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
Read book online ยซHousehold Tales by Jacob Grimm (classic books for 12 year olds .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Jacob Grimm
Late at night the woodcutter came home, and reproached his wife for leaving him to hunger all day. โIt is not my fault,โ she replied, โthe girl went out with your dinner, and must have lost herself, but she is sure to come back tomorrow.โ The woodcutter, however, arose before dawn to go into the forest, and requested that the second daughter should take him his dinner that day.
โI will take a bag with lentils,โ said he; โthe seeds are larger than millet, the girl will see them better, and canโt lose her way.โ At dinnertime, therefore, the girl took out the food, but the lentils had disappeared. The birds of the forest had picked them up as they had done the day before, and had left none. The girl wandered about in the forest until night, and then she too reached the house of the old man, was told to go in, and begged for food and a bed. The man with the white beard again asked the animals,
โPretty little hen,
Pretty little cock,
And pretty brindled cow,
What say ye to that?โ
The animals again replied โDuks,โ and everything happened just as it had happened the day before. The girl cooked a good meal, ate and drank with the old man, and did not concern herself about the animals, and when she inquired about her bed they answered,
โThou hast eaten with him,
Thou hast drunk with him,
Thou hast had no thought for us,
To find out for thyself where thou canst pass the night.โ
When she was asleep the old man came, looked at her, shook his head, and let her down into the cellar.
On the third morning the woodcutter said to his wife, โSend our youngest child out with my dinner today, she has always been good and obedient, and will stay in the right path, and not run about after every wild humblebee, as her sisters did.โ
The mother did not want to do it, and said, โAm I to lose my dearest child, as well?โ
โHave no fear,โ he replied, โthe girl will not go astray; she is too prudent and sensible; besides I will take some peas with me, and strew them about. They are still larger than lentils, and will show her the way.โ But when the girl went out with her basket on her arm, the wood-pigeons had already got all the peas in their crops, and she did not know which way she was to turn. She was full of sorrow and never ceased to think how hungry her father would be, and how her good mother would grieve, if she did not go home. At length when it grew dark, she saw the light and came to the house in the forest. She begged quite prettily to be allowed to spend the night there, and the man with the white beard once more asked his animals,
โPretty little hen,
Pretty little cock,
And beautiful brindled cow,
What say ye to that?โ
โDuks,โ said they.
Then the girl went to the stove where the animals were lying, and petted the cock and hen, and stroked their smooth feathers with her hand, and caressed the brindled cow between her horns, and when, in obedience to the old manโs orders, she had made ready some good soup, and the bowl was placed upon the table, she said, โAm I to eat as much as I want, and the good animals to have nothing? Outside is food in plenty, I will look after them first.โ So she went and brought some barley and stewed it for the cock and hen, and a whole armful of sweet-smelling hay for the cow. โI hope you will like it, dear animals,โ said she, โand you shall have a refreshing draught in case you are thirsty.โ Then she fetched in a bucketful of water, and the cock and hen jumped on to the edge of it and dipped their beaks in, and then held up their heads as the birds do when they drink, and the brindled cow also took a hearty draught. When the animals were fed, the girl seated herself at the table by the old man, and ate what he had left. It was not long before the cock and the hen began to thrust their heads beneath their wings, and the eyes of the cow likewise began to blink. Then said the girl, โOught we not to go to bed?โ
โPretty little hen,
Pretty little cock,
And pretty brindled cow,
What say ye to that?โ
The animals answered โDuks,โ
โThou hast eaten with us,
Thou hast drunk with us,
Thou hast had kind thought for all of us,
We wish thee good night.โ
Then the maiden went upstairs, shook the featherbeds, and laid clean sheets on them, and when she had done it the old man came and lay down on one of the beds, and his white beard reached down to his feet. The girl lay down on the other, said her prayers, and fell asleep.
She slept quietly till midnight, and then there was such a noise in the house that she awoke. There was a sound of cracking and splitting in every corner, and the doors sprang open, and beat against the walls. The beams groaned as if they were being torn out of their joints, it seemed as if the staircase were falling down, and at length there was a crash as if the entire roof had fallen in. As, however, all grew quiet once more, and the girl was not hurt, she stayed quietly lying where she was, and fell asleep again. But when she woke up in the morning with
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