107 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
107 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
HANSEL AND GRETEL
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Once upon a time . . . a very poor woodcutter lived in a tiny cottage in
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the forest with his two children, Hansel and Gretel. His second wife often
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ill-treated the children and was forever nagging the woodcutter.
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"There is not enough food in the house for us all. There are too many
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mouths to feed! We must get rid of the two brats," she declared. And she kept
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on trying to persuade her husband to abandon his children in the forest.
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"Take them miles from home, so far that they can never find their way back!
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Maybe someone will find them and give them a home." The downcast woodcutter
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didn't know what to do. Hansel who, one evening, had overheard his parents'
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conversation, comforted Gretel. =--=
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"Don't worry! If they do leave us in the forest, we'll find the way home,"
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he said. And slipping out of the house he filled his pockets with little white
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pebbles, then went back to bed.
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All night long, the woodcutter's wife harped on and on at her husband till,
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at dawn, he led Hansel and Gretel away into the forest. But as they went into
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the depths of the trees, Hansel dropped a little white pebble here and there
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on the mossy green ground. At a certain point, the two children found they
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really were alone: the woodcutter had plucked up enough courage to desert
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them, had mumbled an excuse and was gone.
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Night fell but the woodcutter did not return. Gretel began to sob bitterly.
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Hansel too felt scared but he tried to hide his feelings and comfort his
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sister.
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"Don't cry, trust me! I swear I'll take you home even if Father doesn t
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come back for us!" Luckily the moon was full that night and Hansel waited till
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its cold light filtered through the trees.
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"Now give me your hand!" he said. "We'll get home safely, you'll see!" The
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tiny white pebbles gleamed in the moonlight, and the children found their
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way home. They crept through a half-open window, without wakening their
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parents. Cold, tired but thankful to be home again, they slipped into bed.
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Next day, when their stepmother discovered that Hansel and Gretel had
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returned, she went into a rage. Stifling her anger in front of the children,
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she locked her bedroom door, reproachlng her husband for failing to carry out
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her orders. The weak woodcutter protested, torn as he was between shame and
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fear of disobeying his cruel wife. The wicked stepmother kept Hansel and
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Gretel under lock and key all day with nothing for supper but a sip of water
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and some hard bread. All night, husband and wife quarrelled, and when dawn
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came, the woodcutter led the children out into the forest.
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Hansel, however, had not eaten his bread, and as he walked through the
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trees, he left a trail of crumbs behind him to mark the way. But the little
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boy had forgotten about the hungry birds that lived in the forest. When they
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saw him, they flew along behind and in no time at all, had eaten all the
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crumbs. Again, with a lame excuse, the woodcutter left his two children by
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themselves.
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"I've left a trail, like last time!" Hansel whispered to Gretel,
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consolingly. But when night fell, they saw to their horror, that all the
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crumbs had gone.
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"I'm frightened!" wept Gretel bitterly. "I'm cold and hungry and I want to
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go home!"
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"Don't be afraid. I'm here to look after you!" Hansel tried to encourage
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his sister, but he too shivered when he glimpsed frightening shadows and evil
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eyes around them in the darkness. All night the two children huddled together
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for warmth at the foot of a large tree.
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When dawn broke, they started to wander about the forest, seeking a path,
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but all hope soon faded. They were well and truly lost. On they walked and
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walked, till suddenly they came upon a strange cottaae in the middle of a
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glade.
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"This is chocolate!" gasped Hansel as he broke a lump of plaster from the
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wall.
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"And this is icing!" exclaimed Gretel, putting another piece of wall in her
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mouth. Starving but delighted, the children began to eat pieces of candy
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broken off the cottage.
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"Isn't this delicious?" said Gretel, with her mouth full. She had never
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tasted anything so nice.
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"We'll stay here," Hansel declared, munching a bit of nougat. They were
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just about to try a piece of the biscuit door when it quietly swung open.
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"Well, well!" said an old woman, peering out with a crafty look. "And
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haven't you children a sweet tooth?"
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"Come in! Come in, you've nothing to fear!" went on the old woman.
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Unluckily for Hansel and Gretel, however, the sugar candy cottage belonged to
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an old witch, her trap for catching unwary victims. The two children had come
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to a really nasty place . . .
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"You're nothing but skin and bones!" said the witch, locking Hansel into a
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cage. I shall fatten you up and eat you!"
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"You can do the housework," she told Gretel grimly, "then I'll make a meal
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of you too!" As luck would have it, the witch had very bad eyesight, an when
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Gretel smeared butter on her glasses, she could see even less.
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"Let me feel your finger!" said the witch to Hansel every day to check if
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he was getting any fatter. Now, Gretel had brought her brother a chicken bone,
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and when the witch went to touch his finger, Hansel held out the bone.
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"You're still much too thin!" she complained. When will you become plump?"
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One day the witch grew tired of waltlng.
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"Light the oven," she told Gretel. "We're going to have a tasty roasted boy
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today!" A little later, hungry and impatient, she went on: "Run and see if the
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oven is hot enough." Gretel returned, whimpering: "I can't tell if it is hot
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enough or not." Angrily, the wltch screamed at the little girl: "Useless
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child! All right, I'll see for myself." But when the witch bent down to peer
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inside the oven and check the heat, Gretel gave her a tremendous push and
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slammed the oven door shut. The witch had come to a fit and proper end. Gretel
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ran to set her brother free and they made quite sure that the oven door was
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tightly shut behind the witch. Indeed, just to be on the safe side, they
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fastened it firmly with a large padlock. Then they stayed for several days to
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eat some more of the house, till they discovered amongst the witch's
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belongings, a huge chocolate egg. Inside lay a casket of gold coins.
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"The witch is now burnt to a cinder," said Hansel, "so we'll take this
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treasure with us." They filled a large basket with food and set off into the
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forest to search for the way home. This time, luck was with them, and on the
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second day, they saw their father come out of the house towards them, weeping.
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"Your stepmother is dead. Come home with me now, my dear children!" The two
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children hugged the woodcutter.
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"Promise you'll never ever desert us again," said Gretel, throwing her arms
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round her father's neck. Hansel opened the casket.
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"Look, Father! We're rich now . . . You'll never have to chop wood
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again . . ."
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And they all lived happily together ever after.
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