up to it. The innkeeper came at once to ask what he could do for him. Now, there were other guests there, and it was a busy place. The guests were all talking of the one matter: when the princess was going to marry the man who had killed the dragon. The wedding ought to have been long ago, but the bride and her parents kept putting it off. The knight listened to all this talk, and then he asked:
"Are you sure that it was that woodcutter who killed the dragon?"
They answered that it certainly was, for the heads were preserved in the palace.
The knight said nothing, but when he thought the proper time had come he rode to the palace. The princess saw him from the window, and she wondered who it might be. He was ushered in, and he went straight to the princess and told her everything. He asked her whether he might attend the wedding.
She answered: "I am not at all pleased with my marriage. I would much rather marry you, sir."
He asked her why.
"If he killed the dragon he must be a great man."
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