185 lines
12 KiB
Text
185 lines
12 KiB
Text
The Girl Without Hands
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A certain miller had little by little fallen into poverty, and had
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nothing left but his mill and a large apple-tree behind it. Once when
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he had gone into the forest to fetch wood, an old man stepped up to him
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whom he had never seen before, and said, "Why dost thou plague thyself
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with cutting wood, I will make thee rich, if thou wilt promise me what
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is standing behind thy mill?" "What can that be but my apple-tree?"
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thought the miller, and said, "Yes," and gave a written promise to the
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stranger. He, however, laughed mockingly and said, "When three years
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have passed, I will come and carry away what belongs to me," and then
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he went. When the miller got home, his wife came to meet him and said,
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"Tell me, miller, from whence comes this sudden wealth into our house?
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All at once every box and chest was filled; no one brought it in, and I
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know not how it happened." He answered, "It comes from a stranger who
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met me in the forest, and promised me great treasure. I, in return,
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have promised him what stands behind the mill; we can very well give
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him the big apple-tree for it." "Ah, husband," said the terrified wife,
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"that must have been the devil! He did not mean the apple-tree, but our
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daughter, who was standing behind the mill sweeping the yard."
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The miller's daughter was a beautiful, pious girl, and lived through
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the three years in the fear of God and without sin. When therefore the
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time was over, and the day came when the Evil-one was to fetch her, she
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washed herself clean, and made a circle round herself with chalk. The
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devil appeared quite early, but he could not come near to her. Angrily,
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he said to the miller, "Take all water away from her, that she may no
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longer be able to wash herself, for otherwise I have no power over
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her." The miller was afraid, and did so. The next morning the devil
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came again, but she had wept on her hands, and they were quite clean.
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Again he could not get near her, and furiously said to the miller, "Cut
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her hands off, or else I cannot get the better of her." The miller was
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shocked and answered, "How could I cut off my own child's hands?" Then
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the Evil-one threatened him and said, "If thou dost not do it thou art
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mine, and I will take thee thyself." The father became alarmed, and
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promised to obey him. So he went to the girl and said, "My child, if I
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do not cut off both thine hands, the devil will carry me away, and in
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my terror I have promised to do it. Help me in my need, and forgive me
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the harm I do thee." She replied, "Dear father, do with me what you
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will, I am your child." Thereupon she laid down both her hands, and let
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them be cut off. The devil came for the third time, but she had wept so
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long and so much on the stumps, that after all they were quite clean.
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Then he had to give in, and had lost all right over her.
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The miller said to her, "I have by means of thee received such great
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wealth that I will keep thee most delicately as long as thou livest."
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But she replied, "Here I cannot stay, I will go forth, compassionate
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people will give me as much as I require." Thereupon she caused her
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maimed arms to be bound to her back, and by sunrise she set out on her
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way, and walked the whole day until night fell. Then she came to a
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royal garden, and by the shimmering of the moon she saw that trees
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covered with beautiful fruits grew in it, but she could not enter, for
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there was much water round about it. And as she had walked the whole
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day and not eaten one mouthful, and hunger tormented her, she thought,
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"Ah, if I were but inside, that I might eat of the fruit, else must I
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die of hunger!" Then she knelt down, called on God the Lord, and
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prayed. And suddenly an angel came towards her, who made a dam in the
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water, so that the moat became dry and she could walk through it. And
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now she went into the garden and the angel went with her. She saw a
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tree covered with beautiful pears, but they were all counted. Then she
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went to them, and to still her hunger, ate one with her mouth from the
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tree, but no more. The gardener was watching; but as the angel was
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standing by, he was afraid and thought the maiden was a spirit, and was
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silent, neither did he dare to cry out, or to speak to the spirit. When
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she had eaten the pear, she was satisfied, and went and concealed
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herself among the bushes. The King to whom the garden belonged, came
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down to it next morning, and counted, and saw that one of the pears was
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missing, and asked the gardener what had become of it, as it was not
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lying beneath the tree, but was gone. Then answered the gardener, "Last
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night, a spirit came in, who had no hands, and ate off one of the pears
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with its mouth." The King said, "How did the spirit get over the water,
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and where did it go after it had eaten the pear?" The gardener
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answered, "Some one came in a snow-white garment from heaven who made a
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dam, and kept back the water, that the spirit might walk through the
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moat. And as it must have been an angel, I was afraid, and asked no
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questions, and did not cry out. When the spirit had eaten the pear, it
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went back again." The King said, "If it be as thou sayest, I will watch
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with thee to-night."
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When it grew dark the King came into the garden and brought a priest
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with him, who was to speak to the spirit. All three seated themselves
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beneath the tree and watched. At midnight the maiden came creeping out
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of the thicket, went to the tree, and again ate one pear off it with
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her mouth, and beside her stood the angel in white garments. Then the
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priest went out to them and said, "Comest thou from heaven or from
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earth? Art thou a spirit, or a human being?" She replied, "I am no
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spirit, but an unhappy mortal deserted by all but God." The King said,
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"If thou art forsaken by all the world, yet will I not forsake thee."
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He took her with him into his royal palace, and as she was so beautiful
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and good, he loved her with all his heart, had silver hands made for
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her, and took her to wife.
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After a year the King had to take the field, so he commended his young
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Queen to the care of his mother and said, "If she is brought to bed
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take care of her, nurse her well, and tell me of it at once in a
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letter." Then she gave birth to a fine boy. So the old mother made
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haste to write and announce the joyful news to him. But the messenger
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rested by a brook on the way, and as he was fatigued by the great
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distance, he fell asleep. Then came the Devil, who was always seeking
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to injure the good Queen, and exchanged the letter for another, in
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which was written that the Queen had brought a monster into the world.
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When the King read the letter he was shocked and much troubled, but he
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wrote in answer that they were to take great care of the Queen and
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nurse her well until his arrival. The messenger went back with the
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letter, but rested at the same place and again fell asleep. Then came
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the Devil once more, and put a different letter in his pocket, in which
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it was written that they were to put the Queen and her child to death.
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The old mother was terribly shocked when she received the letter, and
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could not believe it. She wrote back again to the King, but received no
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other answer, because each time the Devil substituted a false letter,
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and in the last letter it was also written that she was to preserve the
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Queen's tongue and eyes as a token that she had obeyed.
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But the old mother wept to think such innocent blood was to be shed,
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and had a hind brought by night and cut out her tongue and eyes, and
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kept them. Then said she to the Queen, "I cannot have thee killed as
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the King commands, but here thou mayst stay no longer. Go forth into
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the wide world with thy child, and never come here again." The poor
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woman tied her child on her back, and went away with eyes full of
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tears. She came into a great wild forest, and then she fell on her
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knees and prayed to God, and the angel of the Lord appeared to her and
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led her to a little house on which was a sign with the words, "Here all
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dwell free." A snow-white maiden came out of the little house and said,
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"Welcome, Lady Queen," and conducted her inside. Then they unbound the
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little boy from her back, and held him to her breast that he might
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feed, and laid him in a beautifully-made little bed. Then said the poor
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woman, "From whence knowest thou that I was a queen?" The white maiden
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answered, "I am an angel sent by God, to watch over thee and thy
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child." The Queen stayed seven years in the little house, and was well
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cared for, and by God's grace, because of her piety, her hands which
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had been cut off, grew once more.
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At last the King came home again from the war, and his first wish was
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to see his wife and the child. Then his aged mother began to weep and
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said, "Thou wicked man, why didst thou write to me that I was to take
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those two innocent lives?" and she showed him the two letters which the
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Evil-one had forged, and then continued, "I did as thou badest me," and
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she showed the tokens, the tongue and eyes. Then the King began to weep
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for his poor wife and his little son so much more bitterly than she was
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doing, that the aged mother had compassion on him and said, "Be at
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peace, she still lives; I secretly caused a hind to be killed, and took
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these tokens from it; but I bound the child to thy wife's back and bade
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her go forth into the wide world, and made her promise never to come
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back here again, because thou wert so angry with her." Then spoke the
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King, "I will go as far as the sky is blue, and will neither eat nor
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drink until I have found again my dear wife and my child, if in the
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meantime they have not been killed, or died of hunger."
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Thereupon the King travelled about for seven long years, and sought her
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in every cleft of the rocks and in every cave, but he found her not,
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and thought she had died of want. During the whole of this time he
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neither ate nor drank, but God supported him. At length he came into a
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great forest, and found therein the little house whose sign was, "Here
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all dwell free." Then forth came the white maiden, took him by the
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hand, led him in, and said, "Welcome, Lord King," and asked him from
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whence he came. He answered, "Soon shall I have travelled about for the
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space of seven years, and I seek my wife and her child, but cannot find
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them." The angel offered him meat and drink, but he did not take
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anything, and only wished to rest a little. Then he lay down to sleep,
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and put a handkerchief over his face.
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Thereupon the angel went into the chamber where the Queen sat with her
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son, whom she usually called "Sorrowful," and said to her, "Go out with
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thy child, thy husband hath come." So she went to the place where he
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lay, and the handkerchief fell from his face. Then said she,
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"Sorrowful, pick up thy father's handkerchief, and cover his face
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again." The child picked it up, and put it over his face again. The
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King in his sleep heard what passed, and had pleasure in letting the
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handkerchief fall once more. But the child grew impatient, and said,
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"Dear mother, how can I cover my father's face when I have no father in
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this world? I have learnt to say the prayer, 'Our Father, which art in
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Heaven,' thou hast told me that my father was in Heaven, and was the
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good God, and how can I know a wild man like this? He is not my
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father." When the King heard that, he got up, and asked who they were.
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Then said she, "I am thy wife, and that is thy son, Sorrowful." And he
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saw her living hands, and said, "My wife had silver hands." She
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answered, "The good God has caused my natural hands to grow again;" and
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the angel went into the inner room, and brought the silver hands, and
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showed them to him. Hereupon he knew for a certainty that it was his
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dear wife and his dear child, and he kissed them, and was glad, and
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said, "A heavy stone has fallen from off mine heart." Then the angel of
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God gave them one meal with her, and after that they went home to the
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King's aged mother. There were great rejoicings everywhere, and the
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King and Queen were married again, and lived contentedly to their happy
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end.
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