Copyright, 1917, by
L. T. MYERS
printed in u. s. a.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
|---|---|
| Little Snow White | [5] |
| The Ugly Duckling | [22] |
| Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp | [ 43] |
| The Sleeping Beauty | [64] |
| Puss-in-Boots | [73] |
| Adventures of Tom Thumb | [ 81] |
| The Three Bears | [95] |
| The Little Match Girl | [103] |
| Beauty and the Beast | [109] |
| The Story of Cinderella | [122] |
| Jack the Giant Killer | [135] |
| Jack and the Beanstalk | [155] |
| Dick Whittington and His Cat | [167] |
| The Story of Bluebeard | [184] |
| Little Red Riding-Hood | [195] |
| Sindbad the Sailor | [ 202] |
| Hansel and Gretel | [230] |
| The Goose Girl | [247] |
[LITTLE SNOW-WHITE]
ONCE upon a time in the middle of winter, when the flakes of snow were falling like feathers from the clouds, a Queen sat at her palace window, which had an ebony black frame, stitching her husband's shirts. While she was thus engaged and looking out at the snow she pricked her finger, and three drops of blood fell upon the snow. Now the red looked so well upon the white that she thought to herself, "Oh, that I had a child as white as this snow, as red as this blood, and as black as the wood of this frame!" Soon afterwards a little daughter came to her, who was as white as snow, and with cheeks as red as blood, and with hair as black as ebony, and from this she was named "Snow-White." And at the same time her mother died.
About a year afterwards the King married another wife, who was very beautiful, but so proud and haughty that she could not bear anyone to be better-looking than herself. She owned a wonderful mirror, and when she stepped before it and said: