¶ … Tale Problem
The Enchanted Cloak and the Land of Prosperity
Once upon a time, there was a kingdom so vast and so wide that the kings of the surrounding empire sought for control. Now this land was not only vast, but it was the home of an enchanted queen, who had been blessed and cursed by a witch. Blessed, for her kingdom and her land would forever flourish in the hands of the ruler. Cursed, for her castle would forever be plagued with monstrous beasts as her servants. Cursed, for the queen herself would forever be confined within her tower, for the enchantments that surrounded her home were far and many.
Yet the kings of the surrounding magical land sought to claim the hand of the queen and the land of enchantment. For whosoever retained ownership of such a land -- and whosoever married such a queen -- would also be blessed beyond imagining.
Not everything, however, comes without a price. Whenever a neighboring ruler sought the hand of the queen, his failure would prove fatal, and the land in which he once ruled would dissolve and become part of the queen's land. It must have been in this manner that the queen's land doubled in size, for king after questing king failed in such an attempt, and his people fell under the enchanted lands. The cycle would continue for years on end, with the queen never aging and always cursed.
Now far off into a distant land, a prince heard the stories of the queen's curse. While he also heard of the blessings of the land that surrounded the cursed queen, he lamented the woman's problems, and was heartbroken at her seemingly unending curse. For this prince, kindly and goodly that he is, did not care for riches and lands. His own father taught him that the land was only as good as the ruler, and when ruled by a most benevolent and wizened hand, it would flourish without enchantment. It was the plight of the queen that stirred the prince's heart. And so it was with this goal in mind that the prince planned to set out.
The prince's father, an aging king with no other offspring, pleaded for his son not to carry out such a quest, for the father also knew what would happen to those who failed. But the prince was adamant, and the more he tried to forget, the more the queen's plight burned into his mind, and days passed where he could neither eat nor sleep until his father allowed him this permission.
Before the prince went off to carry out his journey, the old king bestowed upon him five of his bravest and most gifted knights. The king was also not without any magic of his own, and he entreated a sorcerer to give the prince a magical item, with which he could divide up between his knights. Employed by the king, the sorcerer took off his long cloak and handed it to the prince.
"This cloak has many different purposes and enchantments," said the sorcerer. "Divided, the power can benefit you and your knights on this journey."
Then the king handed his son a ring from his right finger.
"Son, I gift to you a ring that has kept my mind clear and calm all these years," said the king. "May it aid you as it did me in my lifetime."
The prince thanked the sorcerer and bade his father farewell. And away he went toward the distant and vast land of the enchanted queen.
It was in this journey that the prince's wisdom became tested by his five noble knights. After a day's journey, the prince and his knights sat amongst themselves around a campfire in a forest clearing, and they immersed themselves in deep conversation.
"The sorcerer has advised us to divide the cloak, my liege," said the first knight. His other companions nodded assent. "Will you do so fairly, prince?"
Suddenly, the knights clamored up, demanding that each deserved a greater share than his compatriot. The clamor became a wild noise, and it unnerved the prince, for the noise might attract a greater evil within the forests that they lay camped. The prince fiddled with his ring, and suddenly the solution became as clear in his eyes as that of freshly-blown glass.
He stood and brought the argument to a hushed noise, for while the knights watched each other with wary eyes, they respected their master's son.
"Each of you but one shall divide this cloak into fair shares amongst yourselves," said the prince. "And once you have divided it amongst yourselves, you shall divide your own shares into five fair portions."
"What shall the fifth knight do, our prince?" asked the knights in unison.
The prince nodded. "The first knight shall choose...
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