Cinderella eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 15 pages of information about Cinderella.

Cinderella eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 15 pages of information about Cinderella.

Title:  Cinderella

Author:  Henry W. Hewet

Release Date:  January 25, 2004 [EBook #10830]

Language:  English

Character set encoding:  ASCII

*** Start of this project gutenberg EBOOK Cinderella ***

Produced by Internet Archive; University of Florida, Children, Sandra
Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.

[Illustration]

HEWET’S

HOUSEHOLD STORIES

FOR LITTLE FOLKS

ILLUSTRATED

W. H. THWAITE

Engraved by the best artists.

VOL I.

CINDERELLA

1855

[Illustration:  Frontispiece]

CINDERELLA;

Or,

The little glass slipper.

There once lived a gentleman and his wife, who were the parents of a lovely little daughter.

When this child was only nine years of age, her mother fell sick.  Finding her death coming on, she called her child to her and said to her, “My child, always be good; bear every thing that happens to you with patience, and whatever evil and troubles you may suffer, you will be happy in the end if you are so.”  Then the poor lady died, and her daughter was full of great grief at the loss of a mother so good and kind.

The father too was unhappy, but he sought to get rid of his sorrow by marrying another wife, and he looked out for some prudent lady who might be a second mother to his child, and a companion to himself.  His choice fell on a widow lady, of a proud and tyrannical temper, who had two daughters by a former marriage, both as haughty and bad-tempered as their mother.  No sooner was the wedding over, than the step-mother began to show her bad temper.  She could not bear her step-daughter’s good qualities, that only showed up her daughters’ unamiable ones still more obviously, and she accordingly compelled the poor girl to do all the drudgery of the household.  It was she who washed the dishes, and scrubbed down the stairs, and polished the floors in my lady’s chamber and in those of the two pert misses, her daughters; and while the latter slept on good feather beds in elegant rooms, furnished with full-length looking-glasses, their sister lay in a wretched garret on an old straw mattress.  Yet the poor thing bore this ill treatment very meekly, and did not dare complain to her father, who thought so much of his wife that he would only have scolded her.

When her work was done, she used to sit in the chimney-corner amongst the cinders, which had caused the nickname of Cinderella to be given her by the family; yet, for all her shabby clothes, Cinderella was a hundred times prettier than her sisters, let them be dressed ever so magnificently.

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Cinderella from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.