him it’s because he did something good.

More Good Deeds

The next night, the prince asks the swallow to help a young man who is too cold to write his play. The prince gives one of his sapphire eyes to the man so he can buy food and firewood.

The swallow doesn’t want to take the prince’s eye, but the prince insists. The swallow delivers the sapphire, and the young man is overjoyed.

Staying with the Prince

The swallow plans to leave for Egypt, but the prince asks him to stay one more night to help a little girl who dropped her flowers. The prince gives his other sapphire eye to the girl.

Now the prince is blind, and the swallow decides to stay with him forever. He tells the prince stories about Egypt and the wonderful things he has seen.

Sharing the Gold

The prince asks the swallow to fly over the city and tell him what he sees. The swallow sees rich people living well while others are poor and hungry.

The prince asks the swallow to take the gold from his body and give it to the poor. The swallow does this, and soon the prince looks dull and gray, but the people in the city are happier.

The End of the Journey

As winter comes, the swallow gets colder and weaker. He knows he is going to die, so he says goodbye to the prince and falls down dead at his feet. The prince’s heart breaks at that moment.

A Special Reward

The next day, the city leaders see the statue and decide to take it down because it no longer looks beautiful. They melt it down, but the lead heart won’t melt, so they throw it away.

God asks an angel to bring him the two most precious things in the city. The angel brings the lead heart and the dead swallow. God says they have chosen well, and the little bird will sing in paradise, while the prince will be happy once more in the city of gold.

  1. Why do you think the Happy Prince was called “happy” even though he cried when he saw the sadness in the city? Can you think of a time when you felt happy and sad at the same time?
  2. The swallow decided to stay and help the Happy Prince instead of going to Egypt. Have you ever helped someone when you had other plans? How did it make you feel?
  3. The Happy Prince gave away his gold and jewels to help others. If you could give something special to help someone, what would it be and why?
  1. Act Out the Story: Gather some friends or family members and act out the story of “The Happy Prince.” You can take turns being the Happy Prince, the swallow, and the people in the city. Think about how each character feels and what they might say. How does the Happy Prince feel when he sees the sadness in the city? How does the swallow feel when he helps others?

  2. Create a Kindness Journal: Start a journal where you write down acts of kindness you see or do each day, just like the Happy Prince and the swallow. Draw pictures of these kind acts and describe how they make you feel. How does helping others make you feel warm inside, just like the swallow?

  3. Observe and Share: Take a walk around your neighborhood or school and observe the people and places around you. Are there ways you can help someone, like the Happy Prince helped the people in his city? Maybe you can share a toy, help a friend, or pick up litter. Share your ideas with your class or family and see how many acts of kindness you can do together.

**The Happy Prince**
*A version of the tale by The Fable Cottage*

High above the city stands the statue of the Happy Prince. He is covered with fine gold leaf, his eyes are two blue sapphires, and he has a big red ruby on his sword. Everyone loves him.

“Look at the Happy Prince,” says a mother to her son who is crying. “The Happy Prince never cries. Don’t you want to be like him?”

“Well, at least someone is happy in this town,” mutters a grumpy man as he contemplates the beautiful statue.

“He looks like an angel,” say the children in the orphanage.

One night, a little swallow flies over the city. He is all alone; his friends flew away to Egypt six weeks ago. The swallow stayed behind because he had fallen in love with the most beautiful reed. She was tall and slender and moved gracefully in the wind. The other swallows laughed at this romance, saying, “Oh, it’s so ridiculous! She has no money and no steady job.”

Then autumn arrived, and the other birds left for Egypt. The little swallow began to tire of his lover. “Well, yes, she is beautiful, but does she like to travel?” he wondered. “Of course, my future wife must like to travel.” So he asked the reed, “Will you come to Egypt with me? It’ll be so much fun! I’ll show you the pyramids.”

But the reed shook her head. “Very well, I will go alone,” replied the swallow.

Goodbye, and he flew away towards the city. He arrived in the city after dark. “Now, where am I going to sleep?” he wondered. He saw the statue of the Happy Prince. “Ah, I will sleep there. The view will be magnificent.”

The swallow landed between the feet of the Happy Prince. He looked around himself. “Amazing! I have a golden bedroom.” He was just about to fall asleep when plop! A drop of water fell on his head. “What is it, raining?” he wondered. “Strange, I don’t see any clouds.” Then plop! Another drop fell on him.

“Blasted statue,” he muttered. “It can’t even protect me from the rain. Maybe I should find a nice chimney instead.” But then plop! Another drop fell. The swallow looked up and saw that the eyes of the Happy Prince were filled with tears. Tears were streaming down his golden cheeks, and his face looked so sad in the moonlight. The little swallow was filled with pity.

“Who are you?” he asked the statue.

“I am the Happy Prince.”

“Well, why are you crying then?” asked the swallow.

“I’m all wet. You know, when I was alive and had a human heart, I never cried,” the statue said. “I lived in a palace where there was no sorrow. Every night I danced in the Great Hall, and during the day I played with my friends in the garden. There was a big wall around the garden, but I never asked what was on the other side. Why would I ask? Everything around me was so beautiful when I was alive. Everyone called me the Happy Prince, and yes, I was happy if pleasure and happiness are the same thing. But then I died, and they put me here. Now I can see all the sadness and ugliness of my city. My heart is made of lead, but I cannot stop crying.”

“What? He has a heart of lead? I thought he was solid gold,” thinks the swallow to himself, but he doesn’t say it out loud; he’s too polite.

“Far from here,” continues the statue, “there is a small street. In this street, there is a small house. One of the windows is open, and I can see a woman. She is sitting at a table; her face looks tired and worried. Her hands are red and calloused. She is a seamstress, and she is sewing a dress for a wealthy lady. Her little boy is lying on the bed, ill with a fever. He wants oranges, but his mother does not have money to buy oranges. All she can give him to drink is water from the river, so the little boy continues to cry.

“Little swallow, there is a ruby on my sword. Please take it to his mother. I am a statue now; I can’t do it myself.”

“I’m sorry, I can’t,” says the swallow. “I must fly to Egypt. My friends are waiting for me. They will be flying up and down the Nile and talking to the lotus flowers. They will be sleeping in the tomb of the great king. I must go too.”

“Please, little swallow,” says the prince. “Be my messenger just for one night. The little boy is so thirsty, and his mother is so sad.”

“But I don’t even like little boys,” says the swallow. “Little boys throw stones at me. Of course, they never reach me, but who cares? It’s very rude.”

But the Happy Prince looks sad, and the swallow feels guilty. “It’s very cold here,” he says, “but I will stay one night and help you.”

“Thank you, little swallow,” says the prince.

So the swallow removes the ruby from the prince’s sword. He holds it in his beak and flies over the roofs of the city. He flies over the cathedral with its angels made of white marble. He flies over the river and sees the lanterns hanging from the masts of the boats. He flies over the market and hears the sellers shout, “Oranges! Come and get your beautiful oranges!” He flies over the palace and hears the sound of music and dancing. A young girl and her boyfriend come out onto the balcony of the palace.

“The stars are so beautiful,” says the boyfriend, “and so are you.”

“I hope my dress will be ready in time for the ball,” says the girl. “My seamstress is so slow.”

Finally, the swallow arrives at the woman’s house. He looks through the window. The little boy is tossing feverishly in his bed. The mother is so tired that she has fallen asleep at her sewing table. The swallow hops inside. He gently puts the ruby down on the table, then he flutters around the little boy’s bed, gently fanning him with his wings.

“Huh, I don’t feel so hot anymore,” says the little boy. “I think I’m getting better.”

The swallow goes back to see the Happy Prince. He tells the prince what he did.

“It’s strange,” says the swallow. “The weather is really cold, but I feel quite warm now.”

“That’s because you have done something good,” says the prince.

The little swallow begins to think, then he falls asleep. Thinking always makes him sleepy.

In the morning, the swallow takes a bath in the river. “Tonight I’m going to Egypt,” he says. He is very happy. He spends the day visiting the tourist attractions of the city. Wherever he goes, the sparrows chirp and ask each other, “Who is this distinguished stranger? It can’t be a swallow here in winter.” The swallow likes to be the center of attention; he enjoys himself immensely.

As the moon rises, the swallow flies back to the Happy Prince. “Can I bring you back something from Egypt?” he asks.

“I’m just about to leave,” says the prince.

“Please stay with me one more night.”

“My friends will be waiting for me in Egypt,” replies the swallow. “Tomorrow they will go further up the river. There will be hippos in the tall grass. At noon, the yellow lions will come down to drink on the shore. Their eyes are green like emeralds. I absolutely must see this.”

“Little swallow,” says the prince, “on the other side of town, I see a young man. He lives in a cramped, drafty attic. He is sitting at a desk covered with papers. He’s trying to write a play, but his hands are too cold to hold a pen. He has no money to buy firewood or food.”

“All right, I will stay with you one more night,” says the swallow. “Do you have another ruby?”

“Alas, no,” says the prince. “But I have my eyes. These are sapphires from India. Please take one of my eyes to the young man. He can use it to buy food as well as wood. He can then finish writing his play.”

“Oh no, no way,” says the swallow.

“Little swallow,” says the prince, “please do as I ask.”

So the swallow takes the prince’s eye and flies to the young man’s attic. It’s easy to get in; there’s a hole in the roof. The young man is resting his head in his hands. He doesn’t hear the rustling of wings as the swallow places the sapphire in front of him. When the young man looks up, he finds the beautiful sapphire just lying there on his desk.

“A donation!” he cries. “Someone likes my work! Now I can finish my play.”

The next day, the swallow flies to the harbor. He lands on the mast of a large ship. He watches the sailors taking the cargo out of the holds of the ship. “Ho ho ho! I’m going to Egypt!” he declares, but no one hears him.

When the moon rises, he flies to the Happy Prince. “I’ve come to say goodbye,” says the swallow.

“Little swallow,” says the prince, “please stay with me one more night.”

“It’s winter now,” replies the swallow. “Soon it will snow.”

“But in Egypt, the sun will be shining. I will see green palm trees. I will see crocodiles lying in the mud. My friends will be building their nests. Dear prince, I must go, but I will never forget you. And next spring, I will bring you two beautiful jewels to replace the ones you have given away. The ruby will be as red as a rose, and a sapphire will be as blue as the sea.”

“In the square just below us,” says the prince, “there is a little girl selling flowers. She has dropped a lot of them on the ground, and now they’re ruined. Her family will starve if she doesn’t bring some money home. She’s crying. She has no shoes or socks, no winter jacket and no warm hat. Please take my other eye and give it to her.”

The swallow sighs. “I can stay another night,” he says, “but I can’t take your eye. You will be blind.”

“Little swallow,” says the prince, “please do as I ask.”

So the swallow removes the prince’s other eye and flies down to the square. He swoops past the little girl and drops the jewel into her hand.

“Oh, so pretty!” exclaims the little girl. She runs home laughing.

The swallow returns to the prince. “Now you are blind,” he says.

“So I am,” replies the prince. “I am going to stay with you.”

“No, little swallow,” says the Happy Prince. “You have to go to Egypt.”

“Nope, I will stay with you forever,” says the swallow, and he falls asleep at the prince’s feet.

The next day, the swallow sits on the prince’s shoulder. He tells stories to the prince because the prince cannot see. He talks about Egypt, the desert, the camels, the Sphinx, the pyramids, and the huge snakes in the palm trees.

“Dear little swallow,” says the prince, “you speak of such extraordinary things, but do you know what is even more extraordinary to me? The suffering of people. There is no mystery greater than misery. Fly over my city, little swallow, and tell me what you see.”

So the swallow flies over the city. He sees rich people living comfortably in their beautiful homes while beggars sit at their doorsteps. He sees hungry children sitting in the dark streets. He sees two little boys huddled together under a bridge trying to get warm.

“You can’t sleep here,” says a policeman. “Go on, get!” And the boys scamper off into the rain.

The swallow returns to the prince and tells him what he has seen.

“Hm, I am covered in gold,” says the prince. “Peel it off and give it to the poor.”

Piece by piece, the swallow removes the thin layer of gold from the prince. Soon the Happy Prince appears dull and gray. Piece by piece, the swallow gives the gold to the poor. The children’s faces grow rosy; they laugh and play in the street. “We have bread now! My favorite!”

Then the snow comes, and then the frost. The streets turn white, and long icicles hang from the eaves of the houses. Everyone wears winter jackets, and the children skate on the ice. The poor little swallow gets colder and colder, but he does not leave the prince. He eats the crumbs from in front of the baker’s door. He tries to warm himself by flapping his wings.

Then finally, he knows he is going to die. He lands on the prince’s shoulder one last time. “Goodbye, dear prince,” he whispers.

“I’m glad you’re finally going to Egypt,” says the prince.

“Little swallow,” says the prince, “you have stayed here far too long.”

“I’m not going to Egypt,” says the swallow. “I am going to the house of death. Death is the brother of sleep, is he not?”

He kisses the Happy Prince and falls down dead at his feet.

At that moment, a strange sound comes from inside the statue. The prince’s lead heart breaks.

The next morning, the mayor of the city walks past the statue with his city councilors.

“Oh my, the Happy Prince does not look great,” he says. “Not great at all. I’ve seen him look better.”

The councilors say they always agree with the mayor.

“Where is his ruby?” continues the mayor. “Where are his eyes? And he is not golden anymore. Oh dear, well, he doesn’t look like a Happy Prince. Why, he looks no better than a beggar! No better than a beggar! Where have his eyes gone? And what the—oh my, my word! Goodness me!” says the mayor. “There is a dead bird at his feet! We need to pass a new law: birds are not permitted to die on statues. Someone note that down.”

And someone notes it down. They pull down the statue of the Happy Prince. “If it is not beautiful, then it is not useful,” says an article in the newspaper. They melt the statue in a furnace, but the heart of lead won’t melt.

“This is so weird,” says one of the foundry workers. “What should we do with this?”

“Just throw it away,” says another. “And don’t tell the boss.”

So they throw the prince’s heart on a pile of trash right next to the dead swallow.

“Bring me the two most precious things in the city,” says God to one of the angels. The angel fetches the heart of lead and the dead bird.

“Ah, you have chosen well,” says God. “This little bird will sing in the gardens of paradise, and in my city of gold, the prince will be happy once more.”

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