The Blue Fairy Book by Andrew Lang
page 46 of 541 (08%)
page 46 of 541 (08%)
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length it was as black as if it had been up the chimney.
"Oh," cried the Prince, "not one of you is good for anything at all! There is a beggar-girl sitting outside the window, and I'll be bound that she can wash better than any of you! Come in, you girl there!" he cried. So she came in. "Can you wash this shirt clean?" he cried. "Oh! I don't know," she said; "but I will try." And no sooner had she taken the shirt and dipped it in the water than it was white as driven snow, and even whiter than that. "I will marry you," said the Prince. Then the old troll-hag flew into such a rage that she burst, and the Princess with the long nose and all the little trolls must have burst too, for they have never been heard of since. The Prince and his bride set free all the Christian folk who were imprisoned there, and took away with them all the gold and silver that they could carry, and moved far away from the castle which lay east of the sun and west of the moon.[1] [1] Asbjornsen and Moe. THE YELLOW DWARF Once upon a time there lived a queen who had been the mother of a great many children, and of them all only one |
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