Old-Fashioned Fairy Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about Old-Fashioned Fairy Tales.

Old-Fashioned Fairy Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about Old-Fashioned Fairy Tales.

When the other little girl came up, she cried and screamed so that the room rang with her lamentations, and the widow’s child laid down her needle and ceased working.

“Why don’t you go on darning?” asked the Ogress.

“Alas! dear mother,” said she, “the little sister’s cries make my heart beat so that I cannot darn evenly.”

“Then she must go back to the cellar for a bit,” said the Ogress.  “And meanwhile I’ll sharpen the knife.”

So after she had taken back the crying child, and had watched the little girl, who now darned away as skilfully as ever, the Ogress took down a huge knife from the wall, and began to sharpen it on a grindstone in a corner of the kitchen.  As she sharpened the knife, she glanced from time to time at the little maid, and soon perceived that she had once more ceased working.

“Why don’t you go on darning?” asked the Ogress.

“Alas! dear mother,” said the child, “when I hear you sharpening that terrible knife my hands tremble so that I cannot thread my needle.”

“Well, it will do now,” growled the Ogress, feeling the edge of the blade with her horny finger; and, having seen the darning-needle once more at work, she went to fetch up one of the children.  As she went, she hummed what cookmaids sing—­

    “Dilly, dilly duckling, come and be killed!”

But it sounded like the wheezing and groaning of a heavy old door upon its rusty hinges.

When she came in, with the child in one hand, and the huge knife in the other, she went up to the little darner to look at her work.  The heel of the Ogre’s stocking was exquisitely mended, all but seven threads; but the little maid sat idle with her hands before her.

“Why don’t you go on darning?” asked the Ogress.

“Alas! dear mother,” was the reply, “when I think of my little playmate about to die, the tears blind my eyes, so that I cannot see what stitches I take.  Wherefore I beg of you, dear mother, to cook one of the little pigs instead, that I may be able to go on with my work, and that a pair of stockings may be ready to-morrow morning when the Ogre will ask for them; so my playmate’s life will be spared, and your head will not be put into a poke.”

At first the Ogress would not hear of such a thing, but at last she consented, and made a stew of one of the little pigs instead of cooking the little girl.

“But supposing the Ogre goes to count the children,” said she; “he will find one too many.”

“Then let her go, dear mother,” said the widow’s daughter; “she will find her way home, and you will never be blamed.”

“But she must stir the stew with her forefinger first,” said the Ogress, “that it may have a human flavour.”

So the little girl had to stir the hot stew with her finger, which scalded it badly; and then she was set at liberty, and ran home as hard as she could; and as the little maid’s needles sparkled here and there on the path, she had no difficulty in finding her way.

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Old-Fashioned Fairy Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.