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.
Read free book ยซHousehold Tales by Jacob Grimm (classic books for 12 year olds .txt) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Jacob Grimm
Read book online ยซHousehold Tales by Jacob Grimm (classic books for 12 year olds .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Jacob Grimm
โAlas, my son,โ said the father, โit still does not please me, a thief is still a thief, I tell thee it will end badly.โ He took him to his mother, and when she heard that was her son, she wept for joy, but when he told her that he had become a master-thief, two streams flowed down over her face.
At length she said, โEven if he has become a thief, he is still my son, and my eyes have beheld him once more.โ They sat down to table, and once again he ate with his parents the wretched food which he had not eaten for so long.
The father said, โIf our Lord, the count up there in the castle, learns who thou art, and what trade thou followest, he will not take thee in his arms and cradle thee in them as he did when he held thee at the font, but will cause thee to swing from a halter.โ
โBe easy, father, he will do me no harm, for I understand my trade. I will go to him myself this very day.โ When evening drew near, the master-thief seated himself in his carriage, and drove to the castle. The count received him civilly, for he took him for a distinguished man. When, however, the stranger made himself known, the count turned pale and was quite silent for some time.
At length he said, โThou art my godson, and on that account mercy shall take the place of justice, and I will deal leniently with thee. Since thou pridest thyself on being a master-thief, I will put thy art to the proof, but if thou dost not stand the test, thou must marry the rope-makerโs daughter, and the croaking of the raven must be thy music on the occasion.โ
โLord count,โ answered the master-thief, โThink of three things, as difficult as you like, and if I do not perform your tasks, do with me what you will.โ
The count reflected for some minutes, and then said, โWell, then, in the first place, thou shalt steal the horse I keep for my own riding, out of the stable; in the next, thou shalt steal the sheet from beneath the bodies of my wife and myself when we are asleep, without our observing it, and the wedding-ring of my wife as well; thirdly and lastly, thou shalt steal away out of the church, the parson and clerk. Mark what I am saying, for thy life depends on it.โ
The master-thief went to the nearest town; there he bought the clothes of an old peasant woman, and put them on. Then he stained his face brown, and painted wrinkles on it as well, so that no one could have recognized him. Then he filled a small cask with old Hungary wine in which was mixed a powerful sleeping-drink. He put the cask in a basket, which he took on his back, and walked with slow and tottering steps to the countโs castle. It was already dark when he arrived. He sat down on a stone in the courtyard and began to cough, like an asthmatic old woman, and to rub his hands as if he were cold. In front of the door of the stable some soldiers were lying round a fire; one of them observed the woman, and called out to her, โCome nearer, old mother, and warm thyself beside us. After all, thou hast no bed for the night, and must take one where thou canst find it.โ
The old woman tottered up to them, begged them to lift the basket from her back, and sat down beside them at the fire. โWhat hast thou got in thy little cask, old lady?โ asked one.
โA good mouthful of wine,โ she answered. โI live by trade, for money and fair words I am quite ready to let you have a glass.โ
โLet us have it here, then,โ said the soldier, and when he had tasted one glass he said, โWhen wine is good, I like another glass,โ and had another poured out for himself, and the rest followed his example.
โHallo, comrades,โ cried one of them to those who were in the stable, โhere is an old goody who has wine that is as old as herself; take a draught, it will warm your stomachs far better than our fire.โ The old woman carried her cask into the stable. One of the soldiers had seated himself on the saddled riding-horse, another held its bridle in his hand, a third had laid hold of its tail. She poured out as much as they wanted until the spring ran dry. It was not long before the bridle fell from the hand of the one, and he fell down and began to snore, the other left hold of the tail, lay down and snored still louder. The one who was sitting in the saddle, did remain sitting, but bent his head almost down to the horseโs neck, and slept and blew with his mouth like the bellows of a forge. The soldiers outside had already been asleep for a long time, and were lying on the ground motionless, as if dead. When the master-thief saw that he had succeeded, he gave the first a rope in his hand instead of the bridle, and the other who had been holding the tail, a wisp of straw, but what was he to do with the one who was sitting on the horseโs back? He did not want to throw him down, for he might have awakened and have uttered a cry. He had a good idea, he unbuckled the girths of the saddle, tied a couple of ropes which were hanging to a
Comments (0)