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Thumbelina
Once upon a time... there lived a woman
who had no children. She dreamed of having a little girl, but
time went by, and her dream never came true.
She then went to visit a witch, who gave
her a magic grain of barley. She planted it in a flower pot.
And the very next day, the grain had turned into a lovely flower,
rather like a tulip. The woman softly kissed its half-shut petals.
And as though by magic, the flower opened in full blossom.
Inside sat a tiny girl, no bigger than
a thumb. The woman called her Thumbelina. For a bed she had a
walnut shell, violet petals for her mattress and a rose petal
blanket.
In the daytime, she played in a tulip
petal boat, floating on a plate of water. Using two horse hairs
as oars, Thumbelina sailed around her little lake, singing and
singing in a gentle sweet voice.
Then one night, as she lay fast asleep
in her walnut shell, a large frog hopped through a hole in the
window pane. As she gazed down at Thumbelina, she said to herself:
"How pretty she is! She'd make the perfect bride for my
own dear son!"
She picked up Thumbelina, walnut shell
and all, and hopped into the garden. Nobody saw her go.
Back at the pond, her fat ugly son, who
always did as mother told him, was pleased with her choice. But
mother frog was afraid that her pretty prisoner might run away.
So she carried Thumbellna out to a water lily leaf ln the middle
of the pond. "She can never escape us now," said the
frog to her son. "And we have plenty of time to prepare
a new home for you and your bride."
Thumbelina was left all alone. She felt
so desperate. She knew she would never be able to escape the
fate that awaited her with the two horrid fat frogs. All she
could do was cry her eyes out.
However, one or two minnows who had been
enjoying the shade below the water lily leaf, had overheard the
two frogs talking, and the little girl's bitter sobs. They decided
to do something about it. So they nibbled away at the lily stem
till it broke and drifted away in the weak current.
A dancing butterfly had an idea: "Throw
me the end of your belt! I'll help you to move a little faster!"
Thumbelina gratefully did so, and the leaf soon floated away
from the frog pond.
But other dangers lay ahead. A large beetle
snatched Thumbelina with his strong feet and took her away to
his home at the top of a leafy tree. "Isn't she pretty?"
he said to his friends. But they pointed out that she was far
too different. So the beetle took her down the tree and set her
free.
It was summertime, and Thumbelina wandered
all by herself amongst the flowers and through the long grass.
She had pollen for her meals and drank the dew.
Then the rainy season came, bringing nasty
weather. The poor child found it hard to find food and shelter.
When winter set in, she suffered from
the cold and felt terrible pangs of hunger.
One day, as Thumbelina roamed helplessly
over the bare meadows, she met a large spider who promised to
help her. He took her to a hollow tree and guarded the door with
a stout web. Then he brought her some dried chestnuts and called
his friends to come and admire her beauty.
But just like the beetles, all the other
spiders persuaded Thumbelina's rescuer to let her go. Crying
her heart out, and quite certain that nobody wanted her because
she was ugly, Thumbelina left the spider's house.
As she wandered, shivering with the cold,
suddenly she came across a solid little cottage, made of twigs
and dead leaves. Hopefully, she knocked on the door. It was opened
by a field mouse.
"What are you doing outside in this
weather?" he asked. "Come in and warm yourself."
Comfortable and cozy, the field mouse's
home was stocked with food. For her keep, Thumbelina did the
housework and told the mouse stories.
One day, the field mouse said a friend
was coming to visit them. "He's a very rich mole, and has
a lovely house. He wears a splendid black fur coat, but he's
dreadfully shortsighted. He needs company and he'd like to marry
you!"
Thumbelina did not relish the idea. However,
when the mole came, she sang sweetly to him and he fell head
over heels in love.
The mole invited Thumbelina and the field
mouse to visit him, but... to their surprise and horror, they
came upon a swallow in the tunnel. It looked dead. Mole nudged
it with his foot, saying: "That'll teach her! She should
have come underground instead of darting about the sky all summer!"
Thumbelina was so shocked by such cruel
words that later, she crept back to the tunnel. And every day,
the little girl went to nurse the swallow and tenderly give it
food.
In the meantime, the swallow told Thumbelina
its tale. Jagged by a thorn, it had been unable to follow its
companions to a warmer climate.
"It's kind of you to nurse me,"
it told Thumbelina. But, in spring, the swallow flew away, after
offering to take the little girl with it.
All summer, Thumbelina did her best to
avoid marrying the mole. The little girl thought fearfully of
how she'd have to live underground forever.
On the eve of her wedding, she asked to
spend a day in the open air. As she gently fingered a flower,
she heard a familiar song: "Winter's on its way and I'll
be off to warmer lands. Come with me!"
Thumbelina quickly clung to her swallow
friend, and the bird soared into the sky. They flew over plains
and hills till they reached a country of flowers.
The swallow gently laid Thumbelina in
a blossom.
There she met a tiny, white-winged fairy:
the King of the Flower Fairies. Instantly, he asked her to marry
him. Thumbelina eagerly said "yes", and sprouting tiny
white wings, she became the Flower Queen!
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