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