70 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
70 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
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THE UGLY DUCKLING
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Once upon a time . . . down on an old farm, lived a duck family, and Mother
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Duck had been sitting on a clutch of new eggs. One nice morning, the eggs
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hatched and out popped six chirpy ducklings. But one egg was bigger than the
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rest, and it didn't hatch. Mother Duck couldn't recall laying that seventh
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egg. How did it get there? TOCK! TOCK! The little prisoner was pecking inside
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his shell.
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"Did I count the eggs wrongly?" Mother Duck wondered. But before she had
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time to think about it, the last egg finally hatched. A strange looking
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duckling with grey feathers that should have been yellow gazed at a worried
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mother. The ducklings grew quickly, but Mother Duck had a secret worry.
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"I can't understand how this ugly duckling can be one of mine!" she said to
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herself, shaking her head as she looked at her lastborn. Well, the grey
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duckling certainly wasn't pretty, and since he ate far more than his brothers,
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he was outgrowing them. As the days went by, the poor ugly duckling became
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more and more unhappy. His brothers didn't want to play with him, he was so
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clumsy, and all the farmyard folks simply laughed at him. He felt sad and
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lonely, while Mother Duck did her best to console him.
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"Poor little ugly duckling!" she would say. "Why are you so different from
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the others?" And the ug}y duckling felt worse than ever. He secretly wept at
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night. He felt nobody wanted him.
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"Nobody loves me, they all tease me! Why am I different from my brothers?"
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Then one day, at sunrise, he ran away from the farmyard. He stopped at a
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pond and began to question all the other birds. "Do you know of any ducklings
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with grey feathers like mine?" But everyone shook their heads in scorn.
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"We don't know anyone as ugly as you." The ugly duckling did not lose
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heart, however, and kept on making enquiries. He went to another pond, where a
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palr of large geese gave him the same answer to his question. What's more,
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they warned him: "Don't stay here! Go away! It's dangerous. There are men with
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guns around here!" The duckling was sorry he had ever left the farmyard.
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Then one day, his travels took him near an old countrywoman's cottage.
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Thinking he was a stray goose, she caught him.
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"I'll put this in a hutch. I hope it's a female and lays plenty of eggs!"
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said the old woman, whose eyesight was poor. But the ugly duckling laid not a
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single egg. The hen kept frightening him:
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"Just wait! If you don't lay eggs, the old woman will wring your neck and
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pop you into the pot!" And the cat chipped in: "Hee! Hee! I hope the woman
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cooks you, then I can gnaw at your bones!" The poor ugly duckling was so
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scared that he lost his appetite, though the old woman kept stuffing him with
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food and grumbllng: "If you won't lay eggs, at least hurry up and get plump!"
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"Oh, dear me!" moaned the now terrified duckling. "I'll die of fright first!
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And I did so hope someone would love me!"
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Then one night, finding the hutch door ajar, he escaped. Once again he was
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all alone. He fled as far away as he could, and at dawn, he found himself in a
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thick bed of reeds. "If nobody wants me, I'll hid here forever." There was
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plenty a food, and the duckling began to feel a little happier, though he was
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lonely. One day at sunrise, he saw a flighth of beatiful birds wing overhead.
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White, with long slender necks, yellow beaks and large wings, they were
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migrating south.
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"If only I could look like them, just for a day!" said the duckling,
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admiringly. Winter came and the water in the reed bed froze. The poor duckling
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left home to seek food in the snow. He dropped exhausted to the ground, but a
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farmer found him and put him in his big jacket pocket.
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"I'll take him home to my children. They'll look after him. Poor thing,
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he's frozen!" The duckling was showered with kindly care at the farmer's
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house. In this way, the ugly duckling was able to survive the bitterly cold
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winter.
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However, by springtime, he had grown so big that the farmer decided: "I'll
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set him free by the pond!" That was when the duckling saw himself mirrored in
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tne water.
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"Goodness! How I've changed! I hardly recognize myself!" The flight of
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swans winged north again and glided on to the pond. When the duckling saw
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them, he realized he was one of their kind, and soon made friends.
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"We're swans like you!" they said, warmly. "Where have you been hiding?"
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"It's a long story," replied the young swan, still astounded. Now, he swam
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majestically with his fellow swans. One day, he heard children on the river
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bank exclaim: "Look at that young swan! He's the finest of them all!"
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And he almost burst with happiness.
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