Maxton Publishers, Inc] 1946 Maxton Publishers blue pictorial hardcover with dark blue spine; light edge rubbing; very nice, clean and tight; adapted & illustrated by HARRIET; color pictorial endpapers, unpaginated, 10 x 7 inches
One year after Jakob Ludwig Karl Grimm started studying law at the University of Marburg, his younger brother, German author Wilhelm Karl Grimm, followed.
In 1825, Wilhelm married Henriette Dorothea Wild, also known as Dortchen. Together they parented four children: Jakob Grimm (1826-1826), Herman Friedrich Grimm (1828-1901), Rudolf Georg Grimm (1830-1889), and Auguste Luise Pauline Marie (1832-1919).
From 1837 to 1841, the Grimm brothers joined five of their colleague professors at the University of Göttingen to form a group, known as the Göttinger sieben. They protested against Ernst August, king of Hanover, whom they accused of violating the constitution. The king fired all seven professors.
This was a lovely little read about a proud and haughty princess who finds wrong with every possible suitor and can't help making fun of them until one day, her father, the King marries her to a penniless travelling fiddler who takes her to his home and makes her do all the work which cures her of her pride.
This was a pretty good short story I read online about a princess who is taught a lesson after she made fun of others appearances. A great tale from the brothers Grimm. If you enjoy fairytales, definitely check this story out for yourself.
I have the complete set of the Grimm Fairy-Tales, and there are so many that I haven’t read! They are very short, as one would know, so I have decided to read each one and give them a review. Some are very vulgar, some are very cute and some don’t even make sense. Some of them are well known fairy-tales and some have never been told. Some are fairy-tales we know but are not the same because they have been downplayed for the children.
The king as a beautiful but spoiled daughter. Not a surprise.
He sees that she is spoiled after she makes fun of all the princes that come and want her hand in marriage. So he marries her to a beggar.
WHAT.
So anyway, sorry for my mental breakdown, he begins to humble her spirit.
After many unfortunate events, she becomes a cook at the palace.
When her older brother is getting married, she makes a big mess of things and is made fun of!
So, will she get her happily ever after with the beggar? IDK READ THE BOOK.
While I enjoyed the illustrations, the story was not my favorite. The plot is reminiscent of The Taming of the Shrew without the humor. And while I agree people shouldn't be arrogant or haughty or judge others based on their looks, a marriage based upon deception and punishment doesn't feel right. For me, the ends did not justify the means.
This story reminds me of Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shew." Maybe the princess learned a lesson but I'm not sure that their marriage would be happy or not...
What a great tale about not judging the book by its cover. That you should not judge someone by how they look or even better, to mock them on how they look. If you judge someone, you most likely will get your punishment for it. Like the princess in this story who had learned her lesson.
I love the tale just because it really can teach you a life lesson. I own the Complete Grimm Fairytales and with that some are not so popular. This being not a very popular one but it really should be. It should be a classic. It is to me. A must read.
This is another classic story by the Brothers Grimm. An arrogant princess rudely makes fun of every suitor that comes to her kingdom to think of marriage. She even remarks that one king's bearded chin resembles the beak of a thrush. People call him King Thrushbeard. After this, the parents of the princess decide that she will be married to the next beggar they happen upon. She marries a fiddler and she is forced to learn humility. Like all of Grimms' tales, there is surprise at the end.
I recall seeing an animation based on this story. Here, the story features a lovely but haughty princess who not only rejects her suitors but mocks them. Her father the king finally has enough and marries her to the first beggar he sees, much to the horror of the proud princess. Her fine clothes and delicious meals are replaced with a tiny hovel and barely enough food to survive on. The princess learns about hard work and humility.
King Thrushbeard's story by the Brother's Grimm: Snotty princess rejects all suitors, angers father, gets wed to poor man, learns to be a better person, discovers poor man actually King she taunted earlier in story.
Illustrations are kooky and neat - really enjoyed them.
I don't know what to feel. Sometimes, the good or the better person in a relationship is who pays the biggest price... Yeah. Grimm remembered me that life sucks sometimes.
An excellent story with excellent morals. Be careful how you treat others as, it will come back to haunt you. Do unto others as you expect done to yourself.