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Where are you?
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob, Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
Chapter 7, Boyle Rose.
A king and queen once upon a time rained in the country a great way off, where there were
in those days, there is.
Now, this king and queen had plenty of money, and plenty of iron clothes to wear, and plenty of good things to eat and drink, and a coach to write out in every day.
But though they had been married many years, they had no children, and this grieved them very much indeed.
But one day there's a queen walking by the side of the river. At the bottom of the garden,
she saw a poor little fish that had thrown itself out of the water and laid gasping
and nearly dead on the bank. Then the queen took pity on the little fish and threw it back
in into the river. And before it swam away, it lifted its head out of the water and said,
I know what your wish is, and it shall be fulfilled.
In return for your kindness to me, you will soon have a daughter.
Well, the little fish had more told, soon came to pass, and the queen had a little girl,
so very beautiful that the king could not see some looking on it for joy.
And said, you will hold a great feast and make merry, and show the child to all the land.
So, he asked his kidsman and knurbles and friends and neighbors.
But the queen said, I will have the fairies also, that they may, that they might be kind and good to our little daughter.
Now they're reflecting the fairies in the kingdom.
But, as the king and queen only had 12 golden dishes for them to eat out of, they were forced to leave one of the fairies without asking out.
Now, so 12 varies can each with a high red cap on her head and red shoes with high heels
on her feet, and a long white wand in her hand, and also the pieces over they gathered
round in a ring and gave all the best gifts for the Supreme Sess.
Another beauty, another richness, and so on until she had all that was good in the world.
Just as a member of them had done blessing her, a great noise was heard in the courtyard,
and a while it was brought that a 13th fairy was cut, was a black cap on her head, and
black shoes on her feet, and a broomstick in her hand, and presently up she came into the
dining hall.
Now, as she had not been asked to the feast, she was very angry, and scolded the king and
the queen very much and set to work to take her a bench. So she cried out, the king's daughter
shall in her 15th year be wounded by a spindle and fall down debt. Then the 12th of the
friendly theories, who had not yet given her gift, came forward and said that the evil
wish must be fulfilled, but that she could soften its mission. So her gift was that the king's
daughter when a spindle wounded her. She not really died but should only fall asleep for
100 years. However, the king hoped still to save his dead child altogether from the threatened
evil, to the order that all the spindles in the kingdom should be brought should be brought
up and burnt. But all the gifts of the first 11 tharies were in the meantime fulfilled,
The princess was so beautiful and well behaved and good and wise that everyone who knew her loved her.
It happened that, on the very day she was 15 years old, the king and queen were not at home, and she was left alone in the palace.
So she wrote about by herself and looked at all the rooms and chambers till that last she came to an old tower,
to which there was a narrow staircase ending with a little door. In the door, there was a
golden key, and when she turned it, the door spray opened, and there sat an only lady
spinning away very busy.
Why? How now, good mother, said the princess, what are you doing here? What are you doing there?
Spinning? Said the old lady, and nodded her head, humming the tune, while bus, on the wheel.
So pretty that little thing turns round.
So the princess took the spindle and began to try and spin, but scarcely, as she touched
it, the former fairy's prophecy was fulfilled, the spindle wounded her and she fell
down lifeless on the ground.
However, she was not that, but I only fallen into a deep sleep, and the king and the
queen who had just come home and all their court fell asleep too, and the horses snapped
and the staples and the dogs in the court,
the pigeons on the house top.
And the very flies, laptop on the walls,
even the fire on the half, laptop blazing.
And went to sleep.
The jack stopped and the spit that was turning about
with a goose bonnet, for the king's dinner stood still.
And the cook who was at the moment,
pulling the kitchen boy by the head
to give him a box on the air for something he had done a mess.
Let him go and both fell asleep, but Batta, who was slightly tasting the eel,
fell asleep with a jug of his lips, and thus everything stood still and slept,
silky.
A large hedge of horns soon grew round the palace, and every year it became higher and thicker.
Pell at last the old palace was surrounded and hidden, so that not even though we've
or the chimneys could be seen, but they went on a port through all the land of the beautiful
sleeping fire rows, while so the king's daughter was called, so that from time to time several
king's sons came and tried to break through the forgetting of the palace. This, however, none
of them could ever do for the horns and bushes lay hold of them as it were with hands, and they
there they stuck fast and died, wretchedly.
After many, many years, they came a king's son into that map,
and an old man told him the story of a thicket of thoughts,
and how a beautiful panistered behind it,
and how a wonderful princess called Pryorose
lay in it a sleep was all her court.
He told, too, how he had heard from his grandfather
that many, many princes had come, and had tried to break through the thicket, but that they had all
stuck last in it and died. When the young prince said, all the shun not frightened me,
I will go and see this bride arose. The old man tried to hinder him, but he was burned upon going.
Now that very day, 100 years were ended, and as a prince came to the thicket, he saw nothing but
beautiful flowering shrubs through which he went with ease and they shut in after him as thick as ever.
And he came last to the palace and there in the court to lay the dogs asleep.
And the horses were standing in staples, and on the roof set the pigeons asleep with a heads under their wings.
And when he came into the palace, the flies were sleeping in the walls, the spit was standing still.
still, the butler had a jug of air on that his lips, going to drink for jolt, the main
sat with a fell in her lap ready to be plucked, and the cook in the kitchen was still holding
up her hand as if she was going to be boy. Then he went on still father, and all was so still
that he could hear every breath to true, till that nasty came to the old tower, and open the door
of the little room in which Brian was and then she lay fast asleep on the couch by the window.
She looks so beautiful that he could not take his eyes off her so he stepped down and gave her a kiss.
But the moment he kissed her, she opened her eyes in a work and smiled upon him and they went
out together, and soon the king and queen also worked, and all the court and gazed, all
each other was great wonder.
And the horse had shook themselves in the dog's tent up and barked, the pigeons took
their heads from under their wings, and looked about and flew into the fields, the flies
and the walls burst again, the fire on the pigeon blazed up, round went the jack and ran
with a goose for the kings dinner upon it. The butt of the fash is Georgia Bell, the
main vent on flagging the bow, and the cook gave the boy the box on his ear, and then the
prints and drivers were married, and the wedding feast was given, and they lived happily
together all their lives long. The end, good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm.
Chapter 8, The Dog and the Sparrow The Shabbard's dog had a master who took Nunk
hair of him, but got in at him suffer the greatest hunger. At last he could bear it
no longer. So he took to his heels and off he ran in a very sad and sorrowful mood.
On the road he met a sparrow that said to him, why are you so sad by friend?
Because, so the dog, I am very, very hungry, and have nothing to eat?
If that be all, answer the spell out, come with me into the next town, and I will soon find you plenty of food.
So, only went together into the town, and as they passed by a butcher shop, the Sparrow
said to the dog, stand there in a little while till I peck you down a piece of meat.
So, the Sparrow pushed upon the shop, and having first looked carefully about her to see
if anyone was watching her, she pecked and scratched at a stake that lay upon the edge of
shut to not last down it up. Then the dog snapped it up and scrambled away with it into
a corner where he soon ate it all up. Well, so the Spire, you shall have some more if you
will. So come with me to the next shop and I will pack you down another stake. When the dog
had eaten this too, the Spire said to him, well my good friend, have you had enough now?
I have had plenty of meat on the heat, but I should like to have a piece of bread to eat
after it.
Come with me then, Sivisparam and you shall soon have that too.
So she took him to a baker shop and pecked up two walls that lay in the window to
they fell down, and as a dog still wished for more, she took him to another shop and pecked
down some more for him, when that was eaten the smell asked him whether he had enough
Now, yes, said he, and now let us take a walk a little way out of the town.
So they both went out upon the high road, but as the weather was warm, they had not
gone far before the dog said, I am very much tired, I should like to take a nap.
Very well, on to this bar, do so, and in the meantime I will patch up on that bush, so
the dog stretched himself out on the road and fell fast asleep.
Last he slept, they came by a carter with a cart drawn by three horses and loaded
with two casks of wine.
The sparrow was seeing that the carter did not turn out of the way, but would go in the
track go on in the track in which the dog lay, so as to drive over him, called up stop,
stop Mr. Carter, or it shall be the worst for you, but the carter grumbling himself.
You can make it the worse for me indeed, what can you do?
Cracked his whip and drove the his cart over the poor dog,
so that the wheels crushed him to death.
There, quite a spell.
They'll cruel villain.
They'll have killed my friend the dog.
Now mind what I say.
This deed of wine shall cost the all thou art worth.
Do your worst in a welcome.
Set the fruit.
What harm can you do me and past on?
But the spell crept under the tilt of the cart and pecked at the bum of one of the cast so she loosened it.
And then all the wine went out without the cart to see it.
And last he looked around and saw that the cart was dripping and the cast quite empty.
What an unlucky wretch I am, cried he, not wretch enough yet!
So the spell, as she invited upon the head of one of the horses and pecked at him till he read up and ticked.
When the Carter saw this, he drew out his hatchet and aimed a blow at the spell, meaning to kill her, but she flew away and the blow fell upon the horse.
Poor horses had such force that he fell down dead.
I'm lucky to reach that I am, quite he not reaching out for yet, say the spell.
And as the Carter wound one was all the other two horses, she again crept under the tools of the cart and pecked out the bone of the second cast.
So that all the wine went up.
When the cat is saw this, he again cried out, miserable, wretched that I am, but the
Sparrow on is not wretched nothing yet, and perched on the head of the second horse and
pegged at him. Pegged at him too. The cat ran up and struck at her again with his hatchet,
but away she flew and the blow fell upon the second horse and killed him on the spot.
On Mackey wretched that I am, said he not wretched enough yet. So the Sparrow and perching upon
the third horse she began to pecking to, the cartel was mad with fury and without
looking about him or caring what he was about struck again at the swear but killed his
bird horse as he'd done the other two and the horse and his role, which that I am
creating, not reaching up yet. As of the spur as she flew away, now I will play in
punish the yet thy own house. The cartel was forced at last to leave his cart behind him
and to go home over the flow of the rage and relaxation.
A lass said she used it as a white.
What in luck has before me?
My wine is also, and they horses all three dead.
A lass husband, replaced she.
And a wicked bird has come into the house and has bought with her all the birds in the world.
I am sure they are falling upon our corn and the loft and our eating it up at such a rate.
A wing ran the husband upstairs in sort of thousands of birds sitting upon the floor eating
up his corn, with the sperm in the midst of them.
I'm lucky to reach that I am, Kraylor Carter, where he saw that the corn was almost all gone,
not rich enough yet, so the sperm, by cruelty shall cost thee thy life yet, and a way she flew,
the Carter's singing that he had lost, he had lost, all that he had went down into his kitchen,
and was still not sorry for what he had done, but sat himself angerily and so can he in the chimneys corner.
But the sparrow sat on the outside of the window and cried,
Carter, like cruelty shall cost thee thy life.
With that, he jumped up in a rage seized his hatchet and threw it at the sparrow,
but it missed her, and only broke the window.
The sparrow now hopped in, perched upon the window, see, and cried,
Carter, it shall cost thee thy life.
Then he became mad and blind with rage and structural windows seat for such force that he
clefted in two. And as a spowler flew from a place to place, the garden and his wife was so
furious that they broke all their furniture, glasses, chairs, benches, the table and at last
the walls, without touching the bird at all. In the end however, the quarter and the white
said, shall I kill her at once? No, quite he. That is letting her off too easily. She shall
die a much more cruel death. I will eat her.
With a spell again to flutter about and stretch up her neck and grove. Carter, it shall
cost thee thy life yet, with that he could wait no longer, so he gave his wife the hatch
and cry wife. Strike at the bird and kill her in thy hand, and the wife struck, but
She missed her aim and hit her husband on the head so that he fell down dead and
spur flew quietly home to her nest.
The end.
Good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and World Helm Grim.
Chapter 9 The 12 Dancing Princesses There was a King who had well beautiful daughter
They slept in 12 beds all in one room, and when they went to bed, the doors were shut and locked up.
But every morning their shoes were found to be quite warm, through, as if they had been danced in all night.
And yet nobody could find out how it happened or where they had been.
Then the king made it known to all the land that if any person could discover the secret,
and find out what was the princess' dance in the night. He should have the one he liked best for his wife.
And she became out of her death. But whoever tried and did not succeed after three days and three nights, she could be put to death.
A king of sons in the kingdom, he was well entertained and immediately,
was taken to the chamber next to the one where the princess lay in the 12th bed.
There, he was a certain watch where they went to dance, and in order that nothing
might pass with that his hearing it, the door of this chamber was left open.
But the king's son, the soon-valouslype, and when he awoke in the morning, he found that
the princesses had been had all been dancing, for the souls of his shoes were for the
poarts.
The same thing happened, the second and third night, so the king ordered his head
to be cut off. After him, came several others, but they all had the same luck and all
lost their lives in the same manner. Now, a chance that an old soldier
would have been wounded in battle, I could fight no longer past through the country
where this came rain. And as he was travelling through a good, he met an old woman who
asked him where he was going. I hardly know where I am going or what I had better
do, so the soldier. But I think I should like very well to find out where it is the princess's
deaths. And then in time I might be a king. Well, so the old thing, I don't know very
hard task. Only take care not to drink any of the wine, which one of the princesses will
bring to you the evening. And as soon as she leaves you, pretend to be fuzz asleep.
Then she gave him a cloak, and said, as soon as you put that on your become invisible,
you will then be able to follow the princesses wherever they go, and the soldier had
all this good council, he determined to try his luck. So he went to the king and said he was
willing to undertake the task. He was, as well, received as the others had been, and the king
ordered fine royal robe to be given him. And when the evening king, he was led to the outer chamber,
just as he was going to bite down, the artists of the princesses brought him a cup of wine.
But the soldiers who had all the way secretly taken care of not to drink a drop.
Then he made himself down on his bed, and then a little while began to snore very
loud as if he was fast asleep.
One of 12 princesses had this, they hardly, they not, hardly.
And the owner said, this fellow too might have done the wise thing, then this is right
in this way.
And they rose up and opened their jaws and boxes and took out their fine clothes and dressed themselves at the glass
and skipped about as if they were eager to begin blasting.
But the youngest said, I don't know how it is, while you are so happy, I feel very uneasy.
I'm sure some of this charts will support more before and of us use important set of artists.
You're always afraid.
How do you forgotten how many kings some have already watched in vain?
And who and as for the soldier, even if I had not given him this leaping sword,
who would have slept sadly enough?
When they were already they went and looked at the soldier, but he snored on and dead not
still hand-offered. So they thought they were quite safe, and the elders went up to her own bed
and clapped her hat and the bed sank into the floor and a trap door flew open. The soldiers
saw them going down through the trap door one after another and the elders leading away.
And thinking he had no time to lose, he jumped up, put on the cloak which the old woman had given
him and followed them. But in the middle of the stairs he chored on the gown of the youngest princess
and she cried out to her sisters. All is not right, someone took all of my gown,
used city creature, so the others. It is nothing but a name in the war, then down the
all went, and at the bottom they found themselves in the most delightful group of trees, and the
leaves were all of silver and glittered and sparkle beautifully. The soldier wish to take some
take away some token of place, so the brought off a little, we broke off a little branch,
and they came and now mowing from the tree, and the youngest of his dead, and again,
I am sure all is not right, do you not hear that noise that never happened before?
But the elder said it is only our princes who are shouting for joy at our approach.
And they came to another group of trees where all the news were of gold and afterwards
to a fire where the news were all glittering diamonds and the soldier broke a blanch from
each, and every time they were the loud noise, which made the youngest sister tremble
with fear, but the other still said it was only the princess who were crying the joy.
So they went on until they came to a great lake, and at the side of the lake, then they
12 little boats, who 12 hands in princesses, princes in them, who seemed to be waiting
there for the princesses.
One of the princesses went into each boat, and the soldiers stepped into the same boat
for the youngest. As they were growing on the neck, the print sales in the boat for the youngest
princess and the soldier said, I do not know why it is, but the way I'm grown was all my
mind if we do not get on some fastest usual. And I am quite tired. The boat seems very heavy today.
It is only the heat of the weather, so the princess. I feel it very warm too. On the other side of
the neck, sort of buying it eliminated castle from which came the merry music of horns
and trumpets. There they all landed and landed to the castle and each prince danced to it
his princess. And the soldier, who was all the time invisible, danced with him too. And when
any of the princesses had a couple of one set by her, he drank it all up so that when she put
of the cocktail mouth that was empty, had this, too, the end of the system was terribly
frightened, but the others always said, it's time. They danced until three o'clock
in the morning, and then all their shoes were worn out, so that they were obliged to leave off.
The princes rode them back, but again over the lake, but this time the soldier placed himself
in a boat without his princess, and on the opposite shore they took leave of each other. The princess
is promising to come again in the next night. When they came to the stairs, the soldier ran
on before the princesses and made himself down. And as the 12th sister slowly came up from
very much tired, they had him snoring in his bed. So they said, now all is quite safe
than they address themselves, put away their fine clothes, pulled off their shoes and went
at that. In the morning, the soldiers said nothing about what had happened, but determined to
seen more of the stranded venture and went again the second and third date and everything
happened just as before. The princess is dashed each time till the shoes were torn,
were worn to pieces and then you turned home. However, on the third night the soldier
carried away one of the golden cups as a token of where he had been. As soon as a time came
when he was to declare the secret he was taken before the came over the three branches
and the golden cup, and the 12 princesses stood listening behind the door to hay what he would say,
and when the king asked him, why would you like 12 daughters, dogs at night, he answered,
with 12 princes in a castle underground, and then he told the king all that had happened and showed
him the three branches and the golden cup which he had put with him. And the king called to the princesses,
and asked him, whether what the soldier said was true, and when they saw that they were discovered,
and that it was a no use to deny what had happened. They confessed it all and the team asked
Soldier which of them he would choose for his wife and he answered, I'm not very young so I will have
the eldest and they were married that very day and the soldier was chosen to be the king's heir,
the end, and night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
Chapter 10, the fisherman and his wife.
How is one's fisherman who lived with his wife in a pigsty, close by the seaside?
The fisherman used to go up all day long, up the shape, and one day, as he sat on the shore
on his rod, looking at the spabbling waves and watching his mind, all in a sudden his
load was dragged away deep into the water, and enjoying it up, he pulled out a great fish.
But the fish said, pray, let me live, I am not a real fish, I am an enchanted prince.
Put me in the water again and let me go, or hold, so the man, you need not make so many words
about matter. I will have nothing to do with a fish that can talk, so swim away, sir, as
soon as he please. Then he put him back into the water, and a fish started straight down to the
bottom and met a long streak of fire behind him on the way. When the fisherman went home to his wife
in the pig's thigh, he told her how he had caught a great fish and how it had told him it was
and enchanted prints and how on hearing it speak here let it go again. Did you not ask
did not you ask it for anything? So the white we live very rich at the hip and it's nasty
daddy pegs time. Do go back until the fish we want a snug little cottage. The fisherman did not
much like the business. However he went to the sea shore and when he came back the water looked
all yellow and green, and he stood up at what his edge and said,
oh man of the sea, hugged into me, my wife, Elsaville, will have her own will and had sent me
to beg a burn of thee. Then the fish came swimming to him and said, well, what is her will?
What is your wife want? Ah, said the fisherman, she said that when I had caught you,
I ordered her to ask you for something before I let you go. She does not like living any longer in the pig's day and wants to snuggle for cottage.
Go home then.
So the fish, she is at the cottage already.
So the moment home and saw his wife standing at the door of a nice, trimmed little cottage.
Come in, come in and said she, is not this better, is not this much better than the filthy pig's day we had.
And there was a parlor and a bed chain for an occasion and behind the cottage, there was
a little garden planted with all sorts of flowers and fruit, and there was a courtyard behind
with ducks and chickens.
Ah, set the fishermen, how happily we shall move now.
We will try to do so at least, set his wife.
Everything went right for a weeble too, and then Dean Elcifo said,
Aspen, there's not near, room enough for us in this cottage, the courtyard and the garden
I agreed to have too small, as you'd like to have a large stone castle to live in,
go to the bishop and tell him to give us a castle.
Wife?
So the bishop and I don't like to go to him again, for perhaps he will be angry, we ought
to be easy with his pretty cottage to live in.
Nonsense, southern pipe.
You'll do it very willingly.
I know.
Go along and try.
His heart was very heavy, and when he came to the sea, it looked blue and gloomy, but it was very calm, and he went close to the edge of the waves and said,
On the man of the sea, hawking to me, my wife also go, or her her her own will, and has sent me to be the burn of thee.
Well, what does she want now, so the fish?
Ah, so the man, dolphin me, my wife wants to live in a storm castle.
Go home, then, so the fish, she is standing at the gate of it already.
So a way went the fisherman and found his wife standing before the gate of the great castle.
see, she said that said she is not this grand.
Was that they went into the castle together and found a great many sevens there?
And all the rooms all richly furnished and full of golden chairs and tables.
And behind the castle was a garden and around it was a park, a mile long full of sheep and goats and hairs and deer.
And in the courtyard was stables and cowhouses.
Well, said the man, now we will live cheerfully and happy in this beautiful castle for the rest of our lives.
Perhaps we may, said the wife, but let us sleep upon it before we make up our mind to that.
So, we went to bed.
The next morning when Dean Elcidol awoke was brought daylight and she drove the fish and then with her elbow and said,
Get up husband and bestow yourself for we must be king of all the man.
Life, life, to the man. Why should we wish to be the king?
I will not be king. Then I will, said she, but life, to the fisherman,
How can you be king? The fish cannot make you a king.
husband, since she seen him more about it but grew and tried, I will be keen for the man
went away quite so forth to think that his wife should be she want to be keen.
This time he looked a dark grey colour and was overscred with the carving rays and the
bridges of foam as he cried out.
Oh man of the sea, how can the name my wife Elcidor will help her own world and has
sent me to beg a brutally. Well, what should what would she have now, said the fish,
and asked to the poor man. My wife wants to be king go home so that the fish she is king already.
Then the fisherman went home and as he came close to the palace he saw a trip of soldiers
and had the sound of drums and trumpets and when he went in he saw his wife sitting on a
sort of golden diamonds with a golden crown upon her head and on each side of her
stood six fair maidens each ahead towards the other well wife said the fisherman
are you king? yes said she I am king looked at her for a long time
piece of a wife would have find thing it is to be king now we shall never have anything
more to wish for as long as we live. I don't know how that may be said she never
in the long time. I am king it is true but I begin to be tired of that and I think I
should like to emperor. And last wife, why should you wish to be emperor? Send that
fisherman husband said she, go to the fish, I say I will be emperor. Oh, I will apply the
the fish cannot make an emperor, I am sure, and I should not ask him for such a thing.
I and King said Elcito, and you are my slave, so go at once. So the fish in the north
horse to go, and he muttered, as he went along, this will come to know good. Just too much
to ask, the fish will be tired at last, and then you shall be sorry for what we have done.
soon came to the sea shore and the water was quite black and muddy and a mighty
roll in blue over the waves and rolled them about. Then he went as near as he
cut to the water's brain can said, I'll manage to see how can to mean my wife
Elcidil will have her own wool and have to send to me to beg a broom of thee.
What would she have now, so the fish, ah, so the fish and then she wants to be
The Emperor go home so that she is Emperor already.
So he went home again and as he came near, he saw his wife Elcibo sitting on a very
naughty throne in the name of solid gold and with a great crown in her head, four to
the art high and on each side of her stood her guards and attendance in a row, each one
smaller than the other, from the tortoise giant down to a little wolf, no bigger than
my finger and before her stood princes and cubes and elves and the fisherman went up to her and said,
why are you Emperor? Yes, Satshi, I am Emperor, are Suttman and as he pays upon her,
would I think it is to be Emperor, husband, Satshi? Why should we stop at being Emperor? I will
be the pope next.
Oh wife, why?
Said he, how can you be pope?
There is nothing there is but one pope at a time in Christendom.
Hasband said she, I will be pope from this very day.
But, replied the husband, the fish cannot make you pope.
What nonsense, said she.
If he can make an emperor, he can make a pope.
Go and try him.
So the fish and then went, but when he came to the shore, the wind was raging and the sea
was tossed up and down and boiling waves, and the ships were in trouble and rolled
fairly upon the tops of the pillows.
In the middle of the heaven, so as a little piece of blue sky, the towards the south
or as red as if a dreadful storm was rising.
This site, the fisherman was dreadfully frightened and he trembled so that his knees knocked it together.
But still he went down, near to the shore and said,
O man of the sea, hard-continue, my wife, El Sabil, will have her own will and have sent me to beg a boon of thee.
What does she want now, El Sabil fish, El Sabil fish, and my wife wants to be Pope, go home,
so that she is purple already.
Then the fisherman went home and found those of those sitting on a swim that was too
large high, and she had three great crowns on her head, and around her stood all the
pump and power of the church, and on each side of her were two rows of burning lights
of all sizes, the greatest as large as the highest, and biggest tower in the world, and the least
and the least no larger than a small flashlight.
wife, superficie man, as he looked at all this greatness.
Are you Pope? Yes, Sashi. I am Pope.
Well, wife, reply he, it is a grand thing to be Pope.
And now he's the only one who can be nothing greater.
I will think about that, so the wife.
And they went to bed, but Damon also built a not-sleep all night for thinking what she should be next.
And last, as she was dropping asleep, morning broke in the sunrobes.
Ha!
For she, as she woke up and looked at it through the window, after all I cannot prevent
the sun rising.
At this thought she was very angry and waking her husband and said, husband, go to
the fish and tell him, I must be Lord of the Sun and Moon.
The fisherman was heart asleep, but the fort fled in him so much that he started and
I'll ask wife, said he, cannot you be easy with being Pope? No, said she. I am very
uneasy as long as with some son and moon rise without my moon. Go to the fish at once.
Then the man went to shivering with fear and as he was going down to the shore, a triple
normal notes, so that the trees in the very rock shook, and all the heaven begin black
with stormy clouds and the lightning is played, and the thunder is rolling, and you might
have seen in the sea great black waves swirling up like mountains with crowns of white
foam upon the head, and the fishermen crept towards the sea and cry out as well as you could.
Oh man, of the sea, harking to me, my wife El Sabil will have her own world and have sent me to beg a burn of thee.
What did she want now, so the fish?
Oh, said he, she wants to be Lord of the Sun and move.
Go home, so the fish, to your pigsty again, and there they live to this very day.
the end. Good night.
Grims very tells by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
Chapter 11. The Willow Ren and the Bear.
Once in some time the bear and the wolf are working on the forest,
and the bear had a bird singing so beautifully, and he said,
But the wolf, what bird is it that sings so well?
That is the king of birds, so the wolf, before whom must bow down?
In reality, the bird was the winner of men.
If that's the case, so the bird, I shouldn't very much like to see as royal palace.
Come, take me there.
And it's not done quite as you seem to think, so the wolf, he must wait until the queen comes.
cups. Soon afterwards the queen arrived with some food in her beak, and the Lord
King came to, and they began to feed in young ones. The bear would have liked to go
at once, but the wolf held him back by the sea even said, no, you must wait until
the Lord and Lady Queen have gone away again, so he took stock of the whole within
this night and trotters away. The bear, however, could not rest until he had seen the
one palace and when a short time had passed, went to it again, the king and queen had just
thrown out, so he peeped in and saw five or six young ones lying there.
His Santa Royal Palace cried the bear, it is a wretched palace and you are not King's children,
you are disrepeatable children.
When the young rense her that, they were frightened and angrily inscrowned, no, that we are
not our parents, our honest people, there you will have to pay for that.
The bear and the wolf grew uneasy and turned back and went into their holes.
The young were over at the tower of a continued crying screen, and when their parents again brought through, they said,
We all not so much as touch one-size-neck.
No, not if we were dying of hunger until you have settled whether we are respectable children or not.
The bear has been here and has insulted us.
Then the old king said,
be easy, he shall be punished, and he at once flew with a crane to the bench cave and
called him, old grower, why have you insulted my children, you shall suffer for it, they
will punish you by a bloody war. And that's a war was announced to the bear, and all
four footed animals were summoned to take part in. It, oxen, asses, cows, deer, and every other
animal that earth contained, and the winner when summoned everything which flew in the air,
not only birds, large and small, but images, and hollets, bees and flies had to come.
When the time came for the water begin, the winner ran sent out spies to discover who
was the enemies commander in chief.
For the night, who was the most crafty flew into the forest where the enemy was assembled,
the head and south beneath the leaf of the tree where the password was to be announced.
Best of the day, and he called the box before him and said,
Fox, you are the most cunning of all animals. You shall be general and lead us.
Good, so the box. But what's the thing, though, shall be a gree upon?
No one knew that, so the box said,
I have a fine, long, with pushy tail, which almost looks like a plume of red feathers.
When I left my tail up quite high, all is going well and you must charge that if I
light it hanging down run away as fast as you can. Within that had heard that she flew
away again and revealed everything down to the new newsy detail. When the day broke and
when the battle was to begin all the forthers of animals came running out with such
noise with us tripled. The Willow Renn, with his army also came flying through the air, with
such a humming and blurring and swarming, and everyone was uneasy and afraid, and on both sides
they advanced against each other. But the Willow Renn sent down the Hornet, with orders
to settle underneath the box's tail, and steam them with all his might.
When the fox felt the first thing, he started so that he lifted one leg from pain, but
he bought, and still kept his tail high in the air. At the second state he was forced to put
it down for a moment. At the third he could not, he could hold up no longer, screamed and put
his tail between the legs. When the animals saw that, they thought all was lost in the
fantasy, each into his hull and the birds and one in the battle.
Then the King and Queen threw home to their children and cried, children rejoice, eat and drink
your heart content, we have won the battle, but the young ones said, we will not eat yet,
but their must come to the nest and beg for part and say that we are honourable children,
before we will do that. Then, the willowen flew to the bear's home and cry growler,
you are to come to the nest to my children and beg their part and, or else, every rib of your body
shall be broken, so the bear, perhaps the other and the greatest fear and beg their part and,
And now, at last, the young ones were satisfied and sat down together and ate and drank.
And they married till quite late into the night.
The end.
Good night.
Grim's fairy towns by Jacob Grim and will help grip.
Chaps her 12, the frog prints.
One fine evening a young princess put on her bonnet ten blocks, and went out to take a walk by herself in a wood, and when she came to the course for the water that rose in the midst of it, she sat herself down to rest a while.
Now she had a golden ball in her hand, which was her favourite plaything, and she was always
tossing it up in the into the air and catching it again as it fell.
After a time she threw it up so high that she missed catching it as it fell, and the ball
bounded away and rolled a non-op on the ground, that had last, that held down into the spring.
Princess looked into the screen after her ball, but it was very deep, so deep that she
could not see the bottom of it. Then she began to belittle her loss and said,
I'll ask, if I could only get my ball again, I would give all my fine clothes and jewels
and everything that I have in the world.
While she was speaking of rock put its head out of the water and said,
Princess, why do you reap so quickly?
And last, said she, what can you do for me, you now see folk?
Why golden ball has fallen into the spring?
The frog said, I will not your pearls and jewels and fine clothes, but if you will love me and let me live with you,
and eat from off your golden plate and sleep upon your bed, I will bring you your ball again.
What nonsense, for the princess, this silly frog is talking.
He can never even get out of the spring to visit me, so he may be able to get my ball from me,
and therefore I will tell him he shall have what he asks. So she said in the frog,
well, if you will bring me my ball, I will do all you ask. Then the frog put his head down
and dive deep under the water, and after a little while, he came up again with a ball in his mouth
and threw it to the edge of a spring. As soon as the young princess or her board she
ran to pick it up and she was so a rejoitor habit in her hand again that she never thought
of the plot but ran home with it as far as she could. Therefore called after her stay princess
and take me as you as you said but she did not stop to hear a word.
The next day just as the princess has sat down to dinner she had a strange noise tap tap
flash flash, as if something was coming up the marble staircase and soon after it,
there was a gentle mock-up door and a little voice cried out and said,
open the door my princess dear open the door to thy true love here,
and mind the words that though, and I said by the fountain call in the greenwood shade.
Then the princess ran to the door and opened it and then she saw the fog,
who she had quite forgotten. At this site she was sadly frightened and shutting the doors
as far as she could, came back to her seat. The king, her father, seeing that something
had frightened her, asked her, what was the matter? There was a nasty fog, said she had
the door that lifted my bone from the outer of the screen this morning. I told him that
he should live here with me. He should live with me here, thinking that he could never
get out of the screen, but there he is at the door and he wants to come in. While she
She was speaking before I met again at the door and said, open the door my princess
dear, open the door to the light true love hair and mind the web that fell and I said
I'd have found you in the corner the green wood shade.
Then the king said to be in the princess, as you have given your words you must keep
it so go and let him in.
She did so and I further hopped into the room and then straight on.
tap flash flash from the bottom from the bottom of the room to the top, though you came up close
to the table with a princess set. Pray, you lived me upon chair, said he to the princess,
and let me sit next to you, and we sit next to you. As soon as she had done this to
forks, put your plate to nail it to me that I made it out of it. This she did, and when he had
eaten as much as he could, he said, now I am tired, carrying me upstairs and putting me
more dead into your bed. So the end of princess, the very unwilling took him up in her hand
and put him upon the pillow on her own bed where he stepped all night long. As soon as it was
night he jumped up, hop down sand and went out of the house. Now then I hope princess, I'm nasty
as gone and I shall be troubled with him no more, but she was mistaken, or a night came again.
She had the same tapping at the door on the floor came once more and said,
open the door by princess dare, I'm a door to light through my hair,
and my new ones that though and I said,
what if I'm the cool and clean with shade?
I'm in the princess open the door before came in and slacker upon her pillow
as before her morning work, to the morning work.
I was that night, you did the same.
When the princess arrived on the following morning, she was astonished to see,
Instead of the flock, a handsome prince gazing on her with the most beautiful eyes you have ever seen
and standing at the head of her bed. He told her that he had been enchanted by a spiteful fairy,
where changed him into a flock, and that he had been faded so, to abide, till some princess
should take him out of the spring, and let him eat from her plate and sleep upon her bed for three nights.
You, set the prince, have broken this cruel charm, has broken his cruel charm.
And now I have nothing to wish for, but that you should go with me into my father kingdom,
but I will marry you and love you as long as you live.
The young princess, you may be sure, was not long in saying yes to all this, and as this
of a gay, a gay, coach, drove up, with eight beautiful horses, decked with plumes of
feathers, and a golden harness, and behind the coach were the princes seven, faithful,
high-rank, who had bewailed the misfortunes of his dear master during his
emchantment, so long and serbitally, that his heart had well nigh blast,
then they took leave of the king and brought into the coach with eight horses,
and all set out full of joy and marionant for the princess from the princess kingdom.
For the rich safely and there they look happily, a great many years.
The end.
Okay night.
Grims very tells by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
chapter 13. Cat and mouse in partnership. A setting cat had made the acquaintance of the mouse
and had said so much to her about the great northern friendship she felt for. But at length,
the mouse agreed that they should live and keep house together. But we must make a provision for winter
or else we shall suffer from hunger, so the cat. And you, little mouse, cannot venture everywhere
or you will be caught in traps someday. The good advice was followed, and the part of that
was bought, the lady not know where to put it. At length after much consideration, the cat said,
I know no plans to write, but will be better stored up than in the chat, but no one does take
anything away from them. We will set it beneath the altar and not touch it until we are
really indivisive. So the part was placed in the safety, but it was not long before the cat
had a great DNA. And so into the mouse, I want to tell you something within the mouse.
My cousin has bought a little sun into the world and has asked me to be good mother. He is
White was Bansphots, and I underhauled him over the front of the chrysanthemee.
Let me go out today and you look after the house by yourself.
Yes, yes, out of the mess. By all means go and if you did anything very good to eat, think of me.
I should like a drop of sweet, red chrysanthemee wine myself.
All this, however, was untrue. The cat had no cousin and had not been asked to be good, mother.
She went straight to the church, stole to the pot of fat, began to lick as it and licked
the top of the fat off.
Then she took a walk upon the roofs of the town, looking out for opportunities, and
then strut herself in the site, and licked her lips wherever she thought of the pot of
fat, and not until there was even that she would turn home.
Well, hey you are again, 7th house. No doubt you, you have had a married day.
All went off well on some cat. What name do they give the child?
Top off, 7th cat quite clean. Top off, cried the mouse.
I don't know, very odd and uncommon name. Is it a usual one in your family?
What does that matter, 7 cat? It is no worse than crumb stigler as your
godchildren were called.
Before the long the cat was seized by another bit of yawning, she said to the mouse,
he must do me a favor, and once more managed the house her a day, and then I am again
asked to be good mother and as a child has a white ring around its neck, I cannot refuse.
The good mouse can send it for the cat to crypt behind the town walls to the church and
devoured half the pot of fat. Nothing ever seemed so good as what one keeps to one so.
said she and was quite satisfied with her day's work. When she went home the mouse implied
and what was the child? Chris it? Half done, on sick cat. Half done? What are you saying?
I never heard the name in my life. I'll wager anything it is not in the calendar.
The cat's mouths soon began to water the horse on more licking, all good things go in
three, so she.
I am asked to Sam and go another again.
The child is quite black only it has white paws, but with that exception it has not a
single white hair when it's a whole body.
This only happens once every three years.
You will let me go, once you top off, half done onto the mouth.
the mouse, they are such odd names, they make me very thoughtful for you, so that
home, so cat, and your dark grey phone coat and long tail, and our filled with fancy,
that's because you do not go out in the daytime. Dreaming cats absence, the mouse came
the house and put it in order with a greedy cat entirely empty the port of fact.
When everything is eaten up, one has some peace, such she need to herself, and a world
films in fact, and she did not return home to a night. The mouse at once asked what name
had been given to the birdchart. It will not please you more than the others, so the cat
he is called O' Gone. O' Gone! Try the mouse. That is the most suspicious name of all. I have never
seen it in print, or gone, what can that mean? And she shook her head, called herself up and lay down to sleep.
From this time forth, no one invited the cat to be good mother, but when the winter had come,
and there was no longer anything to be found outside, the mouse thought of their provision,
and said, come, cat, we will go to our pot of fat to which we have stored up for ourselves.
We shall enjoy that. Yes, answer the cat. You will enjoy it as much as you would enjoy sticking out
ding-ditaum of yours out the window. They set out on their way, but when they arrived, they put
it back, suddenly you still in the place, but it was empty. All that so the mouse, now I see what
has happened, now it comes to light. You are a true friend, you have devoured all when you were
standing godmother, first top off, then half done, then will you hold your tongue
by the cat? One word more and I will eat you too. All gone was already on the poor
masses lips, scarcely had she spoken it before the cat sprung on her, seized her and
swallowed her down. Veryly, that is the way of the wrong. See and,
Good night.
Grimm's very tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm.
Chapter 14 The Goose Girl The king of a great land died and left his queen to take
care of their only child.
This child was a daughter who was very beautiful and her mother not had daily and was
very kind to her, and there was a good fairy too who was fond of the princess and held
her mother to watch over her. When she grew up, she was patrols to a prince who lived
a great way off, and as the time drew near a her to be married, she got ready to set off
on a journey to his country. Then the queen, her mother, packed up a great and many costly things,
jewels and gold and silver, trinkets find dresses, and in short everything that became a royal
bride, and she gave her a waiting mate to ride with her and give her into the bride groom's hands,
and each had a horse for the journey. Now the princess's horse was a very skipped,
and it was called Vanara and could speak. When the time came for them to set out,
The fairy went into her bed chamber and took a new life and cut off a look of her hair and gave it to the princess and said,
take care of it, dear child, for it is a charm that may be of use to you on the road.
Then they all took a sorrowful leave of the princess, and she put the look of hair into her bosom.
Let upon her horse and set our honours on into her bright grooms kingdom.
One day, as they were writing a long-buyer book, the princess began to feel very thirsty.
As she said to her maid, pray, get down and fetch me some water in my garden cup out
of the underbrook, but I want to drink.
May, so the maid, if you are thirsty, get off yourself and stoop down by the water
and drink.
I shall not be a waiting maid any longer.
Then, she was so thirsty that she got down and melt over the little book, and
Well, she was frightened and dead not bring out her golden cap, and she went and said,
Alas, what will become of me, and then look answered her and said, Alas, Alas, if I
mother knew it, sadly, sadly, which she would. But the princess was very gentle and weak,
so she said nothing to her, her mains ill behaviour, but got upon her horse again.
Then all wrote further on their journey till the day grew so warm and the sun so
scorching that the bride began to feel very thirsty again, and at last when they came
to a river she forgot how many rude speech and said, pray I get down and fetch me some
water to drink in my garden cup. But the maid answered her and even spoke more
hotly than before. Drink if you will, but I shall not be your waiting maid. But the
Princess was so thirsty that she got her for horse and lay down and hell of her head
over the running stream and cried and said, what will become of me and the lock of hair
answered her again? I last a last if I mother knew it's sadly sounding what she wrote.
And as she leaned down to drink the lock of hair felt from her bosom and floated away with a water.
Now she was so frightened that she did not see it, but her main thought and
was very glad for she knew John, and she saw that the poor bride would be in her power,
now that she had lost the hair. So when the bride had done drinking, and it would have got
upon another again, the main said, I shall ride upon flat, and you may have my horses said.
So she was forced to give up her horse and soon afterwards to take off her world clothes and put
put on her main chubby ones.
At last, as they drew near the end of their journey, this treacherous sevenths were sent
to kill her mistress if she ever told anyone what had happened, but the nun is sort
of all in mocked it well, and the way she made got upon the night and the real bride rode
up on the other horse, and they went on in this way to that last they came to the royal court.
There was great joy at that coming, and the prince flew to meet them, and lifted the
made from her horse thinking she was the one who used to be his wife, and she was
let-up sense of a royal chamber, but the true princess was told to stay in the court below.
Now the old king happened just then to have nothing else to do, so he used himself by
sitting at his kitchen window looking at what was going on, and he saw her in the court yet.
As soon as she looked very pretty into delicate for a waiting maid, he went up into his
and to the world change that asked the bride who it was, she had brought with her. That was less than
standing in the court below. I brought her with me for the sake of her company on the road.
Said she, pre-gives a girl somewhat to do that she may not be idle. The old king could not
for some time think of anyone prior to due. But at last he said, I have a letter he takes care of my
piece, she may go and help him. Now the name of this lad, that the real bride, was to help
in watching the King's Geese, was pumpkin. For the false bride said to the Prince,
dear husband, probably one piece of kindness, that I will, so the Prince,
then tell one of your soldiers to cut off the head of the horse I rode upon,
but it was very unmovily and played me savvy on the road. But the truth was, she was
was very much afraid, less for laden. She had some day or other speak, and tell her
all she had done to the princess. She carried her point and the faithful for laden was killed.
But when the true princess heard of it, she left and begged the man to kneel up the
laden's head against a large dark gate of the city, so which she had to pass every morning
in the evening, that she might still see him sometimes. Then this letter was said, he would
do as she wished and cut off the head and nailed it up under the dark gate.
Early the next morning as she and Kirk can make went out through the gate.
She said so quickly.
A lot of a lot of a lot of them.
They are now hangest and they had on the bride bride.
They are now gangest.
A last, a last, if I mother knew it sadly, said me, would she knew it?
Then they went out of the city and drove the east on.
on and when she came to the meadow she sat down upon a bank there and let down her waving
locks of hair which were all of pure silver and when Kirkkin saw it glittering the sun he ran
up and would have pulled some of the locks up but she cried. Blue breezes bloke, let Kirkkin's
had to go. Blue breezes bloke, let him after it go. O hills, daels and rocks. Away it be well
until the soaring silvery locks are all cloned and calved. Then they came a limb so strong
in a blue or broken hat and away it flew over the hills. It was forced to run to turn and run
after it. Tell by the time he came back she had done the combing and climbing her hat and had
put it up again to stay. Then he was very angry and sulky and we're not speaking at all but they
watch the keys until it grew darkened even and then drove them home with.
The next morning, as they were going through the dark gate, the poor girl looked up at
another's head and cried, the load of a lot of their their hangest and the head also cried
but I never can guess. And last, I'm asked, if I'm other new it, sadly, sadly, but she
were it, then she drives a key, some sat down again in the middle, and began to come out her hair
as before, and Kirk and I ran up to her and wanted to take a hold of it, but she cried
up quickly.
Blow, breezes blow, let Kirk and Zach go, blow, breezes blow, let him after it go, over hills,
dails and rocks away it be well till the silvery lucks are all combed and cold. Then the
wing came and blew away his hat and off it blew a great way over the hills and far away
so that he had to run after it and when he came back she had bound up her hair again and
all was safe, so they watched the geese to look for a dark. In the evening after they came home,
Kurt came into the odd king and said, I cannot tell about strange girl to help me to keep
these geese any longer. Why, so became? Because instead of doing any good, she does nothing but
tease me all day long, then the king made him tell him what has happened. And Kurt came and said,
let me go in the morning, through the dark gate for the last few of the geese. She cries and
talks with a head of a horse to hang upon the war and says, the latter, the latter,
the elder, the elder, the hang of some of the hand-answers, bright, bright,
their their gangas, a lesser-assid-side mother knew it's sadly
sadly which she really.
And Kirk and Wendon telling the King what had happened upon the middle of
the Gesefet, how his hat was blown away and how he was forced
to run after it and to leave his look of Gesef himself.
But the old King told the boy to go out again the next day, and when
morning came, he placed himself behind the dark gate and heard how she spoke to
another, and helped the other answer. Then he ran into the field and said,
he sighed, and he soon saw with his own eyes, how he drove the flock of
geeks, and how after it little time, she met down the hair that
he lifted in the sun, and then he kind of said,
blow, breezes, blow, that curtain's hat, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go,
After it got, over hills, stairs in rocks away it'd be well to the submarine in
rocks that all kind of cowards.
And soon came the gain of wind and carried away Codkins' hat, and a weighing that Codkins
uttered, or a girl went on combing and carrying her hair, all of this all king saw, so he
went home without being seen, and when the little goose girl came back in the evening he called
her side and asked her why she did so, but she buzzed into tears and said that time was not
tell you what any man who I shall lose my life.
But the old King begged so hard that she had no peace so she had told him all the
tale from the beginning to end, word for word. And it was very lucky for her that she did
so for when she had done, the King ordered world plans to be put upon her and gaze on her
with wonder, she was so beautiful. Then he called a son and told him that he had only
a false bride, but that she was merely awaiting me, while the true bride stood by, and the young
king would joist when he saw her beauty, and had had how naked and patient she had been,
and without saying anything to the false bride, the king ordered a great feast to be, got ready
for all his court, the bride groom sat at the top, where the false princess on one side and the
true one on the other, but nobody knew her again, but her beauty was quite dazzling to their eyes,
and she did not seem at all like the name of whose girl, now that she had her brilliant dress on.
When they had eaten in drink and were very married, the old kings said he would tell them a tale,
so he began and told all the story of the princess as if it was the one he had once heard.
And he asked the true waiting mate, what she thought ought to be done to anyone who would behave us.
Nothing better, set this false bride, then that she should be thrown into a cast, stuck around with sharp nails, and that two white horses should be put to it, and should drag it from street to street till she was dead.
How are she, Sergio King, and as Bell has judged herself, so shall it be done to thee,
and the young King was then married to his true wife, and they reigned over the kingdom in peace
and happiness all their lives, and the good fairy came to see them and restored the faithful
the water to wipe again, in and good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Warhelm Grim. Chapter 15,
adventures are shondickly and pocketed. One, how they went to the mountains to eat nuts.
They're not so quiet right now, so shondigators wipe part them. Suppose we go together to the mountains
and eat as many as we can before the squirrel takes them all the way, with all my heart said
potlet, and a skull and make a holiday of it together. So we went to the mountains, and as it
was a lovely day, they stayed there until the evening. Now, whatever it was, that they had eaten
so many nights that they could not walk, or whether they were lazy and would not. Why do not
However, they took it to their heads that they did not become them to go home on.
But, so Shandigly began to build a little carriage on that shelf, and when it was finished,
Paula jumped onto it and sat down.
And Bill Shandigly harnessed himself to it and draw her home.
That's a good joke, so Shandigly.
No, but we'll never do.
I had rather by half walk home,
come, I'll sit on the box and be coachman if you like, but I'll whom I'll not draw.
Oh, this is passing. A duck came cracking up and crying out, you're saving by the bonds.
What business have you in my grounds? I'll give it to you well for your
insolence and upon that she followed for a shunter game, most nasty.
A shunter game was no coward in the time of that show who his sharps fur so busy that she
soon began to cry out the mercy, which was only granted her upon the condition that she
would draw the catch home for them. This year, she agreed to do, and Shandakly had
got upon the box and drove crying, now duck, get on as fast as you can, and away they
went at a pretty good pace. After the a travelled and long, and the way they met a needle
and a pain walking together along the road, and then even cried out, stopped, and said
it was so dark that they could hardly find their way, and such dirty walking they could not get
on at all. He told them that he and his friend the pin had been at the public house a few miles
off, and at sat drinking until they had forgotten how a lady it was. He begged their four
that the travelers would be so kind as to give them a lift in their carriage.
Shondiky had serving that they were, but then fellows, and not likely to take on much room told
than that they might write, but made them promise not to dirty the wheels of the carriage
and getting in, multi-tread on partners' toes.
Late at night they arrived at an inn, and as it was badly travelling in the dark, and the
dark seemed much tired, and what all about a good deal from one side of the other, they made
up their minds to fix their quarters there, but the man mode at first was unwilling, and
said his house was full, thinking they might not be very respectable company. However, they
spoke civility to him and gave him the egg which partner had laid by the way.
And said, they would give him the duck, who was in the habit of laying one every day so
at last he met them come in and they bespoke a handsome supper and spent the evening
very jolly.
Early in the morning before it was quite night, and when nobody was stirring up the
inn, shanderedly awakened his wife and fetching the egg, they'd packed a hole in it,
ate it up and threw the shells into a fireplace, then they went to the pin and needle, who
are fars asleep and seizing them by the head, stuck one into the landmarks easy chair,
and the other into his haggature. And having done this, they clapped away as softly as
possible. However, the duck who slept in the open air in the yard had them coming and
jumping into the brick which ran close by the inn, soon swam out of their reach.
An animal, too, after its an animal, got up and took his hands a pound of chip to wipe his face,
but the pin ran into him and pricked him, and then he walked in the kitchen to have a night's
pipe up the fire, but when he set it up, the eggshells flew into his eyes and almost bled it in.
But less me said he, all the world seemed to have a design against my head this morning,
and so saying he threw himself sobly into his easy chair, but oh dear, the needle ran into him.
And this time the pain was not in his head. He now flew into a very great passion and
suspecting the company who had come in the night before. He went and looked after them,
but they were all off. So he saw that he never again will take in such a troop of
bag of bombs, who ate a great deal, paid no reckoning, and gave him nothing for his
trouble, but their apestrics.
2. How Shandaklay and Partlet went to visit Mr. Corbs. Another day Shandaklay and Partlet
wished to write out together, so Shandaklay have built a hand them carriage with four red
wheels and harness six mice to it, and then the king and partlet got into the carriage
in a way they drove. Soon afterwards a cat met them and said, well, are you going and
Shandaklay replied, all on a way, a visit to pay to Corbs the fox today? Then the cats
So take me with you, Shondigli said,
with all my heart, get up behind and be sure you cannot fall on.
Take care of this handsome coach of mine,
nor dirty my pretty red wheel so fine,
now my speed ready and wheels run steady for we are going to
a visit to pay to administer co-opster box today.
Soon after I came up a millstone and egg,
a duck and a pan and Shondigli gave them all the leaves
to get into the carriage and go with them.
when they arrived at Mr. Corbyn's house. He was not at home, so the mice drew the carriage into
that perch house. Shondikly and peep and the cat sat down in the fireplace. The duck got into
the washing system, and the pines stuck himself into the bed pillow, and the mulestone made himself
over the house door, and the egg rolled up and rolled himself up in the towel.
And Mr. Paul's came home, he went to the fire place to make a fire, but the catch through
all the ashes in his eyes, so he ran to the kitchen to go to wash himself. But there,
the ducks splashed all the water in his face, and when he tried to wipe himself,
egg broke out to pieces and the towel all over his face and eyes. When he was very angry,
and went without him supper to bed. But when he met his head on the pillow, the pin ran into
to his cheek, and at this he became quite furious, and jumping up would have run out
of the house, but when he came to the door the millstone fell down on his head and
killed him on the spot.
Three, how part that died and was buried, and how shanty they had died of grief.
Another day shanty came and parted, agreed to go out again to the mountains to eat
and it was settled that all the nuts which they found should be shared equally between them.
Our partner found a very large nut, but she said nothing about it to Shantigan and kept it all to herself.
However, it was so big that she couldn't swallow it, and it stuck in her throat.
Then she was in a great fight and cried up to Shantigan.
Very run as fast as you can, but she'd be some water or I shall be choked.
Shantigan ran as fast as you could to the river and said,
River, give me some water for partlet lies in the mountain and will be choked by a great nut.
The river said, run first to the bright and ask for her, ask her for a silk and cord to draw up the water.
Suddenly a random of the bright and said, bright, you must give me a silk and cord for
then the river will give me water and the water I will carry to partlet,
who lies on the mountain and will be choked by a great nut. The the bright said, run first and bring
me my garland that is hanging on the willow in the garden and shall be a round to the
the garden and took a garden from the boat, where it hung, and brought it to the bright,
and then the bride gave him the silk and cord, and he took the silk and cord to the river,
and the river gave him water, and he carried the water to partnet, and in the meantime she was
choked by the great nut and lay quite dead and never moved anymore. Then Shandakill was very
sorry and cried bitterly, and all of these came and worked with him over poor partnet, and
six mice built in little hers to carry her to her grave. And when it was ready they
had missed themselves before it, and shunt a kid drove them, on the way they met the box.
How are you going, Shantakla, has said he, to bury my partner, said the other.
I have a girl with you, so the box. Yes, but you must get up behind on my horses
will not be able to draw you. Then the box got up behind in presently the wolf that there
of gold and all the beasts of the wood came and climbed upon the house.
So only went till they came to a rapid stream, how shall we get over, Sishandaliya, then
said a straw, I will lay myself across and you may pass over upon me.
But as the mice were going over the straw slip to rain fell into the water and the six mice
all fell in and the drought, it was to be done, then a large log of wood came and said,
I am big enough, I will lay myself across the stream and you shall pass over upon me.
So he laid himself down, but they managed so glum to me that the lava would fell in and was carried away by the stream.
Then the stone, who saw what had happened, came up and kindly offered to help Portia and appeared by laying himself across the stream.
And at this time he got safely to the un-signed for the hers, and managed to get partnered out of it.
But the box and the other mourners who were sitting behind were too heavy and fell back into the water and they all carried away by the stream and drowned.
But Shandikliam was left alone with his dead partner, and having dug a grave for her, he laid her in it and made a little henook for her.
Then he sat down with a grave and wiped him more till at last he died too, and so all were dead.
the end. Good night.
Grims very towns by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim. Chapter 16, Rapunzel.
It was once a man and a woman who had long-envened wished for a child. At length, the woman
hoped that God was about to grant her desire. These people had a little window at the back
of their house from what a splendid garden could be seen, which was full of the most beautiful
flowers and herbs. It was, however, surrounded by a high wall, and no one dared to go into
it because it belonged to an enchantress, who had great power and was shredded by all the world.
One day the woman was standing by this window and looking down into the garden,
when she saw a bed which was planted with a most beautiful rampion,
Rapunzel, and it looked so fresh and green that she loved for it.
She quite pined away and began to look pale and miserable.
Then her husband was a mom and asked,
what else do you do, why?
Oh, she replied, if I can't eat some of the rampion, which is in the garden behind our house,
I shall die.
The man who loved her vote, but sooner than next your wife died, bring her some of the
ramping yourself that costs what it will. At twilight he clambered down over the war
as the garden of the enchantress, hastily plouched a handful of ramping and took it to his wife.
She had once made herself a silent augment and ate it previously. It tasted so good to her,
So very good for the next day she longed for it three times as much as before.
If he was to have any rest, her husband was once more descended into the garden.
In the gloom of evening therefore he met himself down again,
but when he found the down the wall, he was terribly afraid,
where he saw the enchantress standing before him.
How can you dare, she said with an angry look,
the send into my garden and steal my rampion like a thief. You shall suffer for it.
Oh, once that he, let mercy take the place of justice, I only made up my mind to do it out of
necessity. My wife saw your rampion from the window and felt such a longing for it, but she would have
died if she would not got some to eat. Then the enchantress allowed her anger to be softened and said to him,
If the case be as you say, I will allow you to take away as you, as much rampant as you will, only I make one condition.
You must give me the child which your wife will bring into the world, and it shall be world treated, and I will care for it's like a mother.
The man in his terror consented to everything, and when the women was brought to bed, then Chant was appeared at once, gave them childening repunzel and took it away with her.
Rapunzel grew into the most beautiful child under the sun, when she was troll-free
as old, and child just shut her into a tower which lay in a forest, and had neither
stare nor door, but quite at the top was a little window, and the entourageers would
wanted to go in, she'd face herself beneath him, cried,
Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair to me.
A punzel had quite had a magnificent known hair, fine and spun gold, and when she had
the voice of the enchantress, she unfossined her great addresses, wound them around one
of the hooks of the window above, and then the hair fell twenty-ounce down, and the
enchantress climbed up by it.
After a year or two, it came to pass that keen sun rose through the forest and passed
by the tower, and he heard a song which was so charming that he sits still and listened.
This was Rapunzel, who in her solitude, passed her time in letting her sweet voice
resound.
The king's son wanted to climb up to her and looked for the door to of the tower, but none
must be found.
He rode home, but the singing has so deeply touched his heart, and every day he went out
into the forest and listened to it.
Once he was bus standing behind the tree, he saw that an enchantress came there, and
he heard how she cried.
Repun will repunzel, and that down your head and knee.
Then repunzel let down the braids of her hair, and the enchantress climbed up to her.
Death that is the ladder, by which one mounts I too will try my fortune, said he, and the
next day when it began to grow dark he went to the tower and cried.
and so, Rapunzel, let down your hair to me. Immediately the hair fell down and the
king's son glant up. At first Rapunzel was terribly frightened when a man such as
her eyes had never yet beheld, came to her. But the king's son began to talk to her,
quite like a friend, and told her that his heart had been so stand, that her let him
have no rest, and he had been forced to see her. And Rapunzel lost her fear, and wished
He asked her if she was taking for her husband and she saw that he was young in handsome
she thought he will not be more than all the engulfed us and she said yes and made her
hand in his she said, I will willingly go away with you but I do not know how to get
down.
Please use a skin of silk every time that you come and I will leave a matter of it and when
that is ready, I will descend, and you will take me on the horse. They agreed that until
the time he should come to her every new day, the old woman came by day. The entages
were not nothing of this. Until once, her puns are sent to her, tell me, then go for,
how it happens that you are so much heavier than me to chew up. When the young king's son,
she is with me in a moment.
Ah, you wicked child, quite in shutters.
What do I hear you say?
I thought I had separated you from all the world
and yet you have deceived me
in her anger.
She clutched her upon those beautiful dresses
and wrapped them twice around her neckhand.
Seize the pair of scissors with her right
and snip, snap, they were cut off
and the lovely bravely on the ground.
And she was so pitiless that she took Paul Rapunzel
into a desert,
she had to live in great grief and misery. On the same day when she cast up a
puzzle however, the enchantous plaza in the breeze of her, which she had cut off
to hook to a window and when the king saw him came and climbed, the tons of
a puzzle lit down your head to me, she let the head down. The king saw an
ascended but instead of finding his dearest for a puzzle he found the
enchantous, who gazed at him with wicked and venomous looks.
Ah ha! She cried in mockingly.
You would fetch your dearest with beautiful birds,
it's no longer singing in the nest.
The cat has got it, and will scratch out your eyes as well.
Rapunzel is lost to you, you'll never see her again.
The king's son was beside himself with pain,
and in the hills despair he leapt down from the tower.
He escaped with his life,
but the thorns into which he fell past his eyes,
and he wandered quite blind above the forest,
Nothing but roots and berries, and did not but lament in reprobable loss of his dearest wife.
The Sea of Rome devouted misery for some years, and that length came to the desert where
Rapunzel were the twins to which he had given birth a boy and a girl lived in righteousness.
Richard Niss.
He had a voice and it seemed so for me to him that he went towards it, and when he approached
Rapunzel knew him and fell on his neck and leapt, two of her tears were in his eyes and
group here again and you could see them as before. See with them as before. He
met her as Kingdom where he was joyfully received and he lived for a long time
afterwards. Happy and contented the end. Good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
chapter 17, fundamental. There was once a forester who went into the forest to hunt, and
as he entered it, he heard a sound of screaming as if and if he chowed with her. He followed
the sound and that last came to a high tree, and at the top of the forest and the child was sitting,
but the mother had fallen asleep under the tree with a child, and a bird of prey had seen it in
in her arms and her phone down, snatched away and set it on the high tree.
The voice that climbed up brought the child down and brought them to himself, you
will take him home with you.
And bring him up with your lina.
He took it home, there for, and the two children grew up together.
And the one, which he had found on a tree, was called Thundervogor, because the bird had
carried away. Under vocal and Nina madigia was so daily that when they didn't see each other,
I was sad. Now the first that had an odd cook, who won't even look two pounds in
the game to fetch water, and did not go up only for many times out of the spring. Nina saw
this and said, listen, old son, why are you fetching so much water? If you will never repeat it to
anyone I would tell you why. So Lena said, no, she would never repeat it to anyone. And then the
cook said, early tomorrow morning when the forester is out hunting, I will heat the water,
and whether the one it is boiling in the kettle, I will swear in front of a girl and I will boil
him in it. But I mean next morning the forester got up and went out hunting, and when he was gone,
the children were still and better. The Nina said to her fundamental, if you all never leave me,
I too will never leave you. Unable for said, neither now nor ever when I leave you.
Then, said Nina, then I will tell you, last night, Old Sonna carried so many buckets of water into
the house that I asked her why she was doing that, and she said that, yeah, I would promise not to tell
anyone, and she said that only tomorrow morning with father was up hunting, she would set
the castle full of water and throw you into a temple of you, but we will get up quickly, dress ourselves
and go away together. The two children there will got up, dressed themselves quickly and went away.
When the water in the cattle was boiling, the cook went into the bedroom to fetch a random
were gone through and into.
But when he came in, when she came in and went to the pets, both the children were
bought, and she was terribly alarmed, and she said to herself, what should I say now when
the forest becomes her and sees that the children are gone, they must be followed instantly
to get them back again.
And the cooks and three-seven sought in them, they would to run and overtake the children.
Children however were sitting outside the forest and when they saw them when they saw them
before the three-celled running, Venus said to find a book of never leave me and I will never leave you.
Thunder of the sun, neither now nor ever.
And Venus said, do you become a rose tree and either rose upon it?
When the three-celled came to the forest nothing was there but a rose tree and one rose on it.
But the children were nowhere.
Then said they, there was nothing to be done here, and they went home and all the
cook that they had seen nothing in the forest, but a little rosefish was run
where it was on it.
Then the old cook scolded and said, you simple tenes, you should have cut the rosefish
in two, and have broken up the rose and bought it home with you.
Go, and do it at once.
They had there or to go out and look for the second time.
Children, however, saw them coming from a distance, the leaner said,
hundred vocal, they believe me and I will never leave you on a vocal set, neither now,
nor ever, senina. Then, to you become a church, and I'll be the shonder layer in it.
So when the 37 came, nothing was there, but a church, but a shonder layer in it.
They said, they have all teach, however, what can we do here? Let us go home.
When they got home, the cook asked if they had not found them, so they said, no, they had found nothing but a charge in those of Shanda Merlin.
And the cook scolded them and said, you force, why did you not pull the charge to pieces and bring the Shanda Leir home with you?
And now the old cook has served got on her legs and went with the three servants and pursued to the children.
The children, however, saw from a father the three servants were coming and the cook watering after them.
Then said Yena, thunder-wuggle, eveling me and I will never leave you, then said thunder-wuggle, neither now nor ever.
Same Yena, be a fish point and I will be the darker point.
Look up, however, peel up to them, and when she saw the point she lay down by it.
And it was about to drink it up.
With a dark swim quickly to her, Caesar had in its beak and drew her into the water, and then the old witch had to drown.
And the children went home together and were hardly delighted and as they have not died, they are living still, he and good night.
Grim's fairy towns by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
Chapter 18, the valiant little Taylor.
One summer's morning, a little Taylor was sitting on his table by the window.
He was in good spirits and soared with all his might.
Then came a pleasant woman down the street crying, good jams, cheap, good jams, cheap.
This rank pleasantly in the Taylor's ears, he stretched his delicate head out of the window and called.
Come up here, dear woman.
Here you will get rid of your goods.
The woman came up with a three steps to the tailor with a heavy basket, and he made her unpack all the pots for him.
He inspected each one, lifted it up, but his nose to it, and that length said, the gentleman seemed to mean to be good.
So, weighing me out for ounces, dear woman, and everything's a quarter of a pound that is a no consequence.
The woman who had hoped to find a good sail gave him what he desired, but went away quite angry
and grumbling. Now, this gem shall be blessed by God, for I believe in Taylor, and give me health and
strength, so he brought the bread out of the cupboard. Cut himself a piece right across the loath
and spread the jam around. This won't taste bitter, said he, but I will just finish the jacket
before I take a bite. He laid the bread near him, sold on and in his joy made bigger and
bigger stitches. In the meantime, the smell of the sweet jam rose to where the flies were sitting
in great numbers, and they were attracted and descended on it in hosts.
Hi! Who invited you? said that in Tana and drove the unbidden guests away. The flies,
however, who understood no German, would not be turned away but came back again in ever
increasing companies. The little Tana at last lost all patients and drew a piece of plot from
the whole under his back table and saying, wait, and I will give it to you, struck it
mercilessly, on them. And he drew it away and counted, then over for him, no
few of them, seven dead, and with a leg stretched out, are you up and over that salt?
Said he, and cannot help admiring his own breathing. The whole town should know this, and
and the tailor hastened to cut himself a girdle, stitched it and envoyed it on it in large letters,
seven and one struck, what the town he continued, the whole world shall hear of it.
And his heart wound to his joy like a lamb's tail, the tailor put on a girdle, and resolved to go
forth into the world, because he thought his workshop was too small for his baller. Before he went away,
he sought about in the house to see if there was anything which he could take with him.
However, he found nothing but an old cheeks and that he put in his pocket.
And the friend of the door he observed a bird which had caught itself in the flicked.
It had to grow in his pocket with the cheese.
Now, he took to the wrong road bodily.
And as he was light and nimble, he felt no fatigue.
The road led him up the mountain and when he unleashed the highest point of it,
They're set a powerful giant looking peacefully about him.
The little tailer went to break the up, spoke to him and said,
Good day, come back.
So you are sitting there overlooking the widespread world.
I am just a mile away through the, and want to try my luck.
Have you any inclination to go with me?
The giant looked contemptuously.
At the tailer and said, you rag a muffin, you miserable creature.
Oh, indeed.
answered the retailer and embossed his coat and showed him the giant girdle.
Then the U-Leave, what kind of a man I am, the giant red seven at one stroke and
bought that they had been made with whom the tailor had killed and began to feel
an improved spectra tiny fellow. Nevertheless, he wished to try and first and took a
stern and his hand and squeezed it together so that a water dropped out of it.
Do that likewise so the giant, if you have strength.
Is that all, Sototainer? That is child's play with us.
And put his hand into his pocket, brought out the soft cheese and pressed it until the liquid ran out of it.
They said he, that was an evil better, wasn't it? The giant did not know what to say and could not believe it.
The little man, the little giant picked up stone and threw it so high that the eye could scarcely follow it.
Now, little might of the man, do that likewise?
Well, throwing him on the table, but after all the stone came down to us again, I will
throw you one which will never come back at all.
And he put his hand into his pocket to get the bird and throw it into the air.
The bird delighted with its liberty, rose, flew away and did not come back.
How does that shop pinch you from red?
Ask the tailor.
You can search me through, so the giant.
But now we will see if you are able to carry anything properly.
He took the little tanner to a mighty oak tree, which named that found on the ground and said,
if you watch sure enough, help me to carry the tree out of the forest.
Ready?
Answer them with a man.
Take you, the shrunken old shoulders, and I am always up the branches and twigs, after
all, they are the heaviest.
The giant took the trunk on his shoulder, but the tail is seated himself on a branch.
the giant who could not look around had to carry the whole tree, and the lifetiner into the
bargain. He behind was quite merry and happy, and whistled the song three-tainers rode
falls from the gate, as if carrying the tree looked child's play. The giant RTN dragged the
heavy burden apart out of the way. Of the way, could Gona burn and grind Hock, you, I shall
have to let the tree fall. The tainer sprang nimbly down, sees the tree with both arms as if he had
been carrying it and said to the giant, you are such a great fellow and you cannot even carry the
tree. They went on together and as he passed the cherry tree the giant
made, hold on the top of the tree where the rope is fruit was hanging, bend it down and give
it into the tainer's hand and bathe him eat. With a little tainer was much too weak to hold the tree.
And when the giant that it goes is spraying back again, and the tail-up was tossed into the air with it.
And he had fallen down again about injury, and the giant said,
What is this? Have you not strengthened enough to hold the weak twig?
There's no lack of strength on subliminal tail-up. Do you think that could be anything to a man who has struck down seven at one low?
I'm in that own retreat because the Huntsman are shooting down there and the thickest.
Jump as I did if you can do it.
The giant may be a temp that he could not get over the tree, and remained hanging in the
branches, so that in this, also the tailor kept the other hand.
The giant said, if you are such a valiant fellow, colors me into our cabin and spend
the night with us.
The little tailor was willing and followed him.
When they went into the cave, other giants were sitting there by the fire, and each of them
had a roasted sheep in his hand and was eating it.
The little tailor looked around and thought, it is much more spacious here than in my
workshop. The giant showed him a bed, and said he was to lie down in it and sleep.
The bed, however, was too big for the little tailor. He did not lie down in it, but
crept into a corner. When it was midnight, when giant thought of the little tailor was
lying in a sound sleep, he got up, took a great iron bar, cut through the bed was one blow,
and bought he had finished off the glass holder for good. With the earlier storm, the giant's
went into the forest and had quite a lot of minimal tailor. When all at once he walked
up to them quite mirrorly and boldly, the giants were terrified, they were afraid that he
was strike them all dead and run away in a great hurry.
The little tailor went on with, always following his pointed his own pointed nose, after
he had walked for a long time, he went to the courtyard of a royal palace and, as he felt
weary, glee down on the cross in Fennel-Sique, whilst he lay there the people came and
inspected him at all sides in the road on his guttle, seven at one stroke, ah, said they,
what is the great warrior one here in the midst of peace? He must be a mighty Lord.
He went and announced him to the king and gave it as a opinion that, if worship breakout,
this would be a wazian useful man who ought on no account to be an out-to-depart.
The council pleafed the king, and he sent one of the courtiers to the little tenor to offer him military service when he
awoke.
The ambassador remained standing by the sleeper, waited until he stretched the limbs and opened his eyes,
and then conveyed to him this proposal.
For this very reason are how I come here, the tenor replied, I am ready to enter the king's
service.
He was therefore honourably received and a special dwelling was assigned him.
The soldiers, however, were set against the little painer and wished him a thousand miles away.
What is to be the end of this? They said among themselves, if we quarrel with him and he strikes about him.
Seven of us will fall at every blow, not one of us can stand against him.
They came therefore to a decision. The took themselves and the body to the king and begged for their dismissal.
We are not prepared, said they, to stay with a man who kills seven at one stroke, the
man, the king was sorry that for the sake of one he should lose all his faithful servant.
At least that he had never set arms on the painer and would willingly have been rid of
him again, but he did not venture to give him his dismissal, but dreaded less he should
strike him and the more his people dead and place himself on the wall throughout.
thought about it for a long time, and at last found good counsel. He sent to the
little Taylor, and caused him to be informed that he, as he was a great warrior, he had
one request to make of him. And a first of his country, the two giants, who caused great
mischief, were their loving, murdering, managing and banning, and no one could approach
them without putting himself in danger of death. But the Taylor conquered and killed these
to Giants. He would give him his own daughter to wife, and half of the kingdom as a
dowry, likewise one hundred horsemen shall go with him to assist him. That would be
indeed a fine, that would indeed be a fine thing for a man like me, for the little
painter, one is not offered a beautiful princess and half a kingdom every day of one
of life. Oh yes, you applied, I will soon subdue the Giants, and do not require the help
of a hundred horsemen to do it. He who can help seven years one blow have no need to be afraid of two.
The little tailor went forth and hundred horsemen followed him.
When he came to the Alskats at the first, he said to his followers,
just stay waiting here. I alone will soon finish off the giants,
and he bound him into the first and looked about right in the end.
After a while he perceived both giant, they may sleeping under a tree and snores so
that the brush is waived up and down. The little tanner, not idle, gathered two pockets
full of stirps and lidies cloned up the tree. When he was halfway up, he slipped down
by a branch until he sat just above the sleepers and then at one stone after another
fall on the breast of one of the giants. For a long time the giant popped nothing, but
at last he awoke pushed his conmaner and said, why are you knocking me? You must be dreaming
So the other, I am not knocking you, they lay themselves down to sleep again, and then
the Taylor through the stern down on second, what is the meaning of this, cry the other?
Why are you pelting me?
I am not pelting you onto the buscrowling, they disputed the bottom for a time, but as they
were weary they let them matter rest and their eyes closed once more, the little Taylor
began his game again, picking out the biggest stone and threw it with all his might on the
rest of the first giant. That is too bad, cried he, and sprang up like a mad man and pushes
companion against the tree onto his shook. He other paid him back in the same coin, and they
got in such a rage, a torpe trees and the lavered each other so long that at last they both fell
down dead on the ground at the same time. Then the little pain went up down. It is a lucky thing,
sitting, but they did not tear up the tree that, on which I was sitting, or I should have
to have.
I should have had to sprint onto another like a squirrel, but we tangle as our nimble.
He drew out his sword and gave each of them a couple of thrusts in the grass, and then went
out of the horseman and said, the work is done, I have finished both of them off, but it
was hard work.
They taught trees and their son-made, and defended themselves with them.
But all that is to know purpose when a man like myself comes, can kill seven at one
But are you not wounded as the horsemen? You need not concern yourself about that, as of the
tailor. They have not been the one here of mine. The horsemen would not be depended
and rode into the forest, and there if I am the giant swimming in their blood and all
round about really torn up trees. The little tailor demanded of the king the promised reward.
Here you have a repentant of his promise and again the brought him so how he could get rid
of the hero. Before you receive my daughter and her kingdom, and half of my kingdom, said
he to him, you must perform one more, more heroic deed. And the first realms are unicorn,
which does great harm, and you must catch it fast. I say one unicorn stillness,
then two giants, seven up one glow is my kind of a fair. You took a rope and an axe with
him, went forth into the forest and again damed those who were sent with him to wait outside.
he had not long to seek. The unicorn soon came to ward him and rushed directly onto the tail,
on the tailor. As if it were, as if it were go-himber that's horn without more dip,
softly softly. It can't be done as quickly as that, said he, and stood still and awaited
under the animals quite close, and then sprang nimbly behind the tree. The unicorn ran against
the tree with all its strength, and stuck its horn so fast in the trunk, but it had not
the strength enough to draw it out again, and thus it was caught. Now I have got the bird.
So the tailor and came out from behind the tree and put the rope around its neck,
and then with the axe, he's here little horn out of the tree, and when always ready he never
beast away and took it to the king. The king still would not give him the promise reward and
made a bird to mind. Before the wedding the tailor was to catch him a wild ball that made great
have that came the forest, and the Huntsman should give him the help, winningly,
Sabotana, that is child play. He did not take the Huntsman with him into the forest, and
they were well pleased that he did not. The wild boar had several times received him in such
a manner that they had no inclination to lie in late fend. And the boar perceived the
tanger and ran on him with booming mouth in the weted tusks and was about to throw him to the ground,
but the hero fled and sprang into a chapel, which was near and up to the render at once,
and he won bound out again. The ball ran out of him. But the Taylor ran around outside and shot
the door behind it, and then the raging beast, which was much too heavy and awkward to leap
out of the window, was caught. The little Taylor called the Hudson and the River. That they might
see the prisoner with their own eyes. The hero heard the winter the king who was now,
where he liked or not obliged to keep his promise and gave his daughter and the half of his kingdom.
Had he unknown that it would know, more like he wrote, but a little tailor who was standing
for him, it would have gone to his heart still more than it did. The wedding was held with great
magnificence and small joy and out of the tailor a king was made. After some time, the young
Some Queen heard her husband saying his dreams at night.
Boy, make me the doublet, and patch the pantaloons, while Elsa unwrapped the yarn measure
over your ears.
Then she discovered in what state of life the unknown had been born, and next morning
conflated her lungs to her father, and begged him to help her to get rid of her husband,
who was nothing else but a tailor.
The King accompanied her and said, ''You feel bedroom door open this night, and my servants
such that that side. And when he has one sleep, she'll go in, bind him and take him, on board
a ship which will carry him into the wide world. The woman who was satisfied with this, with
the King Armour Barra, who had heard all, was friendly with the unlawed and informed him of
the whole plot. All put his screw into that business, so that a little tailor, and night he went
to bed with his wife at the usual time. And when she thought he had fallen asleep, she got up,
open the door and then lay down again. And a little tailor, who is only pretending to be asleep,
began to pry out some clear voice. Boy, make me the doublet and patch me the pantaloon, so I
will wrap the yarn measure over your ears. I spent seven at one blow, I killed two giants,
I brought away one unicorn and caught a wild board. And I, to fear those who are standing outside
the room, when these men had the famous speaking nurse, they were overcome by a great
dread, and ran as if the wild Huntsman were behind them, and none of them would venture
anything further against him, so the little panel was and remained a king to the end of his life.
Good night.
Grimm's fairy towns by Jacob Grimm and Little Home Grimm.
Chapter 19.
Hatsle and Grattle.
Hand by a great fellow is taught a poor woodcutter with his wife and his two children.
The boy was called Hatsle and the girl Grattle.
He had little to bite and to break, and once when great dust fell on the net, he
can no longer produce or even daily bread.
Now, when he fought over this by night in his bed, and tossed about in his anxiety, he
grown in such his wife.
What is to become of us?
How are we to feed our poor children when we no longer have anything even for ourselves?
I'll tell you what husband, answer the woman, and into my normal will take the children
out into the forest, where it is the biggest, that we will light a fire for them, and
give each of them one more piece of bread, and then we will go to our work and leave them
alone.
They will not find the way home again, and we shall be rid of them.
No wife, so the man, I will not do that.
How can I bear to leave my children alone in the forest?
The wild animals would soon come and tear them to pieces.
Oh, you fall, she said she.
Then we must all four die of hunger.
You may as well play in the planks for our coffins, and she left him no peace until he
ascended.
Right, you're very sorry for the poor children all the same.
Seven men.
The two children had also not been able to sleep, or hunger, and had heard
what their stepmother had sent to their father.
Gratol went, busy tears and said to Hansel,
now all is over with us,
be quiet, gratol and Hansol.
Do you not distress yourself?
I was soon find a way to help us,
and when all folks have fallen asleep,
he got up, put on his little coat,
up in the door below and cracked that side.
The moon shone brightly, and the white pebbles
which name in front of the house lived like real silver pennies. Hansel stood and
started a little pocket of his coat with his men as he could get in. Then he went back and
said to Greta, be comforted, dear little sister and sleep in peace. God will not forsake us
and he lay down again in his bed. When they dawned, but the full sun had risen, the woman came and
and the work for two children saying,
Get up, you Snuggards.
We are going into the forest a fetchward.
She gave eight and a little piece of bread and said,
there is something for your dinner,
but do not eat it up before them,
for you will get nothing else.
Chrysler took a bread under her apron
and has, as Hansel had the paddles in his pocket,
and they all set out together on a way to the forest.
When they had walked a short time,
cancelled stood still and peeped back at the house and did so again and again.
As Father said, Hansel, what are you looking at there and staying behind for?
Pay attention and do not forget how to use your legs.
Father said Hansel, I'm looking at my little white cat which is sitting up on the roof and wants to say good bye to me.
But the wife said, four, that is not your little cat, that is the morning sun, which
is shining on the chimneys, Hansel, however, had not been looking back at the cat, but
had been constantly throwing one of the white tongue stones out of his pocket on the road.
When they had reached the middle of the forest, the father said, now children pile up some
wood and I will not fire, but you may not be cold.
The brusherwood was lighted, and when the flames were burning very high, the women said,
now children lay a serve sound on the fire and rest.
They will go into the forest and cut some wood.
When we have done, we will come back and fetch you away.
Handsome brusher was set by the fire, and when the moon came, each ate in the
in a piece of bread, and as they had the strokes of the wood axe they believed that their father
was there, it was not the axe however, but a branch which had fars into a wooded tree which a
wind was blowing backwards and forwards, and as they have been sitting such a long time, they
are eyes closed with fatigue and they fell fast asleep. When at last they awoke, it was already
dark night, where it will begin to cry and said, how are we to get out of this out of the forest now,
the hands of comforted her and said, just wait until until the moon has risen and then
we will soon find the way. And when the full moon had risen, handsle took his little sister by
the hand and felt pebbles which saw like a newly coined solar pieces and showed them the way.
They looked the whole night long and by break of day came once more to their father's house.
They knocked up the door and when the woman opened it and saw that it was handsling
and Greta, she thought to you naughty children, why have you slept so long in the forest?
Who thought you were never coming back at all? The father, however, rejoiced for it, had
cut him to the heart to leave them behind alone. Not long afterwards, there was once
a more great death throughout the land, and the children had their mother saying it
night to their father. Everything is eaten again. We have one half of the earth
left, and that is the end. The children must go. They will take them farther into the
wood, so that they will not find their way out again. There is no other means of saving
ourselves, and then, heart was heavy, and he thought it would be better for you to share
the last mouthful with your children. The woman, however, would listen to nothing that he had
to say, but scolded and reproach them. He who says, A must be beat like wise, and as he
he had a yield of the first time he had to do so a second time also.
The children, however, were still awake and had heard of the conversation.
When the old folks were asleep, Pancel got, again, got up and wanted to go out and pick
up pebbles as he had done before, but the women had left the door and handsle couldn't
get out.
Nevertheless, he completed his business as to an unsatisfactory, good sleep quietly, the
good God will help us.
Early in the morning, early in the morning came the woman and took the children out of
that bench.
That piece of bread was given to them, but it was still smaller than the time before.
On the way into the forest, Hansel crumbled his and his pocket and often stood still
and threw a mousel in the ground.
Hansel, why do you stop and look around?
So the father, go on.
I'm looking back at my little pigeon that is sitting on the roof and wants to say goodbye to me
answered Hansel.
Full said the woman, that is not your little pigeon, that is the morning sun that is shining on the chimney.
Hansel has a little binoculars through all of the crams onto on the past.
The woman led the children still deeper into the forest, where they had never been before.
Then, a great fire was again made, and the mother said, just sit there, you children,
and when you are tired, you may sleep in the room.
You're going into the forest to cut to where you're done and leaving when me and Danny will come and fetch you away.
When it was noon, Greta will share a piece of bread with Hansel, but scattered hands by the way.
Then they finally sleep in evening past, but no one came to the board children.
He did not wait until it was dark night, and Hansel comforted his little sister and said,
Just wait, Greta will until the moon rises, then we shall see the crumbs of bread which I have strung about.
And they will show us our way home again.
And the moon came out.
They sent out, they found no crumbs for the world.
Many thousand the birds which lie about in the woods
and feel they picked them all up.
Hands are set to settle, you shall soon find the way
but they did not find it.
They walked the whole night and all the next day
two from morning to evening
but they did not get out of the forest
and were very hungry.
But they had nothing to eat, but two or three berries which grew on the ground.
And as they were so weary that their legs could carry with them more longer, they lay down the new Katrina of the sleep.
It was now three mornings since they had met their father's house.
They began to walk again, but they always came deeper into the forest, and they've helped to not come see it.
They must die of hunger and ruin this.
When it was midday, a saw beautiful snow white bird sitting on a bottom.
A sound saw beautifully, but they stood still and listened to it.
And when it's almost over, it spread its wings a little way before them.
And they followed it until they reached a little house, on the roof from which egg and night is.
And when they approached the little house they saw that it was built up bread and covered with cakes.
But the windows were clear sugar.
He will set a wagon that, said Hansel, and have a good meal, I will eat the dribbler
roof and you, Greta, or can eat some of the window.
It will taste sweet.
Hansel reached up above and broke up and loved the roof to try.
How it tasted and Greta will lend against the window and nibble at the pain.
When a soft voice cried in the Parliament, nibble nibble more, whose nibbling at my
little house, the children answered, the wind, the wind, the wind, the heaven-born
wind and went on eating without disturbing themselves. Hansel, who liked the taste of the
roof, tore down a great piece of it and Quetzel pushed out the whole of one round window
pain sat down and enjoyed himself with it. Suddenly, the door opened and a woman as
all of the hills who supported herself on crutches came creeping out. Hansel and Quetzel
were so terribly frightened that they let fall what they had in their hands. The old woman
and how I've been ordered her head and said, oh, you did children. Who has bought you here?
Do come and me and stay with me? No harm shall happen to you. She took them both by the
hand and lived and then do her little house. Then good food was set before them. Milk
and pancake was sugar, apples and nuts. Afterward, two pretty little birds were covered
with white bean and white linen and hand-selling grass will lay down in them, and thought
they were in heaven. The old woman had only pretended to be so parked, when in the
auntie she was, when she was in the auntie, a wicked witch who lay there in white
children, and had only built a little house of bread in order to entice them there.
When a child fell into her power, she killed it, cooked it and ate it, and that was a
feast with her. Witches have red eyes, but cannot see far, but they have a keen scent,
She said, like the beasts, and are aware when human beings draw near, when Hansen and
Brattle came into her knee-per-hand.
She laughed with molest and said the monkey me, I have them, they shall not escape me again.
Early in the morning before the children went away, she was already up, and when she saw
both of them sleeping and looking so pretty, with their plump and rosy cheeks she muttered
to herself, that will be a ding-ty mouthful. Then she sees Tansol with her shoulder pain, carried
him into a little stable and locked him in behind a greater door.
Scream as you might, it would not help him, and she went to Bretel, shook her toe she
woke, awoke and cried, get up lazy thing, fetch some water and cook something good for
your brother. He isn't stable outside, and is to be made, but...
When he is fat, I will eat him.
Grattle began to whip, weep, bitterly, but it was all in vain,
for she was forced to do what the wicked witch commanded.
And now the best food was cooked for poor handsle.
The grattle got nothing but crab shells.
Every morning the woman crept the little stable in crime.
Handsle, stretch out your finger that I may feel
if you will soon be fat.
Handsle, however, stretch out in your bone to her.
and the old woman who has dim, who had dim eyes cannot see it, and thought it was Hansel's
finger.
It was a sonnish that there was no way of battling him, and four weeks had gone
by and Hansel's silver-maintain thin.
She was seized with impatience, and could win not wait any longer.
Now then, Bretto, she quieted to the girl, stir yourself and bring some water, and Hansel
be fat or lean, tomorrow I will kill him and cook him.
Our house, the poor little sister did lament when she had to fetch the water and how her tears
overflowed down her cheeks.
Do you go and do help us, she cried, if the wild beasts in the forest had butt-divered us,
we should have any rate of time together.
Just keep your noise to yourself so the old woman, it won't help you at all.
Early in the morning, Reds all had to go out and hang up the corner with the water and
night's the fire. We will bake first, so the old woman. I have already heated the oven
and needed the door. She puts poor grettle out to the oven from which flames of fire were already
darting. Creep in, so the witch, and see if it is properly heated so that we can put the bread in.
And once grettle was inside she intended to shut the oven and let her bake in it. And then she
she would eat her too. But Grezel saw what she had in mind and said, I do not know how
I am to do it. How do I get in? Silly goose. Silly old woman. The door is big enough. Just
look. I can get in myself. And she crept up and thrust her head into the oven. Then Grezel
gave her a push that drove her butt into it and shut the iron door and fuss in the vault. Oh,
Then she began to hurl quite horribly, but Gretel ran away in the godless witch with
miserably burnt death.
Gretel, however, ran like lightning to handsle, opened as little stable and cry,
Hansel, we are saved, the old witch is dead, and Hansel sprang like a bird from its cage
when the door is opened.
How they did rejoicing in brise each other and dance about and kiss each other, and as they
had no longer any need to fear her. They went into a witch's house and in every corner there's
the chest full of pearls and jewels. These are far better than pebbles. Said Hansel and thrust
into his pockets would ever keep got. Could be got in and Gretel said, I too will take something
home with me and build her painful fall. The now one must be off, and Hansel. That we may
gate that gets out of the witch's forest. When they had walked for two hours they came
to a great stretch of water. We cannot cross the pencil. I've seen a foot plank in no bridge
and there is also no ferry on the Gretaal but a white duck is swimming there. If I ask her
she will help us over and she cried little duck, little duck, does Thousey had some
and Gretaal are waiting for me? There's never a plank or a bridge in sight. Take us across
And also my back so light, the duck came to them, and hands and seated himself on its back,
and told his sisters a sit by him.
No reply, Greta, that will be too heavy for the rest of the dark.
She used to take us across one after the other.
The good little duck did so, and when they were once safely across and had worked for
a short time, the forest seemed to be more and more familiar to them, and that length they saw
from afar, their father's house. Then he began to run, rushing to the pond and two themselves
round their father's neck. The man had not known one happy hours since he had left the children
in the forest. The woman, however, was dead. That all emptied her pinfondal, pearls and precious
stones ran about the room and handsle through one handful after another out of his pocket to
to add to them. An all anxiety was at an end, and they lived together in perfect happiness.
My tale is done, their runs are now. Who's so ever catches it, they make himself
a thought, a big, a cap out of it.
The end, good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim. Chapter 20. The mouse, the bird, and the
sausage. Once upon a time, a mouse, a bird, and a sausage, entered into partnership, and
set up house together. For a long time, all went well, they lived in great comfort and
prospered so far as to be able to add considerably to their stores.
The bird's duty was the f***ing wood and green in the field, the mouse fetched the
water and the sausage saw to the cooking.
And people are too well off, they always begin to long for something new, and so it
came to pass that the bird, while out one day, had the fellow bird to whom he was
exclusively expaciated on the excellence of his household arrangements.
But the other birds sneered at him for being a poor simpleton who did all the hard work,
or the other two, stayed at home and had a good time of it.
Four, when the mouse had made the fire and fetched in the water, she could retire into her little room
on a rest until it was time to set the table.
The sausage had only to watch the pot to see what the food was properly cooked,
And when it was near dinner time, he just threw himself into the broth or rolled in and out among the vegetables three or four times.
And there they were, butters insulted, and ready to be served.
Then, when the bird came home and had laid aside his blood and they sat down to the table.
They sat down to table, and when they had finished their meal, they could sleep there until the following morning.
and that was a really very, and that was really a very delightful life.
Everyone spy those remarks, the bird next morning refused to bring in the wood, telling
the others that he had them and said, and they have fallen to the bargain, and that it
was now time to make a change and to try some other way of arranging the work.
Big and prey, as the mouse and the sausage might, it was of no use, the bird remained
master of the situation and the venture had to be made. They were all drew lots and
it felt that the sausage was to bring in the wood to the mouse, to cook, and to the bird
to fetch the water. And now what happened? The sausage started in such a wood, the bird
made the fire and the mouse put on the pot, and then used to wait until the sausage returned
with a fuel for the following day. Well, the sausage remained so long away, but they became
when easy, and the bird flew out to meet him. He had not flown far, however, when he came across
a dog who, having met the sausage, had regarded him as his legitimate beauty, and so
seized and swallowed him. The bird complained to the dog of his birthday strawberry, but nothing
he said was of any avail. But the dog answered that he found horse credentials on the sausage,
and that was the reason his life had been forfeited. He picked up the word and flew suddenly
home and told him as all he had seen and had. They were both very unhappy, but agreed
to make the best of things and to remain with one another. So now the birds at the table
on the mouse looked after the food and wishing to prepare it the same way as a sausage by
rolling in and out among the vegetables to salt and butter them, she jumped into the pot,
but she stopped short lump before she reached the bottom. I didn't already parted,
not only with her skin and hair, but also with life.
Presently, the bud came in and wanted to serve up the dinner, but he could know where
she could cook in his unarmed and flurry.
He threw a wood here and there about the floor, called in search, but no cook was to be found.
And some of the wood that had been carelessly thrown down caught fire and began to blaze.
The bud hastened to fetch some water, but his pale fell into the world and he after it.
as he was unable to recover himself, he was drowned, he and good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, chapter 21, Mother Haller.
Once upon a time there were the widow who had two daughters, one of them was beautiful
and industrious, the other ugly and lazy. The mother, however, loved the ugly and lazy
one best because she was her own daughter. And so the other, who was only her steplater,
was made to do all the work of the house and was quite the Cinderella of the family.
Her stepmother sent her out every day to sit by the well in the high road,
there to spin until she made her fingers bleed.
Now it chanced one day that some blood felt onto the spindle,
and as the girl stopped over the world to wash it up, the spindle suddenly sprang out of her hand,
and fell into the well. She ran him crying to tell of her misfortune,
but her stepmother spent halfly tear, and after giving her a violent scolding,
said uncanny, as you have let the spindle fall into the well,
you may go yourself and fetch it out. The girl went back to the well not knowing what to do
and that last in her distress she jumped into the water after the spindle. She remembered nothing
more until she awoke and found herself in a beautiful meadow full of sunshine and with countless
flowers blooming in every direction. She walks over the meadow and presently she came upon a
the biggest of them for the bread and the loaves cried out to her, take us out, take us out
or a last, we shall be burnt to a cinder, we were baked through long ago. So she took the
bread shovel and drew them all out. She went on a little father, because she came to a tree for
the apples. She came to a tree for the apples. She came to a tree for the apples. She came to
me, shake me, I play, cry the tree, my apples went all our ripe. So she shook the tree and the apples
She came falling down upon her and like rain, but she continued shaking until there was
not a single apple left upon it.
Then she carefully gathered the apples together and he peep and walked on again.
The next thing she came to was a little house, and then she saw an old woman looking
out, with such large teeth that she was terrified and turned to run away.
But the old woman called after her, what are you afraid of, dear child, stay with me.
If you will do the work of my house properly for me, I will make you very happy.
He must be very careful, however, to make my bed in the right way, for I wish you always
to shake it thoroughly so that the feathers fly about.
Then they say, down there in the world, that it is snowing, where I and Mother Polla.
The old women spoke so kindly that the girls summoned them courage and agreed to enter into her service.
She took care to do everything recording to the old woman's bedding, and every time she made the bed,
she shook it with all her might so that the feathers flew about like so many snowflakes.
The old woman was good as her word. She never spoke angry to her and gave her roast
and boy meets every day. So she stayed on with mother Harna, for some time, and then she
began to grow unhappy. She could not let her tell wife about sad, but she became conscious
that last of great longing to go home. Then she knew she was homesick, although she was
the thousand times better off with more the whole and with her mother and sister.
After waiting a while, she went to mother-holic and said, I am so homesick that I cannot
stay with you any longer, but although I am so happy here, I must return to my own people.
Then mother-holic said, I am pleased that you should want to go back to your own people,
as you have said me so well and faithfully, I will take you home myself.
There upon she led the girl by the hand up to a broad gateway. The gate was opened and
as the girl passed through, a shower of gold fell upon her and the gold pleams her so that she
was covered with it from head to foot. That is a reward for your industry, said Mava Honour,
and as she spoke she handed her the spindle which she had dropped into the realm.
The gate was then closed and the girl found herself back in the old world close to her mother's house.
As she entered the courtyard, the cockles were purged on the rail called out,
but the little girl then daughters come back to you.
And she went into her mother and sister and as she was so richly covered with gold, they gave her a warm welcome.
she related to them that all that had happened and when the mother heard how she had come
by her great riches she thought she should make her ugly lazy daughter to go and try
her fortune. So she made a sister go and sit by the well and spin and the girl
will prick her finger and throw her hand into a boneless so that she might drop some blood
onto a spindle and she threw it into the well and jumped in herself.
Like her sister, she awoke in the beautiful mirror and walked over it till she came back
to the other.
So she came to the other and take us out, take us out for our last wish of event to
a sender.
You will beg through long ago, quite the nose as before, but the lazy girl answered,
she used to think I am going to dirty my hands for you and walks on.
Presentation came to the apple tree.
She came to me, she came to me, I pray, my apples, one and all are ripe.
It cried, but she only answered, and nice things are asking me to do. One of the apples
might fall on my head and passed on. At last, she came to Mama Honour's house, and as she
had heard, all about the nice she threw her sister, she would not have played with them,
and engaged herself without delay to the old woman. The first day she was very obedient and
in industrious, and exerted herself to please Mama Honour, or she thought to have gone she
she'd get in the turn. The next day however she began to dawdle over her work and
the third day she was more idle still. And she began to lie in bed in the morning
than refuse to get up. While still she neglected to make the old women's bed
properly and we got to shake it so that the feathers might fly about. So mother
Holah, very soon got tired of her and told her she might go and lazy girl was delighted
at this and put her as her, the gold will soon be mine.
Navigola, let her, as she had let her sister to the board gate play, but as she was passing
through the incident of the shower of gold, the great bucket of pitch came pouring over her.
That is in turn for your services, so the old woman and she shut the gate.
So the lazy girl had to go home covered with pitch and a government on the well, called
out as she saw her.
Look at her lovin' your dirty daughters come back to you.
But try what she wrote.
She could not get that pitch off and it's up to her as non-alph-she-fit.
Be and goodnight.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Will Home Grimm.
Chapter 22 Little Red Cap.
Also Nern's little red riding head.
Once upon a time there was a dear little girl who was not by everyone who looked at her.
But most of all, by her grandmother, and there was nothing that she would not have given to the child.
Once, she gave her a little cap or a red velvet, which suited her so well that she would never wear anything else.
So she was always cold, little red cap.
One day, her mother said to her, come, little red cat. Here is a piece of cake and a bottle
of wine. Take them to your grandmother. She is ill and weak, and they will do her good.
Set out before it gets hot, and when you are going walk nicely and quietly and do not run
off the path. Or you may fall and break the bottle, and then your grandmother will get nothing.
And when you go into her room, don't forget to say good morning, and don't keep into every
corner before you do it. I will take great care, so little red cap to her mother, and
gave her hand on it. The grandmother lived out in a wood, half a leaf from the village, and
just so little red cap into the wood, a wolf mater. White cap did not know, did not know
what a wicked creature he was and was not at all afraid of him.
Good day, little red cap, said he.
Thank you kindly.
Wolf?
With that way, so I mean, little red cap?
Do you like red mullers?
What have you got in your apron?
Kaken wine?
Yesterday was bathing day, so poor sick red muller is to have something good.
Make a stronger.
What is your granulalinif?
Little red cap?
Like a cordial of a leg farther on in the wood, the house stands under three large
of trees.
The nut trees are just below. You surely must know it.
They find the little red cap.
The wolf thought himself, would attend a young creature, would a nice plump, mouthful.
She will be better to eat than all women.
I must act crottyly, so as the catch both.
So he walked through a short time by the side of the little red cap,
and then he said, see, then the red cap, how pretty the flowers are about here?
Why do you not look around?
I believe too, but you do not hear how sweetly the little bands are singing. You will
gravely and honest if you are going to school while everything else up here in the world
is merry.
There is a red cap going to eyes and then you saw some beam dancing here and there through
the trees and pretty flowers growing everywhere she thought. Suppose I take round of
our fresh names gay but please are too. She is so early in the day that I shall get there
in good time, and so she ran from the path into the wood to look for flowers, and whenever
she had picked one, she found that she saw a still pretty one while the odd and ran
after it, and so got deeper and deeper into the wood. Meanwhile, the wolf ran to the grandmother's
house and knocked at the door. Who is there? Little rent cap, applied her roof. She is bringing
taken a wine, but from the draw, Mr. Lach called up the grandmother, I am too weak and
cannot get up. The wolf, Mr. Lach, a door sprang open and without saying why he went straight
to the grandmother's bed and devout it out. Then he put all her clothes dressed himself
in her cap, laid himself in bed and drew the curtains.
Little Red Cap however had been running about picking flowers and when she had gathered
in so many that she could carry no more. She remembered her grandmother and set out on
the waiter. She was surprised if I'm the cottage door standing open and once she went into the room,
she had such a strange feeling that she said oh dear, how on easy I feel today and at other times
I like being with grandmother so much. She called out good morning but received no answer. So she
went to the bread and drew back for curtains, barely her grandmother with her catboard far over
her face and looking very strange.
Oh grandma, she said, what big ears you have, the better to hear you with, my child
was the reply, but grandmother, what big eyes you have, she said, the better to see you
with my dear.
But grandmother, what much has you have, the better to hug you with?
Oh, but grandmother, what terrible big mouth you have, the better to eat you with,
scarcely had a wolf said this, then with one bow and he was out of bed and swallowed up
red cap. When the wolf had appeased his appetite, he lay down again in the bed, fell asleep
and began to snore very loud. The Huntsman was just passing the house and thought to himself,
how old women is snoring? They must just see if he wants anything. So he went into the room
and when he came to the bed he saw that the wall was lying in it.
To why blind you hear you old sinner said he, I have a long sought you.
Then just as he was going to fire at him at a curtain at the wall might have devoured the grandmother
and that she might still be saved. So he did not fire, but took a pair of scissors and began to cut open the stomach of sleeping wall.
when he had made two SNPs, he saw the little red cap shining and then he made two SNPs more.
And the little girls sprang up crying, oh how frightened I have been, how dark it was inside the walls,
in the wall. And after that the age-grandmother came up alive also, but scarcely able to breathe.
Rodecape home, a quickly fetched great stones with which they filled the wall's belly,
and when he woke, he wanted to run away, the stones were so heavy that he collapsed
at once and felt dead, and all three were delighted, the Huntsman drew off the wall's skin
and went home with it.
The grandmother ate cake and drank the wine which Rodecape had bought and revived,
but Rodecape brought herself as long as I live, I will never buy myself loose apart, to run
into the wood, and my mother has forbidden me to do so.
It was also related, it also related that once one red cap was again taking cakes to the
old grandmother, another wood spiked out and tried to entice her from the path.
Red cap, however, was on her guard in the straightforward, on her way, and told her grandmother
that she had met the wood, and that she had said good morning to her, but with such
or wicked look in his eyes, that if they had not been on the public road, she was certain
he would have eaten her up. Well, so the grandmother, we will shut the door that he may not
come in, soon afterwards the wolf knocked and cried. Open the door, grandmother, I am
little red cap and bring new some cakes. The painting not speak or over the door, so the
The great-beaged old twice, or thrice around the house, and at last jumped, jumped on the roof,
intending to wait until Red Cat went home and immediately, and then to steal Arthur
her and a vera her in the darkness.
The grandmother saw what was in his thoughts.
In front of the house, there was a great storm trough.
So she said to the child, take the pale of her cat.
I made some sausages yesterday, so carry the water in which I bore them to the trough.
Red cap carried until the great trough was quite full, then the smotheres as it just reached
the wall, and he sniffed them, slipped down, and that last stretch out had next so bad
that he could no longer keep his footing in the gantest lip, and slipped down from the roof
straight into the great trough, and was drowned. The red cap went joysly home, and no one
ever, did anything to harm her again.
He and good night.
Grimm's fairy towns by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm.
Chapter 23, The Robert Fried Grimm.
There was once a member who had one beautiful daughter, and as she was grown up, he was anxious
that she should be well married and provided for.
He said to himself, I will give as to the first suitable man who comes and asks for her
hand.
Not long after, a suitor appears and, as he appeared to be very rich, and the man I could
see nothing in him with which to find fault, he betrothed his daughter to him.
But the girl did not care for the man as a girl or to care for her betrothed husband.
She did not feel that she could trust him, and she could not look at him in all
think of him about an inward shadow.
day he said to her, you have not yet paid me a visit, although we have been betrothed
for some time.
But why do you not know where your house is?" she answered.
My house is out there in the dark forest, he said.
She tried to excuse herself by saying that she would not be able to find the way of the
birth.
Her betroth only replied, you must come and see me next Sunday.
I have already invited guests for that day, and that she may not mistake the way.
I will screw Ashes along the path.
Once a day came, and it was time for the girl to start, a feeling I'm sure her to
came over her, but she could not explain, and that she might be able to find her path
again, she filled her pockets with peas and lentils to sprinkle on ground as she went
along.
On reaching the entrance to the forest, she found the path straight with Ashes, and these
followed, and me she followed, throwing down some peas on either side of her at every step she took.
She walked the whole day, and she came to the deepest, darkest part of the forest.
There she saw a lonely house looking so grim and mysterious, that it did not please her at all.
She stepped inside, but not a soul was to be seen, and a great silence rained throughout.
Suddenly, a voice cried, turned back, turned back, your maiden fair, linger not in this murderous
lair.
The garloved up and saw that the voice came from the bird, hanging in a cage on the wall.
Again, it cried, turned back, turned back your maiden fair, linger not in this murderous
lair.
The girl passed on from, going from room to room of the house, but they were all empty,
and still she saw no one. At last she came to the cellar and there's that a very, very old woman
who could not keep her head from shaking. Can you tell me, Asagov, if I put her husband
lives here, you poor child, answer the old woman, or to a place for you to come to. This is
a murderous den. You think yourself a promised bride and that your marriage will soon take place
but it is with death that you will keep your marriage feast.
Look, do you see that large-quarter of water which I am obliged to keep on the fire?
As soon as they have you in their power, they will kill you without mercy and cook and eat you,
or their eaters of men. If I did not take pity on you and save you, you would be lost.
They are upon the old women led her behind a large cask, which quite hit her from you.
She said, do not move or speak. Or it will be all over with you. Tonight, when the
robbers are all asleep, we will flee together. I have long been waiting for an opportunity
to escape. The words were highly out of my mouth when the godless crew returned, dragging
another young girl along with them. They were all drunk and paid no heed to her cries
in lamentations. They gave her wine to drink, three glasses full, one of white wine,
one of red and one of yellow, and with that her heart gave way, and she died. Then they
tore off her dainty clothing, laid her on a table and cut her beautiful body into pieces
and sprinkles sold upon it. The poor, the troze girl, crouched trembling and shuddering behind
the cast, where she saw what a terrible fate had been intended for her by the rubbers.
One of them now noticed a gold ring still remaining on the double finger of the moment
girl, and as she, and as he could not draw it up easily, he took a hatchet and cut off
the finger, the finger sprang into the air and fell behind the cast, into the lap of
the girl who was hiding there. The rubber took a light and began looking for it, but he
couldn't find him.
How do you look to behind the large cast,
said one of the others, with old women called out,
come and eat your suppers, and let the thing
be till tomorrow, the finger went one away.
The old woman is right, so the rubbers,
and they ceased looking for the finger and sat down.
The old woman then mixed a sleeping jolt
and would bear lying.
And before long, they were all lying
in the floor of the cellar, fastest sleep, and snoring.
As soon as the girl was assured of this,
she came from behind the cast.
She was obliged to step over the bodies of the sleepers who were lying close to Gepa.
And every moment she was filled with renewed dread, less she should wake of them.
But God helped her, so that she passed safely over them.
And then she and the old woman went upstairs, opened the door, and hastened as far as they could from the mother as dead.
They found the ashes scattered by the wind, but the peas and lentils had sprouted,
and grown sufficiently above the ground, to guide them in the room like along the path.
All night long they walked and it was morning before we reached the mill. When the
girls heard her father all by their chaplain, the day came that had been fixed for
the marriage, the bridegroom arrived and also a large company of guests with a miller
had taken care to invite all his friends and relations. As they sat at the feast, each
guest in turn was asked to tell the tale, the bride sat still and didn't say a word.
And you, my love, for the bird green telling to her, is there no tell you know? Tell us
something. I will tell you the dream, then. So the bird. I went alone to a forest and came
at last to a house. But a soul could I find within. But a bird that was hanging in a cage
on the wall cried. Turn back, turn back young maiden fair, lingo not in this murderous
and again a second time that said these words. My darling, this is only a dream. I went on
through the house from room to room, but they were all empty and everything was so grim
and mysterious. At last I went down to the summer and there's that a very very old woman
who could not keep her head still. I asked her if my patrols lived here and she answered
are you poor child, you are come to a murderous den, you'll be true if does it indeed live
here, but he will kill you without mercy and afterwards cook and eat you.
I darling, this is only a dream.
The older woman had me behind a large cask and scarcely had she done this when the
robbers returned home, dragging a young girl and none of them.
They gave her three kinds of wine to drink, white, red and yellow, and with that she
died. My darling, this is only a dream. Then they tore off her dainty closing in cut her
beautiful body into pieces and sprinkled solid on it. My darling, this is only a dream.
And one of the robbers saw that there was a gold ring still left on her finger, and as
it was difficult to draw off, he took a hatchet and cut off her finger, the finger sprang
into the air and fell behind the great cusp into my lap, and here is a finger with
ring, and what these wires supply true for the thing and shoot it, the assembled guests,
the bridegroom, who during this recital had grown deadly pair up and tried to escape with
the guests seized him and held him fast, they delivered him up to justice and he, and all
his mother's fan were condemned to death for their wicked deeds.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, chapter 24, Tom Rambe.
A poor wooden set is called a one-night smuggling his pipe blown by a side, or his wife sat
by his side spinning.
How lonely it is, wife, said he, as he puffed out a long car of smoke, but you and me
to sit here by ourselves without any children to play about and amuse us while other people
seemed so happy and merry with their children.
What you say is very true, so the wife, sowing and turning around her wheel.
How happy should I be if I had the one child?
If it were ever so small?
Nay, if it were no bigger than my thumb, I should be very happy and love it daily.
Now, what does he mean?
It came to pass that his good woman's wish was fulfilled,
just in the very way she had wished it.
not long afterwards she had a little boy who was quite healthy and strong. But was not much bigger than my thumb.
So they said, well, we cannot say we have not got what we wished for, and as well as years, we will love him dearly.
And they called him Thomas Tham. They gave him plenty of food here, but all they could do, he never grew bigger.
could bigger, but kept just the same size as he had been when he was born. Still, his eyes
were sharp and sparkling, and he soon showed himself to be a clever little fella who
always knew well what he was about. One day, as a woodman was getting ready to go into
the wood to cut fuel, he said, I wish I had someone to bring the cart up to me,
I want to make haste, oh father, bro Tom, I will take care of that, I can't shop
in the wood by the time you want it, and the woodman march and said, how can that be?
You cannot reach up to the horse's bridle, never mind that father, so Tom, in my mother
will only harness the horse, I will get into his aunt and tell him which way to go.
Well, so the father, we will try for what?
Then we'll try for once.
When the time came, the mother harness that horse to the cart and put Tom in his ear,
and as he sat there, little man told the beast how to go, crying out, go on and stop
as he wanted, and thus the horse went on just as well as if the woodman had driven
it himself into the wood.
It happened that as the horse was going under the two fast and Thomas going up, gently, gently,
two streams came up.
I'm not doing that as, said one, there was a cart going along, and I hear a cart
are talking to the horse, but yet, I can see no one, at his crew, indeed, for the other,
there's a spot over the cart and see where it goes, so they went on into the woods, to
that last they came to the place when the wooden was, and Tom Dunn seeing his father cried
down, see, father, here I am with the cart, all right and safe, now taking me down.
So the father took hold of the horse, with one hand and with the other took his son out
of the horse's ear and put him down upon the straw, where he sat as a merry as he
pleans.
The two strangers were all this time looking on and did not know what to say for wonder.
At last one, one took the other aside and said, and he will urge him to make a half-ortune
we can get him and carry him about from the town to town as a show we must buy him.
So they went up to the woodman and asked him what he would take for his man.
He would be better off, said they, with us them with you.
I wouldn't say I'm at all, so the father, my own flesh and blood, is zero to me,
than all the silver and gold in the world.
But Tom, hearing of the bargain they wanted to make,
grabbed up to his father's coat to his shoulder and whispered in his ear,
take the money father and let them have me, I'll soon come back to you.
So the Whitman at last said,
he was selling Tom to the strangers for a large piece of gold,
and they paid the price.
Where was you like the set of seven of them?
Oh, put me on the rim of your hat.
That will be a nice gallery for me.
I can walk about there and see the country as we go along.
So, they did as he wished, and when Tom had taken me with his father, they took him away with him.
They jannied on until they began to be dusky, and when the little man said,
then we get down, I'm tired.
So, the man took off his hat and put him down on the clothe of earth,
and applaud, in the plowed field, by the side of the road.
But Tom ran about amongst the flowers, and that last lit into an old, mass hole.
The night my master said he, I'm off, mind and look sharp after me the next time.
Then they ran at once to the place and poked the ends of their sticks into the mouth hole,
but all in me, John only called father and father in, and at last they became quite dark,
so that they were forced to go their way without their prize as soggy as could be.
When Tom found, they were gone. He came out of his hiding place. What dangerous walking
it is, said he, in this plough field? Deviled a four from one of those great empties,
these great empty clots. I should undoubtedly break my neck. At last, by good luck,
he found a large empty snail shell. This is lucky, said he, I can sleep here very well,
in he put. Just as he was falling asleep, he had a two-man passing by chatting together,
and once or two the other, how can we rob that rich person's house of his silver and gold?
I'll tell you, quite a one-wise was that, so that the frightened. I'm sure I had some
speak. They stood still listening, and Tom said, take me with you, and I'll soon show you how to get
the palace and his money. But where are you today? Look about on the ground on his
he and listen with a sound comes from. At last the thieves found him out and lifted
him in their hands. You little urchin, they said, what can you do for us? Why? I can get
between the iron bars, the iron window of bars of the palace and throw you out whatever
you want. That's a good board, so there are things. Come along, we shall see what you can do.
When they came to the past and tasked, Tom slipped through the window bars into the room,
and then called out as loud as he could fall. Will you have all of that in here?
At this, the threes were frightened and said, softly, softly, speak low,
but you may not awaken anybody. The Tom seemed, as if he didn't understand them and balled out again,
How much will you have? Should I throw it all out?
Now we'll cook, lay in the next room, and hearing a noise she raises herself up in her bed and
listen. Meanwhile the thieves were frightened and ran off a little way, but at last they plucked
their hearts and said, the little action is only trying to make balls of us, so they came back
and whispered softly to him, saying, now let us have no more of your movie strokes, let's wear
us out some of the money. Then Tungung out of Ladysu Kud, very well, hold your hands, here
it comes. The cook heard this quite plain, so he sprang out of bed and ran to open the door.
The thieves ran off, as if a wolf was at their tails, and the maven have engroved about
and found nothing, one to wait for a night. By the time she came back, Tung had slipped
off into the barn, and when she looked about and searched every home in corner, she and found
nobody she went to bed thinking she must have been dreaming with her eyes open.
It is the little man called about in the hay loft, and at last on a snag placed a finish
as night's resting, so he laid himself down, meaning to sleep till daylight, and then
find his way home to his father and mother, but at last, however he was undone, what crosses
and sorrows happened to us all in this world, the cup got up and before daybreak to be the
cows and go and straight to the haylots carried away on the edge of the hay with a little
man in the middle of it, buses leave. He still however slept on and didn't awake until he
found himself in the mouth of the cow. For the cook had put the hay into the cows' rick and the
cow had taken tom up in the mouth of the bit. Good lack a day he said, how came I to tumble into
the milk, but soon he soon found out when he really was, and was forced to have all his
wits about him, but he might not get between the cows' teeth and so because she was there.
And last down he went into the stomach, and his father dark said he, he forgot to build windows
in his room to let the sun in, and candle would be no bad thing.
Though he made the best of his bad luck, he did not like his quarters at all,
and the worst of it was that more and more pain was always coming down, and the space left
for him became smaller and smaller, and last he cried out and the loud as he could, don't bring
me any more hey, don't bring me any more hey! The main happened to be just then looking to
care, and hearing someone speak, seeing nobody and yet being quite sure it was the same
wife that she had heard in the night. She was so frightened that she fell off her stool and
overset the milk pale, as soon as she could pick herself up out of the dirt, she ran off as
faster she could to her master, the person, and said, Sir, Sir, the cow was talking with
a person said, Well, then they'll art surely mad. However, he went to move her into the cow house
to try and see what was matter. Scarefully, have they set foot on the threshold, went on
don't bring me any more hate than the past and then the past and the past and
and self was frightened and thinking how the cow was surely bewitched toward his man
to kill him in the spot so the cow was killed and cut up and the stomach in which Tom
lay was thrown out upon a downhill. Tom was soon set himself to work to get out which was
not a very easy task, but at last just as he made room to get his head out, fresh a luck
before him, a hungry wolf sprang out and swallowed up the whole stomach, with Tom in it,
at one gop and run away. Tom however was still not decided and thinking the wolf would not
dislike having some chat with him as he was going along, he called up, like a friend, I can show
So your famous treat, why is that, so the wall, in such and such a house, said Tom,
describing his own father's house, you can call through the drain into the kitchen and
then into the pantry, and there you will find cakes, ham, beef, cold chicken, roast pig,
apple dumplings, and everything that your heart can wish.
The wolf did not want to be asked twice, so that very night he went into the house and
called through the drain into the kitchen, and then into the pantry, and A's in drunk
bed and hot content. As soon as he had enough, he wanted to get away, but he had eaten so
much that he could not go out by the same way he came in. This was just what Tom had
a record upon, and now he began to set up a great shot, making all the noise he could.
Well, you'd be easy, sedable. You're awake in everybody in the house if you make such
a class up. What's that to me? It's a little man. You have had your flotic. Now I have
a mind to be married myself and you began singing and shouting as love as he could.
The Woodman and his wife, being awakened by the noise, peep through the crack, zero
crack in the door. But when they saw a walk, they was down there. You may also pose that
they were sad and frightened. And the Woodman ran for his accent gave the his wife a
the sife.
Did you stay behind, said the woman, said the woodman, and when I have knocked him
on the head, you must rip him up with a sife.
Tom had all this inquiry up, father, father, I am here, the wolf has swallowed me, and
as father said, haven't be praised, we have found our ditch out again, and he told his wife,
not to use the sife of fear she should have had him, and he aimed a great blow and struck
the wolf on the head and killed him on the spot. And when he was said, they caught open his body and said,
Tommy, free. Ah, so the father, what face we have had for you? Yes, father, I'm
the team. I have traveled all over the world. I think in one way or another, in one way or
other since we parted. And now I am very glad to come home and get fresh air again. Why?
where have you been?" said his father,
I have been in a mouse hole,
I didn't a snail shell, and down a cow's throat,
and in the wolf's belly, and yet here I am.
Again, safe and sound.
Well, said they, you are come back, and we will not
sell you again for all the riches in the world,
and they hugged in kiss their dear little son,
and gave him plenty to eat and drink,
while he was very hungry.
And then they fetch new clothes for him,
but old ones had been quite spoiled on this journey.
So Master Phums stayed at home when his father and mother in peace.
Although he had been so great at Traumila and had done and seen so many fine things,
I was fond enough of telling the whole story, he always agreed
that Arturo is no place like home.
He and can night.
Grimm's fairy towns by Jacob Grimm and Warhelm Grimm.
Chapter 25.
Rumble Stilt Skin
By the side of a wood in the country and on the way off,
rather buying stream water,
and upon the stream listed a mill,
the mill's house was close by and the miller
you must know how a very beautiful daughter.
She was more overt, very shrewd and clever,
clever, and the Miller was so proud of her that he one day told the King of the Land
he used to come and hunt in the wood, that his daughter could spin gold out of straw.
Now, this King was very fond of money, and when he heard the millers post his
greediness was raised, and he sent for the girl to be brought before him.
Then he led her to a chamber in his palace, where there was a great heap of straw and gave her
a spinning wheel and said, all this must be spun into gold before morning, as you love
your life. It was in vain that the poor maiden said that it was only a silly boast of her
father, or that she could do no such thing as spin, straw, and the gold. The chamber door
was locked and she was left alone. She sat down in one corner of the room and began to
be well her heart fate, an honest sudden the door opened and a troll looking little man,
hobbled in and said, good morning to you my good last, what are you sleeping for?
A last such a thing, I must spin the straw into gold and I know not how, what will you give
me to the hobgoblin, to do it for you?
I neckless, the climate. He took her at her word and sat himself down to the wheel and
was so then saying, round about round about knowing the whole, really, really, really
strong the gold. And round about the real went nerdy, the white was quickly done, when
the straw was all spun into gold. When the king came and saw this, he was greatly astonishing
please, but his heart grew still more greedy of game, and he shed up the poor man as daughter
again, with a fresh task. Then she knew not what to do, and set down once more to
weep, but the dwarf student opened the door and said, what will he give me to do your
task? The ring on the finger said she, so her little friend took the ring and began to
work at the wheel again, and was all the same. Round about round about low and behold
really, really sure and to go.
Tell a long before morning, all was done again.
The king was greatly denied to see all the squittering treasure, but still he had
not enough, so he took the minister to yet, to a yet larger heap, and said, all this
must be spun to night, and if it is, you shall be my queen.
As soon as she was alone, that dwarf came in and said, what will you give me to swim
gold for you this third time? I have nothing left, said she, then say you will give me,
so that is the man. The first little child that you may have when you are queen.
That may never be for the mother's daughter, and as she knew no other way to get her to have
done, she said she would do what she asked. Round went the wheel again to the old son, and the
the mannequin and once more spun the heap into the gold. The king came in the morning
and finding all he wanted was forced to keep his word, so he married the most daughter
and she really became queen. At the birth of her first child, she was very glad and forgot
the dwarf and what she had said, but one day he came into a room where she was sitting and playing
with her baby, and put her mind and put her in mind of it. Then she grieves slowly at
her misfortune and said, she would give him all the wealth of the kingdom if he would let
her off, but in vain to let last her sit, her tears soften him and he said, I will give you three
days, grace. And if during that time you tell me my name, you shall keep your shadowed.
Now, the queen lay away at all night thinking of all the odd names that she had ever heard,
and she sent messages all over the land to find out new ones.
The next day, the little man came and she began to begin with Timothy, Icarbott, Benjamin, Jeremiah,
and all the names she could remember, but all and each of them he said,
Imagine that is not my name.
The second day she began with all the comical names she could hear of.
Bandy legs, hunchback, crook shanks, and so on.
But a little gentleman still said to everyone that is not my name.
The third day one of the messenger messages came back and said,
I have travelled two days about hearing of any other names, but yesterday,
I was climbing a high hill among the trees of the forest with the fox and the hair
bit each other good night. I saw a little hut and before the hut birded fire and round
about the fire a funnier than the dwarf was dancing upon one leg and singing, merrily
the feast I'll make tomorrow I'll prove tomorrow a big, merrily I'll dance and sing
for next day will a stranger bring, this and does my lady dream, rumple stoolskin is my name.
Then the queen heard that she jumped to the joy and as soon as her little friend came she
sat down upon her throne and called all her court to round to enjoy the fun. And the nurse
did by her son with a baby in her arms as if it was quite ready to be given up. Then the
woman began to chop up the board of having the board child to take her with him to his heart
in the woods. And if I let no lady, what is my name? Is it John? I should be no
madam. Is it Tom? No, madam. Is it Jimmy? It is not. Can your name be Rampal Stilt
Skin? So the lady, slightly? Some witch told you that. Some witch told you that
cry a little man and dices right foot in a rage. So deep into the floor that he was forced
the layholder bit with his hands to pull it with both his hands to pull it out. Then he
made the best of his way off while the nurse laughed in the baby crowed, and all her
caught jade at him were having had so much trouble for nothing, and said, we wish you
a very good morning and a merry feast. Mr. Rampall still skim.
The End, Good Night.
Grimm's very towns by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm.
Chapter 26.
Clever Grettel.
There was once a cook named Grettel, who wore shoes with red heels, and when she walked
out with them on, she turned herself this way in that, was quite happy and bought, used
said in the old pretty girl, and when she came home she drank in her gladness of heart,
a dropped a wine, and as wine excites a desire to eat, she tasted the best of whatever she
was cooking until she was satisfied and said, the cook must know what the food is like.
It came to pass that the most of one day said to her,
Gretel, here is a guest coming this evening, prepare me two files very daily. I will see
two it, Master. Answer Gretel, she killed two files, scolded them, plucked them, put them on the
spit, and towards evening set them before the fire that they might roast. The files began to
turn brown and were nearly ready, but the guests had not yet arrived. Then in Gretel called
out to Hamaster. If the guest does not come, I must take the files away from the fire,
but it will be a sin and a shame if they are not eating the moment they are apt for
their juiciest."
The master said, I will run myself and fetch the guest. When the master had turned his
back, Gretel lay the spit with a thousand one-sided bolt, standing so long by the fire
there, makes one sweat and blasty, who knows when they will come. Meanwhile, I will run
into the sun and take a drink. She ran down, says a jug, said, God bless it for you,
brittle, and took a good drink, and thought the wine should flow on, and should not be interrupted,
and took yet another hearty dropped. Then she went and put the fouls down again to the fire,
basted them and drove the spit to merrily around, but as they rose to meet smoke so good,
but it's all thought, something might be wrong. It ought to be tasted. She touched it with her finger and said,
ah, how good files are. It certainly is a sin and a shame that they are not eaten at the right time.
She ran into the window to see if the master was not coming with his guest, but she saw no one
and went back to the files and bought one of the wings is burning and I'd better take it off from me to it.
So she cut it off, ate it and enjoyed it, and when she had done, she thought, the other
must go down too, or else masterworld observe that something is missing.
And the two wings were eaten, she went and looked for her master and did not see him.
It suddenly occurred to her, who knows?
They are perhaps not coming at all and have turned in somewhere, and she said, well,
So, enjoy yourself. One bow has been cut into. Take another drink and eat it up entirely.
When it is eaten you'll have some peace. Why should God's gift? God's good gifts be spoiled.
So, she ran into the cello again. Took it enormous drink and ate up the one chicken in great glee.
When wives of the chickens were swallowed down and still how master didn't come, did not come.
Grit all looked at the other and said, what one is the other should be like right?
The two go together. What's right for all one is right or the other?
I think if I were to take it to take another draw, it would do me no harm.
So she took another hardy dream and let the second chicken fly the best.
While she was making the most of it, her master came and cried,
hurry up, Gretel.
The guest is coming directly after me.
Yes, sir, I will soon serve up on say Gretel.
Meantime, the master looked to see that the table was probably made,
and took the great knife, wherewithe he was going to carve the chickens and sharpen it on steps,
and sharpened it on steps.
Presently the guest came, and knocked politely and cutiously at the house door.
Gretel ran and looked to see who was there, and when she saw the gas she put her finger
to her lips and said, ''Hash-hash, go away as quickly as you can, and my most
catches you it will be the worst for you.
He said immediately ask you to suffer, but his intention is to cut off your two
ears.
Just listen how he has sharpened my forehead, the gas held the sharpening and hurried
on steps again as fast as he could.
Gretel was an idol.
She ran screaming to her mouth and cried, ''You have invited a fine gas?
Why, Greta, what do you mean by that? Yes, Sushi. Yes, take in the chickens, which, which I was going to serve up.
Off the dish, and has run away with them. That's a nice trick. Say her master, and the men to the find chicken.
If he had, but let me one, so that's something remained for me to eat.
He called him to stop with a breast, but the guests pretended not to hear. Then he ran out of him with a knife still in hand crying.
one, just one, meaning that the Gets should leave him just one chicken and not take
both against however, for no otherwise then he must give up one of his ears and ran
as if fire were burning under him in order to take them both with him, the end, good night.
Grim's very tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim. Chapter 27, the old man and his grandson.
There is once a very old man whose eyes had become dim, his ears done with hearing, his
knees trembled, and when he sat at table, he could hardly hold the spoon and spoke the
before upon the tablecloth or let it run out of his mouth. His son and his son's wife were
discusses at this, so the old grandfather at last had to sit in the corner behind the stove
and they gave him his food in the earth and where a bowl, and not even enough of it. And
he used to look towards the table with his eyes for the tears. Once, too, his tripling hands
could not hold the bowl, and it fell to the ground and broke. The young wife scolded him,
but she said nothing and only sighed. Then they brought him a wooden bowl for a few half
pens, after which he had to eat. However, once sitting with us when the little grounds are
in four years old, began to gather together, some bits of wood upon the ground.
What are you doing there, asked the father? I am making a little trap,
also the child, the father and mother to eat out of when I am big, man and his wife
lived at each other for a while and present things began to cry, and they took the old
grandfather to the table and henceforth always let him eat with them, and likewise said nothing
if he did spill a little bit, nothing, the end, great night
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, chapter 28, the Little Paisant.
I was a certain village where I no one lived, but really rich peasants, and just one poor
one, whom they called the Little Paisant.
He had not even so much as a cow, and so less money to buy one, and yet he and his wife
did so wish to have one. One day he said to her,
listen, I have a good idea. There is our gossip,
the carpenter. He shall make us a wooden car and paint it brown,
so that it looks like any other, and the in time it will
suddenly get big and become and be a cow.
The woman also liked the idea, and their gossip took
carpenter cut and cleaned the calf and painted it as it would be and made it with head
hanging down as if it were eating. Next morning when the cows were being driven out,
the little peasant called the cow heard her, the cow heard in and said, look, I have a little
calf there, but it is small and has to be carried. The cow heard said, all right, and took it
in his arms and carried it to the pasture and set it among the grass. The look-up was
remained standing like one which was eating and the cow had said, it was soon run by itself
just look how it eats already. At night when he was going to drive the herd home again,
he said to the car, if you didn't stand then eat your fill, you can also go on your four legs,
I don't care to drag you home again in my out. The little present stood at his door and
and waited for his little calf.
And when the cow had drove the cow through the village
and the calf was missing, he inquired where it was.
The cow had answered, it's still standing up there, eating.
It would not stop and come with us.
But the little peasant said, oh, I must have my these back again.
And they went back to the meadow together,
but someone had stolen the calf and it was gone.
The cow had said, it must have run away.
The peasant tell her, they said, don't tell me that.
And let the cow her before me, who for his carelessness condemned him to give the peasant
the cow while the calf which had run away.
Now, another peasant in his wife had the cow for which they had so long wished, and they
were hardly glad that they had no food for it, and could it and could give it nothing to eat.
so it soon had to be killed. They sold to the flesh and the peasant went into the town and wanted to sell the skimmet so that he might buy a new car for the proceeds.
On the way he passed by a mill and there sat a raven with broken wings. And out of pity he took him and wrapped him in the skim.
But the weather grew so bad, and there was a storm of rain and wind, he could go no
father and turn back to the moon, thanks for shelter.
The mill is wife was alone in the house and said to the peasant, lay yourself on the
straw there and gave them the slice of bread and cheese.
The peasant ate it and laid down with his skin, the sight him, and the woman thought,
he is tired and has gone to sleep.
And the meantime the peasant, the mill is wife was teetim well, and said,
and said, my husband is out, so we will have a feast.
The peasant listened and when he had been talk about feasting,
he was vexed that he had been forced to make shift for the slice of bread and cheese.
Then the woman served up four different things,
roast meat, salad, cakes and wine.
Just as they were bad and sit down and eat, they were the knocking outside.
The woman said, oh heavens, it is my husband.
She quickly hit the verse meet inside the tired stove, the wine under the pillow, the salad on the bed, the cakes under it, and the passing in the closet on the porch.
Then she opened the door for her husband and said, thank Heaven, you are back again. There is such a storm. It looks as if the world were coming to an end.
The men are sort of present lying on the shore and asked, what is that fellow doing there?
Ah, so the wife, the poor name, came in the storm and ring, and begs for shelter, so I gave him a bit of bread and cheese and showed him what the straw was.
And then I said, I have no objection but be quick and get me something to eat.
The woman said, that I have nothing but bread and cheese.
I'm contented with anything, replied the husband.
So far as I am concerned, bread and cheese will do.
And up to the present and said, come and eat some more with me.
The present did not require to be invited twice, but got up and ate.
After this, the millisold skin in which the raven was lying on the ground and asked,
What have you there? The present answered,
I have a tooth say inside it, can he fall down anything to me?
Seven-minute? Why not, also the present?
But he only says four things, and a fifth he keeps himself.
The man that was curious and said that's him will tell something for once
Then the president pinched the Raven's head
So that he croaked and made him more it's like good
The man said, what did he say the president answered in the last place?
He says that there is some wine hidden under the pillow
Bless me
cried in the night and went there and found the wine now go on
So he
The peasant made the raven cook again and said in second place he says that there is
some roast meat in the tile stove.
A pon-moi-watt, private-manor, and wet-fila, and found the roast meat.
The peasant made the raven policy one still more and said,
gladly he says that there is some salad on the bed.
That would be a fine-date, private-manor, and wonder and found the salad.
And last the peasant pinched the wave and once more till he cropped and said,
Fortunately, he says that there are some cakes under the bed.
That would be a fine thing, by the minute, and look there on the cakes.
And now the two sat down to the table together.
But the men as wife was frightened to death.
And when the bed and took all the keys of her,
the men would have liked much to know the fifth.
But the little peasant said, first we will quickly eat the four things,
for something bad, so they ate. And after that they bargained how much the murder was to get
for the purpose of prophecy. Until they agreed on 300 tailors. And the puzzle wants more
pinched the railings head to be cloaked loudly. The murder asked, what did he say? The
puzzle replied, he says that the devil is hiding outside there and the closet on the porch.
The murder said, the devil must go out and open the house door,
Then the woman was forced to give up the keys and the peasant unlocked the closet.
The person ran out as far as he could, and the minister, it was true. I saw the black
rascal with my own eyes. The peasant, however, made off next morning by daybreak for the 300
tailors. At home, the small peasant gradually moached out. He built a beautiful house, and
a peasant say. The small peasant personally peent to the place where golden's and
in force, and people carry the gold home and shovels.
And the small peasant was brought before the mayor, and bid him to say, from once his
wife came. He answered, I sold my cow skin in the town for 300 kilos. When the peasant
heard that, they too wished to enjoy this great profit, and man home killed all their cows
stripped off their skins in order to sell them in the town to the greatest advantage.
May or however, said that my servant must go first. When she came to the merchant in
the town, he did not give her more than the two tailors for a skin. And when the others
came, he did not give them so much and said, what can I do with these all these skins?
Then the peasants were vexed, that the small peasants should have bused up with them,
wanted to take vengeance on him and accuse him of this treachery before the mayor.
The innocently repel him was a unanimous man, the unanimously sentenced to death and was
three rolled into the water, and a barrel paced for the post. He was led forth, and a
priest was brought to his to say a mess for his soul. But others were all obliged to retire
to a distance, and when the peasant looked at the priest he recognized the man who had
been with him on his wife. He said to him, I said to you free from the closet, set me free
from the bell. At this same moment, up came, with a flock of sheep, the very shepherd, whom the
pellet knew, had long been wishing to be there. So the crying almost might know I will not do
it, and the whole world insists on it, I will not do it, the shepherd hearing that came up to him
and said, and asked, what are you about? What it is? What is it that you will not do? The
person said, they want to make me mayor if I will but put myself in the barrel. But I will
not do it. The shepherd said, if nothing more than that is needful to in order to be mayor,
I would get into the barrel at once. The person said, if you will get in, you will be mayor,
and their shepherd was willing when he got in, and the peasant shut the top down on him.
Then he took the shepherd's rope himself and drove it away.
The pastor went to the crowd and declared that the mess has been said,
and they came and rolled about toward the water.
And the bow began to roll the shepherd's body.
I'm quite willing to be there.
They believed no otherwise, and that it was a peasant who was saying this, and answered,
That is what we intend, but first we shall look about you on the down below that, and they
won't the barrel down into the water. After the peasant went to home, and as they were entering the
village, the small peasant also came in quite, came quite the end, driving a flock of sheep
and looking quite contented. And the peasant's were assertion said, peasant, from once do you come?
Have you come out of the water? Yes, truly, the fun peasant. I say,
deep, deep down until that last I got to the bottom. I pushed the bottom
out of the barrel and clapped out and no pretty meadows on which a number of
lambs were feeding and from dense I brought this rock away with me, said the
peasants, are there any more there? Oh yes, said he, more than I could
walked in the peasants made up their minds that they too would fetch them sheep
for themselves, a flock of peace, but then they had said I come first, so they went
to the water together and just then and by some of the small leaky clouds in the blue sky
which were called with the lambs and then we were reflected in the water.
Where I upon the peasants cry we already see the sheep down below and then you're pressed
forward and said I will go down faster and look about me and things promise well I'll call you
so you jumped in splash on the water as sound as if you were calling them and the whole cloud
plumps him off to him and won that, and the entire village was dead, and it's more
evident, as sole air became a rich man. The end. Good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm. Chapsa 29, Frederick and Catherine.
There was once a man called Frederick. He had a wife whose name was Catherine, and they
had not long been married. One day Frederick said, Kate, I'm going to work in the fields.
When I come back, I shall be very hungry, so let me have something nice cooked, and a good
draught of air. Very well, said she, it shall all be ready. When did his time drew
9. Catherine took a nice steak, which was all meat, and was all the meat she had, and
put it on the fly to fly. The steaks seemed began to look bone, and to crackle in the
pad. And Catherine stood by with a fork and turned it, and she said to herself,
the steak is almost ready, only as well, go to the cellar for the ale. So she left the
pad on the fly and took a large jug, and went into the cellar and tacked the ale
the cast, but they ran into the jug in Catherine's Stimdooking On, and lasted
popped into her head. The dog is not shut up. He may be running away with the stake,
that's where I brought off. So I'm she ran from the cellar and sure enough the
Roscoeca had got the stake in his mouth, and was making off of it.
A way around Catherine in a way around the dog, across the field, but he ran
faster than she and stuck close to the stake. It's all gone and what can't be cured
must be in George said the Katherine. So she turned around and as she had around a good
way in whose tight she walked her militarily to call herself. Now all this time the
ale was running to Katherine had not turned the clock and when the jug was full the
liquor ran upon the floor until the castle was empty. When she got to the silice there she
just wanted to happen. My stars said she, what should I do to keep Frederick from seeing all
the sort of thing about? So she thought a while and at last remembered that there was a
sacrifice meal brought to the last bear, and that if she sprinkled this all over the floor,
it would suck up the ale nicely. What a lucky thing, essentially, that would cap the meal.
Then we have a good use for it. So where she went for it. But she managed to set it down just upon
on the great jug for a bit, an upset it, and thus all the ale that had been saved
was set swimming on the floor also.
Ah, well, such she, and one goes another May as well following, and she threw the meal
all about the cellar, and it was quite pleased with her cleverness and said, how very
neat and clean it looks?
At noon, Fredron came home, now wife cried he, what have you for dinner?
I was afraid to wreck on such she. I was cooking new steak, but while I went down to
draw the ale, the dog ran away with it, and while I ran off to him, the ale ran out.
I wanted to dry up the ale for the second meal that we got out of the fair. I upset
the junk. But the set-up is now quite dry and looks so clean.
Kate, Kate, said you, how could you do all this? Why did you leave the steak to fry and
the ale to run and then spoil over me? Why afraid to wreck? I said she, I didn't know,
I didn't know I was doing wrong, you should have told me before.
I did not know I was doing wrong, you should have told me before.
Sorry.
The husband bought him, so.
If my wife manages to write in books, I must look sharp myself.
Now he had a good deal of gold in the house.
So he said to Katherine,
what pretty yellow buttons he's at,
I shall put them in two blocks and bury them in the garden.
The take care that you never grew in, one mother was her.
No Frederick, such she, that I never will.
And soon as he was born,
they came by some pednits with earthen-replates and dishes.
And they asked her whether she would buy.
Oh, dear me, I should like to buy a very much, but I have no money.
If you have any useful yellow buttons, I might deal with you.
Yellow buttons said they, that is how I look at them.
Go into the garden and dig where I tell you, and you are finding yellow buttons.
I did not go myself. So the robes went and when they found what these yellow bottoms
were they took them all the way and left their plenty of plates and dishes. Then she
set them all about the house for a show, and then Frederick came back and cried at
Kate. What have you been doing? See, said she, I hope, bought all these yellow
bastards, but I do not touch them myself. The plan is when the themselves and dad
them up. Wife, why have you said Frederick, what a pretty piece of work you have made,
Those yellow bodies brought all my money.
How came you to do such a thing?
Why?
As is she, I did not know there was any harm in it.
You should told me.
Kevin wants to be using for a while, and at last I do a husband.
Harkie Frederick, we all soon get the gold back.
That's his run after the thieves.
Well, we will try on such a tea.
It takes some butter and cheese with you.
That we may have something to eat, by the way.
Very well, such a thing, and they set out.
and as Frederick walked the fastest he left his wife in some way behind. It does not matter
thought she, when we turn back I shall be so much nearer home than he.
Presently she came to the top of the hill, down the side of which there was a word so
narrow that the cartwheels always shave the tree on each side as they passed.
Ah, see now, that she, how they have bruised and wounded those portraits. They will never get
well, so she picked up pity on them and made use of the water to go to the sea. So that the wheels might not hurt them so much.
While she was doing this kind of office, one of her cheese-trail out of the basket and rolled down the hill.
Katherine left, but could not see where it had gone, so she said, well, I suppose that other will go the same way and find you.
Here's younger legs and I have. And she rolled it all the cheese after it and away it went. Nobody knew it was where, down the hill.
But she said, she's supposed that they knew the road and would follow her, and she could not stay that all day waiting for them.
And actually I would look very good, desired her to give her him something to eat.
Then she gave him the dry bread.
Where the butter and cheese said he, oh, I'm so cheap.
I used the butter to grease those four trees that the wheels shaped so, and one of the cheeses went away, so I sent me them after to find it.
I suppose that they are both on the road to get the summer.
What a goose you are to do such silly things!
So the husband, how can you say so?
So she, I am sure you never told me not.
They ate the dry bread together, and Fredrick said,
Kate, I hope you lot the door safe when you came away.
No, honestly, you did not tell me,
and go home and do it now before we go any farther, said Fredrick,
and bring with you something to eat.
Katherine did as he told her and bought herself by the way.
Don't worry, once I'm at the EAP, I don't think you're very fond of butter and cheese.
I'll bring him a bag of finance and a vinegar, for which I have obviously seen him take
some.
When she reached home, she bows at the back door, for the front door she took off the hinges
and said a Frederick told me to look the door, but surely it can know where he's so safe
if I take it with me.
she took her time, by the way, and when she over took her husband, she cried out,
they're Frederick, there was the door itself, you may watch it as carefully as you
please, unless unless, if said he would have clever wife by her, I sent you to
make the house fast, and you take the door away so that everybody may go in and
out and say please, however, as you have brought the door, you shall carry it about
with you for your pain, very well, after she is, I'll carry the door, and I'll not
and the vinegar bottle also. There would be too much of a load so if you please, I'll
pass them in to the door.
Frederick of course may know objections to that plan, and they sit off into the wood to
look for the thieves. But they could not find them, and when it grew dark, they climbed
up into a tree to swim the night there, scarcely where they up, and who should come
by, but the very roaks they were looking for. The hill were in, the truest great
and the lungs of the class of people, that class of people who find things before they are lost.
They were tired, so they sat down and made a fire under the very tree where Frederick and Catherine were.
Frederick slipped down on the inside and picked up some stones.
And he climbed up again and tried to hit the thieves on the head with them, but they only said,
it must be in mourning for the wind shakes the fire apples down.
Catherine, who had the two on her shoulder, began to be very tired,
very tired, but she thought it was a nuts upon edge that was so heavy. So she said softly,
Frederick, I must not let the nuts go. No, I was at he, not now. They will discover us,
I can't help that. They must go. Or then make hasten through them down, if you will. Then
away, out of the nuts down among the bows. And one of these grab plash me, it was hayly. And it
will blow after, go home for the door was still very heavy. So she whispered to Frederick,
I must serve the vinegar down, pray don't answer he, it will discover us, I can't help that."
He said, she, go it must, as she bought all the vinegar down, and I think said,
what a heavy jiu there is.
I last had brought them to Katherine's hand, but it was a door itself so heavy all the
time.
So she was with Frederick, I must serve the door down soon, but he begs and prayed
him not to do so, but he sure, he was sure they would betray them.
goes however, said she, and down on the door was such a platter upon the fears that they cried
out murder and not knowing what was coming right away as fast as they could and let all
the gold.
So when Frederick and Catherine came down, there they found all their money, safe and
sad.
The Ed.
Good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim, chapter 30, Sweetheart Rowland.
There was once upon a time, a woman who was a real witch and had two daughters, one
ugly and wicked, and this one she nerfed because she was her own daughter, and one beautiful
and good, and this one she hated because she was her stepdaughter.
The Stimdriller once had a pretty April, which the other fans he's so much, which became
envious and told her mother that she must and would have that April. Be quiet, my child,
the old woman, and you shall have it. Your sister has long deserved death. Tonight, when she
is asleep, I will come and cut her head off. Only be careful that you are at the far side of
the bed and push her well to the front. It would have been all over with a poor girl
if she had not just been standing there in a corner and had everything. All day long she
did not go out of doors and when that time had come, which his daughter got into bed first
so to lie at the far side. But when she was asleep, the other person gently to the front and took
for herself to place up the back, close by the wall. In the night, the old woman came creeping in.
She held an axe in her right hand and felt with her left to see if anyone was lying
up outside, and she brushed the axe with blue pants and caught her own child's head off.
Then she had gone away, the girl got up and went to a sweet out, who was called Roland,
and knocked at his door. When he came out, she said to him, listen, dearest Ronan,
we must fly in all haste. My step mother wanted to kill me, but she has struck her own child,
and daylight comes, and she sees what she has done, we shall be lost.
But, so Ronan, I counsel you first to take away her magic wand,
or we cannot escape if she pursues us. The maiden fetched the magic wand, and she took the
The dead girl's head and dropped three bloods and three drops of blood on the ground.
One in front of the bed, one in the kitchen and one on the stairs, then she hurried away with her never.
On the old witch got up, next morning she called her daughter and wanted to give her the apron, but she did not come.
And then which cried, where are you?
Here on the stairs, I am sweeping, answer the first drop of blood.
Old woman went out and saw no one on the stairs and cried again, where are you?
Here in the kitchen I am warming myself, cried the second drop of blood.
She went into the kitchen and no one, and she cried again, where are you?
Ah, here in the bed I am sleeping, cried the third drop of blood.
She went into the room to the bed, what did she see there?
Her own child whose hair she had cut off, beefed in her blood, for which fell into the
As she could look forth quite far into the world, she perceived her step-to-step
her home away with her sweet heart, Roman. That shall not help you cry, she, even if you
have, got a long way off, you shall still not escape me. She put on her many leaf boots,
in which she covered an owl's walk at every step, and it was not long before she
took them. The girl, however, when she saw the old woman straying her water, changed with her
magic wand, has sweet heart-rollened into a lake, in her self into a duck, swimming in the
middle of it. The witch places out on the shore through boycums in and went to end the
strolls and ties the duck, for the duck did not let its herself be enticed. And the old woman
had to go home at night as she had come. At this the girl and his sweet heart
Roman resume their natural shapes him and they walked on the whole night until
they wake. Then the maiden chants their self into a beautiful flower which stood
in the midst of a briar hedge and a sweet heart Roman into a hiddler. It was not
long before the witch came striding up towards them and said it in the musician
dear musician, they are I plucked that beautiful flower for myself. Oh yes, he replied,
I will play you to you while you do it.
As she was hastily creeping into the hedge,
and was just going to put the flower.
Now, I'm perfectly well who the flower was.
We began to play, and while as she would or not,
she was forced to dance, for it was a magical dance.
The faster he played, more violent springs was she forced to make.
Her born, taller, glowed through her body,
and prick her and wounded her, don't she blend?
And as he did not stop, she had to dance,
until she laid dead on the ground.
As they were now set free, Roland said,
Now I will go to my father and arrange for the wedding.
But in the meantime, I will stay here and wait for you.
So the girl, and that no one may recognize me.
I will change myself into a redstone and not.
And Roland looked away and the girls stood like a red-laner
and marked in the field and waited for her to be left.
But one Roland got home he fell into the snads of another
who so fascinated him, that he forgot the major. The poor girl remained there a long time,
but at length he as he did not return at all, she was sad and changed herself into a flower
and brought. Someone will surely come this way and jump from me down.
It was fell however, a shepherd kept his sheep in the field and saw the flower,
and as it was so pretty plucked it took it with him and made it away in his chest.
On that time forth, straining, strange things happened in the shepherd's house, running
a rose in the morning, all the work was already done, the room was swept, the table
and benches were cleaned, but by the half was lighted, and the water's fetched and
that new when he came home, the table was laying in a good dinner set.
He could not conceive how this came to pass, but he never saw a human being in his house,
and no one could have concealed himself in it.
He was suddenly pleased with his good attendance, but still at last he was so afraid that
he went to a wise woman and asked for her advice.
The wise woman said there is some entrapment behind it.
It's in the very early summer morning with anything moving in the room.
If you see anything no matter what it is, throw a white glove over it and then the magic will be stopped.
The shepherd did as she bathed him.
And next morning, just as day dawn, he saw the chest open and the flower come out, swiftly
he sprung toward it, towards it until the white girl over it.
Instantly, the transformation came to an end and a beautiful girl stood before him, who
admitted to him that she had been the flower and that up to this time she had attended
to his housekeeping.
She told him her story, and as she pleased him, he thanked her if she would marry
him, but she answered, no, or she wanted to remain faithful to her sweet heart
homeland, although he had deserved her. Nevertheless, she promised to not
to go away, but to continue keeping house for a shepherd. And now the time drew
near when Roland's wedding was to be celebrated, and then according to an old
custom in the country, it was announced that all the girls would have
be present at it, and sing in honour of the bridal pair.
When the faithful maiden heard of this, she grew so sad that she thought her heart would break,
and she would not go through the other girl's cave and took her.
When it came to her turn to sing, she stepped back, until that last, she was the only one
left, and then she cannot refuse.
But when she began her song and it reached woman's ears, she sprung up and cried,
I know the voice, that is the true word I will have no other, everything he had forgotten
and which had vanished from him nice had suddenly come home again to his heart and then
faithful me and held her wedding with a sweet heart, fondant and grief came to an end and
joy began.
The ETH. Good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm. Chapter 31. Snowdrop
It was the middle of winter when the broad lakes of snow were falling around, but the
green of a country many thousand miles off sat working at her window. The frames of
window was made of fire and black agony, and as she sat looking out upon the snow, she
pricked her finger and three drops of blood out upon it. Then she gazed, thoughtfully upon
the red drops that sprinkled white snow and said, look that might as well do it or maybe
as white as that snow, as red as that blood, and as black as this ever new winter frame.
and so those were girl related grow up. Her skin was as white as snow, her cheeks
as rosy as the blood, and her hair as black as Ebony, and she was called, Snowdrop.
But this green died, and the king assumed married another wife who became green, and
was very beautiful, but so vain that she could not bear to think that anyone could be
handsome her and she was. She had a fairy-looking glass to which she used to go and then she
would gaze upon herself in it and say, tell me glass, tell me true of all the ladies in the land
who is Ferris, tell me who. And the glass had always answered, that all queen out the Ferris
in all the land, but Snowdrop grew more and more beautiful, and when she was 70 years old,
she was as bright as the day and fairer than the queen herself. And the glass one day
answered the queen when she went to look in it as usual. Now, Queen Art Fair and beauty is to see,
but Snowdrop is lovely out farther than me. When she had, as she turned pale with rage and envy,
and called her one of her servants and said,
takes no double way into the wideward,
but I may never see her anymore.
In the servant that her way,
but his heart melted when Snodrop
bait him to spare her life,
and he said,
I will not hurt you,
fell pretty child,
so he left her by herself,
and thought,
you thought it most likely that the wild beasts would tell her
and to pieces,
and he felt as if a great weight
to take him off his heart. When he had made up his mind not to kill her, but to leave her
to her fate, with a chance of finding someone finding him in saving her.
Then, the poor's now dropped wonders and all the word in great fear.
Wondering along through the word in great fear, and the wild beasts ruled about her, but none
did her any harm, and evening she came to a cottage among hills and went into rest.
But her little feet could carry or would carry her no father.
Everything was spruce and meat in the closet.
On the tables, who spread a white cloth and there were seven full plates, seven full
loaves and seven full glasses with wine in them.
And seven knives and forks, laid in order, and by the walls stood seven little
bags.
As she was very hungry, she picked up a piece of each loaf and drank a very little wine
out of each glass, and after that she thought she would lie down in the rest, so she tried
all the little beds, but one was too long and another was too short, but that last
the seventh suited her, and there she laid herself down and went to sleep.
By and by in came the masters of the cottage.
Now they were seven little dwarfs that lived among the mountains, and dug in search
for God. They lighted up their seven names and saw at one that all was not right. The first
day, who has been sitting on my sword? The second, who had been eating, who had been eating
off my plate? The third, who has been picking my bread, the fourth, who has been meddling with
my spoon? The fifth, who has been handling my fork? The sixth, who has been cutting with my knife?
The seven pillars have been drinking my wine, but then the first lift around and said,
who has been lying on my bed? And the last came running to him, and everyone cried out
that somebody had been upon his bed. But the seven source snurled up and called all his
birthmen to come and see her, and they cried out was wondering a sergeant, and what then
I said, look at her and said, could it happen? What a lovely child she is, and they were very glad
to see her and took care not to wake her and the sevens dwarves left an hour of each of the dwarves
in turn for the night was gone. In the mornings, Nesrop took some told them all her story and they
pity her and said if she would keep all things in order and cook and wash and knit and spin for them,
she might stay where she was when they would take good care of her then they went out all day long
to their work, seeking for gold and silver in the mountains.
There's no drop with left at home, and then we'll enter, and said, the queen will soon find
out where you are, so take care and let no one in.
But the queen now that she thought Snowdrop was said, believe that she must be the
handsomeest lady in the land, and she went to her class and said, tell me, glass, tell me
true of all the ladies in the land who is first, tell me, who.
And the glass answered, thou clean up the ferris in all this land, but over the hills,
in the greenward shade, with the seven dwarves that were in heaven made, their snow drop
is hiding her head, and she, and lovely a far, o-cream than me.
Then the queen was very much frightened, while she knew that glass always spoke the truth,
or sure that the servant had betrayed her.
And she could not bear to think that anyone who lived, she was more beautiful than she was.
So she dressed herself up as an old pednour, and weren't her way of the hills to the place
where the dwarves twirled.
Then she knocked up the door and cried,
Fine wears to sell.
Snow drop looked at the window.
Out of the window and said,
Good day, good woman.
What would have you to sell?
Good wears.
Fine wears.
So she laces and bobbled in the wall colours.
I want to let the old lady in.
She seems to be very good sort of body.
What's in her job?
As she ran down and I'm born through the door.
Bless me, so the old woman,
How badly your stays are laced.
only lay some up with one of my nice, new laces, so no drop did not dream of any
mystery. So she stood before the old woman, which she set to work so namely, and
for the lay so tight, so no drop's breath was stopped, and she fell down as if she were
dead. There's an end to all the APT, so the spiteful queen in the window were home. And the
evening was seven dwarves came home, and I need not say how grieves they were to see their
They forced Nundra to stretch out upon the ground as if she was quite dead. However, they
left you to have up and when they found or held her, they cut the lace and in a little
time she began to breathe and very soon came to life again. When they said the old women
was a queen herself, take care of her time and let no one in when we are away.
When the queen got home, she went straight to her glass and spoke to it and before, but
her great grief, it's so said, thou queen up the thirst in all this land, but over the
hills in the greenward shape of the seven dwarves in their dwelling have made, there's
no drop is hiding her head, and she had lovely a far oak-green than me. Then the blood
ran cold and her heart with spite and manace, to see that snow drops still lived, and
she dressed herself up again, but in quite another dress from a once-year old poor, and took
her a poison comb. When she reached the dwarves' closet, she knocked at the door and cried,
finding where's herself, but Snowdrop said, I did not let anyone in. And the queen said,
only look at my beautiful coats, and gave her the poison one, and it looked so pretty that she
took it up and put it to her head to try. But the moment that touched her head the poison was so powerful,
that she fell down senses. There you may lie, so the queen went her way. But by good luck,
The dwarves came in very early that evening, and when they saw a snorkel flying on the ground,
we thought what had happened, and soon found the poison come. And when they took it away,
she got well and told them all that had passed, and they warned them once more not to open the door
to anywhere. Meantime, the queen went home for a glass and shook with a rage,
when she read the very same answer as Paul, as he said, and the snorled rope shall die if it
cost me my life. So she went by herself into her chamber and got ready,
a poisoned apple. The outside looked very rosy and tempting, but whoever takes
a little short dye. Then she dressed herself up as a peasants' wife and traveled
over the hills of the dwarves' cottage. And knocked at the door, but Snowdruck put her head
out of the window and said, I dare not let anyone in, but the dwarves had told me not.
Do as you please, said the old woman, but at any rate take this pretty apple. I will give it to you.
No, so Snowdrop, I dare not take it. You silly girl answer the answer the other. What are you afraid of?
Do you think it is poisoned? Come, do you eat one part and I will eat the other.
Now the apple is so made at one side was good and the other side was poisoned.
This no job was much time as it takes, but Apple looks so very nice.
And when she saw it all in the night she could not wait, she could have wait no longer.
But she has scarcely put the piece into her mouth when she fell down dead upon the ground.
This time nothing will save the, to the queen.
And she went home to her glass, and at last it said,
they'll queen up the fairest of all with her.
And then her wicked heart was glad and as happy as such a heart could be.
When an evening came when the door said gone home, they found snowdrop lying on the ground.
No breath came from her lips.
They were afraid that she was quite dead.
They lifted her up and combed her hair and washed her face with wine and water.
But all was in vain for the little girl seemed quite dead.
So they laid her down upon a beer.
year, and all seven watching of the well of her three-hole days, and then they thought
it would bury her, but her cheeks were still rosy, and her face looked just as it
did while she was alive. So they said, we will never bury her in the cold ground, and
they made a confident last so that they might still look at her. I wrote upon it in golden
letters what her name was, and that she was a came-on-stort. I look often all set among
the hills and the walls always sat by it and watched. And the birds as an egg came to
and the moans no drop. And the birds of all came and out, and then I waved in, and I lasted
dark, and sat by her side. And the last snow drop lay for a long time, a long, long time,
and so only looked as low she was asleep, where she was even now as wide as snow, and
the red as blood as black as ever. That last appearance came in cold at the door of
south, and he saw snow drop and red of what was written in golden letters. And he offered
the good dwarves money and play in the sort then, and let him take him away. They said,
we were not part of her, for all the gold in the world. And last however, they had pity on
him and gave him the coffin. The moment he lifted it up to carry it home of him, piece of apple
for full moon between her lips and the snow drop, and snow drop a work and say,
where am I? And the prince said it though, art quite safe with me, and he told her
all that happened, and said, I love you far better than all the world, so come with me
to my father's palace and you shall be my wife. As no drop can send him one home of prince
and everything was got ready with great pomp and gender for our wedding. So the feast was
asked him on the rest. No drops old anime the queen, and as she was dressing herself in a
fine-rich pose she went to the glass and said, tell me glass, tell me true of all the ladies
in the man who was first, tell me who. The glass answered about lady, art the loveliest
hair I wien, but lovelier for as a new made queen. When she had this she started with
raised for her envy and curiosity was so great that she could not help setting out to
see the bride. And when she got there, she saw that there was no other than Snowdrop
who, as she thought had been dead and long while, she took to the rage and fell down and
died, but Snowdrop and the prince had happily lived and rained happily over that land,
many many years, and sometimes they went up into the mountains and paid a visit to the
with the walks where they're so kind to snow drop in how time would they meet?
The tent.
Good night.
Grim was sparing towns by Jacob Wim and Warham Grim.
Chapter 32.
The pink.
There was once upon a time a queen to whom God had given no children.
Every morning she went into the garden and prayed to God in heaven to bestow on her
a son or a daughter.
And an angel from heaven came to her and said,
Be at rest, you shall have a son with the power of wishing, so that whatsoever in the world
he wishes for, that shall he have.
Then she went to the king and told him the joyful tidings, and when the time was gone,
she gave birth to a son and the king was filled with gladness.
Every morning she went with the child of the garden with a wild beasts who kept in the
washers of their and a clear stream.
It happened once when the child was a little older that it was lying in her arms and
she first sleep.
Then came the old cook whom the child had the power of washing and stalled away and took
her hand and cut it into pieces and drop some of its blood on the Queen's apron and on her dress.
Then he carried the child away to a secret place where a nurse was obliged to suffer
at. And he ran over the King in the queues of Queen of Heaven heard by loud,
allowing her to be taken from her for the wild beasts.
When the King saw the blood on her apron, he believed this.
Then into such a passion that he ordered a high tower to be built, in which neither the sun nor moon could be seen and had his wife put into it and moved up.
And as she was to stay for seven years without me to drink and die upon the gods and two angels from heaven in the shape of white tabs, which flew to her twice a day and carried her food until the seven years were over.
The cook had a vote term, so, as the child has a power of wishing, and I am here, he might very easily get me into trouble.
So he left the palace and went to the boy, who was already big enough to speak and sit in.
Wish for a beautiful palace for yourself with the guardian and all else that pertains to it.
Skesley was the wise out of the boys' mouth and everything was there that he was wishful.
After a while, the cook said to him, it is not well for you to be so alone.
alone, wish for a pretty girl as a companion, and the King's son's wish for one,
and she immediately stood for him, and was more beautiful than any painter could have painted
her.
The two plays together and Navi took her with all their hearts, and the old cook went out
hunting like a newborn one.
I thought to cut him, however, the King's son might someday wish to be with his father,
and thus bring him into great peril.
So he went out and took the maiden aside and said,
Tonight when the boy is asleep,
go to his bed and punch it.
This and night into his heart.
And bring me his heart and tongue.
And if you do not do it, you show those your life.
They're upon, he went away.
And when he returned the next day,
she had not done it and said,
Why should I shed the blood of an innocent boy
who was never harmed anyone?
But cook once more,
said, if you do not do it,
shop cost you your own life. And when he had gone away, she had a little hind for to
her and ordered her to be killed. And took her heart and tongue and made them
on a plate. And when she saw the old man coming, she said to the boy,
lie down and you'll bed and draw the clothes over you. And the wiki to wretch came in and
said, where are the boys, heart and tongue? A girl reached the plate ten. But King
sounds you have to close and say, you old sinner, why did you want to kill me?
Now when I pronounce thy sentence, you shall become a black puddle and have your
hand-to-have-a-gold color on your neck and shall eat burning calls for the flames burst
forth from your fruit and when he had spoken to me as well as the old man was changed
into a puddle dog and had a gold color around his neck and it cooks well all into
of bringing up some live cars and these he ate into the famous book forth from his
prepared. The king's son, Rameen, that I shot one longer, and he thought of his woman
wounded if she was in the light. At length he said it was amazing, I'll go home to my own
country. If you will go with me, I will provide for you. Ah, she replied, the way is so
long, and what should I do in a strange land where I am unknown. As she did not
seemed quite winning and as they could not be parted from each other, he wished that she might be
changed into a beautiful pink and took her with him. And he went away to his own country and the
Poodle had a run after him. He went to the tower in which his mother was confined and it was so high,
he wished for a ladder which would reach up to the very top. And he mounted up and licked him
sign in Christ.
11 Mother Lady Queen, are you still alive or are you dead?
She answered, I have just eaten an am-still satisfied, which he thought the angels were
there, said he, I am your dear son whom the wild beasts were said to have torn from
no arms.
But I am alive still and will soon such he shriek.
Then he descended again and went as father and caused himself to be announced as a strange
and asked if he could offer him service.
The king said yes, if he was skillful and could gain for him,
he should come to him, but the day had never taken up
the courtes in any part of the district of country.
And the hearts were in pharmaceutical cure, and much came from him
as he could possibly use that as an upper wall table.
So he summoned all the huntsmen together and phasemook her out
for us with him, and he went with him and made them form a great circle, open at one end
where he stations himself and began to wish, two hundred deer and more came running inside
the circle at once, the Huntsman shot them. They were all placed on 60, country, camp, and driven
home to the king, and for once he was able to deck his table with his game after having none
at all years. The King fought great joy of this and commanded that his entire household should
eat with him the next day. And made a great feast. When they were all assembled together he said
to the Huntsman, as you also clever, you shall sit by me, he will find Lord of King your Majesty
must excuse me, I am a poor Huntsman, but the King insisted on it and said, you shall sit by me,
until he did it. Also he was sitting there in the boat of his dearest Naga and wished,
he wrote of his dearest Maga and wished that one of the kings' principal servants would begin to speak of her,
and would ask how it was varying with a clean and tower, and if she were alive still,
while her parished. Harley had he formed the wish that the Marshal began and said,
no emergency, we live joyously here, how is the clean living in the tower,
and she's so alive or how she died.
But the king replied,
she let my dear son be torn to pieces by robberies.
I will not have her named.
When the hunts met a rose and said,
gracious Lord farmer, she's so lifestyle and I am her son.
Now I was not carried away by one piece,
but by that rich, the old cook who told me from her arms,
while she was asleep and sprinkled her ape from the blood of a chicken.
Her body took the dog with a golden corner and said,
That is the wretch, and caused lab calls to be fought and that, and these, the dog was
going to part a devout of the form, the sight of all, until flames burst through force once
thrown. On this, the hunts were asking him, if he would like to see the dog in his true shape,
and wished him back into the form of a cook in which he stood immediately for his white apron
and his knife side by his side. When the king saw him and he fell into a passion and ordered him
tend to be part of the deep dungeon. When the Huntsman spoke further and said,
''Furber, father, will you see the maiden who brought me up so tenderly and who was
afterwoods to murder me that did not do it? They will have no effect on her own life
depending on it?'' I came with like, ''Yes, I would like to see her.''
The sun said, ''My most gracious father, I will show her to you in a form of a beautiful flower
And he goes this hand into his pocket and forth the pink and placed it on the wall
table.
And it was so beautiful that the king had never seen one to equal it.
And the sun said, now, well, I show her to you in her own form and wish that she
might become a maiden and she stood there looking so beautiful that no painter can have
made her look more so.
And the king sent two waiting lanes and two attendants into the tower to fetch the
cream and bring her to the warm table.
But when she was lunch, but when she was lunch, she ate nothing and said, the gracious
and merciful God who has supported me in the tower will soon send me free.
She lived three days more and then died happily, and when she was buried, two white
downs which I brought her through to the tower and were angels of heaven, all had
and see themselves on her grave.
The age came order the cup to be torn
in four pieces, but grief consumed the king's own hearts
and he seemed died.
His son married a beautiful man in whom he had brought with him
as a flower in his pocket.
And when they are so alive, or not,
is known to God, feet and good night.
Grimm spayed Alice by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm. Chapter 33, clever L.C.
There was once a man who had a daughter who was called, clever L.C.
And when she had grown up her father said, we will get her married.
Yes, so the mother, if only someone would come, who would have her?
that length, and then came the distance and rude hat, who was called Hans.
But he stipulated that Clever Elsie shouldn't be really smart.
Oh, so the father, she was plenty of good sense.
And the mother said, oh, she can see the wind coming up the street and hear the blinds
cupping.
Well, so Hans, if she is not really smart, I won't have her.
When they were sitting at dinner and had eaten, the mother said,
I'll see, go into the sun and fetch some beer.
Then Klaner, I'll see the picture from the wall,
I went into the sun and tapped the lid,
basically as she went.
So at the time, I might not appear not in.
When she was below, she fetched herself a chair
and said before the barrel, so that she had no need to stoop
and did not hide her back or do herself any unexpected injury.
M. She had placed the cannon before her and turned its app and while her bear was running
she would not let her eyes be idle. But looked at the warm and after much appearing here
in there saw our pickaxe exactly above her, which is the Mason's accidently near
there. Then clever Elsie began to reap and say, if I get out, and we have a child,
and he grows big and we send him into the cellar hair to draw a bear, and the pickaxe will
four on his head and kill him, and she sat and worked and screamed as all the strength of her body over the misfortune which lay for her.
Those stairs, those upstairs waces for the drink, but clever Elsie did not come.
No one was sitting in the servant, just screamed down into the sun and see where Elsie is.
Main wedding found her, sitting in front of the bile, screaming loudly, Elsie.
Where do you reap?
us the maid, oh she answered, how I not greasem to leave, if I get hands and we have a child,
and he grows big and has a draw bear here, the pig axe will perhaps fall on his head and kill him,
then suddenly put a clever else even he have. And sat down beside her,
began not need to leave over the misfortune. After a while, as the maid did not come back and moves
upstairs with her sleep a bit, and then says her voice, just go into this, just go down into
of the cell and see where Elsie and the Galar. The boy went down and there sat the other
Elsie and the Galar were both leaving together. When he asked, why are you leaving?
Ah, said Elsie. Have I not risen to eat? If I get hands and we have a child and he grows big
and has to draw bare hair, the pickaxe will fall on his head and kill him and the boys are
the lonely, would it let the LC be here and sat down beside her and likewise began to
helm, no, be.
Obscest is a way to wait for the boy, but as he still did not return, the man said to
the woman upstairs, they waited for the boy.
Oh, sorry, I'm standing waiting for the boy, but as he still did not return, the man said
to the woman, just go down into the set and see what LC is.
The woman went down and found all three in the midst of their notimentations in the quiet water.
What was the cause?
And Elsie told her, also, that her future child was to be killed by the pick-up.
When it grew big and had to draw a bear and the pick-ups fell down,
then the mother likewise, then said the mother likewise,
what a clever Elsie we have, and sat down and went through them.
The man upstairs waited a short time, but as his wife did not come back,
As the last group even agrees that he said, I must go in for some of myself and see where else he is.
But when he was into the center and they were all sitting together crying and he heard the reason.
And that else his child was the cause.
And the L.C. might perhaps bring one into the world someday and that he might be killed by the pickaxe.
If he should happen to be sitting beneath it, drawing a bear just at the very time when it fell down.
I'll have water together and see and set down and let those work with them.
The grey grooms say I'm still alone for a long time and no one would come back,
he thought there must be waiting for me for no.
I had to go and see what they are about.
When he got down, the five of them were sitting screaming and lamenting quite pissy as me.
Each out doing the other.
What misfortune has happened then?
He asked he.
Ah, dear Hans.
So I'll see.
If we are married each other, I never child, and he is big.
I hope perhaps send him hair to draw something to drink.
And the pickaxe which has been left up there, might dash his brain down if it were to fall down.
So have we not reason to eat?
Come, so Hans.
More understanding than that is not needed for my household.
As you are such a clever, I'll see.
I'll see how you have you, and see how her hand and took her upstairs with him and married her.
After Hans had heard, had had heard some time, he said, why?
I'm going out to work and answer my breasts.
Go out and just feel and cut the corn that we might, that we may have some bread.
Yes, dear Hans, I will do that.
Underhands had gone away. She couldn't dissolve some good broth and took it into the field with her.
When she came to the field, she said to herself,
What shall I do? Shall I cut first or shall I eat?
Oh, I will eat first.
When she drank a cup of broth and was full of food,
and when she was fully satisfied, she once more said,
What shall I do? Shall I cut first? Or shall I sleep first?
I was full of food.
Then she lay down among the corn in theatic sleep.
Hans had been at home for a long time, but as he did not come, then said he, what a clever
Elsie I have. She is so industrious that she does not even come home to eat, but when
even came and she is still stayed awake, Hans went out to see what she had cut and nothing
was but nothing is cut, as she was lying among the corner sleep. And Hans hastened home and brought
a father's net with like a bells and hung it around about her, and she's still like on sleeping.
Then he ran home, shut the house door, and sat down and his chair and worked.
At length, when it was quite dark, there was also a work, and when she got up, there was
a jingling, a warm, round, about her, and the bells rang at each step she took.
Then she was alarmed, and became uncertain whether she was a clever else or not.
And said, is it eye or is it not eye?
But she knew not to want arms to make of this, to make to this, as did for a time and
doubt.
I think she sought.
I'll go home and ask if it be I or if it not, if it be not I.
They will be sure to know.
She ran to the door of her own house, but it was shut, and she knocked at the window and
crying.
Hans, is else you living?
Yes, Hans and Helen.
She is living.
Hair porn shows terrified and said, oh heavens, that is not why.
And went to another door, one of the people had the changing of the bells, they were not open it, and she could get in nowhere.
Then she ran out of the village, and no one has seen her sex.
The act, midnight.
Grimmers, very towns by Jacob Grimm, and will help Grimm.
chapter 24, the mauser in the bush. A farmer had a faithful and diligent servant to
had worked hard for him. Three years, without having been paid any wages, and lasted
came into the man's head, but he would not go on thus without pay any longer. So he wanted
to his master and said, I've worked hard for you a long time. I would trust you to give me
will die deserved to have for my trouble. The farmer was a sidewiser and knew that his
man, his man was a very simple, was very simplehearted, so he took out three pins and gave him
for every year's service a pay. A poor photo thought it was a great deal of money to have and
for them so why should I work hard and live here on the back there and even go? I didn't travel
into the wide world and make myself merry, with that he put his money in his purse and set
out from over hill and by. As he drove it along over the field, singing and dancing
and it was worth let him and asked him what made him so merry. While once you make me
downhearted, so he, I am sound and health and enriching past, what did I care for? I have
saved up my three years earnings and have it all safe in my pocket.
How much may it come to, several of them are, both repents reply to the countryman,
I wish you would give them to me, so the other.
I am very poor, and the man pityed him and gave them all he had, and I would
walk several times.
As you have such a kind honest heart, I will grant you three wishes, one for every penny,
So choose whatever you like.
Then the countryman rejoiced at his luck and said,
I like many things better than money.
First, I will have a blow that will bring everyone
everything I shoot will bring down everything I shoot at.
Secondly, a fiddle that will set everyone dancing
that hears me play upon it and thirdly,
I should like that everyone should grant what I ask.
The door of said he should have his three wishes, so he given the blow, and fiddle, and went his way.
Our honest friend, Jenny, on his way too, and if he was married before he was now ten times
more so, yet not going to fire before he met in old Miser, close by them still to
a tree and on the topmost twig sat a thrush, singing away most joyfully, oh what a pretty
better, so the Mizer, I would give a great deal of money to have such a one. And that's
also a countryman I will soon breathe down. Then he took up his bow and down full
selection to the bushes of the foot of the tree. The Mizer crept into the bush
to find it, but directly had he got into the middle, has companion took up his
fiddle and played away. And the Mizer began to dance and scream about, he brought
higher and higher in the air, the forms soon began to tear his clothes so they all hung
in ranks about him and he himself was all scratching and wounded so that the blood wound
down.
Overhead and sake, by the might of that master, pray let the film alone, what have I done
to deserve this?
Our has shaped many of Paul's soul close now, says the opera, their art only meeting
by reward, so he played up another two.
And the miser began to beg in promise and offered money for his liberty, but he did not
come up to the musician's advice for some time, he danced him along, brisk and briskar.
And the miser did high and high until at last he offered around, a hundred of Lawrence that
he had in his pass, and had just gained by a few percent poor fellow.
When the countryman saw so much money, he said, I will agree to your proposal, so he took
and put up his fiddle and travelled on a very peaceful bargain.
We, rather, mind the crept out of the bush, half naked, and in a pittiest, like a pittiest
plight, and began to put up to ponder how he should take his revenge, and serve his
late companions and trick.
At last, he went to the judge, and complained that the rascal has robbed him of his money,
and beaten him into the bargain.
And that fellow who did it carried a bow at his back and fiddle and a fiddle hung around
his neck.
Then Jams sent out his officers to bring up the accused for a relation to find him and he
was soon caught and brought up to be tried.
The miles began to tell his tale and said he had been robbed of his money.
No, you gave it to me for playing a tune to you, so the country meant the judge told him
that was not like me and cut them at a short by ordering him off to the gammas.
So, where he was taken, but as he stood on the steps he said,
my Lord, judge, grant me one last request, anything but by life, or by the other.
No, said he, I do not ask when I have only to let me play a poem I said of the last time.
The mile of the quiet out there, no, no!
Well, heaven's sake, don't listen to him, don't listen to him.
But, John said, it is only this once he will soon have done.
A bad one, he could not refuse a class on the count of the door of the door of Stardgift.
Then the miser said, find me fast, find me fast, for pity sake.
But the country men's seizes fiddle and struck up a tune, and at the first note, judge,
clerks, and a jay lover in motion, all began capering in no one else could hold the miser.
At the second note, the hangman met the prisoner go and thus also, and by the time he had
played the first bar of the two and they were all dancing together, Judge Court and Mazda,
and all the people had followed to the gun. At first the thing was very impressive enough,
but when it had gone on the wild, there seemed to be no end of playing or dancing. They began
to cry out and begged him to leave off, but he stopped not to wait for, not to whip them all
for their entries. Tell the judge not only gave him his life, but promised to return him
the hunger for it. Then he called out to the mose and said,
tell us now you've ever won. Where you got that gold, or I shall play on for your
amusement only. I stole it, so the mose and the prison's full of people. I acknowledge that I
stole it, and that you earned it fairly. When the country then stopped his
little and let them rise as it take his place at the gala's in bed. Good night.
Grim's very tells by Jacob Grim and will have Grim. Chapter 35 Ashcutor. The wife of
the rich man fell sick and when she felt that her end reunite, she called her only daughter
to her bedside instead, always be a good girl, and I will look down from heaven in what
over you.
Soon after which she shut her eyes and died, and was buried in the garden, and a little
girl went every day to her grave and wept, and was always good and kind to all about her.
And snow fell and spread a beautiful white covering over the grave, but by the time spring
came and the sun had melted it away again, her father had married another way.
This wife had two daughters of her own, as she brought her with her. They were fair
and face for foul at heart, and it was now a sorry time for the poor to go.
What does the good for nothing want in the partners, if they, they who would eat the
Red should first and it away with the kitchen made, and they took away her fine clothes
and gave her an old grey frock to put on and laughed at her and turned her into the kitchen.
There she was forced to do hard work to rise out even for daylight to bring the water
to make the fire to cook and to wash. The signs that the sister's plagued her in all sorts
of ways and laughed at her. In the evening when she was tired she had no bed to lie down on,
but was made in nine by the heart among the ashes, and as this, of course, may have always
dusty and dirty, and they called her Ashputu. It happened once that the father was going to
the fair and asked his wife's daughters of what he should bring them. Fine clothes, so the first
Paul's in diamonds, cried the second. Now Charles said he is his endwater.
What will you have? The first week dear father that brushes against your hat when you turn your face
to come home to become home nuts, said she, and he bought for the first two blanks and
pearls in diamonds they I'd ask for. And on his way home as he throws through a green cops,
a hazel twig brushed against him and almost pushed off his hat, so he broke it off and
brought it away. And when he got home, he gave it to his daughter, and she took it and
went to her mother's grave and planted it there. And cried so much that it was watered
with her tears, and there it grew and became a fine tree. Three times every day she went to
to it and cried and searing another bad game and built its nest upon the tree and talked
with her and watched over her and brought her whatever she wished for.
Now it happened that the king of that land held a feast, which was the last three days
and out of those who came to it, his son was to choose a bride themselves, as she produced
two sisters were asked to come. So they called her up and said,
now come by her, brush our shoes and tie our sations for us.
But we are going to dance with the king's feasts. And she did as she was told,
but when all of a sudden she could not help crying. But she thought to herself,
she should have liked, she should have so liked. She should,
so have liked to go and have gone with them to the ball. And at last she
You begged her mother very hard to let her go.
You aschpatol said she, you have nothing to wear and no clothes at all and who cannot
even dance.
You want to go to the ball and when she gets on begging, she set up and asked to get rid of
her.
I will serve this dish from the peasants of Asheep and if in two hours time you pick them
all out you shall go to the peasants too.
she threw the peas down among the ashes, but then from Maine then ran out at the back
to do more into the garden and cried out. Here's our Hiver through the sky,
titled as the Minutes Fly, Black Bird's Russian Shuffling Gay. Here's a Hiver
here's a haystayway, one all come help me quick, haystay, haystay,
pick, pick, pick. Then birds came to what does flying in other kitchen window,
X came 2,000,000, and after them became all the little birds under heaven,
chirping and fluttering in, and they flew down into the ashes. And the little devs
flew their heads down and set to a pick, pick, pick, pick, and the others began to pick,
pick, pick, and among them all, they soon picked out all the good grain and put it into a dish
but left ashes. Long before the end of the hour, the work was quite done, and all flew out
again at the windows. Then Ashford will vote the Dishcher mother,
overjoyed at the thought that now she should go to the ball. But then I
said, no, no, you slide. You have no clothes and cannot dance. You
shall not go. And when Ashford will beg very hard to go,
she said, if you can in one hour's time, pick two, pick two of these,
Two of those dishes of peas out of the Ashen, you shall go to, and that she thought she should at least get rid of her.
So she too, so she should two dishes of peas into the Ashes.
The little man went out into the garden and at the back of the house and cried out as poor.
Here the hither, so the sky, tied to the damsel in its fly, that bird's Russian chef and she gave, here the hither haste away.
One or conchalment quick haste haste pick, pick, pick, pick.
The first came, then first came two white dals in the kitchen in the kitchen window,
then came two to the dals, and after then came all of the birds under heaven, chirping
and hopping about, and they flew down into the ashes and they moved the dals for the headstone
and took to work. Pick, pick, pick, and others began, pick, pick, pick, pick, and they put
all the good grain into the dishes and left all the ashes. Before half an hour's time
now as time's all done, and up they flew again.
And then Ash put the dishes to our mother,
rejoicing to think that she should now go to the ball.
But her mother said it is all of no use.
You can't go.
You have no clothes, you have no clothes and cannot dance,
and you would only put us shame,
and Ash went with her two daughters to the ball.
Now when all were gone and nobody left at home,
Ash put all it softly and sat down under the Hegel tree
Sheik, Sheik, Hegel, Sheik, Golden Silver, Overmeat.
Then her friend the bird flew out of the tree and brought a gold and saw the dress
for her.
And slippers of Spangled Silk, and she put them on and followed her sisters to a feast.
They did not know her, and bought in must be some strange princess.
She looked so fine and beautiful in her rich clothes, and they never once thought of Ashcuttle,
looking at the granted that she was safe at home in the dirt. The King's son soon came
up to her and took her by the hand in the answer of her and no one else, and he never left
her hand, but when anyone else came to ask her to dance, he said, this lady is dancing
with me. Thus they danced to a night hour of the night, and then she wanted to go home
and the King's son said, I shall go and take care of you to your home, but he wanted
to see whether beautiful maiden lived, but she slipped away from him unaware and ran
off towards home. And as the prince followed her, she jumped up into the pigeon house
and shut the door, and he waited till her father came home.
And called him that the unknown maiden who had been at the feast had hit her side
when the pigeon house, and when they had broken up in the door they found no one within.
And as they came back into the house, Ash Patrol was lying, as she always did and her
dirty fruit by the Atas, and that damn little lamp was burning in the chimney.
But she had run as quickly as she occurred through the pigeon house and out on and onto
the haywood tree and had bare taken off a beautiful clothes and put them beneath the tree,
but the bird might carry them away and her laying down again amid the ashes and her little
grey fog.
The next day when the feast was again held, and her father, mother and sister were gone,
I should put her onto the handle tree and say, shake, shake, handle tree, golden silver over me.
And the black came and brought a still fine address when the one she had worn the day before.
I was she came in it to the ball. Everyone wondered at her beauty.
But the king's son, who was waiting for her, took her by the hand and danced with her.
And when anyone asked her to dance, he said, as before, this lady is dancing with me.
When night came, she wanted to go home and the King sun followed her, followed her as
before.
And he might see into what house she went, but she sprang away from him all at once
into the garden behind her father's house.
In this garden stood a fine large pantry full of ripe fruit, an ash for tool, not knowing
when the height of south jumped up into it without being seen, then the King sun was
of sight of her and could not find out where she was gone. But waited till her father came
on and said to him, I knew maybe she would dance with me as looked away and I think she
must have sprung into the pear tree, father, thought to himself, can it be Ash Brittle? So he
hadn't explored and they cut down the tree but found no one upon it. And when they came
back into the kitchen, they lay Ash Brittle on the ashes, she had slipped down onto the
I've signed the tree and carried her beautiful clothes back to the bird at the Hebrew tree
and then put on hands or great-fuck. The third day, in five, her father and mother and sisters
were gone, she went to gain into the garden and said, shake, shake, hey, the tree, gold
and silver over me. Then her kind friend, the bird, brought a dress to a finer than the former
one. And slippers were all, which were all of gold. So that when she came to the feast,
no one knew what to say for wonder at her beauty. And the king's and down to a
nobody but her and where anybody else else had to dance. He said this lady is a
my partner. So the night came she wanted to go home and the king's on the
girl with her and said to himself, I will not lose her this time. But however she
against slipped away from him though and such a hurry that she dropped her
a net golden slipper upon the stairs.
The prince took the shoe and went the day to the king
and went the next day to the king, his father,
and said, I will take for my wife
the name he that this golden slipper face.
Then both the sisters were overjoyed to hear it
for they had beautiful feet
and had no doubt that they would wear the golden slipper.
The elders went into the room,
what the slipper was, and wanted to try it on,
and the mother stood by,
that her great toe could not go into it, and the she was all together much too small for her.
Then the mother gave her a knife and said,
never mind, cut stop. When you are queen, you are not care about toes. You will not want,
you will not want to walk.
So a city girl caught up her great toe and there's a squeeze on the shoe,
and went to the king's sign, and he took her for his bride and set her beside him
on his horse and rode away with her homelands.
But on their way home, they had to pass by the Hazel Tree that Ashford will plant it and on
the branch said it will go, singing, back again, back again, look to the shoe, the shoe
is too small and not made for you. Prince Prince look again for by bride, will she use
not the tree one that sits by, by his side. Then the Prince got down and looked to the
foot and he saw by the plant that's shrewd from it, what a trick she had played him. So he
He told his husband, and brought the horse bride back to her home and said, this is not
the right bride.
The other sister tried and put on the slipper, and then she went into the room and got
her foot into the shoe, or brought the heel, which was too light.
And brought her mother's grease it into the blood came and took her to the king's set, and
he set her as his bride, when he sighed on his horse and rode away with her.
But when they get into the hay who will tree the little dove sat there, still insane,
back again, back again, back to the shoe. The shoe is too small and not made for you.
Prince Prince look again for my bride, where she is not the true one that sits by and
right side. Then he looked down and saw the bloodstream so much from the shoe about
her white stockings were quite red. So he turned his horse and brought her also back in.
This is not the true bride, so he's in the father.
Have you know other daughters?
No, said he.
There was only a little dirty ash brittle hair,
the child of my first wife.
I'm sure she cannot be the bride.
The prince told him to send her,
but the mother said no, no, she isn't much too dirty.
She will not dare to show herself.
However, the prince would have her come,
and she first washed her face in her,
and then she went and in and cut the tin.
and he reached her the Bon Zepa. Then she took her clumsy shoe off her left foot and put on the
Golden Zepa and it fitted her as if it had been made for her. From where he drew near and looked
at her face, he knew her and said, this is the right bride. For the mother and both businesses were
fighting and time pale with anger as he took ash puttore on his horse and rode away with her. One
and when they came to the Hazel Tree the white dove sang, home home look at the shoe princess
the shoe was made for you. Prince Prince take home their bride or she is a true woman since
by the side and when the dove had done it singing it came flying and pushed upon her
a white shoulder and so length almost her.
Three and good night.
Grimm's very tells by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, chapter 36, but white snake.
A long time ago, that lived a king who was spanned for his wisdom through all the land.
was hidden from him, and it seemed as if news of the most secret things was brought to
him through the air. But he had a strange custom, every day after dinner when the table was
clear and no one else was present, I just his servant had to bring him one more dish. It
was covered however, and even the servant did not know what was in it. Neither did anyone know,
the king never took off the cover to eat of it until he was quite alone.
This had gone on for a long time, when one day the seven who took away the dish was
overcome with such curiosity that he could not help carrying the dish into his room.
When he had carefully looked at the door, he knitted up the carpet and saw the white snake
nodding on the dish.
But when he saw it, he could not deny himself the pleasure of tasting it.
So he cut off a little bit and put it into his mouth.
Sooner had it touched his tongue and he heard a strange whispering a little voice
inside his window. He went in and listened and then noticed it was, and it was a sparrows
who were chattering together and telling one another of all kinds of things which they
had seen in the fields and roots. Eating the snake had given him power of understanding
the language of animals. Now, it so happened that on this very day the queen lost some
most beautiful rain, and suspicion of having stolen it fell upon this trusty servant,
who was allowed to go everywhere. The king ordered the man to be brought for him,
and threatened with angry words that unless he could before the morgue point out the thief,
he himself should be looked down, should be looked upon as guilty and executed.
And then he declared his innocence, he was dismissed with no better answer.
In his travel and fear he went down into the courtyard and took thought how to help himself out of this trouble.
Now, some ducks were sitting together quietly by a brick and taking their rest,
and while still were making their feathers smooth through their dills, they were having a confidential conversation together.
The silence did not buy a listen. They were telling one another of all the places where they had been modelling about all the morning,
and what good food they had found.
And one said in a pitiful turn, something lies heavy on my stomach, as if, as I was eating
in taste, I swallowed a ring which lay under the queen's window, the servant at once seized
her by the neck, carried her to the kitchen and set up a cook. Here in the fine duck,
pray, kill her. Yes, a look, and weighed her in his hand. She has spared no trouble
to fight in herself, and has been waiting to be roasted low enough. So he cut off her heads
and as she was being dressed up with a dress for the spit, the cream's wringles found inside her.
The servant can now easily prove his innocence and the king to make a men to the wrong,
allowed him to ask a favor and promised him the best place in the court that he could wish for.
The servant refused everything and only asked for a course and some money for travelling,
and she has a mind, had a mind to see the world and go about the level.
One has requested was granted, he set out on his way, and one day came to a pond where he saw three fishes caught in the reef and glass-bingle water.
Now, well, it is said that fishes are dumb, he heard the lamenting that they must perish so miserably, and as he had a kind heart, he got off his horse and put the three prisoners back into the water.
They left with the night to put out the heads and cried him.
We will remember you and repay you for saving us.
He wrote on an after a while that seemed to him that he had, he heard of voice in the
sand at his feet.
He listened and heard an acting complain.
Why can't folks where their clumsy beasts keep off our bodies that stupid horse with
his heavy hooves has been treading down my people without mercy.
So he turned on to the same path and the acting cried out to him.
We will remember you, one good turn deserves another.
The path led him into a wood,
and there he saw two old ribbons standing by their nests,
and throwing out their young ones.
Out with you, you idle, good for nothing creatures,
Friday, we cannot find food for you any longer.
You are big enough and can provide for yourselves.
The rapport young ribbons lay upon the ground,
laughing their wings and crying. Oh, what helpless chicks we are. We must shift for ourselves
and yet we cannot fly. What can we do, but not here and star, for the good young fellow
and light here, and killed his horse with the sword and gave it to them for food. Then they
came hopping up to it, satisfied with their hunger, satisfied with their hunger and cried.
We will remember here, one good turn, deserves another. And now he had to use his own legs
When, and when he had walked along the way, he came up, he came to a large city.
There was a great noise in crowd in the streets, and a man wrote up on the horseback
currently and now, the King's daughter once a husband who wrote, but whoever seeks her hand
must perform a hard task, and if he does not succeed, he will fortify his life.
Many had already made the attempt, but in vain.
Nevertheless, when they used sword the King's daughter, he was so overcome by her great
beauty that he forgot all the danger, went before the King and declared himself a cita.
So he was lit out to the sea, and a gold ring was thrown into it.
Before his eyes, then the King ordered him to fetch this ring up from the bottom of the
sea and added, if you come up again without it, you'll be thrown in again and again until
you perish in the waves.
Some of the people grieve for having youth, when they went away, leaving him alone
by the sea.
He stood on the shore and considered what he should do, when suddenly he saw three
fishes come to swimming towards him, and they were the very fishes whose lives he had
saved.
But while in the middle, how the muslims now, which it laid on the shore of the youth's
feet, and when he had taken an up and opened it, there they were gold ring in the
But of joy he took it to the king and expected that he would grant him the promise to reward.
But the one that a proud princess perceives that he was not hurt equal and blood.
She scorned him and required him to burst to perform another task.
She went down into the garden and strewed with her own hand ten saxophiles of a milit-seed on the grass.
Then she said, tomorrow morning, for sunrise, the evening must be picked up.
And then a single grain being wandered.
They used sat down in the garden and considered how it might be possible to perform this task,
but he could think of nothing and there he sat so carefully waiting, awaiting the break of day, when he should be...
...blend to death.
But as soon as the first rays of the sun shone,
he saw all the ten sacs standing inside by side, quite full, and not a single grain was missing.
The ant King had come in the night with thousands and thousands of ants.
And the grateful creatures had by great industry picked up all of them at seed and gathered them into the sack.
Presently the King's daughter herself came down and took Garlin on his amaze to see that the young man had done the task she had given him.
But she should, but she could not yet conquer her proud heart and said, although he has performed both tasks, he shall not be my husband until he had brought me an apple from the tree of life.
The use did not know whether Tree of Life stood, but he set out and would have gone on forever
as long as his legs would carry him.
He came one evening to a wood and lay down under a tree to his sleep.
But he heard a wrestling in the branches and a golden apple fell into his hand.
At the same time three ravens flew down to him, put themselves upon his tree, appointed
me, and said, we are the three young ravens who you saved from starving.
When we had grown big and heard that you were seeking the golden apple, we flew over the sea to the end of the world with a tree of life stands and have brought you the apple.
They used, one of joy, set out homos, and took the golden apple to the King's beautiful daughter.
They'll have now no more excuses left to make.
They cut the apple of life into and ate it together, and then her heart became full of love for him.
and they lived in understood happiness to a great aid, theme and good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and will helm Grim. Chapter 37. The war from the seven little kids.
There was once upon a time an old girl toured seven little kids and met them with all the love of mother, of a mother for her children.
One day she wanted to go into the forest and fetch some food.
So she called all seven to her and said, Dear children, I had to go into the forest.
Beyond your guard against the wall, if he comes in, he will devalue you all, skin, hair and everything.
The wretched often disguises himself, but you will know him at once by his rough voice,
let's black-beat. We could said, dear Mazda, we will take good care of ourselves,
you may go away without any anxiety. Then the old one bleated and went on her way
with an easy mind. It was not long before someone knocked at the house too and called,
Open the door, dear children. Your mother is here and has brought something back with her for each of you.
The little kids knew that it was a wolf by the rough voice.
They were not open the door cry there. You are not our mother. She has a soft pleasant voice, but your voice is rough.
You are the wolf. Then the wolf went away to a shopkeeper and bought himself a great number of chalk.
love of chalk, ate this and made his voice softer than it. And he came back, knocked
at the door of the house and caused, opened the door that day children. Your mother is here
and has brought something back with her for each of you. The wolf had laid his um black paws
against the window and the children saw them and cried. We were not open the door,
All of a, has not like feet like you. You are the wolf. Then the wolf ran to a baker and said,
I have had my feet raps in the door of the venue for me, and when the baker had arrived his feet
over, he ran to the mirror and said, choose and wipe me of like me. The mirror brought to himself,
the wolf wants to deceive someone, and refused. But the wolf said, if you will not do it, I will
of the valley, and the men of the parade and made his paws wet them.
Truly, this is the way of mankind.
So now the wretched went for the third time to the house door, and knocked it in, and said,
over the door for me, children, your dear mother has come home, as brought every one of you
something back from the forest with her.
But a little kid's cried, but I'll show us your paws that we may know if you are our dear
and he put his paws into the window, and when the kids saw this they were white, they
believed that all these things were true and open the door. But who should come in? But
the war, they were terrified and wanted to hide themselves. One sprang under the table, the
second into the bed, the early into the stones, the fourth into the kitchen, the fifth into the
cupboard, and the sixth under the washing bottle, and the seventh into the glass. But the war
found from all, and used no great ceremony, one after the other he swallowed them down
his throat. My youngest who was in the blockcase was not only one he did not find. When the
wolf had satisfied his appetite he took himself off, laid himself down under a tree in the green
mirror outside and again to sleep. Soon afterwards the old goat came home again from the forest.
Ah, what a sight she saw there. The house door stood wide open with tables, chairs and ventures
were thrown down, the washing bowl, they broke into pieces and the quilts and pillows were pulled
off to bed. She sought her children, but they were nowhere to be found. She called them one after
another by name, but no one answered. At last, when she came to the youngest, a soft waist cried.
Dear mother, I am in the clock case. She took the kid out and it told her for the walk
had come and it was in all of the others. And you may imagine how she worked over her
poor children. I lengthen her grief, she went out and the youngest, can't kid rang her.
When they came to the mother, they lay the wolf by the tree and snored so loud at the
branch of the shook. She looked ahead on every side and saw something was moving and struggling
in his gorge to bed.
Oh heaven, she said, is it possible that my children whom he has swallowed down for
a step I can be still alive?
And the kid had to run home and fetch scissors and a needle and thread and the goat cut
over the monster's stomach and Harley had she made one cut and one kid and one little
kid thrust its head out and when she had cut father all six-brang out one after another
and they were all still alive, and had suffered no injury, whatever, for end-hit
greediness, the monster had swallowed them down whole.
What rejoicing there was, they embraced their dear mother and jumped like a tailor at
his wedding.
The mother, however, said, now go and look for some big stones, and we will fill the
wicked beasts' stomach with them while he is still asleep.
In the southern kid's dragonstones, they were all speed input as many of them into
his stomach as they could get in, and the mother's sword had up again with great haste.
Again in the great haste, so that he was not aware of anything and never once stood.
When the wolf that length had his fill of sleep, he got on his legs and as stones in
his stomach, made him very thirsty, he wanted to go to a well to drink, but when he began
to walk and to move about the stones in his stomach and knocked against each other and rattled,
and he cried, what rumbles and tumbles against my poor bones, I thought towards six kids,
but it deals like big stones. And when he watched the well and stepped over the watered
drink, the heavy stones made him fall in and he drowned and misriply. On the seven kids
saw that they came running to the spot and cried an hour. The wolf is dead, the wolf is dead,
and dance for joy round about the world with their mother, the end. Good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Royal Home Grimm, chapter 38, the Queen B.
Two King sons once upon a time went into the world to seek their fortunes, but they soon fell
into a wasteful, foolish way of living, so that they could not return home again.
The Nebrother, who was a little insignificant wolf, went out to seek for his brothers, but
when he had found them, they only met to him, to think that he was so young and simple,
to try to travel through the world, and then, who was so much wiser, had been unable
to get on.
However, they all set out on their journey together, and became at last to an antel.
The two older brothers would have pulled it down in order to see the poor ants in their
bike would just run about and carry off their eggs.
The little dwarf said, let the poor things enjoy themselves, I will not suffer you to
travel them.
So on the went and came to a lake where many many ducks were swimming about, a two brothers
wanted to catch two and roast them, but the dwarf said that the poor things enjoy
themselves, you shall not kill them. Next they came to a bees nest in a hollow tree and
there was so much honey that it ran down the truck. And the two brothers wanted to
unite a fire under the tree and kill the bees, so as to get their honey. But the dwarves
held them back and said, let the pretty insects enjoy themselves, so I cannot let you burn them.
At length, the three brothers came to a castle, and as they passed by the steels they saw
by Norse's standing there, but all were of marble, and no man was to be seen. The name went
through all the rooms so they came to a door on which there was three locks, but in the
middle of the door was a wicked, so that they could look into the next room. There they saw
a little gray old man sitting at a table and they called him once or twice, but he did not
However, they called a plant-time and then he rose and came out to them.
He said nothing but took a hold of them and led them to a beautiful table covered with
all sorts of good things, and when they had eaten and drunk, he showed each of them to
a bed chamber.
The next morning he came to the eldest took him to a marble table, where there were three
tablets containing an account of the means by which the castle might be disenchanted.
The first table said in the wood under the moss, by the thousand towers belonging to the King's daughter.
They must all be found, and if one of them be missing by set of sun, he who seeks them will be turned into marble.
The eldest brother set out and sought for the pearls the whole day, for the evening came and he
am not found the first hundred, so he was turned into stone as a tab that had foretold.
The next day the second brother undertook the task, but he succeeded no better than the first,
He could only find the second hundred of the pearls and therefore he too was turned into stone.
At last came the little dwarves' turn and he looked into the moss but it was so hard to find the pearls.
And the job was so tiresome so he sat down upon his stone and cried and as he sat there the king of the ants whose Murphy had saved came to help him
with 5,000 ants and it was not long before they have found all the pearls and made them an heap.
The second tablet said, the key of that princess's bed chamber must be fished up out of the lake,
and as the dwarf came to the blink of it, he saw the two ducks whose lives he had saved swimming
about, and they dive down and soon brought in the key from the bottom. The third task was
the hardest. It was to choose out the youngest and the best of the king's three daughters.
Now they were all beautiful and all exactly alike, but he was told that the elders had
eating a piece of sugar, the next some sweet syrup and the youngest a spoon for the honey,
so he was to guess which it was that had eaten the honey. Then came the queen of the bees who had
been saved up by the lute war from the fire, and she tried the lips of all three, but that
last she sat upon the lips of the one that had eaten the honey, and so the dwarf knew which
was the youngest. Thus the spell was broken and all who had been turned into stones, a work,
and took their proper forms and a dwarf marry the youngest and the best of the princesses
and was king after her father's death, but his two brothers married the other two sisters.
The End. Good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim. Chapter 39
The elves and the shimaker.
There was one such shimaker who worked very hard and was very honest.
And still he could not earn enough to live upon.
And that last all he had in the world was gone.
Saved just leather enough to make one pair of shoes.
Then he cut his leather out already to make up the next day,
meaning to rise early in the morning to his work.
His conscious was clear and his heart light amidst all his troubles, so he went
apreciably to bed, left all his cares to heaven and soon fell asleep.
In the morning, after he had said his prayers, he sat himself down to his work, when there
was a great wonder, lest it or all the shoes already made upon the table.
A good man knew not what to say or think at such an odd thing, he looked at the
worksmanship, there was not one false stitch in the whole job, all of a so neat and
true that it was quite a masterpiece.
The same day, a customer came in and they shewes suit him so well that he willingly
paid a prize higher than usual for them, and the poor she made her with all the money
bought leather enough to make two pairs more. And the evening he cut out the
work and went to bed early that he might get up and begin the times next day.
But he was saved all the trouble for when he got up in the morning the work was done
ready to his hand. Soon and came by us who paid him hands and made for his
goods, through that he bought never enough for poor per moor. He cut out the work again
overnight, and found it done in the morning, as before, and so it went on for sometime.
What was got ready in the evening was always done by daybreak, and a good man soon became
thriving in what off again. One evening about Christmas time, and he and his wife was sitting
over the fire chatting together. He said to her,
I should like to sit up and watch tonight
that we may see who it is that comes and does my work for me.
The wife liked the fort,
so they laughed at like burning and hit themselves in a corner of the room,
behind a curtain that was hung up there and watched what would happen.
As soon as it was midnight,
they came in two little naked walks,
and they began themselves upon the shoemaker's bench,
took up all the work that was cut out and began to apply over there and if the
thing gets stitching and wrapping and tapping away such a rate, the shoemaker was all
wonder and could not take his eyes off them. And on they went till the job was quite done,
and the shoes stood ready for use upon the table. This was long before daybreak, and then they
bustled away as quick and lightning. The next day the wife said to the shoemaker,
These little whites have minus rich and we ought to be thankful to them and do them
a good turn if we can. I am quite sorry to see them lying about as they do and indeed
it is not very decent but they have nothing upon their backs to keep off the cold.
I'll tell you what, I'll make each of them a shirt and a coat and a waist coat and a pair
of pantaloons into the bargain and do you make each of them and as a pair of shoes?
For what, please, the good cobbler, very much, and one evening when all the things were
ready, they laid them on the table. Instead of the work for they used to cut out, and
then they went and hit themselves to watch what the little elves would do.
About midnight in the came in, dancing and skipping, hopped around the room, and then went
to sit down to their work as usual. But when they saw the clothes lying through them, they
laughed and chuckled and seemed mightily delighted. Then they dress themselves in the twinkle
of an eye and dance and cape had him sprang about, then Mary's could be, for let last
they danced at the door on a way over the green. The good couple saw them no more, but
everything went well for those them, from that time forward, as known as the myth.
The end. Good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, chapter 40, the Juniper Tree.
Long, long ago, some 2000 years or so, they lived a rich man with a good and beautiful
wife.
They loved each other dearly but soared much that they had no children.
So greatly did they desire to have one, with the wife prayed for it and day and night, but
still be remained childless.
In front of the house there was a court, in which grew a juniper tree.
One window's day the wife stood under the tree to peel some apples, and as she was
peeling them she cut her finger and a blood band on snow.
Ah, so the woman heavily, if I had but a child as red as blood and as white as snow, and
As she spoke through words, her heart grew light within her and it seemed to her that her wish had was granted, and she returned to the house feeling glad and comforted.
A month passed and snow had all disappeared, then another month went by, and all the earth was green.
So the months followed one another, and first the trees budded in the woods and seemed that green bright soscrew sickly intertwined, and then the blossoms began to fall.
Once again, the wife stood under the juniper tree, and it was so full of sweet scent that
her heart leaped for joy, and she was overcome with her happiness that she fell on her
knees.
Pleasantly, the fruit became round and firm, and she was glad and at peace.
But when they were fully ripe, she picked the berries and ate evilly of them, and then
she grew ill, she grew sad and ill.
A little while later, she called her husband and said to him, weeping, if I die, bury
me under the juniper tree. When she felt comforted and happy again, and before another
month had passed, she will had a little child, and when she saw that it was as white as
snow and as red as blood, her joy was so great that she died. Her husband buried her under
the gene of the tree, and wept bitterly for her. By degrees however his sorrow grew less,
and though an although at times he still grieved over his loss, he was able to go about
as usual and later on he married again. He now had a little daughter born to him,
which all of his birth first wife was a boy, who was as red as blood and as white as snow.
The mother loves her daughter very much, and when she looked at her and then looked at the
boy, it appears so hard to think that he would always stand in a way of her own child.
And she was continually thinking how she could get the whole of the property for her.
This evil thought took possession of her more and more, and made her behave very uncondely
to the boy.
She drove him from place to place with cuppings and buffetings, so that the poor child
wonder about him fear and had no peace from the time he left school to the time he
went back. One day the little daughter came running to her mother in the
storium and said, Mother, give me an apple. Yes, my child, so the wife, and she
gave her a beautiful apple out of the chest. The chest of a very heavy
lid in a large iron lock. Mother, so little daughter again, may not brother have
one two, the mother was angry at this but she answered yes, when he comes out of school.
Just then she looked out of the window and saw him coming, and it seemed as if an evil spirit
ended into her, where she snatched the apple out of the little daughter's hand and said,
you shall not have one before your brother, she threw the apple into the chest and shot it too.
The little boy now came in and the evil spirit in the wife made her.
I say kindly to him. My son, will you have an apple, but she gave him a wicked look?
Mother, so the boy, how dreadful you look? Yes, give me an apple, the thought came to her
that she would kill him. Come with me, she said, and she lifted up the lid of the chest.
Take one out for yourself, and as he bent over to do so, the evil spirit urged her and
crash down when the legs and off went from the boys' head. Then she was overwhelmed with
fear at the thought of what she had done. If only I could prevent anyone knowing that I
did it, she thought. So she went upstairs to her room and took a white pancake chip out
of the top drawer, but she set the boys head again on a shoulders and bound it with a
pancake chip so that nothing could be seen and placed him on a chair by the door with
apple in his hand. Soon after this little mileyen came up to her mother who was stirring
a pot of boiling water over the fire and said, Mother, but rose to seen by the door with
an apple in his hand and he looked so pale and when it asked him to give me the apple he
did not answer and that frightened me. Go to him again, so him mother and if he does not answer
give him a box on the ear, so little morning lamp and said, brother, giving that apple,
but he did not say a word and then she gave him a box on the ear and his head rolled off.
She was so terrified at this that she ran crying and screaming to her mother.
Oh, she said, I have knocked off, brother's head and then she wept in the
wept in nothing with supper.
What have you done to her mother, but no one must know about it, so you must keep silence.
What is done, can't be undone. We will make him into puddings, and she took the little boy
and cut him up, made him into puddings, and put him in the pot. But my leans stood looking
on and wept and wept and had tears fell into the pot so that there was no need of salt.
Presently the father came home and sat down to his dinner, and he asked,
whereas my son, the mother said nothing but give him a large dish of that pudding, and my leans
still worked without ceasing. The bother again asked, where is my son? Oh, I'm
surprised. He has gone into the country to his mother's great uncle. He's going
to stay there sometime. What has he gone there for? And he never even said goodbye
to me. Well, he likes being there and he told me he should be away quite six weeks.
He's well observed there. I feel very unhappy about it, so the husband in case it
should not be all right, and he ought to have said, goodbye to me. With this he went on with
his dinner and said, Little Marlene, why do you reap? Brother will soon be back, then he asks
his wife and will put in and as he ate, he threw the little who threw the bones under the table.
Little Marlene went upstairs and took her best silk hang of chiff, out of her,
and in it she wrapped all the bones from under the table and carried them outside, and all the time she did nothing but weep, and she laid them in the green grass under the June of the tree, and she had no sooner than so, and all her sadness seemed to leave her, and she wiped them all.
and now the genopotry began to move and the branches waved backwards and forwards,
passed away from one another and then together again as it might be someone clapping their hands
for joy. After this a mist came around the tree and in the midst of it there was a burning
as a fire and out of the fire there flew a beautiful bird that rose high into the air
singing magnificently and when it could no more be seen the genopotry stood there as before
and the silk hangar chiff and the bones were gone.
Little Marlene now felt as light-hearted and happy as if her brother was still alive,
and she went back to the house and sat down cheerfully to the table and ate.
The bird flew away and elided on the house of a goldsmith and began to sing.
My mother killed her little son and my father grieved when the eye was gone.
My sister left me best of all, she laid her coat chiff over me,
and took my bones that they might now underneath the genie of the tree.
Collect, collect, what a beautiful bird I am I.
The goldsmith was in his workshop making a gold chain when he had the song of the bird on his roof.
He thought it so beautiful that he got up and ran out. And as he crossed threshold, he lost one of
his slippers, but he ran on and then went with the street with a slipper and one foot and a
Sock on the other. He still had on his apron and still held a gold chain and the pincers in his hands.
And so he stood gazing up at the bird while the sun came shining brightly down on the street.
Bird, he said, how beautifully you sing.
Sting me that song again.
Nays at the bird. I do not sing twice for nothing. Give that gold chain and I will sing it here again.
Here is the chain, take it to the goldsmith, only sing me that again.
The bird flew down into the gold chain in his right claw, and then he elided again
from the goldsmith and sang.
My mother killed her little son.
My father grieved when I was gone.
My sister loved me best of all. She laid her coach off over me,
and took my bones that they might lie underneath the juniper tree.
I went to Kuwait for the beautiful bird and I.
And he flew away and settled on the reef of the She Makers house and saying,
My mother killed her little son, my father grieved when I was gone.
My sister loved me best of all, she laid her coat up over me,
and took my bones that they make night underneath the jean of the tree.
Kuwait, Kuwait, would have beautiful bird and I.
The She Maker heard him and he jumped up and ran out of his shirt sleeves
and stood looking up at the bird on the roof with his hand over his eyes to keep himself
on being blinded by the sun.
But, he said, how beautifully he sing, and he calls through the door to his wife.
Why, come out!
Here is a bird, come and look at it, and hear how beautifully it sings.
Then he calls his daughter, and children, and the apprentices, girls, and boys, and they
all ran up the street to look at the bird, and saw how splendid it was with its rare
green feathers and it's neck like a burnished gold and the eyes like two white stars and it's head.
Bird, so the shoemaker, sing me that song again. May I answer the bird? I do not sing twice for
nothing. You must give me something. Why? So the man, go into the garret. On the upper shelf,
you will see a pair of red shoes. Bring them to me. The wife went in and fetched the shoes.
There, bird, so the shemaker, now sing me that song again.
The bird flew down and tip the red shoes and was left more and then went back to the roof
and sang.
My mother killed her son, my father grieved when I was gone.
My sister loved me best of all, she laid her coach if over me, and tip my bones that
they might not underneath the Katrina Petrie.
Correct the correct, what a beautiful bird am I.
when he had finished he flew away he held a chair in his right film on the shoes and his left
and he flew right away to a mill and a mill went click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click and side of the Moon
were 20 of the mill's men are hooing a stone and as they went hit hack, hit hack, hit hack,
the mill went click, click, click, click, click, click.
The bird set settled on a lime tree in front of the mill and sang, my mother killed
hands with son, the new one of them and left off, my father grieved when I was gone.
Two more men left off in this and my sister and her three pastor four and four more
left off.
She laid her purchase over me and took my birds that they might not.
Now they were only eight at work, underneath and now only five, the June of the Tree and
Now only one, correct, correct, would have beautiful bird and eye.
Then he looked up, and the last one had left of work.
But he said, what a beautiful song that is you sing, let me hear it too, sing it again,
name on to the bird, I do not sing twice for nothing, give me that millstone and I will
sing it again.
If it belonged to me alone, so the man, you should have it.
Yes, yes, so if he will sing again, he can have it.
The barb came down in all the 20 minutes set to you
and knitted up the stone of the bee.
Then the barb put his heads through the hole
and took the stone around his neck like a collar
and flew back with it to the tree and sang,
my mother killed her little set.
My father grieved when I was gone.
My sister left me best of all.
She laid her country up over me
and took my bones that they might lie underneath the juniper tree.
to wait to collect my beautiful bird and lie.
And when he finished his song, he spread his wings
and with the chain in his right claw
that she was in his neck and the millstone around his neck,
he flew right away to his father's house.
The father, the mother, a little Marlene were having their dinner.
How light-hearted I feel said the father,
so pleased and cheerful, and I said the mother,
I feel so uneasy as if a heavy thunderstorm were coming.
But little Marlene sat and wept and wept.
Then the bird came flying towards the house and set a room in the roof.
I do feel so happy, said the father, and how beautiful he the sun shines, I feel just
as if I were going to see it in the old friend again.
Ah, so the wife, and I am so full of distress and not easiness that my teeth chatter, and
I feel as if there were a fire and my veins, and she tore open her dress and all the
while Little Marlene sat in the corner and wept. And the plate on her knees was wet with
her tears. The bird now flowed to the dream of a tree and began singing, where Mother
killed her little son. The mother shut her eyes in her areas that she might see and hear nothing.
But there was a roaring sound in her ears like that of a violent storm, and in her eyes
are burning and flashing like them, like lightning. My father grieved when I was gone. Look
come over and send the man at the beautiful, blah, that is seen so magnificently in
how warm and bright the sun is and what a delicious scent of spicing air. My sister
loved me best of all. The new and marley inlaid her head down and her knees unsupped.
I must go outside and see the burn nearest at the man. Ah, do not go cry the wife. I feel as if
the whole house were in flames. The men were the man went out and looked at the bird.
She laid her kerchief over me and took my bones that they might not underneath the
gen of the tree.
Coact, coact with a beautiful bird and my.
And with that the bird let form the gold chain and it fell just around the man's neck
so that it fitted him exactly.
He went inside and said, see what a splendid bird that is.
He has given me this beautiful gold chain and looks so beautiful himself.
The wife was in such fear and trouble that she fell in the floor and a cap fell from
her head and then the barn began again.
My mother killed her little son.
Oh me, cry the wife.
If I were blood a thousand feet beneath the earth, then I might not hear that song.
My father grieved when I was gone.
And the woman fell down again as if dead.
My sister loved me best of all.
Well, son of the morning, I will go out to and see if the blood will give me anything.
So she went out. She laid her coach up over me and took my bones that they might
know. And he threw down the shoes to her underneath the Juniper tree.
To wait for her to quit. What a beautiful birth am I. And she now felt quite happy in
lighthearted. She put on the shoes and danced and jumped about in them. I was so
miserable, she said. When I came out, but that has all passed away. That is indeed
displended birth and he has given me a pair of her shoes. The wife sprung up with her
hair standing out from her head like flames of fire. Then I will go out too, she said,
and see if it will lighten my misery, where I feel as if the world will come into an end,
but as she crushed the threshold crash, the birth through the millstone down on her head and
she was crushed dead. The father and the little manine have a sound and right out,
But they're only so missed and flamed and fire rising from the spot.
And when these had passed, they're still a little brother,
and he took the father and the remaining by the head.
Then they all three rejoiced and went inside together and sat down to their days.
And eight, three, eight,
eight night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Will Helm Grimm.
chapter 41, Lieutenant. There were two brothers who were both soldiers, but one was rich
and the other poor. The poor man bought he would try to bathe himself, so pulling off his
wood coat he became a gardener and drug his ground well and so did the tyrants.
When the seed came up, there was one plant bigger than all the best, and it kept getting
large and larger, and seemed as if it would never see scrolling, so that it might have
been called the Prince of Tannaps, but there was never was such a one-seeing before,
I never will again.
At last, it was so being that it filled the cart and two oxen could hardly draw it,
and the gardener knew not what in the world had do with it, nor whether it would be
a blessing or a cast ahead.
One day he said to himself, what shall I do with it if I sell it? It will bring no more than another,
and for each in the new turn it's a bit of myth. The best thing perhaps is to carry it and
give it to the king of the market respect. Then he yoked his oxen and drew the turnip to the
court and gave it to the king. What a wonderful thing to the king. I have seen so I have seen many
strange things, but such a monster is this I never saw. Where did you get the seed? Or is
it only a good luck? If so, you are true child of fortune.
Ah, no, once the garden out, I am no child of fortune. I am a poor soldier. You never
could get enough to live upon. So I laid aside my road of coat and set to work, telling
the ground. I have a brother who is rich and you might as see no sin well and all the
well knows him, but because I am poor, everybody forgets me.
The king then took pity on him and said, you shall be poor no longer.
I will give you so much that you shall be even richer than your brother, than he gave
him gold and lands and flocks, and made him so rich that his brothers fortune could not
at all be compared with this.
When the brother heard of all this, and how a turnip had made the gardener so rich, he
and beat him sorely, and the thought himself, how he could contrived to get the same good
fortune for himself. However, he determined to manage more cleverly than his brother, and
got together a rich friend of gold and fine horses for the king, and thought he must have
a much larger gift in return, but if his brother had received so much for only a turn,
what must his present be worth? A king took the gift very graciously and said he knew
not want to give in return more valuable and wonderful than the Great Turnip. So, the
soldiers forced to put it into a cart and track it home with him. When he reached home,
he knew not upon whom to bet his rage and spiked, and at length the wicked thoughts came into his
head and he resolved to kill his brother. So he hides and dwellings to my home and having shown them
where to lie in ambush. He went to his brother and said, dear brother, I have found a hidden treasure.
Let us go and dig it up and share it between us.
The other had no suspicions of his robbery, so they went down together and as they were traveling
along, the murderers rushed out upon him, bound him and were going to hang him on tree.
But whilst they were getting already, they heard the trampling of a horse at the distance,
at a distance which so frightened them that they pushed their prisons, their prisoner neck,
and shoulders together into a sack and swung him up by a chord to the tree,
when they left him dangling and ran away. Meantime, he worked in work-deway till he made a whole
larger nut to put out his head. When the horseman came up, he proved to be a student, a Mary
fellow who was joining a long on his mag, and singing as he went. As soon and the man in the
sack saw him passing under the tree right out, good morning, good morning to thee, my friend,
This student looked about everywhere and seeing no one and not knowing when it was came from,
cried out who caused me. Then the man in the tree answered,
lift up the vine eyes for the hold here I sit in the sack of wisdom. Here have
iron in a short time, learn great and wondrous things, compare to the seat, all the learning of
the schools is as empty air. A little longer, and I shall know all that man can know and shall
or comfort wiser than the wisest of mankind.
Here I discern the signs and motions of the heavens and the start.
The laws that control the winds, the number of the sands,
on the seashell, the healing of the sick,
the virtue of all symbols of birds and of precious stones.
Right there, but once here in my friend,
there was those to feel and own the power of knowledge.
just you don't listen to all of us and we wonder much at last you said,
bless it be the day and hour when I've found you.
Cannot you can try to let me into the sack for a little while?
Let me answer that as if very unwillingly.
A little space I may allow the user sit here,
if thou wilt reward me well, and I'm treated me kindly,
but thou must carry yet an hour below
till I have learnt some little matters that are yet unknown to me.
So the students sat themselves down and waited a while, but the time hung very heavy, hung
heavy upon him, and he begged, honestly, that he might ascend forthwith.
Whereas Nudge, his thirst for knowledge was great.
And the other pretended to give way, and said, they almost met the sack of wisdom
discerned by untiring yonder court, and now shall enter.
So the student let him down over the sack and sat him free.
Now then, quite him, let me ascend quickly, as he began to put himself into the sack
he was first, winter while, so the guarder, and is not the way.
And he pushed him, in head first, tied up the sack and soon swung up the such an optimist
and dangling in the air.
How is it, with the friend, said he, thought that thou not feel that wisdom comes onto thee,
rest there in peace, though thou art a wise man than thou what?
So, saying he trotted off on the students' neck and knapped the poor fellow together with them until somebody should come and let him tell.
The end. Good night.
Grim was very towns by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
Chapter 42, however, Hans.
The mother of Han said, what's the way Han's Han's answered?
To grettle, the hayf whale hunts?
Oh, our behavior, goodbye mother, goodbye hunts.
Han's comes to grettle, good day grettle, good day hunts.
What do you bring that is good?
I bring nothing, I want to have something given me.
Grettle presents Han's was a needle.
Han says, goodbye grettle, goodbye hunts.
Hans 6 in Needle sticks it into a hay cart and follows the cart to her.
Good evening mother, good evening Hans.
By the event, with Greta, what did you take her?
Took nothing, had something given me.
What did Greta give you?
Give me a needle.
Where is the needle, Hans?
Stuck in the hay cart?
That was Eldarna Hans.
You should have stuck the needle in your sleeve.
Never mind, I'll do by the next time.
With their away hands, to greater mother, the cave wall hunts, or all the cave well, goodbye mother, goodbye hunts, hunts comes to greater, good day Greto, good day hunts, what do you bring that is good, I bring nothing, I want to have something given to me, Greto presents, present the hunts with a knife, goodbye Greto, goodbye hunts, hunts takes a knife, sticks it in his sleeve and goes home.
Good evening, mother. Good evening, Hans.
Have you been?
Of bridal.
What did she take her?
To come, nothing.
She gave me something.
What did you question give me?
Give me a knife.
Whereas a knife, Hans.
Stuck in my sleeve.
That's ill done, Hans.
You should have put the knife in your pocket.
Never mind.
I'll do better next time.
Was there a way, Hans?
To bridal mother.
The head well hunts. Oh, our behavior. Good bye mother. Good bye hunts.
Hunts comes to grattle. Good day, Greta. Good day hunts.
What good thing do you bring? I bring nothing. I want something given me. Greta, for
has sense, horns with a young goat. Good bye Greta. Good bye hunts. Hunts takes the goat
ties its legs and puts it in his pocket. When he gets home, that is suffocated.
Cater. Good evening, Mama. Good evening, Hans. Why have you been?
Where's Rachel? What did she take and took? Nothing. She gave me something.
What did Rachel give you? She gave me a goat. Where's the goat, Hans? Put it in my pocket.
That was Eldar on Hans. You should have put a rope around the good snack. Never mind.
We'll do better next time. Was there a way, Hans? To grab your mother? The haywell, Hans.
Oh, I'll be painful. Goodbye, mother. Goodbye, Hans. Hans comes to Greta.
Good day, Greta. Good day, Hans.
What good thing do you bring?
I bring nothing. I want something given me. Greta present Hans with a piece of bacon.
Goodbye, Greta. Goodbye, Hans. Hans takes a bacon, ties it to a rope and drags it away behind him.
The dogs come into battle with bacon. When he gets home, he has a rope in his hand.
and there was no longer anything hanging onto it.
Good evening, mother. Good evening, Hans.
Where have you been? With Gretel.
What did you take her? I took her nothing. She gave me something.
What did Gretel give you? Give me a bit of bacon.
Where is the bacon, Hans? I tied it to a rope.
Bought it home. Dogs took it. That was Eldan Hans.
You should have carried the bacon on your head.
Never mind. We'll do better next time.
River away, Hans, to Greta Mother. The Heave well, Hans, our Be Heave well. Goodbye, Mother. Goodbye, Hans. Hans comes to Greta. Good day, Greta. Good day, Hans. What good thing do you bring? I bring nothing, but would have something given. Greta presents Hans in the calf. Goodbye, Greta. Goodbye, Hans. Hans takes the calf. Put it on his head and the calf kicks his face. Good evening, mother. Good evening, Hans.
where he bent with Gretel.
What did you take her?
I shipped nothing, but had something given me.
What did Gretel give you?
I can't.
Where have you the cart hurts?
I set it on my head and it kicked my face.
That was ever done, Hans.
You should have never cut and put it into and put it in the store.
Never mind.
I'll do better next time.
Whether away, Hans, to Gretel mother, behave well, Hans, or behave well.
Goodbye, mother.
Goodbye, Hans.
Khan comes to Gratel, good day Gratel, good day Hans.
What good thing do you bring?
I bring nothing, but would have something given.
But who sends the Hans I will go with you.
Hans takes Gratel, ties her to a rope,
meets her to the rack and binds her fast.
And Hans goes to his mother, good evening mother, good evening Hans.
Where have you been, with Gratel? What did you take her?
I took her nothing. What did Gratel give you?
she gave me nothing, she came with me.
Where have you left, Breton?
I lent her by the rope, tied her to the back and scattered them grass for her.
That would ill done, Hans.
You should have heard, you should have cast friendly eyes on her.
Never mind, we'll do better.
Hans went into the stable, clutter all the cars and sheeps eyes and threw them in
brittle space.
Then, Breton became angry, to herself loose in runaway,
and we no longer divide the parts.
Be and goodnight.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Royal Hound Grimm.
Chapter 43, the three languages.
An aged character once lived in Switzerland,
who had an only son, but he was stupid and could learn nothing.
Then, said the father, heart you, my son, try as I will, I can get nothing into your head.
You must go from hence, I will give you into the care of a celebrated master, who shall
see what he can do with you.
The youth was sent into a strange town and remained a whole year with a master.
At the end of this time he came home again and his father asked, now my son, what have
you learnt?
Father, I have learnt what the dog is saying when they bark.
Lord, I have mercy on us, cry the father.
Is that all you have learned?
I will send you into another town to another master.
The youth was taken with her and stayed in gear with his, with his master likewise.
When you came back, the father again asked my son, what have you learnt?
He answered, father, I have learnt what the bird is saying.
Then the father fell into a rage and said, Oh, you lost my own. You have spent the precious time and learnt nothing.
Are you not ashamed to appear before my eyes? I will send you to a third master. But if you learn nothing this time,
also I will no longer be your father. The youth remained a whole year with that master also.
And when he came home again and his father inquired, my son, what have he learned? He answered dear father,
I have this year learnt what the frog's crook.
Then the father fell into the most furious anger, sprang up, called his people Bither,
and said, this man is no longer my son.
I drive him forth, and command you to take him out into the forest and kill him.
They took him forth, but when they should kill him, they could not do it for pity and
let him go.
and they cut the eyes in tone of a deer that they might carry to the all-man as token, as a token.
The youth wandered on and after some time came to a fortress where he begged for a next lodging.
Yes, so the Lord of the Castle, if you were past the night down there in the old tower, go live there, but I warn you, it is at the peril of your life.
For it is full of wild dogs which bark and how without stopping.
and at certain hours a man has to be given to them whom they at once devour.
The whole district was in sorrow and dismay because of them and yet no one could do anything
to stop this.
The youth, however, was without fear and said, just let me go down to the blocking dogs
and give me something that I can throw to them, they will do nothing to harm me.
As he himself would have it so, they gave him some food for the wrong animals, and
men him down to the tower. When he went inside the dogs did not bark at him, but like their
tails quite amicably, around him, ate what he set before them and did not hurt one
hair of his head. Next morning, the astonishment of everyone who came out again safe and
unharmed, and sent to the Lord of the Castle, the dogs have revealed to me in their own language
why they'd weld there and bring evil on the land. They are bewitched and areve obliged
to watch over a great treasure which is below in the tower and they can have no rest until
it is taken away. And I have likewise learned from their discourse how that is to be done.
And all who heard this rejoiced and the Lord of the Castle said he would adopt him as a son
if he accomplished it successfully. He went down again and as he knew what he had to do,
he did it thoroughly and bought a chest full of gold out to him. The howling of the wild dogs
was henceforth her no more, they had disappeared and the country was freed from the trouble.
After some time he took it in his head that he would travel to Rome. On the way he passed by a
a marsh in which a number of frogs were sitting croaking. He listened to them and when he
became aware of what they were saying, he grew very thoughtful and sad. At last he arrived
in Rome when the Pope had just died and there was great doubt among the Cardinals as
the whom they should appoint as his successor. They, at length, agreed that the person
should be chosen as Pope who should be distinguished by some divine and miraculous token.
And just as that was decided on the young count ended into the church, and suddenly
two snow-white devs flew on a shoulders and remained sitting there, thick, that actually
easy attacks recognized there in the token from above, and asked him on the spot if he
would be Pope. He was undecided, and knew not if he were worthy of this, but the devs
counts of time to do it. And that length he said yes. There, then he was anointed and
comes consecrated and this and thus was fulfilled what he had learned, what he had heard
from the frogs on his way which had so affected him and he was to be his holy nest of the pope.
Then he had to sing a mass and did not know one word of it. The two devs that continually
on the shoulders and said it all in his ear.
He and good night.
Grom's fairy tales by Jave of Grim and Wilhelm Grim, chapter 44, the fox and the cat.
It happens that the cat met the fox in the forest, and as she thought to herself,
He is clever and full of experience and much esteemed in the world.
She spoke to him in a friendly way.
Good day, dear Mr Fox.
How are you?
How is all with you?
How are you getting on in these hard times?
The Fox full of all kinds of arrogance looked at the cat from head to foot, and for
a long time did not know whether he would give any answer or not.
last he said, oh you wretched big Tina, you pi aboard fool, you hungry mouse hunter, what
can you be thinking of? Have you the cheek to ask how I am getting on? What have
you learned? How many arts do you understand? I understand but one, reply the cat, modestly.
What art is that, ask the fox? When the hounds are following me, I can spring into a tree
in saving myself. Is that all? So the fox? I am a master of a hundred odds and have into
the bargain a sack full of cunning. You make me sorry for you. Come with me. I will teach you
how people get away from the hounds. Just then came a hunter and was four dogs. The cat sprang
nimbly up a tree and sat down at the top of it. By the branches and foliage quite concealed her.
Open your sack, Mr. Box, open your sack, cry the cat to him. The dogs had to see
already see his Tim and we're holding him fast.
Our Mr. Box, cry the cat. You as your hundred arts are left in the lush. Had you
been able to climb like me, you would have not have lost your life.
See and good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim, chapter 45, the four clever brothers,
dear children, said a poor man taste for sense, I have nothing to give you, you must
go out into the wide world and try your luck, begin by learning some craft or another,
and see how you can get on.
So the four brothers took their walking sticks in their hands, and their little bundles
on their shoulders, and after bedding their father goodbye, went all out of the gate together.
When they have got on some way, they came to four crossways, each leading to a different
country.
Then the eldest said, here he must part, but this day four years we will come back to the
spot, and in the meantime, each must try what he can do for himself.
So each brother went his way, and as the eldest was hastening on, a man met him, and asked him
where he was going and what he wanted.
I am going to try my luck in the world, and should like to begin by learning some art
or trade on fatigue.
Then, so the man goes me and I will teach you to become the cunningest thief that ever
was.
No, so the other, that is not an honest calling, and what can one look to earn by it in
and put the gallows. Oh, said the man, you need not fear the gallows, but I will only
teach you to steal what will be fair game. I'm metal with nothing but what no one else
can get or care of anything about, and when no one can find you out. So a young man agreed
to follow his trade, and he soon showed himself so clever that nothing could escape him,
that he had once set up his mind upon.
The second brother also met a man, who, when he found out what he was setting out upon, asked him
what craft he meant to follow.
As you don't know yet, he said, then come with me and be a stargazer.
It is a noble art.
Well, nothing can be hidden from you.
When once you understand the stars, the plan pleased him much, and he soon became such a skillful
a beautiful stargazer that when he had served at his time and wanted to leave his master,
he gave him a glass and said, with this, you can see all that is passing on the sky
and on earth, and nothing can be hidden from you.
The Zanbaba met a huntsman who took him with him and taught him so well all that belonged
to hunting, that he became very clever in the craft of the woods, and when he left his
Master he gave him a bottle and said, whatever you shoot at with this bowl, you will be
sure to hit to hit. The youngest brother, like Wise, met a man who asked him what he
wish to do, would not you like, said he, to be a tailor, all knows of the young man
sitting cross-legged for morning to night, working backwards and forwards with a needle
and goose, will never suit me? Oh, answer the man, that is not my sort of tailoring.
Come with me, and you will learn quite another craft from that, not knowing what better
to do, he came into the plan and learnt tailoring from the beginning, and when he left
his marks that he gave him a needle and said, you can sew anything with this, be it as soft
as an egg or as hard as steel, and the joint will be so fine that no seam will be seen.
After this space of four years, at the time agreed upon, the four brothers met at the four
crossroads and having welcomed each other set off towards their father's home, where they
told him all that happened to them and how each had learned some craft. Then one day as they
were sitting before the house under a very high tree, the father said, I should like to
try what each of you can do in this way. So he looked up and said to the second son, at
the top of this tree there is a shuffling, there's a chaplain says nest, tell me how many eggs
there are in it. The star gaze it took his glass, looked up and said five. Now, so the father
to the other son, take away the eggs about letting the bird that is sitting upon them and hatch
them knowing and hatch them know anything of, and hatching them know anything of what you are doing.
So the kind of the climbed up the tree and brought away his father, the father eggs from under
but I never saw a felt when he was doing but kept sitting on at his ears and the father took the
eggs and put one on each corner of the table and the bit in the middle and said to the
Huntsman cut all the eggs into pieces at one shot the Huntsman took up his bow and at one
shot struck all the fire and eggs and his father wished. Now comes your turn said he to the
young Taylor, so the eggs and the young birds in them together again, so neatly that
the sharks shall have done them no harm. Then the Taylor took his needle and sewed the eggs
as he was told, and when he had done the thief was so to take them back to the nest and put
them under the bone without it's knowing it. Then she went on sitting and hatched them, and in a
few days they crawled out and had only a little red streak across their mix where the Taylor had
so many other. Well done, son, so the old man. You have made good use of your time and
learnt something worth the knowing, but I am sure I do not know which ought to have the
prize, other than a time like soon come for you to turn your skill to some account.
Not long after this, there was a great bustle in the country, but the king's door to
had been carried off by a mighty dragon, and the king mourned over his lost day and night,
and made it known that whoever brought her back to him should have her for a life.
Then the poor brothers sent each other, here's a chance for us,
and let us try what we can do, and they agreed to see whether they could not
set the princess free. I will soon find out when she is, however,
so the stargazinger, as he looked through his glass and he soon cried out,
I see her far off, sitting upon a rock in the sea, and I can smile the dragon close by,
guarding her, and he went to the king and asked for a ship for himself and his brother,
and they sailed together over the sea till they came to the right place.
Blálev and the princess sitting as a stargaze and had said, on the rock,
and the dragon was lying asleep with his head upon her lap.
I dare not shoot at him, so the Huntsman, for I should kill the beautiful young lady also,
and I will try my skin to the thief, and went and stole her away from under the dragon,
so quietly and gently that Beast did not know it, but went on snoring.
Then away they hastened with her full of joy in their boat towards the ship, but soon
came the dragon roaring behind them through the air, while he awoke and missed the princess.
But when he got over the boat and wanted a pound upon them and carried the princess,
carry off the princess, the Huntsman took up his bow and shot him straight through the heart
so that he fell down dead.
They were still not safe or he was such a great beast that his fall, that in his fall he
overset the boat and they had to swim in the open sea upon a few packs. So the tailor took his
needle and then a few large stitches put some of the packs together and he sat down upon these
and sailed about and gathered up all pieces of the boat and then tacked them together so
quickly that the boat was soon ready and then they reached the ship and got home safe.
When they had brought home the princess to her father, there was great rejoicing and he said to the four brothers,
one of you shall marry her, but you must settle amongst yourselves which it is to be.
Then there arose a quarrel between them and the stargays are said, if I had not found the princess out,
all your skill would have been of no use. Therefore she ought to be mine.
Your seeing her would have been no, would have been of no use, so the thief.
If I had not taken away her away from the dragon, therefore she ought to be mine.
No, she is mine, so the Huntsman for if I had not killed the dragon, he would after all
have torn you and the princess into pieces.
And if I had not signed the book together again, so the tailor, you would all have been drowned,
therefore she is mine.
And the king put in a word and said,
Each of you is right, and as all cannot have the young lady, the best way is for neither of you to have it, for the truth is that as somebody, she likes a great dear better, but to make up for your loss, I will give each of you as a reward for his skill, half a kingdom.
So the brothers agreed that this plan would be much better than either quarreling or marrying a lady who had no mind to have them, and the king then gave to each half a kingdom.
And he had said, and they lived very happily the rest of their days and took good care of their father.
And somebody took better care of the young lady than to net eye with the dragon or one of the craftsmen have her again.
Eat and good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Warham Grim. Chapter 46, Lily and the Lion.
Imagine who had three daughters was once sitting out upon a journey, but before he went
he asked each daughter what gift he should bring back for her. The eldest wish for
powers, the second for jewels, but the third he was called Lily said, dear father, bring
me a rose. Now it was no easy task to find a rose for it was the middle of winter.
Yet, as she was his prettiest daughter and was very fond of flowers, her father said he
would try and what he could do. So he kissed all three and bid them goodbye. And when
When the time came for him to go home, he had brought, he had bought pearls and jewels
for the two eldest, but he had sought everywhere in vain for the rose.
And when he went into any garden and asked for such a thing, but people laughed at him
and asked him whether he thought roses grew in snow.
This grieved him very much for Lily was his dearest child, and as he was journeying home,
thinking what he should bring her, he came to a fine castle and around the castle
was a garden, in one half of it which seemed to be summertime and in the other half
winter. On one side the finest flowers have been full bloom and on the other everything
looked dreary and buried in the snow. A lucky hit said he, as he called to his servant
and told him to go to a beautiful bed of roses that was there and bring him away one
the finest flowers. This done, they were writing away well pleased when upsprank a fierce
lion and wrought out, whoever has stolen my roses shall be eaten up alive. Then the man said,
I knew not that the god and belong to you, can nothing save my life? No, so the lion,
nothing unless you undertake to give me whatever meets your new return home. But if you,
If you agree to this, I will give you your life, and the rose too for your daughter.
But the man was unwilling to do so and said, it may be my youngest daughter who loves me most
and always runs to meet me when I go home. And the servant was greatly frightened and said,
it perhaps, it may perhaps be only a captor or dog. And at last the man knew that with a heavy heart
and took the rose and said he would give the line whatever he should make him fast on his return.
And as he came near home, it was Liny, his youngest and dearest daughter about met him. She
came running in kissed him and welcomed him home. And when he saw that he had bought her the rose,
she was still more glad. But her father began to be very sorrowful and to reap,
saying, I last my dearest child, I've bought this flower at a high price, but I have said
I would give you your wild lion, and when he has you, he will tell you in pieces and eat
you. Then he told her all that happened and said, she should not go, let what would happen.
But she comforted him and said, dear father, the word you have given must be kept. I will go
to the lion and south him, perhaps he will let me come home, come safe home again.
The next morning she asked the way she has to go, she was to go, and took the eve
of her father, and went forth for the bold heart into the wood. But the lion was an
enchanted prince, by day he and all his court reliance, but in the evening they took their
right forms again, and when Nilly came to the castle he welcomed her so cautiously, as
she agreed to marry him. The wedding feast was held and they lived happily together
a long time. The prince was only to be seen as soon as even came and then he held his
court. But every morning he left his bride and went away by himself, she knew not
with her till the night came again.
After some time he said to her, tomorrow there will be a great feast in your father's house,
For your elder sister is to be married, and if you wish to go and visit her, my lion shall
lead you to the birth.
Then she rejoiced much at the boards of seeing her father once more and set out with
the lion, and everyone was overjoyed to see her, but they had brought her dead long
since.
Which she told them how happy she was and stayed till the feast was over, and then went back
to the wood.
Her second sister was soon after married, and when Lily was asked to go to the wedding,
she said to the prince,
''I will not go alone this time, you must go with me, but he would not, and said that it would
be a very hazardous thing.
For if, at the least ray of the torch light should fall upon him, his enshartement
would become still worse, for he should be changed into a dove and be forced to wonder
about the world for seven long years.
However, she gave him no rest and said she would take care, no light should fall upon him.
So at last they set out together and took with them their little child, and she chose a
large hole, the thick walls for him, to sit in while wedding watches were nighted.
But unmagily, no one saw that there was a crack in the door, and when the wedding was
held with a great pomp, but as the train came from the church and past the torches before
a hall, a very small way of light fell upon the prince. In a moment he disappeared, and
one his wife came in and looked for him. She found only a white dove and it said to her,
seven years must I fly up and down over the face of the earth. But every now and then I will let
fall a white feather that will show you the way I am going, follow it and at last you may overtake
and set me free. This sanity he flew out at the door and pulled any followed, and every
noun then on a white feather fell, and showed her the way she was journey, but she went
woven on through the wildbout, and looked neither to the right hand nor to the left, nor
took any rest for seven years. But she began to be glad and bought herself that the time
was fast coming when all her troubles should end. Yet repose was still far off. For one day
as she was travelling on, she missed the white feather and when she lifted up her eyes, she
couldn't be, she could nowhere see the dove. Now, for she to herself, no aid of man can
be overused to me. So she went to the sun and said, loud shyness everywhere on the hills top
and the valley's depth. Has thou anywhere seen my white dove? No, Seversan. I have not seen it,
but I will give thee a casket, open it when by hour of need comes. So she thanked the sun
and went on her way to even tide. And when the moon arose she cried onto it and said,
thou shyness through the night overfield and glow? Has thou no where seen my white dove?
No, said the moon, I cannot help thee, but I will give thee an egg, break it for need
comes.
Then she thanked the moon and it went on until the night went blue, and she raised
her public toilet and said, now blost through every tree and under every leaf, has
found not seen my white-duff, no, so the night went, but I will ask three other whims,
perhaps they have seen it. When the east wind and the west wind came and said they
too had not seen it, but the south wind had said, but the south wind said, I have seen
them wake up. He has fled to the red sea and has changed once more into an iron, but
the seven years are passed away, and there he is fighting with a dragon, and the dragon
is an enchanted princess who seeks to separate him from you. Then the night wind said,
I will give the council, go to the Red Sea on the right shore stands many, stand many
rods, count them and when they'll come as to the 11th, break it off and smite the dragon
with it, and so the lion will have the victory, and both of them will appear to you in
their own forms.
Then look round, and they'll see a griffin, winged like bird, sitting above the Red Sea,
jump onto his back and with thy love to one and whip. Jump onto his back,
revive the love of one as quickly as possible and he will carry you over the
waters to your home. I will also give the this nut, continue the neck
length. When you are halfway over, we are at down and out of the waters
or immediately sprint up a high nut tree or watch the griffin will be able to
rest. Otherwise he will not have a strength that they give a whole
way, if therefore thou dost forget to throw down the nut, he will let you both fall into
the sea. So our poor wanderer went forth and found all as the night went had said, and she
plucked the set the eleventh rock and smoked the dragon, and the lion forth with became
a prince and the dragon, a princess again. But no sooner was a princess released from the spell,
then she sees the prince by the arm and sprang onto the grippins back and went off carrying the prince away with her.
Thus the unhappy traveller was again forsaken and fall on, but she took heart and said, as far as the wind blows,
and so long as the cook grows, I will journey on till I find him once again. She went on for a long, long way
to let nanks she came to the castle with the princess head carried the prince, and there was a feast
got ready, and she heard that the wedding was about to be held. Heaven aid me now, said she,
and she took the cast-kit that the sun had given her, and found that within it lay of dress as
dazzling as a sun itself, so she put it on and went into the palace, and all the people gazed upon
her, and the dress pleased the bride so much, but she asked whether it was to be sold. Not for gold
and silver, said she, but for flesh and blood. The prince of his ask, which she meant, and she said,
Let me speak with a bright room this night in his chamber, and I will give thee the dress.
At last the princess agreed, but she told her chamberlain to give the princess sleeping dropped,
so that he might not hear or see her. When the evening came, and the prince had fallen asleep,
she was led into his chamber, and she sat herself down at his feet and said,
I have followed the seven years. I have been to the sun, the moon, and the night wind seek thee,
and at last I have helped thee to overcome the dragon. Will thou then forget me quite?
But the prince all the time slept so suddenly that I have always only passed over him and seemed
like the whistling of the wind among the fur trees. Then poor Lily was led away and forced to
give up the golden dress. And while she saw that there was no help for her, she went out
into a murder and herself down and wept. But as she sat she befought herself of the egg, the moon
had given her, and while she broke it, there well out the hand and twelve chickens of pure
gold that played about, and then nestled under the all-ones wings, so as to form the most
beautiful sight in the world. And she rose up and drove them before her to the bridesaw
than from her window, and was so pleased that she came for as an answer if she would sell
the brood. Not for gold or for silver but for flesh and blood, let me again this evening
speak with a bright green when his chamber, and I will give thee the whole brood.
And the princess thought to betray her as before, and agreed to what she asked,
but when the prince came to his chamber he asked a chamber in why the wind and whistleed
so in the night. And the Chamberlain taught him all. How he had given him a sleeping
drought and how a poor maiden had come and spoken to him in his chamber. I was to come
again that night. And the Prince had cared to throw away the sleeping drode. And when
he literally came and began to tell him what was before him had and how faithful and true
to him she had been, he knew his beloved wife's voice and sprang up and said,
you have awakened me as from a dream. Well the strange princess had thrown her spell around me.
so that I had all together forgotten you, but heaven has sent you to me in a lucky hour,
and they stole away out of the palace by night unawares, and seated themselves on the
Griffin who flew back with them of the Red Sea. When they were half way across an alien
up and not born into the water, and immediately a large nut tree arose from the sea,
will look gruffin-rusted for a while, and then carry them safely home.
Blairly found their child, now grown up to be company and fair, and after all the troubles
they lived happily together, so they end all their days. Be and Goodnight.
Grimm is very tense by Jacob Grimm and will help Grimm.
Chapter 47 The Fox and the Horse
A farmer had horse that had an excellent day full 7th time, but he was now growing too old
to work.
So the farmer would give him nothing more to eat and said, I want you no longer, so take
herself off, out of my stable. I shall not take you back again until you are stronger than
a lion. Then he opened the door and turned him adrift. The poor horse was very melancholy
and wandered up and down in the road, seeking some little shelter from the cold wind and rain.
Presently a fox met him. What's the matter my friends said he? Why do you hang down your head and
and look so lonely in one big one.
Ah, I've played the horse.
Just as an average, never dwell in one house.
My master has forgotten all that I have done for him so many years
and because I can no longer work, here's 10-year drift and says,
unless I become stronger than a lion, he will not take me back again.
What chance can I have of that?
He knows I have none or he would not talk so.
However, the books bid him the off-good cheer and said, I will help you lie down there,
stretch yourself out quite stiff and pretend to be dead.
But horses did, as he was told, and the fox went straight to the lion,
who lived in the cave close by and said to him,
a little way of nice and dead horse, come with me and you may make an excellent meal of his carcass.
Lime is greatly pleased, instead of immediately, and when they came to the horse, the
fox said, you will not be able to eat him comfortably here. I'll tell you what. I will
tell you fast to his tail, and then you can draw him to your den, and eat him at your
leisure. Let's advice, please, Lime, so you laid himself down quietly for the fox to
making fast to the horse. But the fox managed to tie his legs together and bound also hard
in fast that with all his strength he cannot set himself free. When the work was done in the
whole flat the horse on the shoulder and said, jip, dubbing jip, then up he sprang and moved off.
Dragging the line behind him, the beast began to roar and bow to all the birds of the road,
flew away for fright, but the horse met him sing on, and made his way quietly over to
feels his master's house. He is master, said he, I have got the better of him, and when the
farmer saw his old servant, his heart relented, and he said, thou shalt stay in my stable and be
well taken care of. And so the poor old horse had plenty to eat and lived till he died.
The End. Good night.
Grimm is very tensed by Jay Thubgrimm and will help Grimm. Chapter 48, The Blue Night.
There was one subunitile, a soldier who for many years had served the king faithfully,
But when the war came to an end, could serve no longer because of a many wounds which he had received.
My king said to him,
You may return to your home.
I need you no longer, and you will not receive any more money,
or he only receives wages who renders me service of them.
And the soldier did not know how to earn a living.
When you were greatly troubled and walked the whole day, until, in the evening, he ended
a forest.
When darkness came on, he saw a night, which he went up to, and came to a house where
an inlived a witch, do give me one night's lodging, and a little, to eat and drink, said
he to have a, or I shall starve, or hold, she answered.
Who gives anything to a runaway soldier?
Yet, will I be compassionate and take you in if you will do what I wish?
What do you wish, Sir, the soldier, that you should dig all around my garden for me, tomorrow?
A soldier consented, the next day, and the next day labored with all his strength, but could not finish it by the evening.
I see well enough, Sir, the witch, that you can do no more today, but I will keep you yet another night, in payment for which you must tomorrow chop me, a load of words and chop it small.
The soldiers spent the whole day in doing it, and in the evening the witch proposed that he should stay one more night.
Tomorrow you shall only do me a very trifling piece of work.
The hide my house there, then all dry well, into which May light has fallen.
It burned blue and never goes out, and you shall bring it up again.
Next day, the old woman took him to the well, and let him down in the basket.
the blue light and made her a signal to draw him up again. She did draw him up, but when
he came near the edge, he stretched down her hand. She stretched down her hand and was
as he took the blue light away from him. No, he said, perceiving her even intention.
I will not give you the light until I am standing with both feet upon the ground, but
which fell into a passion that him fall again into the well and went away. The poor
The soldier fell without injury on on the moist ground, and the beer light went on burning,
but of what he used was that to him.
He saw very well that he could not escape death.
He sat for a while, very sorefully, and suddenly he felt in his pocket and found
his tobacco pipe, which was still harmful.
There shall be my last pleasure, thought he, pulled it out, lit it at the blue light
and began to smoke, and the smoke had cycled about the cabin, suddenly an able black
door stood before him and said, Lord, what are your commands? What my commands are,
reply the soldier quite astonished, I must do everything you bid me, so the little man,
good, so the soldier, then in the first place helped me out of this well, the little
man took him by the hand and then hinted through an underground passage, but he did not
forget to take a blue night with him. On the way, Bridewell showed him treasures which the
witch had collected and hidden there, and a soldier took as much gold as he could carry.
When he was a birth, he said to the little man, now go and buy the old witch and carry
her before the judge. In a short time, she came by like a wind, riding on a wild
time account and screaming frightfully. No was it long before the little man reappeared. It
all done said he, and the witch is already hanging on the gallows. What further commands
has my Lord in quite a draw? At this moment, none, answer the soldier. You can return home,
only be at hand immediately if I summon you. Nothing more in the need is then you should
light your pipe as a blue light, and I will appear before you at once. They are upon
he vanished from his sight. The soldier returned to the town from which he came. He went to the best
in, ordered himself hands and clothes, and then bathed the landlord for a shimmer room as
handsome as possible. When it was ready, and the soldier had taken position of it, he
summoned the little black mannequin and said, I have served the king faithfully, but
he has dismissed me and left me to hunger, and now I want to take my revenge. What am I
to do? As a little man, late at night when the king's daughter is in bed, bring her here
in her sleep. She shall do severance work for me.
The mannequin said,
that is an easy thing for me to do,
but a very dangerous thing for you
for it is discovered you will fare in.
When 12 o'clock headstrap the door spring open
and the mannequin carried in the princess,
aha, are you there, crime soldier?
Get to your work at once.
Pitch the broom and sweep the chamber.
When she had done this, he ordered her to come to his chair
and then he stretched out her feet
and said, pull off my boots and then he threw them in her face and made her pick them up again
and clean and brighten them. She, however, did everything he made her without opposition,
silently and with half-tut eyes. And the first got groved, the mannequin carried her back
to the royal palace and made her in her bed. Next morning when the princess of Rose,
she went to her father and told him that she had a very strange dream. I was carried through
through the streets with a rapidity of lightning, and says she, and taken into a soldiers
room, and I had to wait upon him like a servant, sweep his room, clean his boots, and do
all kinds of manual work. It was only a dream and yet I am just as tired as if I really had
done everything. The dream may have been true, so the king, I will give you a piece of advice,
Fill your pockets full of peas and make a small hole in the pocket, and then if you're
carried away again, they will fall out and leave a track in the streets. But unseen by the king,
the mannequin was standing behind beside him when he said that and had all, and night on
sleeping princesses were again carries in the streets. Some peas suddenly did fall out of a pocket,
but they made no track. The crafting mannequin had just before scattered peas in every street there
it was, and again the princesses compelled to do seven so I can tell a quote quote.
Next morning, the king sent his people out to seek the track, but it was all in vain that
every street, poor children were sitting, picking up peas and saying, it must have
rained peas last night, we must think of something else of the king, keep your shoes
on when you go to bed, and before you come back from place where you were taken, hide one
than there, I will soon contrived to find it. The black man again heard this plot, and
that last, and at night, when the soldier again ordered him to bring the princess, revealed
it to him and told him, making new of no expedient to counteract the strategy. And that, if
the shoe were found in the soldier's house, it would go badly with him. Do what I'd then
she reply the soldier, and again this third night, the princess was obliged to work like
7, but before she went away she hid her shoe under the bed.
Next morning the king had the entire town, a saturated or to shoe, for his daughter's
shoe.
It was found at the soldiers and the soldier himself who at the entry-ty of the dwarf had
gone outside the gate, with soon brought back and thrown into prison.
In his flight he had forgotten the most valuable thing he had, the blue light and the
gold, and had only one duke had in his pocket.
And now I'll load you the chains he was standing at the window of his dungeon, where he
chance to see one of his comrades passing by.
The soldiers tapped at the pane of glass, and when this man came up said to him,
be so kind as to fetch him the small bundle I had left laying lying at the end in the
inn, and I will give you a do-can for doing it.
As a comrades, Ram Thiver and brought him what he wanted, as soon as the soldiers were
alone again he might as his pipe and some of them like my again.
had no fear, so the latter to his master,
go wherever slowly take you and let them do what they will,
only take the blue light with you.
Next day the soldier was tried, and though he had done nothing wicked,
the judge condemned him to death.
When he was led for us to die, he begged a last favorite king.
What is it, Master King?
I made smoke one more pipe on my way.
You made smoke three months of the king, but do you not imagine that I was
Spain in life. When the King pulled out of the bin, the sword dropped all that his pipe
and landed it. At the blue light, and as soon as a few weeks of smoke as it ascended,
had ascended the mannequins there, there was small cudgel in his hand, and said,
what is my Lord command? Strike down to that false judge there, and his constable,
and spare not the King who had treated me so ill. And the mannequin fell on the
like lightning, doubting his way in that way, and whoever so was so much as touched by his
cultural belt out, and did not venture to stare again. The King was terrified, he threw himself
on the soldier's mercy and merely to be allowed to live at all, gave him his kingdom close
on and his daughter to wife. The End. Good night.
Grimm is very towns by Jacob Grimm and Will Helm Grimm, chapter 49, the Raven.
There was once a queen who had an adult her, still too young to run alone. One day the child
was very troublesome and the mother could not quiet it, do what she would. She grew impatient
and seemed in Raven's fly flying around the castle. She opened the window and said,
I wish she were a Raven and would fly away, then I should have a little piece.
Scare Stigler the words out of a mouth when the child in her arms was turned into a Raven
and flew away from her to an open window, so the open window. The bird took its flight to a dark wood,
and remained there for a long time, and meanwhile the parents could hear nothing of their child.
Long after this, and then was making his way through the wood when he had heard a raven
calling, and he followed the sound of the voice.
As he drew near the raven said, I am by black a king's daughter, but I am now under the
span of some inchartement.
You can, and however, set me free.
What am I to do?
He asked, she replied, go farther into the wood until you come to her house, wherein
lives in the old woman, she will offer you food and drink, but you must not take of
either. If you do, you'll fall into a deep sleep, and will not be able to help me.
In the garden behind the house, in the large town heap, and on that you must stand and
watch for me, I shall drive there in my carriage at two o'clock in the afternoon with three
successive days. The first day it will be drawn by four white, the second by four chestnut,
and the last by four black horses. But if you failed to keep awake and I find you sleeping,
I shall not be set free."
The man promised to do all that she wished. The Raven said,
''A lass, I know even now that you will take something from the woman and be unable to save me.
The man assured her again that he would, or no, account, touch a thing to eat or drink.
When he came to the house and went inside, the old woman met him and said, poor man,
how tired you are, come in and rest and let me give you something to eat and drink.
No answer the man, I will neither eat nor drink.
But she would not leave him alone and the ocean saying, if you will not eat anything,
at least you might take a drop of wine, wondering counts for nothing, and that last
you allowed himself to be persuaded and drank.
As it drew toward the appointed outward he went outside the end of the garden and mounted
the tan heaped to await the raven. Suddenly a feeling of the tea came over him and
I am able to resist it he lay down for a little while fully determined. However, to keep
awake but in another minute his eyes closed of their own court. And he fell into such a deep
sleep that all the noises in the well will not have awakened him. At two o'clock the
The raven came driving a long tour, joined by her four white horses, but even before she reached the spot, she said to herself sign,
I know he has fallen asleep, when she ended the garden, then she found him as she had fears, lying on the turn heap, pass asleep.
She got out of the carriage and went to him, she called and shook him, but it was all in vain, he continued still sleeping.
The next day at noon the old woman came to him again with Sweden drink which at first
he refused. At last, over come with by her persistent injuries that he should take
something he lifted the glass and drank again. Toward two o'clock he was in the garden
and onto the tan heap to watch for the raven. He had not been there long before he began to feel
so tired that his limbs seemed hardly able to support him and he could not stand upright any longer.
So again he laid down and fell off the sleep, as a ravens drove along her board chestnut horses,
she said so of Leigh Tessa. I know he has fallen asleep, so she went as before to look for him,
but he slept and it was impossible to awaken him.
The following day the older men said to him,
said to him, what is this? You are not eating or drinking anything? Do you want to kill yourself?
He answered, I may not, and will not either eat or drink.
But she put down the dish of food and the glass of wine in front of him, and when he
smoked the wine he was unable to resist the temptation and took it short.
Only Elwark came round again, he went to the usual, onto the tan heap, and the garden
to awake the king's daughter, but he felt even more overcome was weariness than on
the two previous days, and the ring himself down, he slept like a dog.
At two o'clock, the Raven could be seen approaching, and this time her coachman and everything about her, as well as her horses were black.
As well as her horses were black, she was sadder than ever as she drove along and said mournfully.
I know he has fallen asleep, and will not be able to set me free. She found him sleeping heavily, and all her efforts still waken him were of no avail.
Then she placed him beside him under some meat and a glass of wine of such a kind that
however much he took of them, they were never grow less.
After that she drew a gold ring on which her name was engraved, offered think and put it
upon one of his.
Finally she laid a letter near him in which after giving him particulars of the food and
drink she had left for him.
She finished with a following line.
I see that as long as you remain here, you will never be able to set me free.
If however you still wish to do so, come to the Golden Castle of Strongberg.
This is well within your power to accomplish.
She then returned to her carrot and drove to the Golden Castle of Strongberg.
On the man of work and found that he had been sleeping, he was grieved at heart and said,
she has no doubt been here and driven away again, and it is no too late for me to save
her.
And his eyes fell on things which were nine beside him.
He read the letter and knew from it all that had happened.
He rose up with that lay, he gave the start on his way, and to reach this castle of
strong blood, but he had no idea in which direction he ought to go.
He travelled about a long time in such a bit and came at last to adopt forest through which
he went on walking for 14 days and still could not find a way out.
more than that came on and worn out he lay under down under a bush in
fall asleep. Again the next day he pursued his way through forest in that evening
singing to rest again he lay down as before but he heard such a howling and
wailing that he found it impossible to sleep. He waited until it was dark and
people had begun to light up their houses and then seeing and if a glimmer I
ahead of him, he went towards it. He found that the light came from the house which looked
smaller than it really was, and the contrast of its height, with that of an immense giant
who's didn't find a bit. He thought himself, if the giant sees me going in, my life will not
be worth much, however after a while he summed up courage and went forward. When the giant saw him,
he called out, it is lucky for that to you have come, but I have not had anything to eat for a long
time. I can have you now for my supper. I would rather you let that alone set the man,
but I do not willingly give myself up to be eaten. If you are wanting food, I have enough
to satisfy your hunger. If that is so repivigiant, I will leave you in peace. I only thought
of eating me because I had nothing else. So we went indoors together and sat down, and the man
brought up the bread, meat, and wine, which although he had eaten and drunk of them was still
unconsumed. The giant was pleased with a good cheer and ate and drank to his heart
content, and when he had finished the his supper, the man asked him if he could direct
him to the castle of Stromberg. The giant said, I will look up my map, on it I'll
mark all the towns, villages and houses, so he fetched his map, and looked for the castle,
but could not find it. Never mind he said, I have a larger map upstairs in the cupboard.
We will look on those, but they searched in vain for a castle's not marked even on these.
The man now fought, he should likely continue his journey, but the giant baked him to remain
for a day or two long time till the return of his brother, who was away in search of provisions.
When the brother came home, they asked him about the castle of Tronberg,
and he told them he would look on his own maps as soon as he had eaten and appeased his hunger.
Accordingly, when he had finished the supper, we all went up together to his room and looked
through his maps. The castle was not to be found. Then he fetched other older maps, and they went
on looking for the castle until that last they found it, but it was many thousand miles away.
How shall I be able to get there?" asked the man. I have two hours to spare, so the giant.
and I will carry you into the neighborhood of the castle. I must then return to the castle's
child who was in our care. The giant thereopon carried the man to within about a hundred
weeks of the castle, where he left him the saying, you'll be able to walk the remainder of
the way himself. The man journeyed on day and night till he reached the golden castle of Shrumbark.
He found it situated however, on a glass mountain, looking up from the foot he saw the enchanted
made in driven around her castle and then go inside. He was overjoyed to see her and long
to get to the top of the mountain but the science was so slippery that every time he attempted
to climb he fell back again. What he saw that it was impossible to reach her, he was greatly
grieved and set himself. I will remain here and wait for her. So he bought himself a little
hut and then he sat and watched for a whole year and every day he saw the king's daughter
driving around her castle, but still was unable to get near her to her.
Looking out from his hut one day, he saw three robbers fighting and called out to them.
God be with you.
They stopped when they heard the call, but looking around and seeing nobody, they went
on again with their fighting.
Would now became more furious.
God be with you, he cried again, and again they paused and looked about, but seeing no
one went back to their fighting.
At that time, he called out, God be with him, and then thinking he should like to know
the cause of the dispute between the three men, he went out and asked them where they were fighting
so angrily with one another. One of them said that he found a stick, and that he had
but to strike it against any door through which he wished to pass, and immediately fought
flew open. Another told him that he had found a cloak which rendered its rare invisible,
and the third had called a horse which would carry its rire over any obstacle and even up the
last mountain. They had been able, they had been unable to decide whether they would keep
together and have a thing in common or whether they would separate. On hearing this the man said,
I will give you something and exchange for those three things. Not money for that, I have not
God, but something that is of far more value. I must first have a proof whether or you have
told me about your three things is true. The rubble's therefore made him get on the horse
and handed him the stick in the cloak. And when he had put this around him he was no longer visible.
And he fell upon them and the stick and beat them one after another crying. There you
idle by the bonds you have got what you deserve. Are you satisfied now? After this he wrote
up the glass mountain when he reached the gate of the castle he found it closed. But he gave it
a blow with a stick, and it flew wide open at once, and he passed through. He mounted the
steps and ended the room with a maiden sitting, with a golden goblet with a wine in front
of her. She could not see him before he still wore his cloak. He took the ring which had,
she had given him off his finger and threw it into the goblet, so let it ran as soon as it
touched the bottom. That is my own ring, she claimed, and if that is so, the man must also be here
who was coming to set me free. She sought for him about the castle but could find him nowhere.
Meanwhile, he had gone outside again and mounted his horse and son of the clerk.
One more four she came to the castle gate, she saw him and cried aloud for joy.
Then he dismounted and took her in his arms and she kissed him and said,
Now you have indeed set the free, and tomorrow you will celebrate our marriage, the end. Good night.
Grims very towns by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
Chapter 50, the Golden Goose. There was a man who had three sons. The youngest of whom was called
dooming, which means simple tin. I was despised, mocked and sneered at on every occasion.
It happened that the eldest wanted to go into the forest to skew wood, and before he went
his mother gave him a beautiful sweet cake, and a bottle of wine in order that he might not
suffer from hunger or thirst. When he entered the forest he met a little grey head or man who made
him good day and said, do you give me a piece of cake out of your pocket and let me have
a drop of your wine? I am so hungry and thirsty, but the clever son answered, if I give
you my cake in wine I shall have none for myself, be offered to you, and he left the man
sending in my dawn. But when he began to hear down a tree, it was not long before he made a
a full stroke, and the axe cut him in the arm so that he had to go home and have it
bound up, and this was the only grey man's doing. After this, the second son went into
the forest, and his mother gave him, like the elders, a cake, and the body of life. Then
an old grey man met him likewise, and asked him for a piece of cake and a drink of wine.
But the second son too, says sensibly enough, would I give you or be taken away from myself?
the off, and he left the little man standing and went on. His punishment, however, was not
delayed, when he had made a few birds of the tree he struck himself in the leg, so that he had
to be carried up. Then, do a mean said, father, do you let me go and cut the wood? The father
answered, your brothers have had themselves with it. Leave it alone, you do not understand anything
about it. But Domingon beds big, so hot, so long that at last he said,
"'Just go then, you will get wise of eye-houting yourself. Has mother gave him a cake with
water and baked in the cinders and visit a bottle of soap in. When he came to the forest,
a little old grey man met him likewise, and greeting him, said, give me a piece of your cake
and drink out of your bottle.
I am so hungry and thirsty.
Dimming on said,
I have only sinned a cake and sell a beer.
That place is you.
We will sit down and eat.
So they sat down.
And when Dimming pulled out his sinned a cake,
it was a flying sweet cake.
The salad beer had become good wine.
So they ate and drank
and after that a little man said,
since you have a good heart
and are willing to divine which you have,
I will give you good luck.
luck, their stands and old tree cut it down and you will find something at the roots,
then the little man took leave of him.
The only one down and cut down the one and cut down the tree.
And when it fell there there was a goose sitting in the roots with feathers of pure gold.
He lived in her up and taking her with him went to an inn where he thought he would stay the night.
Now, the closer three daughters who saw the groups and were curious to know what such a wonderful
plan might be, and would have liked to have one of its golden feathers. The older start,
I shall soon find an opportunity of pulling out a feather, and as soon as Duma and her gone out,
she sees the blue spider wing, but her finger and hand remains sticking fast to it.
The second came soon after that thinking only of how she might get a feather for herself,
but she has her sister and she was her boss.
At last, the better also came with the mic intent and the other screamed out,
keep away from getting sick, keep away, but she did not understand why she was
to keep away. The others are there, she thought, I may as well be there too.
I ran to them, but as soon as she touched her sister, she remained
sticking faster to her so they had to spend the night of the goose.
The next morning, dueling took the goose under his arm and sat down, without traveling himself about the three girls who were hanging on to it.
There are blush you went off to him, continually, now left, now right wherever his legs took him.
In the middle of the fields, the parts in mid-tem, and when he saw the procession, he said,
For shame, you could have been nothing girls. Why are you running across the fields after this young man?
Is that Stingley? At the same time he sees the youngest boy by the hand in order to pull her away.
But as soon as he touched her, he liked why stuck fast and was him and was himself obliged to run behind.
Before long, the sexting came by and saw his master, the passing, running behind three girls.
He was astonished that there's him called out.
Hi, you're reference.
With her way so quickly to not forget that we have a christening today and run after him
he took him by the sleep but was also held fast to it.
Whilst the five were trotting, the best one behind the other two labourers came with their
hose from the fields.
The passing called out to them and begged them, begged that they would set him in the
in 163, but they had scarce in touch the 16 when they were held fast, and now there
was seven of them running behind him in the case. Soon after the T.K.A.A.C.A.C.A.
King ruled, who had a daughter who was so serious that no one can make her laugh. So he
had put forth a victory, but whoever so should be able to make her laugh, she America. When
Timling had this, he went with his goose and all the train, before the King's daughter,
and as soon as she saw the seven people running on and on one behind me I've actually
began to laugh quite loudly, and as if she would have stopped.
There upon Timling asked her to have her for his wife, but the King did not like the
sun and more, and made all manner of excuses, and said he must first produce a man who could
drink a cellar cellar cellar wine.
The little grey man who could certainly help him, so he went into the forest and in the
same place where he had full of a tree, his old man sitting, who had a very sorrowful
face.
Doming asked what him what he was taking to heart so sorely and he answered,
I had such a great first and chemo-quenchant, called water I cannot stand, a barrel of wine
I just have, I have just emptied, that to me is like a drop on a hot stone.
There, I can help you, said do me, as come with me and you shall be satisfied. He led
him into the king's centre, and the man bent over the huge bowels and drank and drank
those wounds hurt. And before the day was out, he had ended all the bowels, and
doubling will ask once more for his bride, but the king was vexed at such an ugly fellow
whom everyone called do me, he should take away his daughter, and he made a new condition.
He must first find a man who can eat a whole mountain of bread. Do me, did not think
but when straight into the forest, where Emma's same place, as that of man, who was tying up his body with a strap, and making an awful face saying,
I haven't eaten a whole oven full of rolls, but what good is that when one has such a hunger as I?
My stomach remains empty and I'm almost time myself up.
If I am not to die of hunger.
At this Sturmin was glad and said, get up and come with me and you shall eat yourself full.
He led him to the King's Palace where all of them and the whole King comes collecting.
And from it he caused the huge mountain of bread to be baked.
When I and from the forest stood before it began to eat and by the end of one day the whole mountain
had vanished and liming, referred to and asked for his bride, but the King again sought away
out and ordered a ship which could sail on there and on water.
As soon as you come back sailing, as soon as you come sailing back in it,
said he, you shall have my daughter for a while.
The main one straight into the forest and then said a little grey man to whom he had given his cake.
When he had walked in the morning, he said, since you have given me to eat and to drink,
I will give you the ship and I do all this because you once were kind to me.
And he gave you the ship which could sail on the engine motor.
And when the King saw that he could no longer prevent him from having his order, the wedding was celebrated and out of the King's death.
filming inheriting his kingdom and lived for a long time, contentedly with his wife, he and good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Will Helm Grimm, Chapter 51, The Water of Life.
Long before you or I were born, they're reigned in a country a great way off, a king
who had three sons, his king once fell very ill, so ill but nobody thought he could
his sons were very much grieved at their father's sickness and as they were walking together
very mournfully in a garden of the palace, a little old man met them and asked what was
the matter. They told him that their father was very ill and that they were afraid nothing
could save him. I know what would, so the little old man, it is the water of life. If he could
had a drop of it. He would be well again, but it is very hard to get.
When the eldest son said, I will soon find it, and he went to the sick king, and begged
that he might go in such a bewwater of life, as it was the only thing that could save
him. No, so became. I had rather died than face you in such great danger, as you
must meet within you, journey. But he begged so hard that the king let him go, and the prince
bought him so, if I bring my father this water, he will make me so, and it is Kingdom.
Then he set out and when he had gone on his way, some time, he came to a deep valley, over
hung with rocks and woods, and as he lived around, he saw standing above him on one of
the rocks, a little ugly dwarf, with a sugar loaf cap and a sculled cloak.
And the door, of course, to him, said, Prince, with the so fast, what is it to, what is that to
the ugly imp, so the Prince caught me and rode on, but the door was enraged at his behavior
and laid a very spell of ill-like upon him, so that as he rode on the mountain pass, they
came the narrower and narrower, and at last, the way, was so straightened that he could not
go to set forward and when he fought to have turned his horse around and go back the way he
came he heard a mad laugh ringing around him and found that the pass was closed behind him
so that he was shut in the old round. He next tried to get off his horse and make his wheel put,
but again the nerve rang and his ears and he found himself unable to move step and thus he was
court forced to abide spellbound.
Meantime, the old king was lingering on in daily hope of his son's return, but at last
the second son said, Father, I will go inside to the water of life, where he fought
himself, my brother is surely dead, and the kingdom will fall to me if I find the water.
The king was at first very unwilling to let him go, but at last, you did to his wish,
set out and followed the same road which his brother had done. And met with the same elf
who stopped him at the same spot in the mountain and the same as before Prince Prince,
with a so fast, mind your own affairs busybody for the Prince's gone for the he and rode on.
But the dwarf put the same spell upon him as he put on his older brother and he too was at
last applied to take up his abund in the heart of the mountains.
Thus it is with proud silly people who think themselves above everyone else, and are
too proud to ask or take advice.
While the second prince had thus been gone a long time, the young guy said he would
go and sat for the water of life, and trusted he should soon be able to make his father
well again. So he said out, and the dwarf met him too at the same spot in the valley
I'm on the mountains and said, prints were the so fast and the prints said,
I am going in search of the water of life because my father is ill and liked to die.
Can you help me?
Pray be kind and aid me if you can.
Do you know what it is to be found as a door?
No, so the prints. I do not.
Pray tell me if you know.
Then, as you have spoken to me kindly and are wise enough to seek for advice,
I will tell you how and where to go.
But what do you seek springs from a well and in a chanted castle?
And that you may be able to reach in it safety.
And that you may be able to reach it in safety.
I will give you an iron wand and two of the rooms of bread.
Strike the iron door overcastle three times with a wand and it will open.
Two hungry lines will be lying down inside gafing for their prey.
but if you throw it on the bread, they won't let you pass, and hasten on to the well and take some of the water of life before a clock strikes 12.
Or if you tarry the, if you tarry longer, the door will shut up on you forever.
Then the prince thanked his little friend with the star-like look for his friendly aid,
and took the wand and the bread and went traveling on and on, overseeing in overland, going came to his Chinese end,
and found everything to be as it were, but told him.
him. A door flew open at the bird stroke of the wand and when the lions were quiet, he
went on through the console and came at length to a beautiful hall, around it he saw
several night sitting in a trance, and he pulled off their rings and put them on his own
fingers, and another room he saw on a table, a sword, a loaf and a loaf of bread, which he
also took. By the arm he came to a room a beautiful young lady sat upon a couch, and
She will continue, by the end said, if he would set her free from the spell of that
bounty her, the kingdom should be his.
If he would come back in the year and marry her.
Then she told him, at the well that held the water of life was in the palace gardens,
and they'd him to make hate, and made him make hate, and draw what he wanted before the
pluckstruck 12.
He walked on, and as he walked through the beautiful garden, he came to a delightful
he spot in which stood a couch and he got to himself as he felt tired that he would
rest himself for a while and gazed on the lovely scenes around him. So he laid himself
down and slept and sleep felt upon him on a wares so that he did not wake up till
the clock was striking upward at the shore, a water to twelve.
Then he sprang from the couch dreadfully frightened, ran to the well for the cup that
was standing by him full of water and hastened to get away in time. So as he was
going out of the iron door, a short 12 am door fell so quickly upon him that it snapped
off a piece of his heel.
When he found himself safe, he was overjoyed to think that he got the water of life.
And as he was going on his way home, when he passed by by the window of who, when he saw
the sword in the nose, said, you have made a noble prize, and the sword you can, at a
blows lay whole armies, and the bread will never fail you.
Then the prince fought himself. I cannot go home to my father without my brothers. So he said,
My dear friend, cannot you tell me where my brothers are, who set out in search of a
water of life before me and never came back? I have shut them up by a child between two
mountains so that they'd walk, because they were proud and ill-behaved and scorned to ask advice.
The Prince begs over hard for his brothers that were, at least, at last, set them free,
low unwillingly, saying, beware of them, for they have bad hearts.
Their brother, however, was greatly rejoice to see them, and told them all that happened
him.
How he found the water of life, and had taken a cup of it, and how he had set.
A beautiful princess free from the spell that bound her, and how she had engaged
engaged to wait a whole year, and then to marry him and to give him the kingdom.
And they all three rode on together, and on their way home came to a country that was made
waste by war, and a dreadful famine, so that it was feared all must die for want, for the
Prince gave the king of the man, the bread, and all his kingdom ate of it, and he lent the
king the wonderful sword, and he sews the enemies on him with it, and thus the kingdom
was once more in peace and plenty, and the same manner he befriended two other countries
through which they passed on their way. When they came to the sea they got into a ship and
during their voyage the out two eldest set of themselves, our brother has got the water which we
could not bite, therefore our father will forsake us and give him the kingdom which is our right,
so they were full of envy and rage and agreed to ever have they could ruin him, and they
The only way to tell him was whilst sleeping for the water of life out of the cup and took it for themselves, and giving him bitter sea water instead.
When they came to their journeys and the youngest son bought his cup to the sick king, he might drink and be cute.
Scaredly however, he had tasted the bitter sea water when he became worse than if he was before, and then both the other sons came in and then became the youngest of what they had done, and said that he wanted to poison their father, but that they had found the water of life and have bought it with them.
He knows sooner than again to drink of what they bought him than he thought to sickness leave him, and he was strong, as strong and well as in his young few days.
And they went to their brother and laughed at him and said, well, brother, you found the
water of life did you?
We have had the trouble and we shall have the reward.
Pray with all your cleverness, why did not you manage to keep your eyes open?
Next year one of us will take away your beautiful princess if you do not take care.
You are better say nothing about this to our father, where he does not believe a word
you say, and if you tell tales you shall lose your life into the bargain, but be quiet
and we were next to you off. The old king was so very angry with his younger son and thought
that he really meant to have taken away his life. So he called his court together and asked
what should be done and all agreed that he ought to be put to death. The Prince knew nothing
of what was going on until one day when the King's Chief Huntsman went hunting with him and they
were alone in the wood together. The Huntsman looked so sorrowful that the Prince said,
my friend, what is the matter with you? I cannot and they're not tells you that he,
but the prince begged very hard and said, only tell me what it is and do not think I shall be angry
for I will forgive you. Alas, so the hutsman, the king has ordered me to shoot you. The prince started
at this and said, let me nap and I won't change dresses with you. You shall take my world coat to
to show my father and do you give me your Shabby one?
With all my heart, so the handsman, I am sure I shall be glad to save you, but I
cannot have shown you.
Then he took the princess coat and gave him the Shabby one and went away through the
wood.
Sometimes after a three round and the seas came to the old King's court, with the rich
gifts of gold and precious stones were here in the sun, now all these were sent from
three kings to whom he and then to sword and move a bird in order to get in order to
rid them of the enemy and feed their people. This touch the all kings had at any thought
his son might still be gildless and said to his court, over that my son was done a life
of how grieves me that I have him killed. He is still alive so the huntsman and I am glad
that I had pity on him that let him go in peace and brought home his royal coat. At this
the King was overwhelmed with joy and made it known throughout all his kingdom and if his
son would come back to his court he would forget him. Meanwhile the princess was eagerly waiting
until her deliverers should come back and had a road made leading up to her palace all of
shining gold and told her court years that whoever came on horseback and road straight up to the
gate upon it was a true lover and that thing must let him in but whoever rode on one side of it
they must be sure was not the right one and that they must send him away at once.
The time soon came and when the eldest brother thought that he would make haste
ago to the princess and say that he was the one who had set her free and that he should have
her for his wife and a kingdom with her. As he came before the palace and saw the golden
rope he stopped looking at and re-bought himself, it is a pity to ride upon the speed of the rope
So he turned aside and wrote on the right hand side bit, but when he came to the guard,
to the gate, the guard said, seen the road he took, said to him, he could not be what he said
he was and must go about his business. The second prince set out soon afterwards and almost
same errand. And when he came to the golden road and his horse said, said one foot upon it,
he stopped to look at it and bought in very beautiful and said himself, what a pity that it is,
But what a pity it is that anything should tread here.
Then he too turned aside and wrote on the left side of it.
But when he came to the gate, the guard said he was not the true prince,
and that he tuned the skull away about his business and the way he went.
Now, when the four-year was come round, the third brother left the forest in which he
had leaned him of their other father's anger and set out in such of his patrols bright.
So he jannied on, thinking of her all the way, and wrote so quickly that she did not even see
what road we made up. But went with his horse straight over it, and as he came to the gate,
it flew open, and the princess welcomed him with joy, and said he was heard deliverer,
and should now be her husband and Lord of Kingdom. When the first joy of their meeting was over,
the princess told him, she had heard of his father having forgiven him, and of his wish to have him
home again. So remember what is wedding the princess. He went to visit his father,
taking her with him. Then he told him everything, how his brothers achieved it in rob time,
and he got that she had born all those wrongs from the love of his father. And the old
king was very angry and wanted to punish his wicked sons, but they made their escape and put
into a ship and sailed away over the white sea, and where they went to nobody knew and nobody cared.
And now the old king gathered together his coat and asked all his kingdom to come and
celebrate the wedding of the sun and the princess.
And old and young, noble and square, gentle and simple, came at once on the summons,
and among the rest came the friendly door, with a shiver loaf hat and a new scallop flunk.
And the wedding was held and the married those front and all the good people they danced
and they sang, and feasted and product, I can't tell how long, see, and good night.
Grims fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
Chapter 52, The Twelve Huntsman.
The once was a king's son, who had a bride whom he loved very much, and when he was sitting
beside her, and very happy. News came that his father lay sick on the death, and
decided to see him once again before his end. Then he said to his brother,
I must now go and leave you. I give you a ring as a remembrance of me. When I am
king, I will return and fetch you. So he rode away, and when he reached his father,
then I thought it was dangerously ill and near his death.
He said to him, dear son, I wish to see you once again before my end, promise me to marry
as I wish, and he named a certain King's daughter who was to be his wife.
The son was in such trouble that he did not think what he was doing and said, yes dear father,
he will shall be done, and there upon the King's son his eyes and died.
Therefore, the sun had been proclaimed king, and the time of morning was over.
It was forced to keep the promise which he had given his father, and of course, the King's daughter
to be asked in mode.
And she was promised him.
His first patrols heard of this in front of so much about his faithfulness, but she nearly died.
And then a father said to her, do you wish child, why are you so sad?
You shall have whatsoever you will.
thought for a moment and said, dear father, I wish for 11 girls exactly like myself, and face
figure and size. The father said, if it be possible, the design shall be fulfilled.
And he caused the such to be made in his whole kingdom, until 11 young maidens were found
who exactly resembled his daughter in face figure and size.
When they came to the King's Daughter, she had 12 suits of Huntsman's clothes made
all alike, and the 11 maidens had to put on the Huntsman's clothes, and she put herself
on the 12th suit.
Leraporn, she took her near for the father and rode away with them and rode to the court
of her former patrols, whom she loved so dearly.
And she asked if he required any Huntsman, and here, and if he would take all of them
into his service, the king looked at her and did not know her, but as soon as they
were such hands and flowers he said, yes, and that he would really take them and now they
were the king's twelve huntsmen. The king, however, had a lion which was a wondrous animal
for he knew all concealed in secret things. I came to pass that one evening he said
to the king.
You think you have 12 months, man?
Yes, of the king.
They are 12 months, man.
They're lying continued.
You are mistaken.
They are 12 girls.
The king said, they're cannot be true.
How will you prove that to me?
Oh, just let some peas be strewn in the anti-chamber.
Answer the line.
And then you will soon see.
Then I have a fun step.
And when they walk over peas, none of them start.
girl's trip and skip and drag their feet and let Pies roll about. The King was well-placed
when the cat saw him close the piece to be strong.
Streep. There was, however, a servant of the King's who failed the Huntsman, and when
he heard that they were going to be put to this test, he went to them and repeated everything
and said, the lion was to make the King believe that he wore girls. Then the King's daughter
and said to her maidens, show some strength instead of burning on the peace. So next morning
when the king had the 12 consmen called before him, and they came into the anti-channel
other peace were lying. They stepped so burning on them and had such a strong, sure walk
and not one of the peace other roles of stead that they went away again. And the kings
had to lie and you have lied to me. They walked just like them. The lions said they have been
informed that they were going to be put to the test and have assumed some strength
Just let 12 spinning wheels be brought into that empty chamber and they will go to them and be pleased with them.
And that is what no man would do.
The king liked the advice and had the spinning wheels placed in the empty chamber.
But the servant, who was while the spokes of the Huntsman, went to them and disclose the project.
So when they were alone the king's daughter said to her 11 girls,
show some constraint and do not look around at the spinning wheels.
And the next morning on the King had his full constant summon, they went through the anti-chabler and that once looked at the spinning wheels.
Then the King again said to the lion, you had to see for me, they are men for they have not looked at the spinning wheels.
The lion replied, they have restrained themselves, restrained themselves, the King however were no longer believed in the lion.
A 12-huntseman always followed the king to the chase, and his liking for them continually
increased.
Then it came to pass that once they were out hunting, the news came that the king's
bride was approaching.
When the true bride had that, it had so much that her heart was almost broken, and she
fell thinking to the ground.
The king thought something had happened to his dear hutsman, ran up to him and wanted
to help him, and drew his glove off.
Then he saw the ring which he had given to his first bride, and when he looked at in her,
that he seemed recognised her.
And his heart was so touched that he kissed her, and when she opened her eyes he said,
you are mine, and you are an eye-mourse, and no one in the world can order that.
He sent and lessen judges of the bride, bride, and entraded her to return to her unkingdom,
or he had a wife already, and someone who had just found an old kid did not require a new one.
They are upon the wedding instead of British and the one was again taken into fail,
because after all, he had told the truth.
He and good night.
Grimm is very talented by Jake Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, Chapter 53, the King of the Golden Mountain.
There was once a merchant to her only one child, a son that was very young and barely able
to win a loan.
He had two richly-laden ships, then making a voyage upon the seas, in which he had embarked
all his wealth, in the hope of making great games, and the news came that was for last.
Last from being a rich man he became all at once so very poor,
that nothing was left to him, but one small plot of land, and there he often went,
and an evening to take his walk, and an evening mind of a little of his trouble.
One day, as he was roaming along in a brown study, thinking was no great
comfort on what he had been and what he was now and was like to be all in a sudden the
stood before him a little rough looking black dwarf.
Pretty friend, why so sorrowful, said he to the merchant, what is it you take so deeply
to heart?
If you were doing me any good, I would willingly tell you so the merchant.
Who knows but I may, so the little man, tell me what else you and perhaps you will find
I may be of some use.
Then the merchant told him about how all his wealth was gone to the bottom of the sea,
and how he had nothing left for that nithy plot of land.
O'Trabble, yours, I would trouble not yourself about that, so the dwarf.
Only undertake to bring me here 12 years' hence,
whatever meets you first on your going home, and I will give you as much as you please.
The merchant thought this were no great thing to ask,
and it was most likely, most likely being his dog on his cat, or something of that sort,
but forgot his little boy, finally. So he agreed to the bargain, signed and sealed the bomb
to do what was asked of him. But as he drew near home, his little boy was so glad to see him that
he crept behind him and made fast the whole of his legs and looked up in his face and met.
And the father started trembling with fear and horror, and saw what it was and he had bad himself to do.
But as no god was come, he made himself easy by thinking it was only a joke that the dwarf was playing him,
and that at any rate when the money came, he should see the bearer and he not take it in.
About a month afterwards, he went upstairs into a number room to look for some old iron.
He might sell it and raise it as money, and then instead of his iron, he saw a large pile of gold lying on the floor.
At the sight of this, he was overjoyed and forgetting all about his son went into trade again.
And became a rich merchant like before.
Meantime and a high note grew up, and as the end of the 12 years drew near the merchant, began to call his to call to mine his bond.
and became very sad and thoughtful so that care and son were written upon the space.
The boy one day asked what was the matter, but his father would not tell him not to help us sometime.
At last, however, he said that he had, without knowing it, sold him the goal to a little
ugly looking black dwarf, and that the 12 years were coming round when he must keep his word.
And Hyno said, Father gave yourself very little trouble about that.
I shall be too much for the living man.
When the time came, the father and son went out together to replace it agreed upon.
The son drew a circle on the ground and set himself as father and the living thing.
A little black dwarf, soon came and walked round and round about the circle, but could not find any way to get into it.
and he could either not, and he either could not or dare not jump over it.
Alas, the voice of the him, have you not had you anything to say to us my friend?
Or what do you want?
Now, I'm not, I found a friend in a good fairy that was haunted him
and I'm told him what to do for this very new walk and that was installed for him.
Have you brought to me what you said you would, so the dwarf to the merchant?
The old man held his tongue, the high notes said again, what do you want here?
The door said, I come to talk with your father, not you, not with you.
You have cheated and taken in my father, so the son,
break give him up his bond at once.
Then, and softly, so the old, so the little old man, right is right,
I have paid my money and your father has had it and spent it.
So be good as the next we have, or I paid it for.
You must have my consent to that best, Sanhanu, so to please, so please to step in here and let us talk over it, and let us talk it over.
The old man grinned and showed his teeth as if he should have been very glad to get in the circle if he could.
Then at last after a long talk they came to town.
attempts. Hyno agreed that his father must give him up, so that, and that so father
dwarves should have his way, but on the other hand, the very hand-told Hyno, what
fortune was installed for him. If he followed his own course, and he did not choose
to be given up to his humpback friend, this seems so anxious for his company. So, to
make a sort of drawn battle on the matter, it was settled that Hyno should be put into
an open boat that lay on the sea shore hard by, but the father should push him off
on his own hand, and that he should be thus, and he should thus be set adrift, and that
to the bad or good luck of wind and weather.
Then he took the river this half and set himself in the boat, but before it got off
a wave of strackets, there was one sailor in the water, so the merchant thought that
poor high-end was lost, and went home very so-or-for, for the poor, white-ish way thinking
that at any rate he had had his revenge.
The boat, however, did not sink for the good fairy took care of her friend and soon raised
the boat up again and it went safely on.
A young man sat safe within Timutten-Link and ran ashore upon an unknown man.
As he jumped upon the shore he saw before him a beautiful castle but emptying and dreary
was in for it was enchanted.
Here, said he, himself, must I find a prize a good fairy told me of?
So he once more searched the whole palace through, till that nasty found white snake,
lying cold up on a cushion in one of the chambers.
Now the white snake was an enchanted princess, and she was very glad to see him,
and said, are you at least, are you at large, come to set me free?
Even on years have I waited here for the very to bring you his eye and she promised,
but you alone can save me.
This night, 12 manual gun, a faces will be black and they will be dressed in chain
armour.
They will ask what you do here and give note but give note on that and that them do what
they will.
Beat, whip, pinch, prick, or torment you, they're all, only speak not a word and that
12 o'clock female's going away.
The second night, twelve others will come and the third night, twenty-four, he will even
cut off your head. But at the twenty, but at the twelve hour of that night their power
is gone in high shall be free, and will come and bring you the water of life. I will wash
you with it, and bring you back to life and health. And all came to pass, as she said,
I know a board, all, and spoke not a word, and the third night the princess came and fell
on his neck and kissed him.
Joy and Grannis burst forth throughout the castle, the wedding was celebrated and he was
crowned King of the Golden Mountain.
They lived together very happily, and the Queen had a son, and thus eight years had passed
over the head, when the King fought to this father and he began to long to see him once again,
but the Queen was again to his going and said, I know well, but misfortune will come upon
us if you go. However, he gave her my rest till she agreed. And his going away, she gave
him a wishing ring and said, take this ring and put it on your finger, whatever you wish
it will bring you, only promise never to make use of it to bring me hence to your father's house.
Then he said he would do, she asked and put the ring on his finger and wished himself
in the town where his father lived. I love found himself at the gates in the movement,
but the guards were not met him going in, because he was so strangely tired. So he went
up to a neighbouring hill where a shepherd walked and borrowed his old flock, and thus passed
unknown into the town. When he came to his father's house, he said he was his son. The
merchant would not believe him and said, he only had to have but one son, his poor
He knew it was the long-sense death, and as he was only dressed like a poor shepherd, he
would not even give him anything to eat.
But came however, still vowed that he was his son, and said, is there no mark by which
you would know me, if I am really your son?
Yes, that is my son.
I had a mark like a raspberry on his right arm, and he showed them the mark coming new,
that what he said was true.
He next told them how he was king of the Golden Mountain, and was married to a princess
and had a son, a living seven years old.
But the merchant said, that can never be true.
He must be a fine king truly who troubles about in a shepherd's flock.
At this, the son was vexed and forgetting his wife, turned his ring and wished for his queen and son.
In an instant they stood beforehand for the cream wrapped and said, he had broken his
wife and bad luck or follow. He did all he could to sue her, and she at last seemed
to be a piece, but she was not so in truth, and was only thinking about thinking how
she should punish him. One day, he took her to walk with him out of the town, and so had
a spot for the book was set a draft upon the wine waters. There he sat himself down
and said, I am very much tired to sit by me, I will rest my head and more that happens
these a while. As soon as he had fallen asleep however she drew the ring from his finger
and crept softened away and wished herself and his son at home in their kingdom and when
he had worked he found himself alone and saw that the ring was gone from his finger.
I could never go back to my father's house said he, they would say I am a sorcerer and I will
journey forth into the world till I come to come again to my kingdom.
So saying he set out and traveled till he came to a hell.
A three giants were sharing their father's goods.
And as they saw him past the pride out and said little men I'm sharp with, he shall
apart the goods between us.
Now there was a sword that cut off an enemy's head, wherever the wire came for words,
heads off.
a cloak that made the owner invisible, or gave him any form he pleased, and a pair of boots that carried the wearable wherever he wished.
Han also said, they must first let him try these wonderful things, and he might know how to set the value upon them.
Then they gave him the cloak, and he wished himself a fly, and in a moment he would have fly.
The cloak is very well said he, and he gave me the sword.
No, so they're not unless you undertake not to say he had off, but if you do, without all
dead men, so they gave it to him, charging him to try it on a tree. He next asked for the
boots also, and the moment he had all three in his power, he wished himself at the golden
mountain, and then he wasn't lost. The giants were left behind, no good to share or quarrel
about. As a high-mode came there, his castle he had, the seventh of their music, and the
When people around him told him that his queen was about to marry another husband, then
he threw his cloak around him and passed through the castle hall and placed himself
by the size of the queen when there was so him.
But when anything to eat was put upon a plate, he took it away and into himself.
But when in laws of wine was handed to her, he took it and drank it and thus, rather
kept giving her meat and drink her plate and clap her always, cup her always empty.
upon this, their animals came over her, and she went into her team alone and sat there
weeping, and he followed her, followed her, and later she said to herself,
I'm not one set free, why then this is in Chapman, seems still seem to blame me?
Four semifical ones said he, one indeed came who set me free, and he has now nearly again,
but how have you used him?
or tea to have had such treatment for me, and he went out and sent away the company and said
the wedding was at the end, but that he was come back to the kingdom, but the princess
pears and great men mocked at him. However, he would enter into no parlor, but only ask them
if he, if they would go and piece or not. The main town upon him and tried to seize him,
but the truly sword heads off quietly and with the word the traitors had felt before him
and high-mode was once more came of the golden mountain.
3, and good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm.
Chapter 54 Dr. Noir.
There was once a one-time or poor peasant called Crab, who drove for two oxen, and
moved with to the town, and sold it to a doctor for two tankers.
When the money was being counted out to him, it so happened that the doctor was sitting
at table, and when the peasants saw how well he ate in drank, his heart designed
what he saw, and would willingly have been adopted too.
So he remains standing a while and that lengthen quite if he too could not be adopted.
Oh yes, so the doctor let us soon manage.
What must I do?
Ask the peasant.
In the first place, by herself an ABC book of the kind which has a cop on the frontispiece
In the second, turn your cards in or two oxen into money and get yourselves some clothes
and lots of other elves pertains to medicine.
Certainly, have a sign, paint it for yourself, for the words, I am Dr. Noor, and have that
nailed up above your house door. The person did everything that he had been told to do.
When he had Dr. People on the wild and not long, a rich and great Lord had some money stolen.
Then he was told about Dr. Noor, who lived in such and such a village and must know what had
the calm of the money. So the Lord had the horse's harnesses carriage and drove out to the village
in asked crap if he were Dr. Noor. Yes, he was, he said. Then he was about to go, he was to go with
him and bring back the stolen money. Oh yes, but Greta, why why must go to? The Lord was willing
and let both of them have a seat in the carriage and they drove and they all drove away together.
When they came to the minimum homes castle, the table was spread and crowd was told to sit down and eat.
Yes, but my wife, Greater, too, said he, and he seated himself with her at the table.
And when the first servant came with a dish of delicate fare, the peasant much his wife, and said, Greater,
That was the first meaning that was the servant who brought the first dish.
The servant, however, 14 intended by that to say,
by that to say that is the first thief and as he and as he actually was so he was terrified
and said to his comrade outside the doctor knows all, we shall fail. He said I was the first
the second did not want to go in at all but was forced. So when he went in with his dish
the peasant rush just wiped and said, greater, that is the second. This servant was equally alarmed
and he got out as fast as he could. He said there no better. The peasant again said no better, that is the third.
The fours had to carry in a dish that was covered, and the Lord told the doctor that he was to show his skill,
and guess what was beneath the cover. Actually, there were crabs. The doctor looked at the dish and had no idea what to say.
And cried, ah poor crap.
And the Lord heard that he cried there, he knows it, he must also know who has the money.
Omnis, the servants looked terribly uneasy, and made a sign to the doctor that they wished
him to step outside for a moment.
When therefore he went out all further and confessed to him that they had stolen the money,
and said that they would willingly restore it, and give him a happy son into the bargain,
if he would not denounce them, or if he did, they would be hanged.
They led him to the spot where the money was concealed.
With this, the doctor was satisfied and returned to the hall, sat down at the
to the table and said, my Lord, now I will search in my book where the gold is hidden.
The fifth servant, however, crept into the stove to hear if the doctor still knew more.
The doctor sat still and opened his ABC book.
Turn the pages backwards and forwards and look for the code.
And as you can not find it, immediately he said, I know you are there, so you are better
come out.
Then the fellow and the stove thought the doctor went here and followed Terraspring up crying.
That man knows everything.
Then Dr. Noor showed the board where the money was.
They did not say who had stolen it and received from birth site much money in the ward
and became a renowned man.
The end, good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and your home Grimm, Chapter 55, The Seven Ravens.
There was one Samarmy at seven sons, and last of all, one daughter.
Although the little girl was very pretty, she was so weak and small that they thought
she could not live. But they said, she should not once be prisoned. So the father sent
one of his sons and haged to the spring to get some water, but the other six ran with him.
Each wanted to be first and run the water. So they were in such a hurry that all that their
pictures fall into the well and they stood very foolishly looking at one mother and did not know
what to do, the Nanda had go home. In the meantime, the father was an easy and cannot tell
what made the unremstay so not. Surely, said he, the whole seven must have forgotten themselves
over the same game of play, and when he had waited he still longer and they did not come.
He flew into a rage and wished them all turned into rapants.
Skeshi gets broken these words when he had a croaking over his head and looked up and saw
seven reasons as black as cold flying round and round.
So, as he was to see his wish so fulfilled, he did not know what was done could be undone.
And comforted himself as well as he could for the loss of his seven sons, with his
dear daughter, the soon became stronger and every day more beautiful.
For a long time, she did not know that she had ever had any brothers, or her father and
mother took care of the speakers then before her, but one day, by chance, she had the people
about her speakers then, yes, so they, she is beautiful indeed, but still, it is a pity
that her brother should have been lost for her sake.
Then she was much grieved and lutter her father and mother, and asked if she had any brothers,
and what had become of them? So the dead no longer had a truth from her, and said, but
said it was the win of heaven, and that her birth was the only, was only the innocent
cause of it. But the little girl, more sadly, about it every day, and bought herself
bound to do all she could to bring her brother's back, and she neither rest. She had
neither rest nor in his.
To that length one day she stole away and set out into the wide world to find her
brothers, wherever they might be and freedom would ev it might cost her.
She took nothing with her, but a little ring which her father and mother had given her,
a loaf of bread in case she would be hungry, and in the picture of water in case she
should be thirsty, and in whose store to rest upon when she should be wary, but she
went on and on and journey till she came to the worlds end and she came to the sun
at the sun looked too much to your heart and fiery so she ran away but it's the moon
that the moon was called and chitty and said, I smell flesh and blood this way so she took
a silver way in a hurry and came to the stars and the stars were friendly and kind to her
and each star sat upon his own stool. But the morning star rose up and gave her
a little piece of wood and said, if you have not this little piece of wood, you cannot
unlock the castle that stands in the glass mountain and bear your brother's life.
A little girl took the piece of wood, hold it up in a little glass and went on again until
she came to the glass mountain and found the door shut.
And she thought for the little piece of wood, but when she unwrap the glass, it was not
there.
And she saw she had lost the gift of the good stars.
What was to be done?
She wanted to save her brothers and had no key to the castle of the glass mountain.
So this faithful little sister took a knife out of her pocket and cut off her little finger.
That was just the size of the piece of wood she had lost and put it in the door and opened it.
I she went in and little walk came up to her and said, what are you seeking for?
I seek for my brothers the seven ravens answered she, and towards her my masters are not at home,
but if you will wait till they come, price up in.
Our little dwarf was getting there dinner ready, and he brought their food upon seven little
plates, and their drink in seven little glasses and set them upon the table.
And out of each little plate, the sister ate a small piece, and out of each little glass
He drank a small drop, but she let the ring that she had brought with her fall into the
last glass.
On a sudden, she had a fluttering and cloaking in the air, and the door said,
here come her masters, and they came in, they wanted to eat and drink and look for
them as a place and glasses.
Then said one after the other, who was eaten from one of her plate, and who has been
drinking out of one of her glass.
Cole, Cole, while Irene, mortal necks have this way been.
When the seventh came to the bottom of his glass, and found there a ring, he looked at it,
and he knew that it was his father's and mothers, and said,
oh, that our little sister would come, then we should be free.
When the little girl had this, but she stood behind the door all the time and listened,
she ran forward, and in an instant all the ravens took their right forward again.
again, and all hugged in kissed each other and went lonely, hugged, see, damp, good night.
Grim's fairy tales by Jacob Grim and will help Grim.
Chapter 56, the wedding of Mrs. Fox.
First story. There was once a time and hold for close nine tales,
who believed that his wife was not faithful to him, and wished to put her to the test.
He strut himself out under the bench, did not move a limb and behave as if he was stoned dead.
There's a box that went up to her room, shut herself in and her maid missed cat, set by the fire
and did the cooking. When it became known that the odd fox was dead, she was presented themselves,
I made a hell of someone standing at the house door knocking. She went and opened it, and it was a young fox who said,
What may you be about, Miss Kat? Do you see, PODY WAKE? She answered,
I am not sleeping, I am waking, would you know what I am making? I am boiling warm beer with wetter, will you be my guest for supper?
No, thank you, Miss, for the fox.
What is Mrs. Fox doing?
The maid replied, she is sitting in her room,
moaning in her room, leaving her little eyes quite bad
because all Mr. Fox is dead.
Do just tell her how Miss, that a young fox is here
who would like to rule her.
Suddenly, young sir, the cat goes up to stairs,
is drip trap, the door she knocks at tap tap tap tap.
Mr. Spock's are you inside? Oh yes, my little cat, she cried.
Aurora stands at the door out there. What does he look like? I do.
He has a has he nine as beautiful tails as the natemic Mr. Fox.
unknown answer the cat, he has only one. Then I will not have him. This cat went downstairs
and sent the ruler away. Soon afterwards there was another knock, and another fox was
at the door who wished to ruin his fox. He had two tails, but he did not bear better
than the first. After this still more came, each was one tail more than the other, but
They were all turned away until that last one came who had nine chaos, like all Mr. Fox.
When the widow heard that, she said joyfully to the cat.
Now open the gates and do us all why, and carry all Mr. Fox outside.
But just as the wedding was going to be summarized, all Mr. Fox stirred under the bench,
and caged all the wrap and drove them and this fox started the house.
Second story.
When all Mr. Fox was dead, the wolf came as a seater, knocked at the door and the cat
she was serving to Mrs. Fox opened a warhead, the wolf greeted her and said,
good day Mrs. Catta, could it?
Here comes it that alone you sit. What are you making good?
The cat replied, in look, I'm breaking bread so sweet, will you be my guest and eat?
No thank you Mrs. Cat, answer the book. Isn't this a box not at home?
Look at her, she sits upstairs in her room, the wailing house on her full doom, the
wailing her child also saw for all Mr. Fox is no more. The wolf answered, if she is in
more of our husband now, than William Plings had to step below, the cat runs quickly up
the stair, and that's her tailfly here and there.
Until she comes to the parlor door, with her five gold rings at the door she knocks.
Are you within?
Goodness respects.
If you're in the amount of our husband now, then William Plings used to step below.
This is Fox asked, has it gentleman read stockings on and has he appointed mouth?
No, answer the cat, then he worked with me.
On the rope was gone, came a dog, a stack, a hair, a bear, a lion, and all the beasts of the forest
went after the other.
But one of the qualities which all Mr. Fox had possessed was always lacking, and the cat
and continually to send us who to soar away.
At length, can we on fox?
Then Mrs. Fox says,
has a gentleman who had stopped him going
and has a lovely point of mouth?
Yes, so the cat he had,
then let him come upstairs,
so Mrs. Fox,
and order the servant to prepare the wedding feast.
Swing from me up the real mask being as you can,
up with a window fling out to my old man, for many of fine at last he brought it on
this wire key never thought, but ate at every one he brought, and the wedding was
summarized with the endless de box, and there was much rejoicing in dancing, and if they
I have not left off. They are dancing still.
The end. Good night.
Grimm's fairy towns by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm.
Chapter 57, the Salad.
As a marion, Hotsman was once going whisky along through a wood.
They came up a little old woman and said to him,
Good day, good day, you see Mariana, that I am hungry and thirsty.
Do you pray, give me something to eat?
The whole Smith took pity on her and put his hand in his pocket and gave her what he had.
Then he wanted to go his way, but she took hold of him and said,
Listen my friend, to what I am going to tell you,
I will reward you for your kindness.
Go your way and after another time, you'll come to a tree where you will see nine birds sitting on a cloak.
Shoot into the midst of them, and one more fall down dead, the cloak or fall to.
Take it, it is a wishing cloak, and when you wear it, you will find yourself at any place when you may wish to be.
Cut over the dead bird, take out its heart and keep it, and you will find a piece of gold under your pillow.
your pillow every morning when you rise. It is a bird's heart that will bring you as good luck.
The hutsman banked her and bought herself. It all this does happen, it will be a fine thing for me.
When he had gone 100 steps or so, he heard a screaming and chirping in the branches over him,
and looked up and saw block of birds pulling a cloak with their bills and feet,
screaming, fighting, and tugging at each other as if each wished to have them so.
Well, so the Huntsman, this is wonderful. This happens just as the Olderman said.
Then he shot into the midst of them, so that their feathers flew all about,
off from the block, chattering away, but one found down dead, and the cloak with it.
In the Huntsman gave us Olderman told him, cut open the bird, took out the hullat and carried
the cloak home of them. The next morning when he worked, he lived at his
penner, and then made a piece of gold littering underneath. The same happened
next day, and indeed, every day when he arose, he heaped up a great deal of gold
and that last looked himself, of what use is the school to me whilst I am at home.
I will go out into the world and look about me. Then he took leave of this
leave of his friends and hot newsbag in Borew about to neck and went his way. It so happened
that his road one day led to a thick wood at the end of which was a very large castle in
a green meta and that one of the windows did an old woman or a very beautiful young lady by
her side looking about them. Now the old woman was a witch and said to the young lady there
was a young man coming out of the wood who carries a wonderful prize. We must get it away from
him, my dear child, where it is more fit for us than for him. He has a bird's heart that brings
a piece of gold under his pillow every morning. Meantime the huntsman came nearer and looked
at the lady and said to himself, I didn't travel so long that I should make to go into this
castle and rest myself, but I have money enough to pay for anything I want. But the real
reason was that he wanted to see more of this beautiful, more of the beautiful lady. And he
He went into the house and was welcome kindly, and it was not long before he was so
much in love, letting thought of nothing else but looking at the lady's eyes and doing
everything that she wished.
Then the old woman said, now is the time for getting the birds heart, so the lady started
away and he never found any more golden than there is payload, but lay now under the young
ladies, and the old woman took it away every morning, but he was so much in love that
he never missed his prize. Well, so the old witch, we have got the bird's heart, but not
the wishing cloak yet, and that we must also get. Let's see if I'm that silly and lady. He
has already lost his wealth, then the witch was very angry in fact. Such a cloak is a very rare
and wonderful thing, and I must, and will have had, and will have it. So she did as the old
woman told her and set herself at the window and looked about the country and seemed
very sorrowful.
When the huntsman said, what makes you so sad, a last deer said she, yonder lies
the granite rock where all the costly diamonds grow and then once so much should go there,
that whenever I think of it, I can't help being so awful, who can reach it, only the
birds and the flies, man cannot. If that's all your grief for the Huntsman, I shall take you there with all my heart.
So he drew her under his cloak, and the moment he wished to be on the granite mountain,
there were both there. They were both there. The diamonds glitters so on all sides that they
were delighted for the sight and picked up the finest. The old witch made a deep sleep come upon him,
and he said to me, I'm ready.
Let us sit down and rest ourselves, anything.
I am so tired that I cannot stand any longer,
so they sat down and he made his head in her neck and found a sleep.
And while she was sleeping, she took the cloak from her shoulders and hung it on her own,
picked up the diamonds and wished herself home again.
When he awoke and found that his lady had tricked him
and left him alone on the wild rock. He said, and last, what robbery there is in the world,
and there he sat in great grief and fear not knowing what to do. Now this rock belonged to
this giant who lived upon it, and as he saw three of them striding about, he felt himself.
I can only save myself by failing to be asleep, so he laid himself down as if he were in a sound
sleep. When the james came up to him, the first push him with his foot and said, what
worm is that? Is this that lies here called up? Tread upon him and kill him, so the second.
It's not worth the trouble, so the fat. Now, Tim live, he'll go climbing higher up the mountain
and some plow will come rolling in carrying him away and they passed on. The enhancement had
heard all they said, and as soon as they were gone, he climbed to the top of the mountain,
and when he sat there a short time, Cloud came rolling around him and caught him in a whirlwind
and bore him along for some time till it settled in a garden, and he fell quite gently to
the ground amongst the greens and captures. Then he looked around him and said, I wish I had
something to eat. If not, I shall be worse off than before. But here I see another apple
more parents, more any kind of fruits, nothing but vegetables.
A last few thought to himself, I can eat salad, it will refresh and strengthen me, so
you picked out a fine head and ate a bit, but scarce he had his swallow two bites when
he felt himself quite changed, and so was horror that he was turned into an ass.
However, he still fought very hungry, and the salad tasted very nice, so he ate
on until he came to another kind of salad and scarcely had he tasted it, but he felt
another change come over him and soon saw that he was in luck, he was lucky enough to have
found his own shape again. Then he laid himself down and slept off and full of his wearing
this. And when he worked the next morning he broke off the head both of the good and the bad
salad and bought them so this will help me to my fortune again and enable me to pay off some
books for their treachery, so he went away to try and find the castle of his friends,
and after laundering about a few days he knew that he found it, and he stained his face all
over the brown so that even his mother would not have known him, and went into the castle
and asked for a lodging. I am so tired said he, that I can go no farther. Countrymen said
the witch, who are you and what is your business? I am said he, and that's not just sent
by the king to find the final salad that grows under the sun. I have been lucky enough
to find it and have brought it with me, but the heat of the sun scorches through that
it begins to live up and I don't know that I can carry it farther.
On the which, under the only lady heard of his beautiful salad, a long-to-taste
dish, and said, dear countrymen, let us just taste it, to be sure, honestly, I have two
heads of them with me, and will give you one, so we opened his bag and gave them the
bag, and gave them the bag. When the witch herself took it into the kitchen to be dressed,
and when it was ready she could not wait to it was carried up. They took a few leaves immediately
and put them in her mouth and scarcely while, and scarcely well-a-swared when she lost her
own form and ran brain down into the court in the form of an ass. That was servant-made
came into the kitchen and seemed that the salad ready was going to carry it up but
on the way she too felt a wish she tasted as the old woman had done and ate some
noodles so she also was turned into an ass and ran off to the other, letting the dish
were the salad fall to the ground, fall on the ground.
Then I sent just that, all this time with a beautiful young lady and as nobody came
with a salad and she longed to taste it she said, I don't know if a salad can be,
he thought something must have happened and said, I will go into the kitchen and see.
And as he went, he saw two asses in the court running about on the side of mine on the ground.
All right, so he goes to have had their share and he took up the rest of the leaves, made
the money dish important to the young lady. I bring you the dish myself that you may not
wait any longer, so she ate a bit and like the others ran off into the court, bringing away.
Then the hearts will wash the space and went into the court, but they might never have
him.
Now you shall be paid for your robbery, said he, and tired them all three to a rope and took
them along with him, so they came to a mill and looked at the window.
What's the matter of seven miller, I have three tires and beasts here, so the other.
If you will take them, give them food and room and treat them, as I tell you, I will pay
you whatever you ask, with all my heart to seven miller.
and how shall I treat them?
And the Huntsman said,
give the old one stripes three times a day and hay once.
Give the next, who's a servant made,
stripes once a day and hay three times
and give the youngest who was a beautiful lady,
hay three times and no stripes.
Well, he could not find it in his heart to have her beaten.
After this he went back to the castle
where he found everything he wanted.
Some days after the Miller came to him
told him that the old ass was dead. The other two, he said he, are alive and eat, but
are so so helpful that they cannot last long. When Hansman picked up them and told the
minister to drive them back to him, and when they came, he gave himself a good salad to eat,
and the young, and the beautiful young, maybe fell upon her knees before him and said,
oh dear, Hansman, forgive me, all the ill I have done you, by mother forced me to it. It was against
my world for I always love you very much. You're wishing for hangs up in the closet and as
for the birds heart I will give it to you too. But he said keep it. It won't be just the same thing
what I mean to make you my wife. So they were married and lived together very happily till they died.
The end. Good night.
Grimm's great house by Jacob Grimm and Warham Grimm. Chapter 58, the story of these who went
forced to learn what fear was. A certain father had two sons, the elder who was smart and
sensible, and couldn't do everything, but the younger was stupid, and could neither learn
or understand anything. And when people saw him, they said, there's a fellow who will give
his fathers some trouble. When anything had to be done, it was always the elder who was
forced to do it, but if his father paid him fetch anything when it was late, or in the
night time, and the way they threw the church, yard, or any other dismal place he answered,
Oh, no father, I'll not go there and fix me shudder for he was afraid, or when stories were
told by the fire at night which made the flesh creep.
Listeners sometimes said, Oh, it makes us shudder, the younger set in the corner and
the symbol of the rest of them, I cannot imagine what they could mean.
They were always saying, it makes me shudder and makes me shudder and does not make me
shudder for he.
That too must be an art of which I understand nothing.
Now, it came to pass that his father said to him one day,
how can to me you follow in the corner there,
you are going tall and strong, and you too must learn something
by which you can earn your bread.
Look how your brother works, but you do not,
but you do not even earn your salt or father, you applied.
I'm quite willing to learn something, indeed,
that could be but manage, I should like to learn how to shudder. I don't understand, but
all yet, the elder brother smiled when he heard that, and bought himself goodness,
what a blockhead that brother of mine is. He will never be good for anything as long as he lives.
He who ought to be a sickle must bend himself the times. The father sighed and answered him,
You shall soon learn what it is to shudder, that you will not earn your bread by that.
Soon after this, the sex soon came to the house on a visit, and the father began to travel,
and told him how his younger son was so backward in every respect that he knew nothing and nothing.
So think said he. When I asked him how he was going to earn his bread, he actually wanted to learn
to shudder. If that's be all the places, reply the sexton, you can learn that with being,
send him to me and I will soon polish him. The father was glad to do it,
while he thought it would train the boy in a door. The sexton therefore took him into his house,
and had to ring the church bell. After a day or two, the sexton will work him a midnight and
bait him a rise and go up into the church tower and ring the bell. You shall soon learn what
shuddering it's okay and see if it anyone there before him.
And when the boilers at the top of the tower and turned around, and was going to, and
was just going to take hold of the bell-roop, he saw a white figure standing on the stairs
of the six sounding hall.
Who is there, Kredi, for the figure may never play, and did not move or stand?
Given answer, Kredi born, or take herself off, you have no business here at night, the
and however, a main standing motionless that the boy might think he was a ghost, the boy
cried a second time. What do you want here? Speak if you want an honest fellow, or I will
throw you down steps. The sexin bought. He can't be mean to us. He can't be mean to be as bad
as as words. I did know sound instead as if he were made a stone, and the boy called him
robbed with third time. And as that was also to know purpose, he ran against him and pushed
the ghost down the stairs, so they fell down the ten steps and remained lying there in a corner.
There were one here round the bell and went home and about saying a word,
like the bed and fell asleep. The sex is wife, waited a long time for her husband,
but he did not come back. At length she became uneasy and waited in the boy and asked,
do you know where my husband is? He climbed up the tower before you did. No, I don't know
the kind of boy, but someone was standing by the sun in home on the other side of the steps.
And as he would not have given an answer in a girl away, I took him from us for a scoundrel
and threw him downstairs. Just go there and you will see if it was he.
I should be sorry if it were. The woman ran away and found her husband who was lying
running in the corner and had broken his leg. She carried him down and then was loud
screams she hastened to the boy's father. Your boy, Clyde, she has been the cause of
a great misfortune. He has thrown my husband down the steps so that he broke his leg.
Take the good from nothing fellow out of our house. The father was terrified and ran further
than scolored the boy. What would he trick so these, said he, the devil must have put
them on your head. Baba, he replied, to listen to me, I am quite innocent. He was standing
there by night, like one intent on doing evil. I did not know who it was, and I
intruded him three times either to go to speak, to speak or to go away. Ah, so the
father, I have nothing but unhappyness with you. Go out of my sight, I will see you
no more. Yes, father, right willingly, wait only until it is day. Then I will go
forth and learn how to shudder, and then I shall at any rate, understand one
art, which will support me. Then what you will, spoke with father, it is all the same to me.
Here are 30 tenors for you. Take these and go into the wide round and tell them no one from
what you come and who is your father. I have reason to be ashamed of you. Yes father,
she'll be as you will. If you desire nothing more than that, I can easily keep it in mind.
On the day dawn before, when the day dawn, therefore the boy put his 50 tenors into his pocket
and went forth on the great highway when continually said him so, if I could but shatter,
if I could but shatter, when a man approached you had this conversation which the youth was
holding with himself, and when they had walked a little farther to where they could see the
ganners, the man said to him, look, there is a tree with seven men who married the group
maker's daughter, and are now learning how to fly. Sit down beneath it and wait till night
cups and you'll soon soon learn how to shower. If that is all that is wanted, once
of you, it is easily done. But if I learn how to shower as fast as that, you shall
have like a few tables. Just come back to me early in the morning. Then the youth went
to the gallows, sat down beneath it and waited till evening came. And as he was called,
he lighted himself fire, but atm in night the wind blew so sharply that in spite of
his fire, he could not get more. And as a win knocks the hang of them against each other,
and they move backwards and forwards, he hooked himself. If you shiver below by the fire,
how those up must up above must freeze and suffer. And as he felt pity for them, he raised
another, planned up, and I'm bound one of them after the other, and brought down all seven.
Then he stepped the fire, blew it, and set them all around it to warn themselves.
but they sat there and did not stare and the fire caught their clothes. So he said, take care
or I will hang you up again. A dead man however did not hear, but look quite silent and that
their ranks go on burning. But at this he threw angry and said, if you will not take care,
I cannot help you. I will not be burned with you. And he hung them up again each in his turn.
Then he sat down by his fire and fell asleep, and the next morning the man came to him and wanted to have with his tailers and said,
Well, do you know how to shiver? No, honestly, how should I know? Those fellows up there did not open their mouths,
and was so stupid that they let the few old rags which they had on their bodies get burnt,
and the man saw that he would not get with the potatoes that day, and went away saying,
Such a youth has never come my way before.
The youth likewise went his way and once more began to monitor them so,
Ah, if I could be shudder, or if I could be shudder,
I'm waggana, feel striding behind him, heard this and asked,
Who are you? Why don't they answer the youth?
And the waggana asks, from once to you come, I know not.
Who is your father? That aim, that I am may not tell you.
What is it that you are always maturing between your teeth?
Ah, proud of you.
I do so wish I could shut up, but no one can teach me how.
Enough of your foolish chatters of the Wagner.
Come, go with me.
I will see about a place for you.
The use went for the Wagner, and in the evening I arrived at an inver they wish to pass the night.
Then at the entrance of the pond, the youth again said,
quite not me. If I could but shadow, if I could but shadow. The host who had this
laughed and said, you have ridden your desire, that ought to be a good opportunity for you here.
Ah, peace silence at the host, so many prime persons have already lost their lives,
it would be a pity and a shame if such beautiful eyes as these could never see the daylight again.
But the youth said, however difficult it may be, I will learn it. For this purpose indeed,
have I journey forth. He let the host have been harassed until the letter told him that not
far from once stood a haunted castle where anyone could very easily learn what shuddering was,
if he would but watch it in it for three nights. The king had promised that she would
venture to have his daughter to wife, and she was the most beautiful maiden in the sun,
shown on, likewise in the castle may create treasures which were guarded by evil spirits,
and these treasures would then be freed and make a poor man original. Already many men
had gone into the castle, but as yet none had come out again, then the youth went to
next morning to the king and said, if it be allowed, I will will only watch three nights
in the haunted castle. The king looked at him and asked the yeast please him, he said,
you may ask for three things to take into the castle with you, but they must be things
without life. Then he answered them, it asked for a fire, a turning left, and a turning
leave, and a cutting board with the knife. The king had these things carried into the castle
for him during the night during the day. One night was drawing near the youths went up and made
himself a bright fire and was little ruse, placed a cutting board and made beside it and
seated himself by turning these.
If I could but Shudder said he, but I shall not learn it here either. Towards midnight he was
about to poke his fire and as he was blowing it something bright suddenly from one corner.
Oh, meow, how cold you are. You fall's cried, what do you cry about? If you are cold, come and take a seat by the fire and warm yourselves.
And when he answered that, two great nutpats came with one tremendous leap and set down on each side of him and looks savagely at him with a fiery eyes.
After a short time, when they had won themselves, they said, come red.
She only had a game of cards, why not, he applied, but show me your paws, and they stretch out their paws, oh, said he, what long nails you have, wait, and was first cut them for you.
Far apart he sees them on the fritz, put them on the cutting board and screw their feet
bust.
I have looked at your think it's said he and my fancy folk card playing has gotten
and they struck them dead and threw them out into the water.
But when he made away with these two, and was about to sit down again by his fire,
out from every hole in corner came black cats and black dogs was a red hot chain
and more of them came until he could no longer move and then he held horribly
and got on his fire, pulled it to pieces and tried to put it out. He watched them for a while
quietly, but at last they were going too far. He seized his cutting knife and cried away with
you vermin and began to cut them down. Some of them ran away but others he killed and threw
out into the fish pond. When he came back he found the embers of his fire again and warmed him
himself, and as he was set, his eyes would keep open no longer, and he felt the desire to
sleep.
He looked around and saw a great bed in the corner.
That is a very thing for me, he said he and got into it.
When he was just going to shut his eyes, however the bed began to move of its own accord,
and went all and went over the hall of the castle.
That's right, said he, but go faster, and the better rolled on as if six horses were
harmless to it, up and down over thresholds and stairs, but suddenly hop hop, it turned
over upside down and lay on him like a mountain, but he could put some pillows up in the air,
got out and said, now anyone who likes may drive, and lay down by his insulate to it was
day. And the morning the king came and when he saw him lying down the ground he thought
evil spirit the killed him and he was dead. Then said he, after all it is a pity for
so a handsome man. The youth heard it, got up and said, it has not come to that
yet and the king was astonished but very gnawed in the arse tower he had fed. Very well
indeed answered he, one night his past, the two others we passed like twice, and he
I think one of the innkeeper who opened his eyes very wide and said,
I never expected to see you alive again.
Have you learnt how to shut it yet?
No, said he, it is all in vain if someone would be tell me.
The second night, he again went up into the old castle, sat down by fire
and once more began his old song.
If I could put shudder, when midnight came an uproar and noise of tumbling about was heard,
At first it was low, but it grew louder and louder, then it was quite for a while, and that
length was a loud scream. Half a man came down the chimney and fell before him,
hello cried he, another half belongs to this. This is not enough, and the uproar began again
there was a warring and howling, and the other half fell down likewise. Wait, said he,
I will just soak up the fire a little for you. When he had done that and looked around again,
the two pieces were joined together on a hideous man was sitting at his place.
That is no part of our bargain, something to use. The Benches mine. The man wanted to push him away.
The youth, however, were not allowed that, but the rest of them off with all his strength and seated himself on it, again in his own place.
Then still two more men fell down, one after the other. They bought nine dead men's lives in two skulls
and two skulls and set them up and play them, play them, nine pins of them. The youth
also wanted to play and said, listen, can I join you? Yes, if you have any money, money enough,
reply to you, but your balls are not quite round. They took the skulls and put them
in the leaf and turned them till they were round. There, now they will roll back them,
sit here. Harra, now we'll have fun, he played with them and was some of his money,
But when it struck 12 everything vanished from his sight, he lay down and quietly fell asleep.
Next morning the king came to enquire him, how has it then was he used his time,
asking, I have been playing at nine pens, he answered, and have lost a couple of
fatherings. Have you not shudded then? What? Said he? I hope had a wonderful time.
If I did but not know, what it was to shudder.
The third night he sat down again on his bench, and said, quite sadly, if I could
put Shadda, when it grew late, six tall men came in and brought to the coffin. Then
he said, ha ha. Not as saddenly my ears of cousin who died only a few days ago, and
he'd back in with his finger and cried, come with a cousin, come. They placed the coffin
on the ground, but he went to it and took a little, and a dead man lay there in. He felt
to space, but it was called as ice. Wait, Satini, I will warm you a little. I went to the fire
and warned his hand and laid it on the dead man's face, but he remained cold. Then he took
him out and sat down by the fire and laid him on his breast and rubbed his arms that the
blood might circulate again. As this also did no good he thought to himself, when two people
lion back together they will warm each other and carry him to the bed covered him over
and lay down by him. After a short time a day man became warm too and began to move.
Men said that you seen little cousin have I not warned you? A day man however got up and cried.
Now will I strongly? What city is that the way you sank me? You shall at once go into your
coffin again and he took him up through him into it and shot the lid and came the six
and carried him away again. I cannot manage to shudder, said he, I shall never lend it here as
one of I knew."
Then a man entered he was taller than all others and looked terrible. He was old, however,
and had a long white bit. You wrecked quite he, you shall soon learn what it is to shudder
for you shall die, not so fast for quite you. If I have to die, I shall have to have a
saying it, I will soon see his ears at the face, softly softly do not talk so big, I am
as strong as you are and perhaps even stronger, which I'll see for the old man.
If you are stronger, I will let you go, cut, we will try, and he led him by dark passages
to a Smith's porch, took an axe, and with one blow, struck an anvil into the ground.
I can do better than that, so be it, and run to the other anvil, the old man placed
himself near him wanted to look on and his white bed hung down.
And the youth seized the axe, split the animal with one blow and in it caught all
learns bit.
Now I have you, said the youth, now it is your turn to die, and he sees an iron bar and
beat the old man, doing a moment and treated him to stop, and he would give him great
riches.
The youth drew up the axe and the him go.
The old man met him back into the castle and in the cellar showed him three chests full of gold.
A green said he, one part is called the pool, but other of the king with that is yours.
In the meantime, it struck twelve on the spirit disappeared, so that the youth stood in darkness.
I shall still be able to find my way out, said he, and felt about, found the way into the room and slept there by his fire.
next morning the king came and said, now he must have learned what shuddering is, no, he answered
what can it be, my dead cousin was here, and a bit of man came and showed me a great deal
of man down below, but no one told me what it was to shudder. Then, so the king, you
have saved the castle and shall marry my daughter, that is all very well, said he, but
But I still do not know what it is to Shutter.
When the goal was brought up and the wedding set up right in, but how so ever much the
young king loved his wife and how ever happy he was, he still said always, if I could
but Shutter, if I could but Shutter, and this at last ended her.
Her wedding made said, I will find a cure for him, he shall soon learn what it is to
shutter. She went out to the stream which froze through the garden and had a whole bucket full
of gudgins brought to her. At night when the young king was sleeping, his wife was to draw the clothes
of him and empty the bucket full of cold water with the gudgins in it all in it over him so that
the little fishes would spawn about him. Then he woke up and cried, oh what makes me shut
the stove, what makes me so so do I. I know I know what it is to shatter.
3, and good night.
Grims fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, chapter 59, King Grizzly bit. The great king of
the land far away in the east had a daughter who was very beautiful, but so proud and
and haughty and conceded that none of the princes who came to ask her in marriage was good enough for her, and she only made sport of them.
Was it one of time King held a great feast, and asked a river on her seat as, and they all sat in a room, ranged according to their rank, kings and princes and yukes and arrows and counts and barons and knights?
Then the princess came in and as she passed by them, she had something spiteful to say to everyone.
But thus was too fat.
His as round as a tub said she, the next was too tall.
What a main pole, said she, and next was too short, what a dumpling, said she, the warmth was too pale, and she cawnt in more space.
But this was too red, so she cawnt in the cocks comb.
The sixth was not straight enough, so she said, he was like a green stick that had been
made to dry over a baker's oven. And now she had some dirt to crack upon everyone,
but she laughed more than all at a good king who was there. Look at him, said she, his
bed is like an old mop. Here she had be called grizzly bed, to the king got the nickname
of a crazy bird. But the old king was very angry when he saw how his daughter behaved
and how she illustrated all his guests. And he vowed that, willing or unwitting, she
should marry the person that, being he prints all beg of that king to the door.
Two days after that came by a travelling fiddler, he began to play under the window and
beg arms. And when the king heard him, he said, net him come in, so he brought in a
that he looked in front of. And when he had sung before the king in the princess, he begged
a boon. When the king said, you have some so well that I will give you my daughter for your
wife. The prince of the bag and pray that the king said, I have sworn to give you to be to the
first combat and I will keep my word. So, words and tears were of no avail, and the person
was sent for and she was married to the Pidina. When this was over the king said, now get ready
to go, you must not stay here, you must travel on with your husband.
And the villa went his way and took her with him, and they soon became, and they soon
came to a great wood.
Pray, that she, who's is this wood?
It belongs to King Grizzly, bed, answer to he, hast, had stow taken him, or had been
Oh, unlucky, retro I am, unlucky, retro I am, so she would art with that I am married King
Christy-Bid. Next they came to some fine meadows, who is these beautiful green meadows,
so she, they belong to King Christy-Bid, had star taken him, they had all been known.
Oh, unlucky, retro I am, so she would that I am married King Christy-Bid.
Then they came to a great city, who's as this noble city, said she, it belongs to
King Grizzly bed, had thou taken him, it had all been lying.
Oh, which is the time I am, since she, why did I not marry King Grizzly bed, that
is no business of mine, said the Fiddler, why should you wish for another husband, am I
not good enough for you?
At last they came to a small cottage, would a poetry place, said she, to whom's, to whom does
that living dirty hole below, then the business said, that is your and my house, over
yet in it.
Well, your servants, Kray-She, what do we want with servants, that he, he wants to do for
yourself or to have it is to be done.
Now make the fire and put them water and cook myself up for iron very tight.
But the princess knew nothing of making fires and cooking, and the thin love was forced
to help her.
When they had easing at a very scanty man, they went to bed, but the thinner called her
up very early in the morning to clean the haps. I say live for two days and when they had eaten
up all that, all there was in the cottage, then they had said, why, they can't go on us, spending
money and nothing. He wasn't going to leave baskets. When he went out and put the windows and
brought them home and she began to leave, but it made her fingers very sore. I see this
quite quite do, said he, try and spin, perhaps you will do that better. So she sat down and tried
to spin, but the friends cut her tender fingers to the blood ran.
Seeing now, something like, you are good for nothing, you can do no work, what a bargain I
have brought. However, I was trying to set up a trade-in-pots-in-pads and then you shall
stand in the market and serve them. And as science-she, if any of my father's court
should pass by and see me standing in the market, have it will laugh at me, though her husband
did not care for that, and said she must work, but she did not wish to die of hunger.
At first, the trade went well, for many people, seeing such a beautiful woman, what
to buy her bags, and paid their money without thinking of taking away the goods.
It lived on this as long as it lasted, and then her husband bought, bought a fresh lot of
wear, and she sat herself down with it in the corner of the market, and drunk and sold
us in king buy and wrote his horse against her store.
and broke all her goods into a thousand pieces and she began to cry and knew not what to do.
Oh, we'll become of me, said she and all my husband say, so she ran home and told him,
who would have bought you a bit of them so say, said he,
as to put an earth and earth store in the corner of the market that everybody passes.
But let us have no more crying. I see you are not fit for this sort of work.
So I've been to the King's Palace and asked if they did not want to get you made.
and they say they will take you and then you will have plenty to eat.
Let's the princess became a kitchen maid and helped look up to all the dead youths
work, but she will allow to carry home some of the meat that was left and on this they
met.
She had not been there long before she had but the kings and the sun was passing by going
to be married and she went to one of the windows and looked out.
Everything was ready and all the pomp and brightness of the court was there, then she
she allegedly grieved for the pride and falling in which hand bought her so long, and
the servants gave her some of the rich meat which she put into her basket to take home.
All on a sudden, as she was coming out, inking the king's side in golden clothes, and when
he saw a beautiful woman at the door, he took her by the hand and said that she should
be his partner in the darts, but she trembled for fear for she saw that was king grizzly
bed, those making sport of her. However, he kept hold, he kept fast hold and led her in,
and the cover of the basket came off so that all the meets in it flowed out, and everybody
left in Giaz at her, and she was so abashed that she wished herself a thousand feet deep in
the air. She sprung to the door to a runaway, but on the steps King grizzly bid over took her,
and bought her back and said, they're me not. I am the Fino, who has an liberty in the hut,
I bought you there because I really loved you, and I am also the soldier that overset your
store.
I have done all this, only to tear you off your silly pride, and to show you the folly of
your ill treatment of me.
Now all is over that you have left wisdom and it is time to hold our marriage piece.
When the Chamberlains came and brought to have the most beautiful robes, and a father and
thought were there already, and welcome to home on her marriage. Joy was in every face
in every heart, the feast was grown, they danced and sang, all were married and I only
wish that you and I had been of the party the end. Good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm.
Chaplus 60, Iron Hans.
There was once upon a time a king who had a great forest near his palace full of all kinds
of wild animals.
One day he sent out a honsman to shoot him a road, but he did not come back, perhaps some
accident has performed in him so became, and the next day he sent out two more
hutsmen who were to such for him, but they two stayed away. Then on the 3rd he sent
for all his hutsmen and sent, scound the whole forest through, and do not give up until
you have found all three. But of these also, none came home again, none were seen again.
On that time forth no one would any longer venture into the forest, and it lay there in
deep stillness and solitude, and nothing will seem of it.
But sometimes an eagle or a hawk flying over it.
This lasted for many years, when an unknown huntsman announced him and announced himself
to the king as seeking as a situation, an offer to go into the dangerous forest, the king
however would not give his consent and said, it is not safe in there.
I fear it would fail, but you know better than the others.
And you would never come out again.
The Huntsman would apply Lord, I will venture at my own risk of fear.
I know nothing.
The Huntsman therefore took himself with his dog to the forest.
It was no longer for the dove fell in with some game on the way.
And wanted to pursue it.
But hardly had the dog run two steps when it stood before a deep pool.
We're going to father and then make it on stretch itself out of the water, sea-stitch and drew it under.
On the Hudson saw that human back and fetched three men to come with buckets and bail out the water.
And they could see that the bottom there and they, a wild man, whose body was browned like rusty iron and whose hair hung over his face down to his knees.
They bound him with cords and made him away to the castle.
It was a great astonishment over the Wild Man.
The King, however, had put him in an iron cage in his courtyard, and forbade the door
to be open on pain of death.
And the Queen herself was to take the key into her keeping, and from this time forth, everyone
could go into it.
Everyone could go again into the forest with safety.
The King had a son of eight years, who was once playing in the courtyard, and while
he was playing, his golden ball fell into the cage. The boy ran through her and said,
given my ball out, not till you have opened the door for me onto the moon, no said the boy.
I will not do that. The king has forgotten it and run away. The next day he again went and
asked for his ball. The wild man said, open my door, but the boy would not. On a third day
the king had ridden out hunting and the boy went once more and said, I cannot open the door
or even if I wished for I have not the key, and the wild man said,
at lies, and the young man is pillow, using get it there.
The boy who wanted to have his ball back, cast all fort to the winds and brought the key.
The door opened with difficulty, and the boy pinched his fingers.
When it was open the wild man stepped out, gave him the golden ball and heard away.
The boy had become afraid, he called and cried out to him,
While man do not go away or I shall be beaten, the while man turned back, took him up, set him on his shoulder, and went from hasty steps into the front.
When the king came home, he observed the empty cage and asked the queen how that had happened.
She knew nothing about it and sought the king but it was gone. She called up the boy but no one answered.
The king sent out people for him. People to seek for him and the fields, but they did not find him.
Then, he could easily guess what had happened and much grieved in the mortal court.
When the wild man had once reached, once more reached the dark forest he took the boy
down from the shoulder and said to him, you will never see your father and mother again,
but I will keep you with me for you have set me free and I have compassion on you.
If you do all I bet you you shall farewell.
Of treasure and gold have iron there, and more than anyone in the world, he made a better
most for the boy on which he slept, and the next morning the man took him to a well
and said, the hope, the gold well as as bright and clear as crystal, which else sit beside
it and take care that nothing falls into it, or it will be polluted.
I will come every evening to see if you have a date my order.
boy paced himself by the brink of the well and often saw a golden fish or a golden snake
show itself there in and took care of that nothing felt in. And as he was sitting with us and
as he was last sitting, his finger hurt him so violently that he involuntarily put it in the water.
He drew it quickly out again and saw that it was quite good in and what sort of a pain
he took to wash the gold off again. All was to no purpose. In the evening I and herms,
and the evening I and herms came back and looked at the boy and said,
what has happened to the well? Nothing, nothing, he answered and held his finger behind the
back, but the man might not see it, but he said, you have dipped your finger into the water.
This time it may pass, but take care you do not again let anything go in.
by daybreak the boy was already sitting by the wall and watching it. His finger hurt him again and he
passed it over his head and then unhappily a hair fell down into the well. He took it quickly out but it
was already quite good. Iron hands came and already knew what happened and happened. You have let
a hair fall into the well. So he I will allow you to watch it till watch by it once more but if this
This happens for the third time, and the world is polluted, and you can no longer remain with me.
On the third day, the boy sat by the well and did not stir his finger however much it hurt him.
But the time was long to him, and he looked at the reflection of his face on the surface of the water.
And as he still burnt down more and more while he was doing so, and trying to look straight into the eyes, his long hair fell down from his shoulders.
into the water. He raised himself up quickly to the horror. The horror of the hair of his
hair was already gold from the insure on the side. You can imagine how terrified the poor boy
was. He took his pocket to hang a chip, tied it around his head, in order that the man
wouldn't see it. When he came, when he came, he already knew everything, and said take the
handkerchief off, and the golden henna stream force, and let the boy excuse himself as
might. It was of no use. We have not stood the trial and cannot stay here. I can
stay here no longer. Go forth into the world. Then you will learn what poverty is. But
as you have not a bad heart and as I am meanwhile about you, there is one thing I will
grant you. If you fall into any difficulty, come to the forest and cry. I am heart and
and then I will come and help you.
My power is great, greater than you think,
and I have gold and silver in abundance.
When the king's son left the forest and walked by beaten
and unbeaten paths ever onwards,
until that length, he reached a great city.
There, he looked for work, but could find none,
and he learned nothing by which he could help himself.
At length, he went to the palace and asked as they would take him in.
people about court did not at all know what they can make, what you say can make of him,
but they like him and all them to stay. At length, Pook took him into service and said,
he might carry wood in the water, and rake the symbols together. Once one also happened that
no one else was at hand, but Pook ordered him to carry the food to the wall of table. But
But as he did not like to let his golden head be seen, he kept him a cap on.
Such a thing, as that, had never yet come under King's practice.
And he said, when you come to the Royal table, you must take a hat off.
He answered, ah Lord, I cannot.
I have a bad sore face on my head.
When the King had the cut, called before him, and scolored him,
and asked how he can take such a boy as that into a service.
And that he had to, he was to send him away at once.
at once.
They took however, had pity on him, and exchanged him for the gardeners boy.
I never boy had to plant in water the garden, whole and dig, and bear the wind and
bag of weather.
Once in someone when he was working alone in the garden, the day was so warm, he took
his little cap off that and I might call him.
And as the sun shone on his hair, he glitters and flashes over that, the rains fell into
the bedroom of King's daughter, and actually sprang to see what that could be.
and she saw the boy and cried him, boy, bring me a leaf of flowers. He put his cap on with
all haste and gathered wild field flowers and bound them together. When he was ascending
his stance with them, the garden and met him and said, how can you take the King of those
at a garden of such common flowers? Go quickly and get another and seek out the prettiest and
rareness. Oh no, reply the boy, the wild ones have more scent. I will please have better.
When he got into the room, the King's thought said, take your cap off. It is not seen
me to keep it on in my present. He again said, I may not. I have a sore head. See
however, caught up in his cap and pulled it off, and then his golden hair rolled down
on his shoulders, and it was splendid to behold. He wanted to run out, but she held
him by the arm and gave him a handful of doots. But these he departed, but he cared
nothing for the girl pieces. He took them to the gardener and said, I present them to your
children. They can play with them. The following day, the King's daughter, again, called
him that he was to bring her a week of field flowers. And then he went in with it. She
instantly snatches cap and wanted to take it away from him, but he held it fast with her
hands. She again gave him the handful of two cats. But he would not keep them and give
them a gardener and gave them to the gardener for play things for his children. On the
Thursday, things went as the same. She could not get his cap away from him, and he would
not have her money. Not long afterwards, the country was overrun by war. The king gathered
together his people, and did not know whether he, whether or not he could offer any opposition
to the enemy. He was superior in strength and had a mighty army. Then, said the garden's
boy, I am grown up, and we'll go to the war's also, only give me a horse. The others
laughed and said, seek one for yourself and me or God. They were only one behind him
behind us in the stable for you. And they had gone forth. He went into the stable and
at the horse out. It was the name of one foot and a limp, hobbled to you, hobbled to you.
Nevertheless, he mounted it and rode away to the dark forest.
When he came to the outskirts, he called Ironhuts, three times so loudly that it echoed through
the treats. They're upon the wild man that paid immediately and said, what do you desire?
I want a strong seed for I am going to the wars that you shall have and still more than you
ask for. And the wild man went back into the forest and it was not long before a stable boy
came out of it. He learned a horse that's snorted with his nuttracks and could hardly be
restraint. And behind them followed a quick trip of warriors entirely equipped in iron and
and their swords flashed in the sun. The youth made over his three leg torso's tableboy.
Now to the other, and rode at the heads of the sword, and rode at the head of the soldiers.
When he got near the battlefield, a great part of the king's man had already fallen, and
little was wanting to make the rest get way. When the youth got up to the realm of his iron
soldiers, broke like a hurricane over the enemy, and beat down all who opposed him. They began
And if Lee, the youth pursued and never stopped until there was not a single man left.
Instead of returning to the King however, he conducted his troops by a biowen he's
back to the forest and called forth Ironhounds.
What do you desire?
Ask the wild man.
Take back your horse and your troops and give me my three leg horse again.
All that he was, he asked was done and soon he was riding on his three leg horse.
When the King returned to his palace, his daughter went to meet him and wished him joy of his victory,
I am not the one who carried away the victory, said he, but a strange night who came to my sustenance with his soldiers.
The daughter wanted to hear who the strange night was, but the King did not know, and said he followed the enemy, but I did not see him again.
She inquired of the governor, where his boy was, but he smiled and said he has just come home on his three-day course,
And the others have been mocking him and crying, he comes, but here comes our hobbling team chip back again.
They asked, too, and what hedge have you been lying sleeping all this time all the time?
So he said, I did the best of all, and it will have gone badly without me, and then he will still more much killed.
The kings of the tears daughter, I will proclaim a great feast that shall last for three days,
and you shall slow a golden apple. Perhaps the unknown man will show himself.
One of these was announced the youth went out to the forests and corn iron hines.
What do you design? I've seen that I may catch the King's daughter's golden apple.
It is as safe as if you had it already.
Sen iron hines. You shall likewise have a future red armor for the occasion and ride on a spirited chestnut horse.
When the day came the youth galloped to the spot, took his place among the nights, and was recognized by no one.
The kings dought to came forward, and through a golden apple to the nights, the none of them caught it, but he only as soon as he had it.
As soon as he had it, he galloped away.
On the second day, Iron Hands cooked him as a white night, and gave him a white horse.
Again, he was the only one who caught the apple, and he did not linger in an instant
but calved off a bit.
The king grew angry and said, that is not allowed.
He was the payable for me and tell me his name, and tell his name.
He gave the order that if the night who caught the apple should go away again, they should
pursue him, and if he would not come back willingly, they would have cut him down and
slap him.
On the third day he received from Ironhounds, a suit of black armor and a black horse,
and again he caught the apple, but when he was riding off of it the King's attendance
pursued him and one of them got so near that he wounded the use leg for the point of
the sword. The use nerve of the rest escaped from them, but his horse and their so violently
the helmet fell from the use head and they could see that he had galling hurt, they rode
back and announced the announcement to the King. The following day the King's daughter
asked a guy to know about his boy. He has that work in the garden. The queer creature
has been at the festival too, and only came home yesterday evening. He has liked why
showing my children three golden apples which he has won. The king summoned him into his
presence, and he came again and again, and he came and again had his little cap on his head.
But the king's daughter went up to him and took it off, and then his golden hair fell down
over his shoulders, and he was so handsome that all were amazed. Are you the knight who came every
day to the festival, always in different colours and who caught the three apples,
are succinct, yes, answer tea, and here the apples are, and he took them out of his pocket
and returned them to the king. If you desire, further proof, you may see the wound,
which all people gave me when they followed me, but I am likewise the night to help
you to your victory over your enemies. If you can perform such deeds as that, you are no
a gardener's boy, tell me who is your father? My father is a mighty king and the
girls have eye-implenty as great as I require. I will see, so the king, that I owe my
thanks to you. Can I do anything to please you? Yes, I'll say to you, that indeed you can.
Give me your daughter, do I? The maiden mother and said, he does not stand much on so
lonely, but I have already seen by his golden hair that he was no gardener's boy, and
and she went and kissed him. His father and mother came to the wedding and were in great
light but they had given up all the hope of ever seeing their tears on again. And as they
were sitting at the marriage feast, the music suddenly stopped and the doors opened and the
state became in with great retribution. He went up to the youth and embraced him and said,
I am Iron Harts and was by enshrotment a while ago that you have set me free all the transitions
which I possess shall be your poverty, free and good night.
Grimm's fairy tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, chapter 61, Cat Skin.
There was once a king whose queen had a hair of the purest gold and was so beautiful that
that had match was not to be met with on the whole face as the earth.
But this beautiful, clean, felt ill, and when she felt that kind of endsure near, she
called the King to her and said, promise me that you will never marry again, unless you
meet with a wife who is as beautiful as Ania, and who have a golden hair like mine.
Then when King in his grief promised all she asked, she shut her eyes and died, but the King
was not to be comforted, and for a long time never thought of taking another wife.
At last, however, his wise men said, this will not do. The king must marry again, that
we may have a queen. So Messengers were sent for our unwanted seat for a bride as beautiful
as a late queen, but there was no princess in the world so beautiful, and if there had
been, still there was not one to be found who had gulped in her. So the Messengers came
home, and had had all the trouble for nothing.
Now the king had a daughter who was just as beautiful as her mother, and had the same
golden hair.
And when she was grown up, the king looked at her and saw that she was just like this
late queen.
Then he said to his courtiers,
"...may I not marry my daughter, she is a very image of my dead wife.
On this I have her, I shall not find any bride upon the whole earth, and you say there
must be a queen."
And the故iers heard this. They were shocked and said,
You haven't the bid that a father should marry his daughter.
Out of so great a sin no good can come.
As daughter was also shocked,
But hoped the king soon gave up such thoughts.
So she said to him,
Before I marry anyone,
I must have three dresses.
One must be of gold like a son.
Another must be of shining silver like the moon.
And a firm must be dazzling as a star.
Besides this, I want a mandal of a thousand different kinds of flower put together,
through which every base in the kingdom must give a part of his skin, and thus he thought
he would think of the magic no more, but the kingdom may be the most skillful workmen
in his kingdom leaves for three dresses, one golden like the sun, another sovray, sovray
like the moon, and as the earth sparkling with the stars, and as hunter, and as hunters
were told to hunt out all the besie in the kingdom and to take the finest water out of
their skins and must a mantle of a thousand birds was made.
When we were when all were ready the king sent them to her but she got up in the night
when all were asleep and took three of the trinkets, a golden ring, a golden necklace,
and a golden brooch, brooch, and packed the three dresses of the sun, the moon and the stars
up in the nutshell. I wrapped myself up in the mantle made of all sorts of fire and
besmeered her face in hands at the sight. Then she threw herself upon heaven for help
in her need, and went away and jenied on the whole night till that machine came to a
large wood. As she was very tired, she sat herself down in the hollow of a tree and soon
and then she slept on until it was midday.
Now, as the king to film the wood balloon was hunting it, his legs came to the tree and began to snuff about and run around and run him back.
Look, sharp, so the king to the Huntsman, and see what sort of game lines there, and the Huntsman went up to the tree, and when they came back again,
again, then the hollow tree then lies a most wonderful beast.
I only came back again, said, in the hollow tree,
then lies a most wonderful beast, such as we never saw before.
Its skin seems to be all 1,000 kinds of fat, but they're
at lies last asleep. See, so the king, if he's in
the kitchen, I know it, and we will take it with us.
So, the husband took it up, and the maiden it worked,
and was greatly frightened, and said,
and said, I am a poor child but neither has lymophath and all mother left.
I have pity on me to take me with you.
And they said, yes, Miss Katzkin, you will do for the kitchen, and you can use and sweep
up the ashes and do things about salt.
So, we put her into the coach and took her home to the King's Palace.
And they showed her a little corner under the staircase, where no one might have day
have a peepe in and said, cat skin, healing lie and sleep there, and she was sent into
the kitchen and laid a fetch wood and water to blow the fire, pluck the poetry, pick
the herbs, sip the ashes, and do all the dirty like.
Thus kept in there for a long time, very sore of me.
Our pretty princess, but she, what will now become me?
But it happened one day that at least was to be held in the king's castle.
When she said to the cook, me and I go up a little while and see what is going on, I will
take care and stand behind the door, and the cook said yes you may go, but be back again
in half an hour starting to wake up the ashes.
When she took her little lamp and went into her cabin and took off the first skin and
washed the suit off from off the base and hand so that her beauty shone forth at the
sun from behind the clouds.
She next opened her nutshell and brought out a bit the dress that shot like a sun and so
went to the feast. Everyone made way better for nobody knew her and they thought she
could be no less than the king's daughter.
But the king came up to her and held out his hand and danced with her and he thought
in his heart, I never saw one half so beautiful. I never saw anyone half so beautiful.
When the dance was at an end, she cut seed. And when the king looked around for her, she
was gone, no one knew with her. The guards that stood at the castle gate were called
in, but they had seen no one. The true swars, as she had run into her little cabin,
pulled off the dress, black and defaced and hands and put on the bursting cloak, and
those cats skin again. And she went into the kitchen for help to work, and began to
to rake the ashes, the cook said, let that alone to a morning, and keep the king's
soup. I should like to run up now and give a peep. The take care you do not let a
hair fall into it, or you will run a chance of nerve eating again. As soon as the cook
went away, catskin heated the king's soup and posted a slice of bread for us, as nicely as
ever she could. And when it was ready, she went and leapt in the cabin for her little
golden ring, and put it in the dish in which the soup was. When the dance was over the
king ordered his soup to be brought in, and it pleased him so well that he thought he
never tasted any so good before. At the bottom he saw a gold ring lying, and as he could not
make out how it had got there, he ordered the cook to be sent for. The cook was frightened
when he had ordered, and said to catskin, you must have let a hair fall into the soup. If
If it be so, you'll have a good beating.
And he went before King and asked him who had cooked the soup, I did answer the cook.
But the King said that is not true.
It was better done than you could do it.
And he answered to tell the truth I did not cook it, but cats can did.
The net cats can come up.
So the King.
And when he came, and when she came, he said to her, who are you?
I am a poor child, said she, that has lost both five and other.
How came you in my palace, asked you, I am good for nothing, said she, but to be a scully
in girl, and to have boots and shoes thrown at my head, but how did you get that ring
that was in the soup, asked the king, then she would not own the then, then she would
not own that she knew anything about the ring, so the kingdom sent her away again about
her business.
After a time now another face and cat skin also cooked and let her go up and see it as
before.
Yes, said he.
But come again in half an hour and cook the king the soup that he likes so much.
Then she ran to her little cabin, washed herself cooking, and took her dress out which
was soaked as silvery as the moon and put it on.
And when she went in, looking like a king of slaughter, the king went up to her and
rejoiced at seeing her again.
And when the dawns began, he danced with her.
After the dance was at an end, she managed to sniff out so slightly when the king did not see where she was gone.
But she sprang into her little cabin and made herself into Kat's skin again, and went into the kitchen to cook the soup.
Whilst the cook was above the stairs, she got the golden necklace and dropped in the soup.
Then it was brought to a king who ate it, and it pleased him as well as before.
So, he said for a cook who was forced, who was again forced to tell him that Katzkin had
cooked it.
Katzkin was aboard again before the king, but she still told him that she was only
fit to have boots and shoes to burn up her head.
But when the king had ordered a piece to be got ready for the third time, it happened
just the same as before.
He must be a witch Katzkin, so the cook, but you always put something in your soup, so
that it pleases the king better than mine.
However, he let her go up as before, then she put on her dress with spark like the stars
and went into the ballroom in it.
On the team danced to her again and brought, she had never looked so beautiful as she
did then.
So whilst he was dancing with her, he put a gold ring on her finger without her seeing
it, and ordered that the dark should be kept up a long time.
When it was at the end, he would have her held.
She wouldn't have held her fast by the hand, but she slipped away and sprung so quickly
through the crown that he must side her.
But she ran, and she ran as fast as she could into her mid-peppin under the Senate.
But this time, she kept away too long and stayed beyond the heart of our.
So she had not time to take off her fine dress, and through her firm and all over it.
And in her haste, not blacken herself.
All over it was set to the left one of her fingers white.
When she ran into the kitchen and cooked the king's soup, and as soon as the cook was
gone, she put the golden broach into the dish.
When the king got to the bottom, he ordered cats going to be corn once more.
He soon saw the white finger under him that he had put on it while they were dancing,
so he seized her hand and kept fast hold of it.
And when she wanted to release herself and spring away, the fur cloak fell off a little
on one side and the story dressed well with underneath it. Then you got hold of the fur and
toward off and her golden hair and beautiful form was seen and she could no longer hide herself.
So she washed the set and ashes from her face and she showed herself to be the most beautiful
princess upon the face of the earth. But King said, you are my beloved bride and we will never be
never more be part of each other and the wedding feast was held and in Mary Daniel it was,
as ever was heard or all seen in that country or indeed in any other.
The end. Good night.
Grims fairy tales by Jacob Grim and Wilhelm Grim.
Chapter 62 Snow White and Rose Red. It was one support of who lived in a lonely cottage.
In front of the cottage was a garden where in stood two rose trees, one of which bore white
and the other red roses. She had two children who were like the two rose trees and one was called Snow White
and the other rose red.
They were as good and happy, as busy and cheerful as ever to children in world
were.
Only Snow White was more quiet and gentle than rose red.
Rose red liked better to run about in the meadows and field season flowers and catching
butterflies, but Snow White said her own with her mother and helped her with her house
work, or read to her when there was nothing to do.
A two children were so fond of one another, but they always held each other by the
hand when they went out together.
Then Snow White said, they were not really each other, those red-answered never so long
as we live, and the mother would add.
And their mother would add, what one her she must share with the other.
They often ran about the forest alone and gathered berries, and no beasts did them any
hope, but came close to them trustfully. The little pair would eat a cabbage leaf out
of their hands, the row grazed by their side, the stag left Merley by them, and the birds
sat still upon the birds, and sang, whatever they knew. Nomus have overtook them, and they
stayed too late in the forest and they came on. They laid themselves down in one another upon
the moss and slept on two morning came and their mother knew this and did not worry on that count.
Once when they had spent the night in the wood and the dawn had last them, they saw a beautiful
child in the shining white dress sitting in the rabbit. He got up and it quite kindly at them.
It's nothing in one into the forest and when they looked around they found that they had
been sleeping quite close to a precipice. I would certainly have fallen into it in the
darkness if they had gone only a few paces back there and their mother told them that
it must have been the angel who watches over good children. Snow White and Rose
ran to Captain Mother's Little Cottage so neat that it was a pleasure to look inside it.
In the summer, Rose read took care of the house and every morning laid a
a leaf of flowers by her mother's bed before she awoke, in which was a rose from each tree.
In the winter snow white knit the fire and hung the kettle on the hop. The kettle was
of brass and shun white gold, so brightly was it polished. In the evening when the snowflakes fell
when I said, go snow white, snow white and bought the door. And when they sat around the house
And the mother took their spectacles, took her spectacles and read a note of a large book,
and the two girls listened as a snack and spun, and he was by the mlayer man, on the
upon the floor, and behind them upon a perch, sat a white turf where the head hid in beneath its
legs.
One evening, as they were lost sitting comfortably together, someone knocked at the door as if he
he wished to be let in. The mother said, quick, red rose open the door, it must be a
troublemaker who was seeking shelter. Rose red went and pushed back the bolt, thinking
that it was a poor man, but it was not. It was a bear that stretched his broad, black head
within the door. Rose red screamed and sprang back, the lamb bleated, the blood fluttered,
and snow white hid herself behind her mother's bed. But the bear began to speak and said,
Do not be afraid, I will do you no harm. I am half-browsen and only want to warm myself a little beside you.
Poor bear, so the mother, lie down by the fire, only take care that you do not blam your coat.
Then she cried.
Snow White, rose red, come out, the bear will do you no harm, he means well, so they both came out and by the by the man and dove came nearer and were not afraid of him.
The bears said, here children, knock the snow out of my coat of a dog. So they brought the
broom and swept the bears high peeing, and he stretched himself by the fire and
crowd, contempt me, and comfortably. It was not long before they grew quite at home, and
played tricks where they clums he guessed. They turned his hair in with their hands, but
their feet are on his back, and rolled him about, all they took the haze or switch and beat
him, and when he crowned, they laughed.
For the bear should get all in good part, only when they were too rocky called out,
who leaves me alive children.
So white, where's red, will you beat your will or did?
When it was bedtime, and the others went to the bear.
The mother said to the bear, you can lie there by the heart, and then you will be safe
from the cold in the bad weather.
As soon as they dawned, the two children met him out, and he trodden across the snow into the forest.
Henceforth, the bear came every evening at the same time, laid himself down by the hath,
and that the children used himself, a musense out with him as much as they liked,
and they got so used to him that the doors were never fastened until their black friend had arrived.
In the spring and come, and all that time was green, the bear said one morning to snow white.
Now, I must go away and cannot come back for the whole summer.
Where are you going then, dear bear?
I'll snow white.
I must go into the forest and guide my treasures from the wicked walls.
In the winter, when the earth is frozen hard,
the earth are obliged to stay below and cannot walk their way through.
But now, when the sun has bored and warned, the earth,
they break through it and come out to pry and steal.
and what once gets into their hands and in their caves there's not even the same day right
again. Snow White was quite sorry at his departure and as she
and bought her the door for him and the bear was hurrying out he caught against the
bolt and a piece of his hairy coat was torn off and it seemed to snow white as if she
had seen gold shining through it but she was not sure about it but they ran away quickly
and was soon out of sight behind the trees.
For sure time afterwards, the mother sent her children into the forest to get fired.
Then they found a big tree which lay felled on the ground and closed by the trunk,
something was jumping forwards, backwards and forwards in the grass,
but they could not make out what it was.
When they came near, nearer, they saw a draw for them all with a face,
and a snow white beard, a yard long.
The end of the beer was caught in a crevice of a tree, and the little fellow was jumping
about like a dog tied to a rope and did not know what to do. He'd led up the girls
with his fiery red eyes and cried, why do you stand there? Could you, can you not come here
and help me? What are you up to, Mr Man? Asked Rosemary, you stupid, crying goose answered
the door. I was going to split the tree to get a little boy to the cooking. The little
But if we do it that way people get is immediately burnt up of heavy locks.
We do not swallow so much as you of course greedy folk.
I had to strip them the wedge safely in and everything was going as I wished.
But the cursed wedge was too small than some sprouting.
The tree closed so quickly that I could not put out my beautiful white beard.
So now it is tight and I cannot get away.
And the silly, sleek, nuk-faced things, love.
Now, ugh, help early as you are.
The children try it very hard, but they can not pull the bit out.
It was caught too fast.
El run and fetch someone's cellar as red.
You senseless, goose, snarb and dwarf.
Why would you fetch someone?
You too, you are already too many for me.
And you not think of something better.
Don't be impatient since Snow White.
I will help you.
And she pulled out her scissors at her pocket
cut off the end of the bed. As soon as the door felt himself free, he laid
hold of a bag which lay amongst the roots of the tree and which was full of
gold and let you out for grumbling himself, uncoose people to cut off the piece of
my fine bed. Bad luck to you! To cut off a piece of my fine bed, bad luck to you,
and then he swung the bag upon his back and went off without even on what's
looking at children. Sometimes afterwards no writing rose red went to catch and dish of fish,
as they came near the brook, they saw something like a large grasshopper jumping towards
the water as if it were going to move in. They ran to it and found it was the dwarf.
Where are you going, said rose red. You surely don't want to go into the water?
I am not such a fool, cry the door. Don't you see that the occassid fish wants to pull me in?
The little man had been sitting there fishing and I'm luckily the wind and tangled up his
bear in the fishing line. A moment later, a big fisherman bite and a fever creature had not
strengthed on an out. A fish kept the other hand and pulled it off towards him. He held onto
all the leaves and rushes, but it was of little good, for he was forced to follow the movements
of a fish and was in urgent danger of being dragged into the water. The girls came just in time
they held him fast and tried to free his bed from the line, but all in vain.
Bid and line were entangled fast together.
There was nothing to do but bring out the scissors and got the bid.
Whereby, a small part of it was lost.
One adorved saw that he screamed out,
Is that civil you told short to disfigure a man's face?
Was it not in my tip of the end of my bed?
Now you have cut off the best part of it.
I cannot let myself be seen by my people.
I wish you had been made to run the souls of your shoes, and he took out a sack of pearls
which lay in the rushes, and without another way he drag it away and disappear behind stone.
It happened that soon afterwards the mother sent the two children to the town to buy needles
and thread, and laces and rhythms.
The road led them across the heath, upon which huge pieces of rock lay strewn about.
Then they noticed a larger bird hovering in the air, flying slowly around and round upon them,
and said the lower and lower and at last, said, well near a rock, not far away.
Immediately they heard a loud, pittiest cry.
We ran out of control, with horror, that the eagle had seized their order-quintance to
door, and was going to carry him off.
The children full of pitties, and once took tight hold of the little man, and pulled against
the evil so long that at last he met his pretty girl. As soon as a door had a
cover from his first Friday cry with his short voice, could you not have done it
more carefully? You dragged my brown coat so that it is all torn and full of
holes you plumsy creatures. And he took up the sack full of
pristons and slipped away again under the rock into his hole. The girls who
by the time were used his in gratitude went on their way into their business
in town. As they crossed the hill again on their way home, they surprised the door,
who had emptied out of his bag of precious stones in a clean spot, and how not bought
that anyone would come there so late. The evening sun shone upon the brilliant stones,
made lisses and sparkles with all kind of so beautifully that the children stood still
and stared at them. Why do you stand gaping with her? Cry the door, and as the
Asian Greyface became copper red was red.
He was still casting when a loud growling was had,
and a black bear came trotting towards the mouth of the forest.
The dwarves sprang up in a fight,
but he could not reach his cave,
where the bear was already close.
Then in the dread of his heart he cried.
Dear Mr. Bear, spare me.
I will give you all my treasures.
Look, the beautiful jaws laying there.
Grant me my life.
What do you want was such a slender little fellow as I?
You were not feeling me between your teeth.
Come, take these two wiggas.
see our tender mortals for you, that is young quills, for Mazi's sake eat them!
A bad took no heed of his words, but gave the wicked creature a single glow of his poor,
and he did not move again. The girls had run away with a bad call to them.
Snow White and Rose Red. Do you not be afraid? Wait, I will come with you,
and they recognise his voice, and wait it. And when he came up to them, suddenly his best
in front of, and he stood there, a handsome man clothed in all, clothed all in gold.
I am a king's son, said he said, and I was bewitched by that wicked horse who had
stalled in my creed, my treasures. I had had to run about the forest of a savage bear,
until I was freed by his death. Now he has got his world-aserved punishment.
Snow White was married to him, and Rose read, there's brother, and they divided between them
the great treasure which the dwarf had gathered together in this cave.
The old mother lived peacefully and happily with her children for many years.
She took the two rose trees with her and they stood before her window,
and every year, all the most beautiful roses, white and red.
He and good night.
Myths and legends of ancient Greece and Rome by E. M. Barrett's Part 1 Myths Introduction.
I'm Boba.
I love the voice.
I love the voice of Boba.
I know you.
You guys did great.
It is the dawn of the final day and it will have me for one hour before I disappear
into the void, you know, just to allow people some time to like, come in, just keep
You're still missing.
Oh, boy.
Are you feeling wise?
This is it!
This is actually a song that I left off yesterday.
This was the next song that I was supposed to play.
Okay.
10, no, no.
7, no.
8, no.
8, no.
7, no.
7, no.
7, no.
8, no.
9, no.
6, please.
6, no.
7, no.
10, no.
Thank you guys so much. I had a feeling, a long time ago was going to end.
and
well you guys kept going I was like oh my god
I kind of want to like experience the end while I'm awake, so like what if we like
simulated the end of it and like an hour from now?
And that way I can't give my speech to him.
So I was asleep for it.
I'm looking arms hurt.
I don't know how I slept in my sleep room, but arms hurt.
It didn't manage to revive the timer one time, failed the second one, or what?!
There's nowhere.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Then this cartoon's so good.
I'll move on.
Hmm.
I'll tell you I give you something fun.
Hmm.
Yeah, yeah.
Maga, maga.
Maga, maga, maga.
From the fun, yeah later.
Yeah, this
Yeah.
Michael.
Yeah, blah, blah.
I'm eating a salad for breakfast.
No.
No, God.
I also rip my nail off on my sleep apparently.
So, I don't know if I will go back to that or not.
Hmm.
Ah.
Yeah, that's the way.
Because I might have something to do, like, important after.
I might have, like, some family stuff I needed to do.
After right after my stream, I have no clue how more.
I'm not, I'm not.
can be girl
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, oh, hi, oh, good morning everybody.
Subtle fun has ended.
We are just gathering people to think it's people want us to be there for the end.
Good morning, good morning.
I don't know. I've slept on my arm this last night. I'm so confused.
I was great though. The summer fun was amazing. Thank you guys so so much for letting
me see places I've never seen before. Thank you so so much. I will do speech a
later. I'll tell you guys everything later, but thank you, everybody, say you all.
I hope that the cell of one was one for you. Hope it created a fun place for you to be
During the holidays, for sure.
That was so funny, Joey.
I'm so fucking Joey.
I'm glad that you had a place to be during the holidays.
Yeah.
Thank you guys.
Yeah.
to I knew I knew this time when I woke up last the last time I had like like 30 minutes on the
clock and I went to sleep it was a miracle but I knew this time that was going to and it was
so close to ending the whole entire time yesterday and then people were editing the timer and
then I was like I know what are these times they're gonna fail they're gonna miss it so I was like
Well, when I was going to end, when I was going to end, when I was going to end, when I
thought around and find out too much.
But I just didn't expect it to happen while I was asleep.
I thought it was going to happen while I was awake.
The timer 1, you guys called chicken.
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah
thank you so much to the people of tea for getting a sub smurf burner, Maldon Squirrel
takes a little too plastic, rose seriously, black winter, smurf, fernur, tea, or a bunch
of some gifted subs.
On my own, the geeky Canadian,
a non-ex-dave, general, curvedest,
time-consumer, the real people.
Like when Jerry Smith again,
I don't know what it ended.
And some neck.
What?
Right now.
I didn't even know what to do yesterday because I was like,
I don't know if it's going to end.
So I just, yep, that's why I didn't do anything yesterday.
I just, yep, the whole entire day.
I was like, I don't,
But whenever there's like,
whenever you don't know if there's enough time or not,
you kind of just, you're kind of there.
You're kind of just there.
And I don't have the confidence to start doing something
unless like, I know I have time.
So I was just the having the whole entire day yesterday.
Cause I was like, I don't know what to do.
And then like, there was one time that you guys
got like one hour on the clock and I was like,
what do I do now?
I was just like, what do we do now?
Yeah.
I'll go by.
But I will appreciate you guys keeping the time of our life for sure.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That was crazy. I was like, oh, oh.
What's going on?
Dan, Dan, Dan, Dan, Dan, Dan.
The seventh one is over.
Ableba.
Oh, seven, time room.
You were all in the budget,
but we were buying the points that were 30% off.
Ableba, and grand slide.
Look, and glad to see you guys.
Thank you so so much.
being so lovely. Thank you so so much. Able ba.
Eeeepieee. Oh my god guys, today will be the day my computer rests. It's been alive with
the whole entire time. It was crazy because I think in the past some of the phones also.
There were times where I actually would have to turn off because it was like not surviving.
Yeah. I have a lot of voice that go through and cut and cut up and upload to my
water channel and stuff too. So yeah. I had like a few restarts. Yeah.
Yeah, coming all the way up the wheel this camera wheel
Thank you guys so so much. I never thought I would ever see
334 10 oh my god wait
411
411
That's self-fucking funny.
Saying it no for no don't worry.
Be happy.
I think it's, I mean, I think it's so counts.
Self-such isn't a matter of time.
Oh, seven now.
Be happy.
Thank you, I can save like if things are fine.
I'm just, I'm like, I'm thinking, I'm like, I'm thinking so much about shit.
Guys, I'm 4th, 12 now.
Oh my god.
Why is there a fucking hype train when I'm fucking wake up?
No!
It's over already.
Bitch, I swear.
Thank you for being here for the more I want. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Oh my fucking God. No, some of them are part two. I'm literally, I believe I'm done.
Oh, my fucking God. Thank you. There's a lot. Thank you.
You guys going to afford 20? Like, what's going on? I'm surprised you guys got to like around 400 while I was asleep.
33, 400, I'm like one. Thank you so much 33, 4th, 1, thank you. Thank you Alex. Alex and
Candor. Alex and Candor. Oh my god. Hmm, look over there. I didn't have some candy, my
voice is shit. I will from not to go to brush my teeth and wash my face and then
came here.
Yeah, I think I saw the clip.
Or the screenshot?
I don't know.
Well, the Los Angeles aren't actually medicine.
They just, they're horrible.
I'm full bomb.
Oh, did you guys have 33, 33, 33?
Double 3, triple 3, oh no.
33 out, 30.
There's few minutes, 33 seconds.
That one's sneeze.
Oh, ha ha ha ha.
Yeah, I'm just sorry.
Hmm, did I really do the speech now I'm whining for a little bit?
I'm gonna sneeze again.
Oh, no.
Outside of no bleeding when it will go up, so...
...plogings.
I'll do it right back one second.
you
Well, at least a lady I'll be able to take Mama's high up from the hospital.
I'll listen.
They want to see the, well, they probably want to see the sub count.
I think, because it has the thing you want to...
How do I do this?
I'm allergic.
Hmm.
I have a bull-bah, I had an idea fairly didn't know, I have a bull-bah, I need to massage my arm.
on.
Oh god guys I've been on the other sheet for 10 years. Wait was it? 21 years? I don't
How long was it?
20 years?
I can go see Penelope.
Who is Penelope?
six hundred men, six hundred men, perpendicular to your leaving, oh, my bad.
How Boba?
Hmm.
I'm sailing away with 600 men.
Six hundred and then six hundred and then why come and
I
For 20 years until the next album, I'll be crazy guys
I'll be so insane.
I'll pull by.
You know, last night, I got on the bed and then I looked at the stream and I was
I was like, oh my god, is it actually gonna end like right now?
And then you guys, like,
I just stopped it for like, I don't know how, like, 20.
Oh?
Oh, like, 20 seconds, and then like restarting it.
Oh, it hasn't been an hour yet, actually, oh, oh, and like, I've almost, I'm going to
Almost.
Whoa.
Eight.
Age.
Hmm.
Oh my god.
That's okay, this is just.
That's okay, guys.
Don't worry about it.
It's for later, don't worry about it.
There you go.
The time is a zombie.
I will run.
Yeah.
15 hours, no, that's 15 minutes.
Ready nine minutes, oh, I had 30 minutes.
What the fuck are you doing?
I'm like, I'm very tired rooting. No, I'll release them early 2026.
So just stay tuned.
I will release them sometime every this year for all the people.
But yes.
Oh my god guys, I can't believe after 32 days.
I'm just waiting for people to gather because I know some people want to make it to the end.
Yeah, I can't believe what we got like a month and a month and a day and double the
subs and more.
Yeah, I wrote personal records and I was kind of crazy.
I do get to the good at Japan and I get to stream it so that I can share the trip
with you guys too.
We had a lot of funny moments, a lot of rage-bading, we had a lot of stuff, you guys should be proud of yourselves, because chat came together and achieved stuff together, so thank you so so much.
And you guys helped me achieve so many things.
Thank you so so much.
I never thought I would have a community like this.
Thank you.
You all did great.
Thank you for showing us how dangerous Bob Lazarus is.
Yeah, no problem.
I just opened up Microsoft Edge somehow.
Kind of crazy.
Thank you guys for being amazing.
A bowl of clapping too much.
Clap-y for the wogies.
Clap-y to chat.
Clap-y, clap-y, clap-y, clap-y.
Like herself, Ed.
Yeah, we did.
We finished.
We finished the...
Savatan.
And it's the end of the sub-bar.
I'm just waiting for people to like trickle in so that people can, you know, come see the end as well.
I didn't want to like immediately do it when I woke up because then it'll be like, look at my guys.
But...
I can't believe you guys made it one whole month and you guys got nerfed afterwards too
because after the 25k I was like hey guys I'm gonna be transparent with you
we're gonna change the values so like it's gonna be a little bit harder
but then you guys are like oh no home I was like okay I was like what the
Oh my god.
I think you're in my sin.
I'm a boy, I'm a child.
You have fun in the sounds, I did.
And it is.
Down, down, down, down.
I'm a bull-blown.
I was surprised you guys had power hour, like literally cinema.
Like there was, you guys, like, it took three roles for you guys to get power hour.
And then it was actually kind of insane.
in my spine.
Okay, way boy.
Shout out to cow.
Yeah.
Shout out to cow guys.
How such a trip is called lay all your love on me by Abba.
I love Abba.
Holy cow.
No, no, no.
All right, guys, we've gone to the point in the, in the, in the,
sub-athon where we have ended however.
I wasn't around for one of the time hit Darrell,
so we're going to, we've said the time to 15 minutes
And subs will add 10 seconds each.
That way we can watch the timer zero together.
There's no fucking way that you guys are going to just don't fuck away guys.
It's 10 seconds.
That's not going to happen.
It's not going to happen.
It's not going to happen guys.
I'll do the speaks one at the time right there. We literally have I said I was gonna like wait for an hour and then we go we'll do the speech
So
We'll buy I just want to see it hit their own while I'm awake
No, we'll
So I think she likes here. Okay, we'll like make it in one second
Oh, surely I'll be fine guys.
No, I did not want to, guys, they'll be okay.
We didn't make it through the night, so surely that means we'll just watch the timer
and looking, we're simulating the end.
I'm Boba.
Then I know sick of the thing, my heart.
Then I go, say sick of the thing, my heart.
This is truly the end.
Okay, you know, I'm somehow starting to realize maybe, maybe I'm going to be here for another 15 minutes for another 15 hours.
Wait a second.
I thought that you were going to think of this house.
You guys can't, you guys will have to, why, why did you give to someone my big clock?
Thank you, glitch my gift for the fuck of this stuff.
We thought at the final day new game plus like at the last of it.
Oh my god.
Oh my god.
Well, we have 15 minutes.
That's a good deal. Back to work. That's okay. Good luck at work. Thank you so
so much. Thank you so much for all of your help. I really appreciate it. Thank you so
so much. I'm all about. Yeah. We will see that we will see the timer
There we go.
Hi, hi, hello.
We're simulating the end of the...
Because I was asleep when the time of hit zero.
Oh, here we are.
And your dance on it reaches zero.
Look at that's right now.
That's dance, guys.
Dance for the last.
Second girl, in my ear.
Second girl, in my ear, in my ear.
Oh my god, if I must, that's crazy.
I've been of a girl to do either salad like you promised.
Ah, no, not yet.
I will find the suitable time.
Um, I'm a boba.
Thank you for that door when she gives a thumbs up and something like so.
God, hello.
Why now, huh?
Why now?
Oh my God.
Guys, if you get to the sum go before the timer ends, I will share it.
What the fuck? Hello?
Guys.
What? I thought you guys were done last night. Hello, that's why it did this.
Why is it happening now? Hello?
What the fuck?
Guys!
I'm a fuck.
I'm like that.
This is the longest routine for it's anywhere.
Oh my God, can we get the nal?
Punky.
Punky nal!
Punky nal!
I'm a mom.
Punky nal!
Punky nal!
Punky nal!
Oh my God, this is the longest routine for my life.
No, I... we will not be here for another. We will not be here.
I'm like, oh, why do you have a five star out of five subs?
What the fuck?
No, no, no, no, no, no. We will play Frank Sinatra.
And Frank Sinatra will bring the end of the samathad.
I'm leaving today.
Oh my god.
I'm leaving today!
See?
Very hard of it.
We are good New York.
I'm gonna wake up in a city that never sleep.
I'm king of the hell.
I'm so happy.
He's all God.
Thank you, Ruth.
I'm glad to give it to you.
No, guys.
Let it happen.
Why is that almost that 500?
Like excuse me.
No, you're like...
Can make it there, I make it.
And the words, I tell you, now you're like, new, new, new, like.
I will warm.
I have a drab with us.
We have 15 minutes left.
I can't!
I can't!
I can't!
I can't!
I can't!
I can't!
I can't!
I can't!
I can't!
I can't!
minutes and you don't get power hour. I believe that will help you guys.
For sure, if I'd sit and land on power, I wouldn't go on.
Good morning, good morning.
after the timer hit zero for all time sake, maybe after the timer ends.
I'll be crazy if I landed on it.
Bumblebee.
The other time her has hit zero.
Time her has hit zero guys.
It's up to you, New York, New York.
It's almost there guys.
Don't cry because you said smile because it happened.
I won't cry anyway.
I won't cry anyway.
I'm okay, I'm okay.
I'm over.
Happy tears, happy tears.
I'm so happy I haven't found.
I'm a bull-bomb.
We, you guys, did it great.
You guys did that absolutely great.
It's great to be here. Thank you so much.
Thank you for joining me guys. I appreciate you all.
You're a great-side.
Oh.
Hmm.
A boba.
You guys are beautiful.
Everyone did their best, and that's all I could ever ask for.
So thank you for keeping me company.
During the whole entire 32 days of being here.
Or 31, I'm not sure in technicalities, but thank you guys.
For being with me also during the holidays.
I'm full, blah.
I can't believe we made it to New Year's, too.
That's what I'm saying.
I didn't expect we could do New Year's.
Thank you for giving me confidence during the holidays.
holidays can be really lonely for some, so thank you so much for providing a place for others.
And thank you for allowing me to spend the holidays with you guys.
Thank you guys so, so much.
You bring so much cheer and whimsy.
I am one stupid.
I went crazy.
I went stupid.
Thank you for always asking for our moms along, get together, true.
I just provided a room for you all to hang out and thank you guys allow me to stay
It's so long.
I did a ball-hop blast my way through the sofa, and it was kind of crazy.
Double.
And...
I'll ball-ba.
Don't forget that.
I won't forget. Thank you.
I get a lift and I see.
I think the ranking now is Raspberry.
Lift and I see and then definitely ball-on-blast up there.
Yeah, Boba.
Okay, now make some water.
Oh god.
So I was telling up there why I didn't know what that was.
The hell.
That's so fucked up.
ah
ah
ah
ah
ah
ah
ah
ah
Thank you guys.
I just can't believe it's ending today.
This is it guys.
This is it.
I can't work anymore.
Now turn me into stone for the next few hundred years.
This is the end.
Another sound right.
Okay.
It's been an honor, guys.
It's been an absolute honor, you won't wake up and see Sarah and Sarah's line anymore.
down. Can't wait to see what you have planned for the minute to be a six. We watched them
bald. Oh, that's something. Thanks so. Thank you. Oh guys, we have six minutes. Thank you for
making the dark days before Christmas and absolute class. Oh, hugs all around, hugs all
around much better okay. Thank you so much for making the number
around number. I appreciate it. Thank you so much.
And then on.
I'm surprised that I actually streamed for a month, but I'm not sure if I can
Like, I didn't think I was, I don't know, I thought it was going to be like only after a while, what do I end up,
and updating this.
I thought after a while I would end, and I wouldn't be here.
Um, I'm all about, yeah, you did an amazing. I just existed. I felt bad. I was like,
oh, what do I do now? Like, I reached all my goals, like, what does that do?
And then it was like, okay, it was a 40k salad.
No, it's gonna get that.
You guys prove me wrong.
You guys got to the salad goal.
I still have to eat a salad.
Oh my god.
Oh my voice is short because I woke up in a little and I'm not too long ago.
If I actually ate something,
then I think I'll be fine.
I didn't have an in yet.
Ah!
33,500, thank you so much!
Chanam!
Or Chanam?
I don't know.
Thank you for the 20 gifts itself.
Thank you.
I just want to say 30, 3.5.
Thank you.
Above all, thank you so so much.
Today, yesterday,
Take me home, to the place of the Lord.
What's Virginia?
No, no, no, no, no.
Take me home, country will.
Oh, take me home to the place, I've a love, what's Virginia, mountain mama, take me home and you will, we home and you will, take me home
Take me home and you are above.
We have five minutes left to listen to the song guys.
Oh my god, we have five minutes to be okay.
I've been in five minutes to go over, okay?
Because now it's an even number, right?
That is evil.
Ah, thank you, Kimi.
Thank you, Kimi goes on. Thank you. Thank you. No more round number.
A five little five for us or less.
This day.
long day without you my friends tell you all about it when I see you again long
where we begin tell you all that we're not seeing
I'm full, bud.
Thank you so so much, by the way, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you.
We're going to see for it one in maybe for the last time.
Now, Boba.
Here we go, guys. This is the last four minutes.
you
This is the last three minutes.
Oh my God.
It's been a long month.
It's been a great, it's been great guys.
Oh, boo-ba-ba-ban, oh-ba-ban.
Oh, Pronto!
We're seeing three minutes again.
Hmm.
I don't think it's a...
I'm full, but...
Yeah.
The time I ended when I was asleep, so...
Here's your chance, guys.
We can experience the end together.
I'm old, though.
I was so sorry I wasn't there the first time.
Two minutes left guys.
Anyone.
Now, both of us.
What's with you son?
Ha ha ha.
We have one minute to go in there.
Oh my god guys, this might be it.
This might be it guys.
This is it, this is my beard.
40 seconds guys.
Guys, that's from saluting.
This has been crazy.
It was in all of their gullies.
Nine.
Okay, I guess not.
Oh my god.
Wait, is that guy dead?
Wait, is that guy dead?
That was the supposed to happen.
That was in in the script.
Wait, guys?
Hello?
Wait, is that guy dead?
This was in the script, guys.
Oh, it's script I ate and I'm like, uh, well, right, right, right, right, right, right.
Um, last minute script change, who changed the script last minute guys?
What the fuck, hello?
What happened?
And there was the screw and screw, and what screw and what, oh my god.
Here's a song.
There's another song, guys.
I have your really tested my DJ skill, wow.
Oh.
Oh.
I watched the beach after, okay.
Okay, good luck.
I work a little bit.
I don't cry, you want to be okay, guys, you want to be okay.
I'll be back before you know it.
Plus there's a plenty of people out there, you know?
I am just what a train stop and you guys are just going to the next station.
They'll be okay.
I'm not leaving forever.
The trains are delayed.
What?
No, they're not.
I can still hear, I'm still here.
What the fuck are you?
Okay, guys.
Here we are.
10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 13, 12, 11, 10, date of 9, 8, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0!
I was here!
I was here!
What a beautiful time this has been shown!
Congratulations to you!
Oh!
We did it together!
I can't believe this has been the end, guys.
This is the end.
Thank you so so much, Abba.
Thank you so so much, everybody.
Thank you, thank you for such an amazing time together.
I never thought I would see 33,531 subs that's insane I'm not on God. Thank you so so much.
Zero now zero zero.
It's done already it's already dead it's already dead.
Come on it's already dead.
Thank you Nanda Kada.
No, the time is not back up. Look at this is zero. Thank you. Nice try, nice try.
Oh, my God. This is it. This is it, guys. This is it.
We will do, we will, we gotta let her go, oh, you know where I'm going, I'm going.
All right guys, isn't speech time, is it finally speech time?
It's the actual speech this time because before I thought, my fucking stupid ass was like,
Oh, hey, like we got five minutes left.
I'll do my speech and then nope, I wasn't so here.
I'll fold on.
All right, here we are guys.
Time for a speech time.
Thank you guys so so much.
Oh God, no, I don't wanna cry.
I don't know, girl, I got a little cry, no.
Oh god, here goes the tears.
I'm crying with this, look.
I'm sorry, I might have wasted Photoshop again.
I don't got it.
So, you know, there we go.
My final words for the sub-abon.
I say this so often, but I feel like it's, you know, been a while since I've said this, because I haven't ended my stream in so long.
32 days of the exact.
I wouldn't be here without you guys.
So thank you.
Carlos, the chopping onions in here.
As tired as I make it, you know, I always push myself to bring you guys the best, you know, the content that you guys deserve.
Um, Dees of a thongs always surprised me.
Um, I never thought we would hit even 25k.
And let alone, like, I don't even think to be honest, I don't even think we were going to hit like, you know, 15k or like, my, like last year's record.
So, um, you guys definitely hit the ball out of the park this time.
And that's even the correct say.
This sounds fun.
Let you take a look into my life with my Lord video.
I'm sorry, the Lord video was you know, heavy, but that's my life.
I wanted to make sure my streams were an escape not just for you, but not just for
me for you all as well. So, you know, there's, it was one more thing that I didn't really,
you know, I haven't really told you guys. I told you guys at the start of the sub-thaw,
Like I'd never crossed my shortcomings before,
like more in my life than when my mom,
my mom's health declined.
And I couldn't tell her that she could like
quit her job and focus on getting better.
And it got even worse when she had to go to the ER
right before I decided to start it.
Um, you know, because of now I made the choices stay at home and try as hard as I can.
With the subatone.
Well, the rest of my family went to go visit my grandma's grave.
Um, that for those of you guys who watch my lawyer video, understand how much my grandma went to me.
Um, I was alone for most of the sub-ethan and this house and the only interaction
um, I had on Christmas was having you guys with me.
So thank you guys so much for keeping me company.
Um, so about the sub-ethan and Christmas and New Years, I didn't even think I'd make it
in the years but you guys probably wrong to that. I hope to make many, many more
memories with you all in 2026. I don't know when I'll start my break because you know
I got a lot of stuff I need to work on but I'll be catching up on work once I
and the stream today. So I was dive right back in. I know a lot of you guys
will want me to take a break but there's a lot of pressure on me. I won't be able
to slow down until I feel like, you know, I'm stable enough to support this
family. I have an elderly retired dad and he'll overworked mom and a little baby
sister that I need to take care of eventually. Thank you guys for
here. Overwhelming support.
Chad, I told you back in September when I left my previous agency. You've seen me
walk, so please keep an eye on me as I show you how I run and as cringe as it
it might sound, I haven't even warmed up yet. So you'll see great things in 2026. So I hope
they'll continue to stick by me and cheer me on as they finally get to show you guys
what I can really do. And hopefully me saying this doesn't jinx anything but chat. We're
All going to be okay.
Pull both.
And with that, my speech is over.
Pull both.
I think we can,
We can, or one further row, we can watch, we can watch,
Can watch it in the video perhaps?
I will send you guys off with the emotional damage perhaps.
Ah, yes, I'm Obama.
Time to send you guys off with emotional damage!
You're going to get me a trouble with the captain again.
How many times do I need to tell you people I don't need to train?
You already seen what I can do to an elder dragon.
And honestly, I was holding back.
Something stronger than an elder dragon shows up.
I'll just obliterate that too.
So I really don't get what the problem is.
Now I'm gonna wash up.
No, teaching.
Listen, the world hasn't seen any form of hope in decades, but that means something to you.
Like you said, you obliterated the elder dragon, but I guess you just don't want to lose our last hope with the being over prepared.
Nevermind, I guess we'll never understand.
You all suffered so much for so many years. You just got so many a year ago. You don't even know what suffering is.
Emma?
Hmm?
Why do all the other chains call for an absolute moment, Dad?
That is because those people are in moments and adds sweet heart.
So are you anymore?
No.
But I love you like your mom would.
Emma, I'm for...
Oh my goodness how much you've grown.
Hello, baby. Nice to meet you.
Mama, can I go play in the backyard?
Oh well, you see, you should really spend some time with me.
It's okay. She should go play.
It's about time I head back anyway.
Okay, thank you.
And you should probably win the recognize me.
I mean, she was only a baby the last time we saw her.
Thank you for taking care of her. I'll be back when I can.
Emma, hi, it's Christy. Can I have some water?
I love you, heart. It's gone.
Baby, what is my grandma crying? Did you hurt my grandma?
Listen, don't you forget that I love you even if we don't see each other.
Okay, I love you, my little girl, okay, I love you too, my love, and why are you still crying?
Listen sweet heart, that lady is your mom, see us here to take you home.
But I am full of listen to me carefully okay, you will be okay, say it for me, I'm okay.
I'm okay.
Sweetheart, take a bite of grandma and you need to get going. It's gonna be a long flight.
Goodbye, I love you.
I love you too, grandma. I'll come and say so.
I'm okay.
Hey, what's this?
Oh, it's a manga I've been reading. Do you like anime too?
You?
That's it!
Why are you bringing your weird cartoons to school anyways?
Go back to the country and keep it there!
I'm okay.
Okay.
Alright, we're done!
Oh my God, she's done!
I bet she's just knocking it for more attention.
I know, she's so faint.
I'm okay.
I'm okay.
Maybe I can make some online friends.
Hello everyone, it's me, Amy.
Where are you talking like that?
Pepper.
You just have to touch it.
I need to see you, Amy.
I'm okay.
Stop scorning!
What the hell, baby?
Shut up!
She'll be with you.
Shut up, baby!
I don't want this to let me!
Shut up!
Why did you hit me?
Come on, baby.
There's a couple of times.
Wait.
I don't want to go outside anymore.
I'm okay.
I'm sorry, but we don't know what is wrong with you.
I'll live that something as your test results show you a post-hard attack.
I'm very sorry to tell you this, but there's a good chance I will show in your lifespan.
I'm okay.
Hi Chad, hope you all had a good day!
Oh yeah, oh hi, let's see you again!
I got a big sandwich with you!
Things have been pretty rough lately.
I'm pretty lonely and a bunch of stuff just hasn't been going on for me.
But I'm okay.
Thank you everyone for stopping by.
See you guys tomorrow!
Bye bye!
Okay.
Let's go in.
I hope else to answer about my...
Can't just say I'm dying from no one can help me.
I'm lonely and depressed.
Someone wants to hear that.
What?
I'm okay.
I'm on.
Huh?
What happened?
Oh, you see, you're flying over tomorrow.
Okay, well take your vending system while you're gone.
I don't care.
I think we're going to go see if you're like that.
I wanted to show you how much I could...
But in just a few more ways...
I...I...
I wanted you to tell me I'm your cat...
But in just how you...
I won't...
This girl is an unusual subject.
She's cursed but also possess the blessing. That's odd. Usually humans are only born with one or the other.
The curse is unremovable. The blessing is strong. Yes, the curse of misfortune and the blessing of the termination.
That just sounds like she's doomed to suffer until the very end. Indeed, but she entrests me. I can't cure her, but I may be able to help.
I like you, I like you, I like you.
That's all I've ever wanted.
Hey, I know I'll never know you've gone to, but I promise, as long as I am around, you will all be under my protection.
How can you be so confident being alone is painful so I'll always protect everyone no matter what
How do you know you can protect everyone?
Come on
Now let's go with some anime and place the lady in
Okay.
All right.
Now leave that in high.
And what you get in trouble with a captain.
Check me.
Ha ha ha ha.
Oh, hey, wait up.
You're going to get me in trouble again.
Ah.
Thank you.
you
you
you
you
you
you
you
It's not a goodbye chat, it's a see you later, take care of everyone, see you next time.