"The Goose Girl" published April 24,1932 in the American Weekly Sunday magazine painted by Edmund Princess was bethroughed to a Prince who lived far away. Neither had ever seen each other. She set off to marry him, riding on a horse that could talk, and with a serving maid. The serving maid was wicked, the Princess meek. The maid bullied her into changing horses and clothes; the Prince thought the maid (was) the Princess and wed her. She had the talking horses’ head cut off, so he couldn’t tell on her. The true Princess was put to work tending the royal geese. She had golden


In 1923, “Edmund Dulac, the Distinguished English Artist,” as he was billed on the covers, was contracted by the Hearst organization to paint watercolors for The American Weekly Sunday magazine. The contract lasted 30 years and Dulac painted 107 watercolors for thirteen different series until his last Arabian Nights in 1951.


Size: 9301px × 13082px
Photo credit: © Albert Seligman / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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