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Changed line(s) 24 (click to see context) from:
* Corporeal Punishment: In desperation to make her cry, the king whips his daughter
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* Corporeal Punishment: In CorporealPunishment: When the possibility comes about that making the princess cry may break her curse, the king in desperation to make her cry, the king whips his daughterdaughter. She laughs all the way through.
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* DissonantLaughter: The princess reacts with laughter to the news of the kingdom being under attack, the sight of he rmothers tears and to being whipped by her father. It's not a happy sound and can be mistaken for screaming.
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* AccidentalKiss: Among other incidents, an accident when the princess gets caught up in the wind as she rushes to greet her father causes her to blow into a page and accidentally kiss him instead.
* CheerfulChild: Growing up, the Light Princess is never anything but joyful.
* ChocolateBaby: Both the Princess's parents are brunette while the princess is blonde. This leads to some light speculation from the king that the light-bodied baby might not actually be theirs.
* CheerfulChild: Growing up, the Light Princess is never anything but joyful.
* ChocolateBaby: Both the Princess's parents are brunette while the princess is blonde. This leads to some light speculation from the king that the light-bodied baby might not actually be theirs.
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* Corporeal Punishment: In desperation to make her cry, the king whips his daughter
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* EvilAunt: The witch that curses the Princess is her father's sister, estranged due to having fallen out with their father.
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Even if that were a trope, it's for the Theatre.
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%%* Getting Crap PastTheRadar: The stage production is very good at this.
%%* HeroicBSOD: The Princess has one when she almost loses the lake.
%%* HeroicBSOD: The Princess has one when she almost loses the lake.
to:
%%*
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Deleted line(s) 27 (click to see context) :
%%* IncrediblyLamePun: Lampshaded.
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%%* {{Pun}}: Lampshaded.
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* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: The Princess, due to her curse.
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%%* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: The stage production is very good at this.
* HeroicBSOD: The Princess has one when she almost loses the lake.
* HeroicBSOD: The Princess has one when she almost loses the lake.
to:
%%* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: Getting Crap PastTheRadar: The stage production is very good at this.
* %%* HeroicBSOD: The Princess has one when she almost loses the lake.
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* TheHyena: The Princess, as part of the curse.
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* RuleOfFunny: Quite a few fairy tale tropes are PlayedForLaughs.
* StealthPun: The Princess lacks gravity in both senses of the word.
* StealthPun: The Princess lacks gravity in both senses of the word.
to:
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----
Changed line(s) 22 (click to see context) from:
%%* GettingCrapPastThe Radar: The stage production is very good at this.
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%%* GettingCrapPastThe Radar: GettingCrapPastTheRadar: The stage production is very good at this.
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* StealthPun: The Princess lacks gravity in [[TheHyena both senses of the word]].
%%* {{Troperiffic}}
%%* {{Troperiffic}}
to:
* StealthPun: The Princess lacks gravity in [[TheHyena both senses of the word]].
%%* {{Troperiffic}}word.
* {{Troperiffic}}: The story is chock-full of fairy tale tropes: one childless couple who desperately want a child, a main character who is a princess, a wicked witch who curses the baby during her christening out of spite...
%%* {{Troperiffic}}
* {{Troperiffic}}: The story is chock-full of fairy tale tropes: one childless couple who desperately want a child, a main character who is a princess, a wicked witch who curses the baby during her christening out of spite...
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Changed line(s) 22 (click to see context) from:
%%* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: The stage production is very good at this.
to:
%%* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: GettingCrapPastThe Radar: The stage production is very good at this.
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No longer a trope
Deleted line(s) 21 (click to see context) :
%%* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses
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Added image.
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/light_princess.png]]
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----
Deleted line(s) 19 (click to see context) :
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* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses
to:
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* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: The stage production is very good at this.
to:
Changed line(s) 27,32 (click to see context) from:
* TheHyena: The Princess.
* IncrediblyLamePun: Lampshaded.
* InverseFertilityLaw
* {{Jerkass}}: The King's sister.
* LemonyNarrator: Not quite to the extent as some of the examples on the main page, but still noticeable.
* LoveAtFirstSight
* IncrediblyLamePun: Lampshaded.
* InverseFertilityLaw
* {{Jerkass}}: The King's sister.
* LemonyNarrator: Not quite to the extent as some of the examples on the main page, but still noticeable.
* LoveAtFirstSight
to:
* TheHyena: The Princess.
*Princess, as part of the curse.
%%* IncrediblyLamePun: Lampshaded.
* %%* InverseFertilityLaw
* %%* {{Jerkass}}: The King's sister.
* %%* LemonyNarrator: Not quite to the extent as some of the examples on the main page, but still noticeable.
* %%* LoveAtFirstSight
*
%%* IncrediblyLamePun: Lampshaded.
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* ThePowerOfLove
to:
Changed line(s) 38,39 (click to see context) from:
* {{Troperiffic}}
to:
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Because of this, the Princess spends her life floating in the air, unable to touch the ground and always dangerously close to being carried off into the sky. What's more, though, is that there's no gravity to weight down her ''soul'', either. She never thinks seriously on any topic, cannot be made to empathize with people, and never cries.
The only thing that seems to remedy this is a nearby lake the Princess love to swim in, which miraculously returns her gravity. After sneaking out to it one evening, a Prince happens across her and, believing she's drowning, swims out to rescue her. By the time he realizes his mistake, he's already fallen in love with her. Though the Princess is incapable of being serious about anything, least of all love, she consents to spend time with him while she swims at night.
The only thing that seems to remedy this is a nearby lake the Princess love to swim in, which miraculously returns her gravity. After sneaking out to it one evening, a Prince happens across her and, believing she's drowning, swims out to rescue her. By the time he realizes his mistake, he's already fallen in love with her. Though the Princess is incapable of being serious about anything, least of all love, she consents to spend time with him while she swims at night.
to:
Because of this, the Princess spends her life floating in the air, unable to touch the ground and always dangerously close to being carried off into the sky. What's more, though, is that Moreover, there's no gravity to weight weigh down her ''soul'', either. She never thinks seriously on any topic, cannot be made to empathize with people, and never cries.
The only thing that seems to remedythis this, is a nearby lake the Princess love loves to swim in, which miraculously returns her gravity. After sneaking out to it one evening, a Prince happens across her and, believing she's drowning, swims out to rescue her. By the time he realizes his mistake, he's already fallen in love with her. Though the Princess is incapable of being serious about anything, least of all love, she consents to spend time with him while she swims at night.
The only thing that seems to remedy
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Changed line(s) 15,16 (click to see context) from:
In 2013 it was adapted into a [[Theater/TheLightPrincess musical]] by London's National Theatre, with the book by Samuel Adamson and music by Music/ToriAmos.
to:
In 2013 it was adapted into a [[Theater/TheLightPrincess [[Theatre/TheLightPrincess musical]] by London's National Theatre, with the book by Samuel Adamson and music by Music/ToriAmos.
Changed line(s) 18,19 (click to see context) from:
!!This story provides examples of:
to:
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Noted children's author Creator/MauriceSendak illustrated a version, which was released in 1977.
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How To Create A Works Page explicitly says "No bolding is used for work titles."
Changed line(s) 1,2 (click to see context) from:
'''The Light Princess''' is an 1864 tongue-in-cheek fairy tale written by Creator/GeorgeMacDonald.
to:
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Changed line(s) 13,14 (click to see context) from:
In 2013 it was adapted into a musical by London's National Theatre, with the book by Samuel Adamson and music by Music/ToriAmos.
to:
In 2013 it was adapted into a musical [[Theater/TheLightPrincess musical]] by London's National Theatre, with the book by Samuel Adamson and music by Music/ToriAmos.
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Changed line(s) 1,2 (click to see context) from:
''''The Light Princess'''' is an 1864 tongue-in-cheek fairy tale written by Creator/GeorgeMacDonald.
to:
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Shortened the plot summary by about 600 words.
Changed line(s) 1,26 (click to see context) from:
''The Light Princess'' is an 1864 fairy tale, was written by Creator/GeorgeMacDonald. It's a fairy tale about a princess who is cursed to lose her gravity, and some parts of it are decidedly tongue-in-cheek. More than one audio version exists, so do give them a try.
So this King and Queen desperately want a child -- you know how that goes -- and eventually they get one. The little girl is due to have a christening party when the King conveniently forgets to invite his sister, an evil woman with magical powers. The woman arrives just the same, and curses the Princess with a lack of gravity.
This means firstly that the gravity of the world has no pull on the girl's body: She floats everywhere, never has to worry about falling, and on walks must be accompanied by several courtiers who hold onto ribbons attached to her waist, lest the slightest breeze whip her away into the sky. But secondly, the gravity of life has no pull on the girl's soul: She never thinks seriously on any topic, cannot be made to empathize with people, and never cries, even when her father decides to give a good go at spanking her until she does. The court wisemen try to figure out how to undo this terrible curse, but as their schemes amount to stuff like "drain her blood until she's dead and then bring her back," the King declines to give it a try.
So the Princess grows up with no sense of unhappiness, except occasional annoyance when she isn't allowed her own way. And she laughed all the time, although "in her laugh there was something missing"... for similar to how you cannot appreciate light without darkness, you cannot appreciate happiness without sorrow. And so her laughing at times sounded much like crying.
And then one day, she happens to get pushed into the nearby lake. Turns out that when she's in the lake, her gravity is back, but when she leaves the water she floats again; and from that day on she is never so happy as when she is in the water.
One day, a Prince happened to come by and see her in the water, and because of her strange laughter, he thought she was drowning and tried to save her. Once that had been straightened out, he began to court her, but she was never serious about anything, least of all the possibility of love. The only reason she enjoyed his presence was that he could take her out to the water, and furthermore that he could grab her and fall into the water with her, a sensation which she very much enjoyed (as she put it, it felt like "falling up").
Unfortunately, about this time the King's sister discovered that the lake was making the Princess happy. And so she went down into her basement and followed a tunnel down below the lake, where she rigged a magic spell and got a large serpent to bite the ceiling of the chamber right below the lake, and the spell began to drain the lake.
The Princess figured this out before too long, and it scared her as nothing had ever scared her before. She was distraught at the idea of losing the lake. But nothing could be done until a man happened to spot, at the bottom of the lake, a plaque. It said that if one man in the whole kingdom was brave enough to give his life for the lake, by plugging the hole with his entire body, then the lake would refill; but if there were no man so brave, then the kingdom deserved its loss.
Eventually the Prince learned the details of this plight. He had not seen the Princess in many days, and by this point was deeply in love with her; and so he reasoned that the Princess would be no good without the lake, and went straightway to the King to offer his life. Only he made the condition that the Princess should stay out with him in a boat, and feed him and give him drink with her own hands until the deed was done. The King, not knowing that the man was a Prince, agreed, and soon the whole affair was set in motion.
At length the Prince, the Princess, and a small boat filled with food and drink were in the center of the lake. The Prince got into the hole, filling most of it with his legs and using his hands to stop up the little bit that remained. The Princess was at times curious and at times distracted, and she did not seem to entirely understand that the Prince would be dead once this was all done. But the water slowly began to come back. This fact began to take up the Princess's entire attention, which delighted the Prince, for he had not seen her happy in many days. Only she would hardly pay attention to him, and he had to coax her into feeding him; and even when he kissed her fingers, she did not seem to care.
As the water rose, it covered the Prince up to his neck; and then up to his mouth; and then his nose; and then it covered him completely, and as the Princess realized what had happened, she "gave a shriek and dove into the water". She grabbed the Prince and managed to pull him out of the hole, and then got him into the boat, and then rowed him back to land and had the servants bring him to her nursemaid, and over several hours they did all they could think to do for him.
Eventually, it proved to be enough, and he woke up; and at this point the Princess fell to the floor weeping. Her love, finally awakened, had broken the curse; the lake was brim-full, and had also crushed the King's sister; and as soon as the Princess had learned to walk like a normal person, she married the Prince and they lived HappilyEverAfter, having many children, "none of whom ever lost their gravity."
It has recently been adapted into a musical by Samuel Adamson and Music/ToriAmos at London's National Theatre, and has been well received.
So this King and Queen desperately want a child -- you know how that goes -- and eventually they get one. The little girl is due to have a christening party when the King conveniently forgets to invite his sister, an evil woman with magical powers. The woman arrives just the same, and curses the Princess with a lack of gravity.
This means firstly that the gravity of the world has no pull on the girl's body: She floats everywhere, never has to worry about falling, and on walks must be accompanied by several courtiers who hold onto ribbons attached to her waist, lest the slightest breeze whip her away into the sky. But secondly, the gravity of life has no pull on the girl's soul: She never thinks seriously on any topic, cannot be made to empathize with people, and never cries, even when her father decides to give a good go at spanking her until she does. The court wisemen try to figure out how to undo this terrible curse, but as their schemes amount to stuff like "drain her blood until she's dead and then bring her back," the King declines to give it a try.
So the Princess grows up with no sense of unhappiness, except occasional annoyance when she isn't allowed her own way. And she laughed all the time, although "in her laugh there was something missing"... for similar to how you cannot appreciate light without darkness, you cannot appreciate happiness without sorrow. And so her laughing at times sounded much like crying.
And then one day, she happens to get pushed into the nearby lake. Turns out that when she's in the lake, her gravity is back, but when she leaves the water she floats again; and from that day on she is never so happy as when she is in the water.
One day, a Prince happened to come by and see her in the water, and because of her strange laughter, he thought she was drowning and tried to save her. Once that had been straightened out, he began to court her, but she was never serious about anything, least of all the possibility of love. The only reason she enjoyed his presence was that he could take her out to the water, and furthermore that he could grab her and fall into the water with her, a sensation which she very much enjoyed (as she put it, it felt like "falling up").
Unfortunately, about this time the King's sister discovered that the lake was making the Princess happy. And so she went down into her basement and followed a tunnel down below the lake, where she rigged a magic spell and got a large serpent to bite the ceiling of the chamber right below the lake, and the spell began to drain the lake.
The Princess figured this out before too long, and it scared her as nothing had ever scared her before. She was distraught at the idea of losing the lake. But nothing could be done until a man happened to spot, at the bottom of the lake, a plaque. It said that if one man in the whole kingdom was brave enough to give his life for the lake, by plugging the hole with his entire body, then the lake would refill; but if there were no man so brave, then the kingdom deserved its loss.
Eventually the Prince learned the details of this plight. He had not seen the Princess in many days, and by this point was deeply in love with her; and so he reasoned that the Princess would be no good without the lake, and went straightway to the King to offer his life. Only he made the condition that the Princess should stay out with him in a boat, and feed him and give him drink with her own hands until the deed was done. The King, not knowing that the man was a Prince, agreed, and soon the whole affair was set in motion.
At length the Prince, the Princess, and a small boat filled with food and drink were in the center of the lake. The Prince got into the hole, filling most of it with his legs and using his hands to stop up the little bit that remained. The Princess was at times curious and at times distracted, and she did not seem to entirely understand that the Prince would be dead once this was all done. But the water slowly began to come back. This fact began to take up the Princess's entire attention, which delighted the Prince, for he had not seen her happy in many days. Only she would hardly pay attention to him, and he had to coax her into feeding him; and even when he kissed her fingers, she did not seem to care.
As the water rose, it covered the Prince up to his neck; and then up to his mouth; and then his nose; and then it covered him completely, and as the Princess realized what had happened, she "gave a shriek and dove into the water". She grabbed the Prince and managed to pull him out of the hole, and then got him into the boat, and then rowed him back to land and had the servants bring him to her nursemaid, and over several hours they did all they could think to do for him.
Eventually, it proved to be enough, and he woke up; and at this point the Princess fell to the floor weeping. Her love, finally awakened, had broken the curse; the lake was brim-full, and had also crushed the King's sister; and as soon as the Princess had learned to walk like a normal person, she married the Prince and they lived HappilyEverAfter, having many children, "none of whom ever lost their gravity."
It has recently been adapted into a musical by Samuel Adamson and Music/ToriAmos at London's National Theatre, and has been well received.
to:
Once upon a
So this
The
So
And then
One day, a Prince happened
Unfortunately,
The Princess figured this out before too long, and it scared her as nothing had ever scared her before. She was distraught at the idea of losing the lake. But nothing could be done until a man happened to spot, at the bottom of the lake, a plaque. It
Eventually the Prince learned the details of this plight. He had not seen
Though initially pleased that the
At length the Prince, the Princess, and a small boat filled with food and drink were in the center of the lake. The Prince got into the hole, filling most of it with his legs and using his hands to stop up the little bit that remained. The Princess was at times curious and at times distracted, and she did not seem to entirely understand that the Prince would be dead once this was all done. But the water slowly began to come back. This fact began to take up the Princess's entire attention, which delighted the Prince, for he had not seen her happy in many days. Only she would hardly pay attention to him, and he had to coax her into feeding him; and even
As the water rose, it covered the Prince up to his neck; and then up to his mouth; and then his nose; and then it covered him completely, and as
Eventually, it proved to be enough, and he woke up; and at this point the Princess fell
It has recently been
In 2013 it was adapted into a musical by
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
The Seven Basic Plots, as a work, cannot be used as a trope.
Deleted line(s) 47 (click to see context) :
* TheSevenBasicPlots: An excellent example of the ''Rebirth'' plot, in which the Princess is trapped in a state of being cut off from her humanity, and the love and sacrifice of her Prince bring her around in the end.
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None
Changed line(s) 25,26 (click to see context) from:
It has recently been adapted into a musical by Samuel Adamson and Tori Amos at London's National Theatre, and has been well received.
to:
It has recently been adapted into a musical by Samuel Adamson and Tori Amos Music/ToriAmos at London's National Theatre, and has been well received.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Deleted line(s) 48 (click to see context) :
* SpankTheCutie: The King tries it to see if crying can make the princess recover her [[StealthPun gravity]]. It doesn't take.
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Changed line(s) 34 (click to see context) from:
* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: the stage production is very good at this.
to:
* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: the The stage production is very good at this.
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None
Added DiffLines:
It has recently been adapted into a musical by Samuel Adamson and Tori Amos at London's National Theatre, and has been well received.
Added DiffLines:
* GettingCrapPastTheRadar: the stage production is very good at this.
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None
Changed line(s) 1,2 (click to see context) from:
''The Light Princess'' is an 1864 fairy tale, was written by Creator/GeorgeMacDonald (1824-1905), a writer who inspired the likes of Creator/JRRTolkien, Creator/CSLewis, and MadeleineLEngle. It's a fairy tale about a princess who is cursed to lose her gravity, and some parts of it are decidedly tongue-in-cheek. More than one audio version exists, so do give them a try.
to:
''The Light Princess'' is an 1864 fairy tale, was written by Creator/GeorgeMacDonald (1824-1905), a writer who inspired the likes of Creator/JRRTolkien, Creator/CSLewis, and MadeleineLEngle.Creator/GeorgeMacDonald. It's a fairy tale about a princess who is cursed to lose her gravity, and some parts of it are decidedly tongue-in-cheek. More than one audio version exists, so do give them a try.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None
Changed line(s) 1,2 (click to see context) from:
''The Light Princess'' is an 1864 fairy tale, was written by {{George MacDonald}} (1824-1905), a writer who inspired the likes of JRRTolkien, CSLewis, and MadeleineLEngle. It's a fairy tale about a princess who is cursed to lose her gravity, and some parts of it are decidedly tongue-in-cheek. More than one audio version exists, so do give them a try.
to:
''The Light Princess'' is an 1864 fairy tale, was written by {{George MacDonald}} Creator/GeorgeMacDonald (1824-1905), a writer who inspired the likes of JRRTolkien, CSLewis, Creator/JRRTolkien, Creator/CSLewis, and MadeleineLEngle. It's a fairy tale about a princess who is cursed to lose her gravity, and some parts of it are decidedly tongue-in-cheek. More than one audio version exists, so do give them a try.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None
Added DiffLines:
''The Light Princess'' is an 1864 fairy tale, was written by {{George MacDonald}} (1824-1905), a writer who inspired the likes of JRRTolkien, CSLewis, and MadeleineLEngle. It's a fairy tale about a princess who is cursed to lose her gravity, and some parts of it are decidedly tongue-in-cheek. More than one audio version exists, so do give them a try.
So this King and Queen desperately want a child -- you know how that goes -- and eventually they get one. The little girl is due to have a christening party when the King conveniently forgets to invite his sister, an evil woman with magical powers. The woman arrives just the same, and curses the Princess with a lack of gravity.
This means firstly that the gravity of the world has no pull on the girl's body: She floats everywhere, never has to worry about falling, and on walks must be accompanied by several courtiers who hold onto ribbons attached to her waist, lest the slightest breeze whip her away into the sky. But secondly, the gravity of life has no pull on the girl's soul: She never thinks seriously on any topic, cannot be made to empathize with people, and never cries, even when her father decides to give a good go at spanking her until she does. The court wisemen try to figure out how to undo this terrible curse, but as their schemes amount to stuff like "drain her blood until she's dead and then bring her back," the King declines to give it a try.
So the Princess grows up with no sense of unhappiness, except occasional annoyance when she isn't allowed her own way. And she laughed all the time, although "in her laugh there was something missing"... for similar to how you cannot appreciate light without darkness, you cannot appreciate happiness without sorrow. And so her laughing at times sounded much like crying.
And then one day, she happens to get pushed into the nearby lake. Turns out that when she's in the lake, her gravity is back, but when she leaves the water she floats again; and from that day on she is never so happy as when she is in the water.
One day, a Prince happened to come by and see her in the water, and because of her strange laughter, he thought she was drowning and tried to save her. Once that had been straightened out, he began to court her, but she was never serious about anything, least of all the possibility of love. The only reason she enjoyed his presence was that he could take her out to the water, and furthermore that he could grab her and fall into the water with her, a sensation which she very much enjoyed (as she put it, it felt like "falling up").
Unfortunately, about this time the King's sister discovered that the lake was making the Princess happy. And so she went down into her basement and followed a tunnel down below the lake, where she rigged a magic spell and got a large serpent to bite the ceiling of the chamber right below the lake, and the spell began to drain the lake.
The Princess figured this out before too long, and it scared her as nothing had ever scared her before. She was distraught at the idea of losing the lake. But nothing could be done until a man happened to spot, at the bottom of the lake, a plaque. It said that if one man in the whole kingdom was brave enough to give his life for the lake, by plugging the hole with his entire body, then the lake would refill; but if there were no man so brave, then the kingdom deserved its loss.
Eventually the Prince learned the details of this plight. He had not seen the Princess in many days, and by this point was deeply in love with her; and so he reasoned that the Princess would be no good without the lake, and went straightway to the King to offer his life. Only he made the condition that the Princess should stay out with him in a boat, and feed him and give him drink with her own hands until the deed was done. The King, not knowing that the man was a Prince, agreed, and soon the whole affair was set in motion.
At length the Prince, the Princess, and a small boat filled with food and drink were in the center of the lake. The Prince got into the hole, filling most of it with his legs and using his hands to stop up the little bit that remained. The Princess was at times curious and at times distracted, and she did not seem to entirely understand that the Prince would be dead once this was all done. But the water slowly began to come back. This fact began to take up the Princess's entire attention, which delighted the Prince, for he had not seen her happy in many days. Only she would hardly pay attention to him, and he had to coax her into feeding him; and even when he kissed her fingers, she did not seem to care.
As the water rose, it covered the Prince up to his neck; and then up to his mouth; and then his nose; and then it covered him completely, and as the Princess realized what had happened, she "gave a shriek and dove into the water". She grabbed the Prince and managed to pull him out of the hole, and then got him into the boat, and then rowed him back to land and had the servants bring him to her nursemaid, and over several hours they did all they could think to do for him.
Eventually, it proved to be enough, and he woke up; and at this point the Princess fell to the floor weeping. Her love, finally awakened, had broken the curse; the lake was brim-full, and had also crushed the King's sister; and as soon as the Princess had learned to walk like a normal person, she married the Prince and they lived HappilyEverAfter, having many children, "none of whom ever lost their gravity."
----
!!This story provides examples of:
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: The Princess, due to her curse.
* CursedWithAwesome: The Princess seems to think so at first; she doesn't understand why everyone makes such a fuss about her lack of gravity.
* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses
* FairyTaleMotifs: Princess? Check. King and Queen? Check. Evil fairy? Check. Handsome knight-errant prince? Check....
* HeroicBSOD: The Princess has one when she almost loses the lake.
* HeroicSacrifice: The Prince [[TearJerker doesn't mind dying if it means the Princess will be happy]].
* TheHyena: The Princess.
* IncrediblyLamePun: Lampshaded.
* InverseFertilityLaw
* {{Jerkass}}: The King's sister.
* LemonyNarrator: Not quite to the extent as some of the examples on the main page, but still noticeable.
* LoveAtFirstSight
* NoNameGiven: The Princess, the Prince, and most of the other characters as well.
* ThePhilosopher: Two of them, a Materialist and a Spiritualist. PlayedForLaughs.
* ThePowerOfLove
* RuleOfFunny: Quite a few fairy tale tropes are PlayedForLaughs.
* TheSevenBasicPlots: An excellent example of the ''Rebirth'' plot, in which the Princess is trapped in a state of being cut off from her humanity, and the love and sacrifice of her Prince bring her around in the end.
* SpankTheCutie: The King tries it to see if crying can make the princess recover her [[StealthPun gravity]]. It doesn't take.
* StealthPun: The Princess lacks gravity in [[TheHyena both senses of the word]].
* {{Troperiffic}}
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So this King and Queen desperately want a child -- you know how that goes -- and eventually they get one. The little girl is due to have a christening party when the King conveniently forgets to invite his sister, an evil woman with magical powers. The woman arrives just the same, and curses the Princess with a lack of gravity.
This means firstly that the gravity of the world has no pull on the girl's body: She floats everywhere, never has to worry about falling, and on walks must be accompanied by several courtiers who hold onto ribbons attached to her waist, lest the slightest breeze whip her away into the sky. But secondly, the gravity of life has no pull on the girl's soul: She never thinks seriously on any topic, cannot be made to empathize with people, and never cries, even when her father decides to give a good go at spanking her until she does. The court wisemen try to figure out how to undo this terrible curse, but as their schemes amount to stuff like "drain her blood until she's dead and then bring her back," the King declines to give it a try.
So the Princess grows up with no sense of unhappiness, except occasional annoyance when she isn't allowed her own way. And she laughed all the time, although "in her laugh there was something missing"... for similar to how you cannot appreciate light without darkness, you cannot appreciate happiness without sorrow. And so her laughing at times sounded much like crying.
And then one day, she happens to get pushed into the nearby lake. Turns out that when she's in the lake, her gravity is back, but when she leaves the water she floats again; and from that day on she is never so happy as when she is in the water.
One day, a Prince happened to come by and see her in the water, and because of her strange laughter, he thought she was drowning and tried to save her. Once that had been straightened out, he began to court her, but she was never serious about anything, least of all the possibility of love. The only reason she enjoyed his presence was that he could take her out to the water, and furthermore that he could grab her and fall into the water with her, a sensation which she very much enjoyed (as she put it, it felt like "falling up").
Unfortunately, about this time the King's sister discovered that the lake was making the Princess happy. And so she went down into her basement and followed a tunnel down below the lake, where she rigged a magic spell and got a large serpent to bite the ceiling of the chamber right below the lake, and the spell began to drain the lake.
The Princess figured this out before too long, and it scared her as nothing had ever scared her before. She was distraught at the idea of losing the lake. But nothing could be done until a man happened to spot, at the bottom of the lake, a plaque. It said that if one man in the whole kingdom was brave enough to give his life for the lake, by plugging the hole with his entire body, then the lake would refill; but if there were no man so brave, then the kingdom deserved its loss.
Eventually the Prince learned the details of this plight. He had not seen the Princess in many days, and by this point was deeply in love with her; and so he reasoned that the Princess would be no good without the lake, and went straightway to the King to offer his life. Only he made the condition that the Princess should stay out with him in a boat, and feed him and give him drink with her own hands until the deed was done. The King, not knowing that the man was a Prince, agreed, and soon the whole affair was set in motion.
At length the Prince, the Princess, and a small boat filled with food and drink were in the center of the lake. The Prince got into the hole, filling most of it with his legs and using his hands to stop up the little bit that remained. The Princess was at times curious and at times distracted, and she did not seem to entirely understand that the Prince would be dead once this was all done. But the water slowly began to come back. This fact began to take up the Princess's entire attention, which delighted the Prince, for he had not seen her happy in many days. Only she would hardly pay attention to him, and he had to coax her into feeding him; and even when he kissed her fingers, she did not seem to care.
As the water rose, it covered the Prince up to his neck; and then up to his mouth; and then his nose; and then it covered him completely, and as the Princess realized what had happened, she "gave a shriek and dove into the water". She grabbed the Prince and managed to pull him out of the hole, and then got him into the boat, and then rowed him back to land and had the servants bring him to her nursemaid, and over several hours they did all they could think to do for him.
Eventually, it proved to be enough, and he woke up; and at this point the Princess fell to the floor weeping. Her love, finally awakened, had broken the curse; the lake was brim-full, and had also crushed the King's sister; and as soon as the Princess had learned to walk like a normal person, she married the Prince and they lived HappilyEverAfter, having many children, "none of whom ever lost their gravity."
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!!This story provides examples of:
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: The Princess, due to her curse.
* CursedWithAwesome: The Princess seems to think so at first; she doesn't understand why everyone makes such a fuss about her lack of gravity.
* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses
* FairyTaleMotifs: Princess? Check. King and Queen? Check. Evil fairy? Check. Handsome knight-errant prince? Check....
* HeroicBSOD: The Princess has one when she almost loses the lake.
* HeroicSacrifice: The Prince [[TearJerker doesn't mind dying if it means the Princess will be happy]].
* TheHyena: The Princess.
* IncrediblyLamePun: Lampshaded.
* InverseFertilityLaw
* {{Jerkass}}: The King's sister.
* LemonyNarrator: Not quite to the extent as some of the examples on the main page, but still noticeable.
* LoveAtFirstSight
* NoNameGiven: The Princess, the Prince, and most of the other characters as well.
* ThePhilosopher: Two of them, a Materialist and a Spiritualist. PlayedForLaughs.
* ThePowerOfLove
* RuleOfFunny: Quite a few fairy tale tropes are PlayedForLaughs.
* TheSevenBasicPlots: An excellent example of the ''Rebirth'' plot, in which the Princess is trapped in a state of being cut off from her humanity, and the love and sacrifice of her Prince bring her around in the end.
* SpankTheCutie: The King tries it to see if crying can make the princess recover her [[StealthPun gravity]]. It doesn't take.
* StealthPun: The Princess lacks gravity in [[TheHyena both senses of the word]].
* {{Troperiffic}}
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