Once upon a time in a great castle, a Prince's daughter grew up
happy and contented, in spite of a
jealous stepmother. She was very pretty, with blue eyes and long black hair. Her skin was delicate and fair, and so she was called Snow White. Everyone was quite sure she would become very beautiful. Though her stepmother was a wicked woman, she too was very beautiful, and the magic mirror told her this every day, whenever she asked it.
jealous stepmother. She was very pretty, with blue eyes and long black hair. Her skin was delicate and fair, and so she was called Snow White. Everyone was quite sure she would become very beautiful. Though her stepmother was a wicked woman, she too was very beautiful, and the magic mirror told her this every day, whenever she asked it.
"Mirror, mirror on the wall,
who is the loveliest lady in the land?" The reply was always; "You
are, your Majesty," until the dreadful day when she heard it say,
"Snow White is the loveliest in the land." The stepmother was furious
and, wild with jealousy, began plotting to get rid of her rival.
Calling one of her trusty servants, she bribed him with a rich reward
to take Snow White into the forest, far away from the Castle. Then,
unseen, he was to put her to death. The greedy servant, attracted to
the reward, agreed to do this deed, and he led the innocent little girl
away. However, when they came to the fatal spot, the man's courage
failed him and, leaving Snow White sitting beside a tree, he mumbled
an excuse and ran off. Snow White was all alone in the forest.
Night
came, but the servant did not return. Snow White, alone in the dark
forest, began to cry bitterly. She thought she could feel terrible
eyes spying on her, and she heard strange sounds and rustlings that
made her heart thump. At last, overcome by tiredness, she fell asleep
curled under a tree.
Snow White slept fitfully, wakening
from time to time with a start and staring into the darkness round
her. Several times, she thought she felt something, or somebody touch
her as she slept.
At last, dawn woke the forest to the
song of the birds, and Snow White too, awoke. A whole world was
stirring to life and the little girl was glad to see how silly her
fears had been. However, the thick trees were like a wall round her,
and as she tried to find out where she was, she came upon a path. She
walked along it, hopefully. On she walked till she came to a clearing.
There stood a strange cottage, with a tiny door, tiny windows and a
tiny chimney pot. Everything about the cottage was much tinier than it
ought to be. Snow White pushed the door open.
"l wonder
who lives here?" she said to herself, peeping round the kitchen. "What
tiny plates! And spoons! There must be seven of them, the table's
laid for seven people." Upstairs was a bedroom with seven neat little
beds. Going back to the kitchen, Snow White had an idea.
"I'll
make them something to eat. When they come home, they'll be glad to
find a meal ready." Towards dusk, seven tiny men marched homewards
singing. But when they opened the door, to their surprise they found a
bowl of hot steaming soup on the table, and the whole house spick and
span. Upstairs was Snow White, fast asleep on one of the beds. The
chief dwarf prodded her gently.
"Who are you?" he asked.
Snow White told them her sad story, and tears sprang to the dwarfs'
eyes. Then one of them said, as he noisily blew his nose:
"Stay here with us!"
"Hooray! Hooray!" they cheered, dancing joyfully round the little girl. The dwarfs said to Snow White:
"You
can live here and tend to the house while we're down the mine. Don't
worry about your stepmother leaving you in the forest. We love you and
we'll take care of you!" Snow White gratefully accepted their
hospitality, and next morning the dwarfs set off for work. But they
warned Snow White not to open the door to strangers.
Meanwhile,
the servant had returned to the castle, with the heart of a roe deer.
He gave it to the cruel stepmother, telling her it belonged to Snow
White, so that he could claim the reward. Highly pleased, the
stepmother turned again to the magic mirror. But her hopes were dashed,
for the mirror replied: "The loveliest in the land is still Snow
White, who lives in the seven dwarfs' cottage, down in the forest." The
stepmother was beside herself with rage.
"She must die!
She must die!" she screamed. Disguising herself as an old peasant
woman, she put a poisoned apple with the others in her basket. Then,
taking the quickest way into the forest, she crossed the swamp at the
edge of the trees. She reached the bank unseen, just as Snow White
stood waving goodbye to the seven dwarfs on their way to the mine.
Snow White was in the kitchen when she heard the sound at the door: KNOCK! KNOCK!
"Who's there?" she called suspiciously, remembering the dwarfs advice.
"I'm an old peasant woman selling apples," came the reply.
"I don't need any apples, thank you," she replied.
"But they are beautiful apples and ever so juicy!" said the velvety voice from outside the door.
"I'm not supposed to open the door to anyone," said the little girl, who was reluctant to disobey her friends.
"And
quite right too! Good girl! If you promised not to open up to
strangers, then of course you can't buy. You are a good girl indeed!"
Then the old woman went on.
"And as a reward for being
good, I'm going to make you a gift of one of my apples!" Without a
further thought, Snow White opened the door just a tiny crack, to take
the apple.
"There! Now isn't that a nice apple?" Snow
White bit into the fruit, and as she did, fell to the ground in a
faint: the effect of the terrible poison left her lifeless
instantaneously.
Now chuckling evilly, the wicked
stepmother hurried off. But as she ran back across the swamp, she
tripped and fell into the quicksand. No one heard her cries for help,
and she disappeared without a trace.
Meanwhile, the
dwarfs came out of the mine to find the sky had grown dark and stormy.
Loud thunder echoed through the valleys and streaks of lightning
ripped the sky. Worried about Snow White they ran as quickly as they
could down the mountain to the cottage.
There they found
Snow White, lying still and lifeless, the poisoned apple by her side.
They did their best to bring her around, but it was no use.
They
wept and wept for a long time. Then they laid her on a bed of rose
petals, carried her into the forest and put her in a crystal coffin.
Each day they laid a flower there.
Then
one evening, they discovered a strange young man admiring Snow
White's lovely face through the glass. After listening to the story,
the Prince (for he was a prince!) made a suggestion.
"If
you allow me to take her to the Castle, I'll call in famous doctors to
waken her from this peculiar sleep. She's so lovely I'd love to kiss
her!" He did, and as though by magic, the Prince's kiss broke the
spell. To everyone's astonishment, Snow White opened her eyes. She had
amazingly come back to life! Now in love, the Prince asked Snow White
to marry him, and the dwarfs reluctantly had to say good bye to Snow
White.
From that day on, Snow White lived happily in a
great castle. But from time to time, she was drawn back to visit the
little cottage down in the forest.
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