英语格林童话故事:森林里的小屋

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英语格林童话故事:森林里的小屋小故事_96趣味网 一个致力于资源整合的网站

A poor wood-cutter lived with his wife and three daughters in  a little hut on the edge of a lonely forest. One morning as he  was about to go to his work, he said to his wife, "Let my dinner  be brought into the forest to me by my eldest daughter, or I shall  never get my work done, and in order that she may not miss her  way," he added, "I will take a bag of millet with me and strew  the seeds on the path." When, therefore, the sun was just above  the center of the forest, the girl set out on her way with a bowl of  soup, but the field-sparrows, and wood-sparrows, larks and finches,  blackbirds and siskins had picked up the millet long before, and the  girl could not find the track. Then trusting to chance, she went on  and on, until the sun sank and night began to fall. The trees rustled  in the darkness, the owls hooted, and she began to be afraid. Then  in the distance she perceived a light which glimmered between the  trees. "There ought to be some people living there, who can take  me in for the night," thought she, and went up to the light. It was  not long before she came to a house the windows of which were all  lighted up. She knocked, and a rough voice from inside cried, "Come  in." The girl stepped into the dark entrance, and knocked at the door  of the room. "Just come in," cried the voice, and when she opened the  door, an old gray-haired man was sitting at the table, supporting his face  with both hands, and his white beard fell down over the table almost  as far as the ground. By the stove lay three animals, a hen, a cock, and  a brindled cow. The girl told her story to the old man, and begged for  shelter for the night. The man said,  "Pretty little hen,  Pretty little cock,  And pretty brindled cow,  What say ye to that?"  "Duks," answered the animals, and that must have meant, "We are  willing," for the old man said, "Here you shall have shelter and food,  go to the fire, and cook us our supper." The girl found in the kitchen  abundance of everything, and cooked a good supper, but had no thought  of the animals. She carried the full dishes to the table, seated herself by  the gray-haired man, ate and satisfied her hunger. When she had had  enough, she said, "But now I am tired, where is there a bed in which I  can lie down, and sleep?" The animals replied,  "Thou hast eaten with him,  Thou hast drunk with him,  Thou hast had no thought for us,  So find out for thyself where thou canst pass the night."  Then said the old man, "Just go upstairs, and thou wilt find a  room with two beds, shake them up, and put white linen on them,  and then I, too, will come and lie down to sleep." The girl went  up, and when she had shaken the beds and put clean sheets on,格林童话故事:森林里的小屋  she lay down in one of them without waiting any longer for the  old man. After some time, however, the gray-haired man came,  took his candle, looked at the girl and shook his head. When he  saw that she had fallen into a sound sleep, he opened a trap-door,  and let her down into the cellar.  Late at night the wood-cutter came home, and reproached his  wife for leaving him to hunger all day. "It is not my fault," she  replied, "the girl went out with your dinner, and must have lost  herself, but she is sure to come back to-morrow." The wood-cutter,  however, arose before dawn to go into the forest, and requested  that the second daughter should take him his dinner that day. "I  will take a bag with lentils," said he; "the seeds are larger than millet,  the girl will see them better, and can't lose her way." At dinner-time,  therefore, the girl took out the food, but the lentils had disappeared.  The birds of the forest had picked them up as they had done the day  before, and had left none. The girl wandered about in the forest  until night, and then she too reached the house of the old man,  was told to go in, and begged for food and a bed. The man with  the white beard again asked the animals,  "Pretty little hen,  Pretty little cock,  And pretty brindled cow,  What say ye to that?"  The animals again replied "Duks," and everything happened just  as it had happened the day before. The girl cooked a good meal,  ate and drank with the old man, and did not concern herself about  the animals, and when she inquired about her bed they answered,  "Thou hast eaten with him,  Thou hast drunk with him,  Thou hast had no thought for us,  To find out for thyself where thou canst pass the night."  When she was asleep the old man came, looked at her, shook his  head, and let her down into the cellar.  On the third morning the wood-cutter said to his wife, "Send our  youngest child out with my dinner to-day, she has always been good  and obedient, and will stay in the right path, and not run about after  every wild humble-bee, as her sisters did." The mother did not  want to do it, and said, "Am I to lose my dearest child, as well?"  "Have no fear,' he replied, "the girl will not go astray; she is too  prudent and sensible; besides I will take some peas with me, and  strew them about. They are still larger than lentils, and will show  her the way." But when the girl went out with her basket on her  arm, the wood-pigeons had already got all the peas in their crops,  and she did not know which way she was to turn. She was full  of sorrow and never ceased to think how hungry her father would  be, and how her good mother would grieve, if she did not go home.  At length when it grew dark, she saw the light and came to the house  in the forest. She begged quite prettily to be allowed to spend the night  there, and the man with the white beard once more asked his animals,  "Pretty little hen,  Pretty little cock,  And beautiful brindled cow,  What say ye to that?"  "Duks," said they. Then the girl went to the stove where the  animals were lying, and petted the cock and hen, and stroked  their smooth feathers with her hand, and caressed the brindled  cow between her horns, and when, in obedience to the old man's  orders, she had made ready some good soup, and the bowl was  placed upon the table, she said, "Am I to eat as much as I want,  and the good animals to have nothing? Outside is food in plenty,  I will look after them first." So she went and brought some barley  and stewed it for the cock and hen, and a whole armful of sweet-  smelling hay for the cow. "I hope you will like it, dear animals,"  said she, "and you shall have a refreshing draught in case you  are thirsty." Then she fetched in a bucketful of water, and the  cock and hen jumped on to the edge of it and dipped their beaks  in, and then held up their heads as the birds do when they drink,  and the brindled cow also took a hearty draught. When the animals  were fed, the girl seated herself at the table by the old man, and ate  what he had left. It was not long before the cock and the hen began  to thrust their heads beneath their wings, and the eyes of the cow  likewise began to blink. Then said the girl, "Ought we not to go to bed?"  "Pretty little hen,  Pretty little cock,  And pretty brindled cow,  What say ye to that?"  The animals answered "Duks,"  "Thou hast eaten with us,  Thou hast drunk with us,  Thou hast had kind thought for all of us,  We wish thee good-night."  Then the maiden went upstairs, shook the feather-beds, and laid clean  sheets on them, and when she had done it the old man came and lay  down on one of the beds, and his white beard reached down to his  feet. The girl lay down on the other, said her prayers, and fell asleep.  She slept quietly till midnight, and then there was such a noise  in the house that she awoke. There was a sound of cracking  and splitting in every corner, and the doors sprang open, and  beat against the walls. The beams groaned as if they were being  torn out of their joints, it seemed as if the staircase were falling  down, and at length there was a crash as if the entire roof had  fallen in. As, however, all grew quiet once more, and the girl  was not hurt, she stayed quietly lying where she was, and fell  asleep again. But when she woke up in the morning with the  brilliancy of the sunshine, what did her eyes behold? She was  lying in a vast hall, and everything around her shone with royal  splendor; on the walls, golden flowers grew up on a ground of  green silk, the bed was of ivory, and the canopy of red velvet,  and on a chair close by, was a pair of shoes embroidered with  pearls. The girl believed that she was in a dream, but three richly  clad attendants came in, and asked what orders she would like to  give? "If you will go," she replied, "I will get up at once and make  ready some soup for the old man, and then I will feed the pretty  little hen, and the cock, and the beautiful brindled cow." She  thought the old man was up already, and looked round at his  bed; he, however, was not lying in it, but a stranger. And while  she was looking at him, and becoming aware that he was young  and handsome, he awoke, sat up in bed, and said, "I am a King's  son, and was bewitched by a wicked witch, and made to live in  this forest, as an old gray-haired man; no one was allowed to  be with me but my three attendants in the form of a cock, a hen,  and a brindled cow. The spell was not to be broken until a girl  came to us whose heart was so good that she showed herself full  of love, not only towards mankind, but towards animals - and that  thou hast done, and by thee at midnight we were set free, and the  old hut in the forest was changed back again into my royal palace."  And when they had arisen, the King's son ordered the three attendants  to set out and fetch the father and mother of the girl to the marriage  feast. "But where are my two sisters?" inquired the maiden. "I have  locked them in the cellar, and to-morrow they shall be led into the  forest, and shall live as servants to a charcoal-burner, until they have  grown kinder, and do not leave poor animals to suffer hunger."