Household Tales by Jacob Grimm (classic books for 12 year olds .txt) ๐
Description
When it was first published in 1812 as Childrenโs and Household Tales, this collection of Germanic fairy tales contained eighty-six stories and was criticized because, despite the name, it wasnโt particularly well-suited to children. Over the next forty-five years, stories were added, removed, and modified until the final seventh edition was published in 1857, containing 210 fairy tales. Today, the book is commonly referred to as Grimmsโ Fairy Tales.
These fairy tales include well-known characters such as Cinderella, Snow White, and Rapunzel, as well as many more that never became quite as popular. Over the years, these stories have been translated, retold, and adapted to many different media.
This is a collection of Margaret Huntโs 1884 English translation, originally published in two volumes.
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- Author: Jacob Grimm
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โOh, no,โ said he, โI will not do that.โ So they gave him the boots as well. And now when he had got all these things, he thought of nothing but his wife and his child, and said as though to himself, โOh, if I were but on the Golden Mountain,โ and at the same moment he vanished from the sight of the giants, and thus their inheritance was divided. When he was near his palace, he heard sounds of joy, and fiddles, and flutes, and the people told him that his wife was celebrating her wedding with another. Then he fell into a rage, and said, โFalse woman, she betrayed and deserted me whilst I was asleep!โ So he put on his cloak, and unseen by all went into the palace. When he entered the dining-hall a great table was spread with delicious food, and the guests were eating and drinking, and laughing, and jesting. She sat on a royal seat in the midst of them in splendid apparel, with a crown on her head. He placed himself behind her, and no one saw him. When she put a piece of meat on a plate for herself, he took it away and ate it, and when she poured out a glass of wine for herself, he took it away and drank it. She was always helping herself to something, and yet she never got anything, for plate and glass disappeared immediately. Then dismayed and ashamed, she arose and went to her chamber and wept, but he followed her there.
She said, โHas the devil power over me, or did my deliverer never come?โ
Then he struck her in the face, and said, โDid thy deliverer never come? It is he who has thee in his power, thou traitor. Have I deserved this from thee?โ Then he made himself visible, went into the hall, and cried, โThe wedding is at an end, the true King has returned.โ The kings, princes, and councillors who were assembled there, ridiculed and mocked him, but he did not trouble to answer them, and said, โWill you go away, or not?โ On this they tried to seize him and pressed upon him, but he drew his sword and said, โAll heads off but mine,โ and all the heads rolled on the ground, and he alone was master, and once more King of the Golden Mountain.
The RavenThere was once upon a time a Queen who had a little daughter who was still so young that she had to be carried. One day the child was naughty, and the mother might say what she liked, but the child would not be quiet. Then she became impatient, and as the ravens were flying about the palace, she opened the window and said, โI wish you were a raven and would fly away, and then I should have some rest.โ Scarcely had she spoken the words, before the child was changed into a raven, and flew from her arms out of the window. It flew into a dark forest, and stayed in it a long time, and the parents heard nothing of their child.
Then one day a man was on his way through this forest and heard the raven crying, and followed the voice, and when he came nearer, the bird said, โI am a kingโs daughter by birth, and am bewitched, but thou canst set me free.โ
โWhat am I to do,โ asked he.
She said, โGo further into the forest, and thou wilt find a house, wherein sits an aged woman, who will offer thee meat and drink, but you must accept nothing, for if you eatest and drinkest anything, thou wilt fall into a sleep, and then thou wilt not be able to deliver me. In the garden behind the house there is a great heap of tan, and on this thou shalt stand and wait for me. For three days I will come every afternoon at two oโclock in a carriage. On the first day four white horses will be harnessed to it, then four chestnut horses, and lastly four black ones; but if thou art not awake, but sleeping, I shall not be set free.โ The man promised to do everything that she desired, but the raven said, โAlas, I know already that thou wilt not deliver me; thou wilt accept something from the woman.โ Then the man once more promised that he would certainly not touch anything either to eat or to drink.
But when he entered the house the old woman came to him and said, โPoor man, how faint you are; come and refresh yourself; eat and drink.โ
โNo,โ said the man, โI will not eat or drink.โ
She, however, let him have no peace, and said, โIf you will not eat, take one drink out of the glass; one is nothing.โ Then he let himself be persuaded, and drank. Shortly before two oโclock in the afternoon he went into the garden to the tan heap to wait for the raven. As he was standing there, his weariness all at once became so great that he could not struggle against it, and lay down for a short time, but he was determined not to go to sleep. Hardly, however, had he lain down, than his eyes closed of their own accord, and he fell asleep and slept so soundly that nothing in the world could have aroused him.
At two oโclock the raven came driving up with four white horses, but she was already in deep grief and said, โI know he is asleep.โ And
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