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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โBut,โ answered Trina, โnot before we have a child to take care of them! Am I to worry myself with the little geese, and spend all my strength on them to no purpose.โ
โDost thou think,โ said Harry, โthat the youngster will look after geese? Nowadays children no longer obey, they do according to their own fancy, because they consider themselves cleverer than their parents, just like that lad who was sent to seek the cow and chased three blackbirds.โ
โOh,โ replied Trina, โthis one shall fare badly if he does not do what I say! I will take a stick and belabour his skin for him with more blows than I can count. Look, Harry,โ cried she in her zeal, and seized the stick which she had to drive the mice away with, โLook, this is the way I will fall on him!โ She reached her arm out to strike, but unhappily hit the honey-pitcher above the bed. The pitcher struck against the wall and fell down in fragments, and the fine honey streamed down on the ground.
โThere lie the goose and the young gosling,โ said Harry, โand want no looking after. But it is lucky that the pitcher did not fall on my head. We have all reason to be satisfied with our lot.โ And then as he saw that there was still some honey in one of the fragments he stretched out his hand for it, and said quite gaily, โThe remains, my wife, we will still eat with a relish, and we will rest a little after the fright we have had. What matters if we do get up a little later the day is always long enough.โ
โYes,โ answered Trina, โwe shall always get to the end of it at the proper time. Dost thou know that the snail was once asked to a wedding and set out to go, but arrived at the christening. In front of the house it fell over the fence, and said, โSpeed does no good.โโโ
The GriffinThere was once upon a time a King, but where he reigned and what he was called, I do not know. He had no son, but an only daughter who had always been ill, and no doctor had been able to cure her. Then it was foretold to the King that his daughter should eat herself well with an apple. So he ordered it to be proclaimed throughout the whole of his kingdom, that whosoever brought his daughter an apple with which she could eat herself well, should have her to wife, and be King. This became known to a peasant who had three sons, and he said to the eldest, โGo out into the garden and take a basketful of those beautiful apples with the red cheeks and carry them to the court; perhaps the Kingโs daughter will be able to eat herself well with them, and then thou wilt marry her and be King.โ The lad did so, and set out.
When he had gone a short way he met a little iron man who asked him what he had there in the basket, to which replied Uele, for so was he named, โFrogsโ legs.โ
On this the little man said, โWell, so shall it be, and remain,โ and went away. At length Uele arrived at the palace, and made it known that he had brought apples which would cure the Kingโs daughter if she ate them. This delighted the King hugely, and he caused Uele to be brought before him; but, alas! when he opened the basket, instead of having apples in it he had frogsโ legs which were still kicking about. On this the King grew angry, and had him driven out of the house. When he got home he told his father how it had fared with him. Then the father sent the next son, who was called Seame, but all went with him just as it had gone with Uele. He also met the little iron man, who asked what he had there in the basket.
Seame said, โHogsโ bristles,โ and the iron man said, โwell, so shall it be, and remain.โ When Seame got to the Kingโs palace and said he brought apples with which the Kingโs daughter might eat herself well, they did not want to let him go in, and said that one fellow had already been there, and had treated them as if they were fools. Seame, however, maintained that he certainly had the apples, and that they ought to let him go in. At length they believed him, and led him to the King. But when he uncovered the basket, he had but hogsโ bristles. This enraged the King most terribly, so he caused Seame to be whipped out of the house. When he got home he related all that had befallen him, then the youngest boy, whose name was Hans, but who was always called Stupid Hans, came and asked his father if he might go with some apples.
โOh!โ said the father, โthou wouldst be just the right fellow for such a thing! If the clever ones canโt manage it, what canst thou do?โ
The boy, however, did not believe him, and said, โIndeed, father, I wish to go.โ
โJust get away, thou stupid fellow, thou must wait till thou art wiser,โ said the father to that, and turned his back.
Hans, however, pulled at the back of his smock-frock and said, โIndeed, father, I wish to go.โ
โWell, then, so far as I am concerned thou mayst go, but thou wilt soon come home again!โ replied the old man in a spiteful voice. The boy, however, was tremendously delighted and jumped for joy. โWell, act like a fool! thou growest more stupid every day!โ said the father again. Hans, however, did not care about
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