251 lines
		
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			251 lines
		
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
| A rich man's wife became sick, and when she felt that her end was drawing near,
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| she called her only daughter to her bedside and said, "Dear child, remain pious
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| and good, and then our dear God will always protect you, and I will look down
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| on you from heaven and be near you." With this she closed her eyes and died.
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| 
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| The girl went out to her mother's grave every day and wept, and she remained
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| pious and good. When winter came the snow spread a white cloth over the grave,
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| and when the spring sun had removed it again, the man took himself another
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| wife.
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| 
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| This wife brought two daughters into the house with her. They were beautiful,
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| with fair faces, but evil and dark hearts. Times soon grew very bad for the
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| poor stepchild.
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| 
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| "Why should that stupid goose sit in the parlor with us?" they said. "If she
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| wants to eat bread, then she will have to earn it. Out with this kitchen maid!"
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| 
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| They took her beautiful clothes away from her, dressed her in an old gray
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| smock, and gave her wooden shoes. "Just look at the proud princess! How decked
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| out she is!" they shouted and laughed as they led her into the kitchen.
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| 
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| There she had to do hard work from morning until evening, get up before
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| daybreak, carry water, make the fires, cook, and wash. Besides this, the
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| sisters did everything imaginable to hurt her. They made fun of her, scattered
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| peas and lentils into the ashes for her, so that she had to sit and pick them
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| out again. In the evening when she had worked herself weary, there was no bed
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| for her. Instead she had to sleep by the hearth in the ashes. And because she
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| always looked dusty and dirty, they called her Cinderella.
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| 
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| One day it happened that the father was going to the fair, and he asked his two
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| stepdaughters what he should bring back for them.
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| 
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| "Beautiful dresses," said the one.
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| 
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| "Pearls and jewels," said the other.
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| 
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| "And you, Cinderella," he said, "what do you want?"
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| 
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| "Father, break off for me the first twig that brushes against your hat on your
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| way home."
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| 
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| So he bought beautiful dresses, pearls, and jewels for his two stepdaughters.
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| On his way home, as he was riding through a green thicket, a hazel twig brushed
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| against him and knocked off his hat. Then he broke off the twig and took it
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| with him. Arriving home, he gave his stepdaughters the things that they had
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| asked for, and he gave Cinderella the twig from the hazel bush.
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| 
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| Cinderella thanked him, went to her mother's grave, and planted the branch on
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| it, and she wept so much that her tears fell upon it and watered it. It grew
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| and became a beautiful tree.
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| 
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| Cinderella went to this tree three times every day, and beneath it she wept and
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| prayed. A white bird came to the tree every time, and whenever she expressed a
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| wish, the bird would throw down to her what she had wished for.
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| 
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| Now it happened that the king proclaimed a festival that was to last three
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| days. All the beautiful young girls in the land were invited, so that his son
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| could select a bride for himself. When the two stepsisters heard that they too
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| had been invited, they were in high spirits.
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| 
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| They called Cinderella, saying, "Comb our hair for us. Brush our shoes and
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| fasten our buckles. We are going to the festival at the king's castle."
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| 
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| Cinderella obeyed, but wept, because she too would have liked to go to the
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| dance with them. She begged her stepmother to allow her to go.
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| 
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| "You, Cinderella?" she said. "You, all covered with dust and dirt, and you want
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| to go to the festival?. You have neither clothes nor shoes, and yet you want to
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| dance!"
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| 
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| However, because Cinderella kept asking, the stepmother finally said, "I have
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| scattered a bowl of lentils into the ashes for you. If you can pick them out
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| again in two hours, then you may go with us."
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| 
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| The girl went through the back door into the garden, and called out, "You tame
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| pigeons, you turtledoves, and all you birds beneath the sky, come and help me
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| to gather:
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| 
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| The good ones go into the pot, The bad ones go into your crop." Two white
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| pigeons came in through the kitchen window, and then the turtledoves, and
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| finally all the birds beneath the sky came whirring and swarming in, and lit
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| around the ashes. The pigeons nodded their heads and began to pick, pick, pick,
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| pick. And the others also began to pick, pick, pick, pick. They gathered all
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| the good grains into the bowl. Hardly one hour had passed before they were
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| finished, and they all flew out again.  The girl took the bowl to her
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| stepmother, and was happy, thinking that now she would be allowed to go to the
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| festival with them.
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| 
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| But the stepmother said, "No, Cinderella, you have no clothes, and you don't
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| know how to dance. Everyone would only laugh at you."
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| 
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| Cinderella began to cry, and then the stepmother said, "You may go if you are
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| able to pick two bowls of lentils out of the ashes for me in one hour,"
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| thinking to herself, "She will never be able to do that."
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| 
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| The girl went through the back door into the garden, and called out, "You tame
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| pigeons, you turtledoves, and all you birds beneath the sky, come and help me
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| to gather:
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| 
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| The good ones go into the pot, The bad ones go into your crop." Two white
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| pigeons came in through the kitchen window, and then the turtledoves, and
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| finally all the birds beneath the sky came whirring and swarming in, and lit
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| around the ashes. The pigeons nodded their heads and began to pick, pick, pick,
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| pick. And the others also began to pick, pick, pick, pick. They gathered all
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| the good grains into the bowls. Before a half hour had passed they were
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| finished, and they all flew out again.  The girl took the bowls to her
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| stepmother, and was happy, thinking that now she would be allowed to go to the
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| festival with them.
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| 
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| But the stepmother said, "It's no use. You are not coming with us, for you have
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| no clothes, and you don't know how to dance. We would be ashamed of you." With
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| this she turned her back on Cinderella, and hurried away with her two proud
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| daughters.
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| 
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| Now that no one else was at home, Cinderella went to her mother's grave beneath
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| the hazel tree, and cried out:
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| 
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| Shake and quiver, little tree, Throw gold and silver down to me.  Then the bird
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| threw a gold and silver dress down to her, and slippers embroidered with silk
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| and silver. She quickly put on the dress and went to the festival.  Her
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| stepsisters and her stepmother did not recognize her. They thought she must be
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| a foreign princess, for she looked so beautiful in the golden dress. They never
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| once thought it was Cinderella, for they thought that she was sitting at home
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| in the dirt, looking for lentils in the ashes.
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| 
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| The prince approached her, took her by the hand, and danced with her.
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| Furthermore, he would dance with no one else. He never let go of her hand, and
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| whenever anyone else came and asked her to dance, he would say, "She is my
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| dance partner."
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| 
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| She danced until evening, and then she wanted to go home. But the prince said,
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| "I will go along and escort you," for he wanted to see to whom the beautiful
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| girl belonged. However, she eluded him and jumped into the pigeon coop. The
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| prince waited until her father came, and then he told him that the unknown girl
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| had jumped into the pigeon coop.
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| 
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| The old man thought, "Could it be Cinderella?"
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| 
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| He had them bring him an ax and a pick so that he could break the pigeon coop
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| apart, but no one was inside. When they got home Cinderella was lying in the
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| ashes, dressed in her dirty clothes. A dim little oil-lamp was burning in the
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| fireplace. Cinderella had quickly jumped down from the back of the pigeon coop
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| and had run to the hazel tree. There she had taken off her beautiful clothes
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| and laid them on the grave, and the bird had taken them away again. Then,
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| dressed in her gray smock, she had returned to the ashes in the kitchen.
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| 
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| The next day when the festival began anew, and her parents and her stepsisters
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| had gone again, Cinderella went to the hazel tree and said:
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| 
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| Shake and quiver, little tree, Throw gold and silver down to me.  Then the bird
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| threw down an even more magnificent dress than on the preceding day. When
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| Cinderella appeared at the festival in this dress, everyone was astonished at
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| her beauty. The prince had waited until she came, then immediately took her by
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| the hand, and danced only with her. When others came and asked her to dance
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| with them, he said, "She is my dance partner." When evening came she wanted to
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| leave, and the prince followed her, wanting to see into which house she went.
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| But she ran away from him and into the garden behind the house. A beautiful
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| tall tree stood there, on which hung the most magnificent pears. She climbed as
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| nimbly as a squirrel into the branches, and the prince did not know where she
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| had gone. He waited until her father came, then said to him, "The unknown girl
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| has eluded me, and I believe she has climbed up the pear tree.
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| 
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| The father thought, "Could it be Cinderella?" He had an ax brought to him and
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| cut down the tree, but no one was in it. When they came to the kitchen,
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| Cinderella was lying there in the ashes as usual, for she had jumped down from
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| the other side of the tree, had taken the beautiful dress back to the bird in
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| the hazel tree, and had put on her gray smock.
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| 
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| On the third day, when her parents and sisters had gone away, Cinderella went
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| again to her mother's grave and said to the tree:
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| 
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| Shake and quiver, little tree, Throw gold and silver down to me.  This time the
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| bird threw down to her a dress that was more splendid and magnificent than any
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| she had yet had, and the slippers were of pure gold. When she arrived at the
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| festival in this dress, everyone was so astonished that they did not know what
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| to say. The prince danced only with her, and whenever anyone else asked her to
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| dance, he would say, "She is my dance partner." When evening came Cinderella
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| wanted to leave, and the prince tried to escort her, but she ran away from him
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| so quickly that he could not follow her. The prince, however, had set a trap.
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| He had had the entire stairway smeared with pitch. When she ran down the
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| stairs, her left slipper stuck in the pitch. The prince picked it up. It was
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| small and dainty, and of pure gold.
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| 
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| The next morning, he went with it to the man, and said to him, "No one shall be
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| my wife except for the one whose foot fits this golden shoe."
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| 
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| The two sisters were happy to hear this, for they had pretty feet. With her
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| mother standing by, the older one took the shoe into her bedroom to try it on.
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| She could not get her big toe into it, for the shoe was too small for her. Then
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| her mother gave her a knife and said, "Cut off your toe. When you are queen you
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| will no longer have to go on foot."
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| 
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| The girl cut off her toe, forced her foot into the shoe, swallowed the pain,
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| and went out to the prince. He took her on his horse as his bride and rode away
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| with her. However, they had to ride past the grave, and there, on the hazel
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| tree, sat the two pigeons, crying out:
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| 
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| Rook di goo, rook di goo!  There's blood in the shoe.  The shoe is too tight,
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| This bride is not right!  Then he looked at her foot and saw how the blood was
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| running from it. He turned his horse around and took the false bride home
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| again, saying that she was not the right one, and that the other sister should
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| try on the shoe. She went into her bedroom, and got her toes into the shoe all
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| right, but her heel was too large.  Then her mother gave her a knife, and said,
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| "Cut a piece off your heel. When you are queen you will no longer have to go on
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| foot."
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| 
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| The girl cut a piece off her heel, forced her foot into the shoe, swallowed the
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| pain, and went out to the prince. He took her on his horse as his bride and
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| rode away with her. When they passed the hazel tree, the two pigeons were
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| sitting in it, and they cried out:
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| 
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| Rook di goo, rook di goo!  There's blood in the shoe.  The shoe is too tight,
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| This bride is not right!  He looked down at her foot and saw how the blood was
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| running out of her shoe, and how it had stained her white stocking all red.
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| Then he turned his horse around and took the false bride home again.  "This is
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| not the right one, either," he said. "Don't you have another daughter?"
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| 
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| "No," said the man. "There is only a deformed little Cinderella from my first
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| wife, but she cannot possibly be the bride."
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| 
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| The prince told him to send her to him, but the mother answered, "Oh, no, she
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| is much too dirty. She cannot be seen."
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| 
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| But the prince insisted on it, and they had to call Cinderella. She first
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| washed her hands and face clean, and then went and bowed down before the
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| prince, who gave her the golden shoe. She sat down on a stool, pulled her foot
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| out of the heavy wooden shoe, and put it into the slipper, and it fitted her
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| perfectly.
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| 
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| When she stood up the prince looked into her face, and he recognized the
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| beautiful girl who had danced with him. He cried out, "She is my true bride."
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| 
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| The stepmother and the two sisters were horrified and turned pale with anger.
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| The prince, however, took Cinderella onto his horse and rode away with her. As
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| they passed by the hazel tree, the two white pigeons cried out:
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| 
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| Rook di goo, rook di goo!  No blood's in the shoe.  The shoe's not too tight,
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| This bride is right!  After they had cried this out, they both flew down and
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| lit on Cinderella's shoulders, one on the right, the other on the left, and
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| remained sitting there.  When the wedding with the prince was to be held, the
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| two false sisters came, wanting to gain favor with Cinderella and to share her
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| good fortune. When the bridal couple walked into the church, the older sister
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| walked on their right side and the younger on their left side, and the pigeons
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| pecked out one eye from each of them. Afterwards, as they came out of the
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| church, the older one was on the left side, and the younger one on the right
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| side, and then the pigeons pecked out the other eye from each of them. And
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| thus, for their wickedness and falsehood, they were punished with blindness as
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| long as they lived.
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| 
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| 
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