182 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
182 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
THE LlTTLE MERMAID
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Once upon a time . . . in a splendid palace on the bed of the bluest ocean,
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lived the Sea King, a wise old triton with a long flowing white beard. He
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lived in a magnificent palace, built of gaily coloured coral and seashells,
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together with his five daughters, very beautiful mermaids.
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Sirenetta, the youngest and loveliest of them all, also had a beautiful
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voice, and when she sang, the fishes flocked from all over the sea to listen
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to her. The shells gaped wide, showing their pearls and even the jellyfish
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stopped to listen. The young mermaid often sang, and each time, she would gaze
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upwards, seeking the faint sunlight that scarcely managed to filter down into
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the depths.
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"Oh, how I'd love to go up there and at last see the sky, which everyone
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says is so pretty, and hear the voices of humans and smell the scent of the
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flowers!"
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"You're still too young!" said her mother. "In a year or two, when you're
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fifteen. Only then will the King let you go up there, like your sisters!"
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Sirenetta spent her time wishing for the world of humans, she listened to her
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sisters' stories, and every time they returned frorm the surface, she would
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ask them questions, to satisfy her curiosity.
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And as she waited for the day when she too would be allowed to reach the
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surface of the sea and meet the unknown world, Sirenetta spent her time in her
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wonderful sea garden. The seahorses kept her company, and sometimes a dolphin
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would come and play. Only the unfriendly starfish never replied when she
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called. At last, her long-desired birthday came. The night before, Sirenetta
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could not sleep a wink. In the morning, her father called her and, stroking
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her long golden hair, slipped a lovely carved flower into her locks . . .
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"Therel Now you can go to the surface. You'll breathe air and see the sky.
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But remember! It's not our world! We can only watch it and admire! We're
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children of the sea and have no soul, as men do. Be careful and keep away from
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them; they can only bring bad luck!" In a second, Sirenetta had kissed her
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father and was darting smoothly towards the surface of the sea. She swam so
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fast with flicks of her slender tail, that even the fish could not keep up
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with her.
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Suddenly she popped out of the water. How wonderful! For the first time,
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she saw the great blue sky, in which as dusk began to fall, the first stars
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were peeping out and twinkling. The sun, already over the horizon, trailed a
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golden reflection that gently faded on the heaving waves. High overhead, a
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flock of gulls spotted the llttle mermaid and greeted her arrival with shrieks
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of pleasure.
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"It's so lovely!" she exclaimed happily. But another nice surprise was in
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store for her: a ship was slowly sailing towards the rock on which Sirenetta
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was sitting. The sailors dropped anchor and the ship swayed gently in the calm
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sea. Sirenetta watched the men go about their work aboard, lighting the
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lanterns for the night. She could clearly hear their voices.
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"I'd love to speak to them!" she said to herself. But then she gazed sadly
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at her long flexible tail, her equivalent of legs, and said to herself: "I can
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never be like them!" Aboard ship, a strange excitement seemed to seize the
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crew, and a little later, the sky became a spray of many coloured lights and
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the crackle of fireworks filled the sky.
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"Long live the captain! Hurray for his 20th birthday. Hurray! Hurray . . .
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many happy returns!" Astonished at all this, the little mermaid caught sight
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of the young man in whose honour the display was being held. Tall and
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dignified, he was smiling happily, and Sirenetta could not take her eyes from
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him. She followed his every movement, fascinated by all that was happening.
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The party went on, but the sea grew more agitated. Sirenetta anxiously
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realized that the men were now in danger: an icy wind was sweeping the waves,
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the ink black sky was torn by flashes of lightning, then a terrible storm
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broke suddenly over the helpless ship. In vain Sirenetta screamed: "Look out!
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Beware of the sea . . ." But the howling wind carried her words away, and the
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rising waves swept over the ship. Amidst the sailors' shouts, masts and sails
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toppled onto the deck, and with a sinister splintering sound, the ship sank.
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By the light of one oi the lamps. Sirenetta had seen the young captain fall
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into the water, and she swam to his rescue. But she could not find him in the
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high waves and, tired out, was about to glve up, when suddenly there he was on
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the crest of a nearby wave. In an instant, he was swept straight into the
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mermaid s arms.
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The young man was unconscious and the mermaid held his head above water in
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the stormy sea, in an effort to save his life. She clung to him for hours
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trying to fight the tiredness that was overtaklng her.
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Then, as suddenly as it had sprung up, the storm died away. ln a grey dawn
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over a still angry sea, Sirenetta realized thankfully that land lay ahead.
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Aided by the motion of the waves, she pushed the captain's body onto the
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shore, beyond the water's edge. Unable herself to walk, the mermaid sat
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wringing her hands, her tail lapped by the rippling water, trying to warm the
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young captain with her own body. Then the sound of approaching voices startled
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Slrenetta and she slipped back into deeper water.
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"Come quickly! Quickly!" came a woman's voice in alarm. "There's a man
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here! Look, I think he's unconscious!" The captain was now in good hands.
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"Let's take him up to the castle!"
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"No, no! Better get help . . ." And the first thing the young man saw when
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he opened his eyes again was the beautiful face of the youngest of a group of
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three ladies.
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"Thank you! Thank you . . . for saving my life . . . he murmured to the
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lovely unknown lady.
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From the sea Sirenetta watched the man she had snatched from the waves turn
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towards the castle, without knowing that a mermaid had saved his life. Slowly
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swimming out to sea, Sirenetta felt that there on the beach she had left
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behind something she could never bring herself to forget. How wonderful those
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tremendous hours in the storm had been, as she had battled with the elements.
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And as she swam down towards her father's palace, her sisters came to meet
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her, anxious to know what had kept her so long on the surface. Sirenetta
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started to tell her story, but suddenly a lump came to her throat and,
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bursting into tears, she fled to her room. She stayed there for days, refusing
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to see anyone or to touch food. She knew that her love for the young captain
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was without hope, for she was a mermaid and could never marry a human. Only
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the Witch of the Deeps could help her. But what price would she have to pay?
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Sirenetta decided to ask the Witch. .
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". . . so you want to get rid of your fishy tail, do you? I expect you'd
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like to have a pair of woman's legs, isn't that so?" said the nasty Witch
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scornfully, from her cave guarded by a giant squid.
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"Be warned!" she went on. "You will suffer horribly, as though a sword were
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cutting you apart. And every time you place your feet on the earth, you will
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feel dreadful pain!"
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"It doesn't matter!" whispered Sirenetta, with tears in her eyes. "As long
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as I can go back to him!"
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"And that's not all!" exclaimed the Witch. "In exchange for my spell, you
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must give me your lovely voice. You'll never be able to utter a word again!
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And don't forget! If the man you love marries someone else, you will not be
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able to turn into a mermaid again. You will just dissolve in water like the
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foam on the wave!"
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"All right!" said Sirenetta, eagerly taking the little jar holding the
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magic potion. The Witch had told Sirenetta that the young captain was actually
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a prince, and the mermaid left the water at a spot not far from the castle.
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She pulled herself onto the beach, then drank the magic potion. An agonizing
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pain made her faint, and when she came to her senses, she could mistily see
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the face she loved, smiling down at her.
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The witch's magic had worked the spell, for the prince had felt a strange
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desire to go down to the beach, just as Sirenetta was arriving. There he had
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stumbled on her, and recalling how he too had once been washed up on the shore,
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gently laid his cloak over the still body, cast up by the waves.
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"Don't be frightened! he said quickly. "You're quite safe! Where have you
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come from?" But Sirenetta was now dumb and could not reply, so the young man
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softly stroke her wet cheek.
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"I'll take you to the castle and look after you," he said. In the days that
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followed, the mermaid started a new life. She wore splendid dresses and often
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went out on horseback with the prince. One evening, she was invited to a great
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ball at Court. However, as the Witch had foretold, every movement and each
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step she took was torture. Sirenetta bravely put up with her suffering, glad
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to be allowed to stay near her beloved prince. And though she could not speak
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to him, he was fond of her and showered kindness on her, to her great joy. However, the young man's heart really belonged to the unknown lady he had seen
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as he lay on the shore, though he had never met her since, for she had
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returned at once to her own land.
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Even when he was in the company of Sirenetta, fond of her as he was, the
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unknown lady was always in his thoughts. And the little mermaid, guessing
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instinctively that she was not his true love, suffered even more.
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She often crept out of the castle at night, to weep by the seashore. Once
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she thought she could spy her sisters rise from the water and wave at her, but
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this made her feel sadder than ever.
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Fate, however, had another surprise in store. From the Castle ramparts one
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day, a huge ship was sighted sailing into the harbour. Together with
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Sirenetta, the prince went down to meet it. And who stepped from the vessel,
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but the unknown lady who had been for long in the prince's heart. When he saw
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her, he rushed to greet her. Sirenetta felt herself turn to stone and a
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painful feeling pierced her heart: she was about to lose the prince for ever.
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The unknown lady too had never forgotten the young man she had found on the
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bea and soon after, he asked her to marry him. Since she too was in love, she
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happily said "yes".
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A few days after the wedding, the happy couple were invited for a voyage on
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the huge ship, which was still in the harbour. Sirenetta too went on board,
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and the ship set sail. Night fell, and sick at heart over the loss of the
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prince, Sirenetta went on deck. She remembered the Witch's prophecy, and was
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now ready to give up her life and dissolve in the sea. Suddenly she heard a
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cry from the water and dimly saw her sisters in the darkness.
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". . . Sirenetta! Sirenetta! It's us . . . your sisters! We've heard all
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about what happened! Look! Do you see this knife? It's magic! The Witch gave
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it to us in exchange for our hair. Take it! Kill the prince before dawn, and
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you will become a mermaid again and forget all your troubles!"
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As though in a trance, Sirenetta clasped the knife and entered the cabin
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where the prince and his bride lay asleep. But as she gazed at the young man's
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sleeping face, she simply blew him a furtive kiss, before running back on
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deck. When dawn broke, she threw the knife into the sea. Then she shot a
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parting glance at the world she was leaving behind, and dived into the waves,
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ready to turn into the foam of the sea from whence she had come, and vanish.
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As the sun rose over the horizon, it cast a long golden ray of llght across
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the sea, and in the chilly water, Sirenetta turned towards it for the last
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time. Suddenly, as though by magic, a mysterious force drew her out of the
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water, and she felt herself lifted high into the sky. The clouds were tinged
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with pink, the sea rippled in the early mornlng breeze, and the little mermaid
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heard a whisper through the tinkling of bells: "Sirenetta, Sirenetta! Gome
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wlth us ..."
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"Who are you?" asked the mermaid, surprised to find she had recovered the
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use of her voice. "Where am l?"
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"You're with us in the sky. We're the fairies of the air! We have no soul
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as men do, but our task is to help them. We take amongst us only those who
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have shown kindness to men!"
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Greatly touched, Sirenetta looked down over the sea towards the prince's
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ship, and felt tears spring to her eyes. The fairies of the air whispered to
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her: "Look! The earth flowers are waiting for our tears to turn into the
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mornlng dew! Come along with us ..."
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