She's too pretty to get bedhead. |
Then you have the wise young fairy. She did say that she couldn't fully undo what the old fairy did, but did she have to set the princess up to sleep for one hundred years? For everyone that knew her, that would be like her dying, and for the princess, it would be like throwing her into a foreign country by herself and expecting her to survive. A lot could happen in one hundred years. Would the castle still be sound at that point, or would it crash in on top of her? What I'm saying is that this fairy made an effort, but she didn't really fix the problem. The problems of continuing the throne and a curse remained. It's not surprising that all of the fairies disappeared after she did that.
Let's take a look at the prince as well. He is possibly related to Sleeping Beauty (although distantly, if at all), and he is foolish. He hears about a beautiful princess trapped in a castle behind a ring of trees and immediately rushes off to get to her. The barrier stops anyone else from following him, but he doesn't seem to think much of that. Then he sees all of the servants in the castle asleep and doesn't think much of that, either. I suppose at least the fairy kept all of their food from spoiling or the fires in the castle from burning them. It was the least she could do. Then, when the prince makes it to the princess' room, she's so pretty that he just has to kiss her. There are tales where the man who finds her does worse, but that doesn't mean this is okay. However, Sleeping Beauty is immediately in love with this man and they get married the same night he woke her up. I guess she waited for him for one hundred years, but another day or two couldn't have been that difficult.
The moral of this story is: even when fairies are trying to help you, sometimes they don't do much. Alternatively, if you're going to be cursed, make sure you're pretty so there's no problem breaking the curse.
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