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Words near each other
・ The Fool (design collective)
・ The Fool (guitar)
・ The Fool (Lee Ann Womack song)
・ The Fool (play)
・ The Fool (Ryn Weaver album)
・ The Fool (Tarot card)
・ The Fool (Warpaint album)
・ The Fool and His Money
・ The Fool and the Flying Ship
・ The Fool and the Princess
・ The Fool Circle
・ The Fool Killer
・ The Fool Monty
・ The Fool of Kairouan
・ The Fool of Quality
The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship
・ The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship (book)
・ The Fool on the Hill
・ The Fool on the Hill (ballet)
・ The Fool's Errand
・ The Fool's Progress
・ The Foolish Matrons
・ The Foolish Old Man Removes the Mountains
・ The Foolish Thing to Do
・ The Fools
・ The Fools in Town Are on Our Side
・ The Fools' Hall of Fame
・ The Fooo Conspiracy
・ The Foot
・ The Foot Book


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The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship : ウィキペディア英語版
The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship

The Flying Ship or The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship is a Russian fairy tale. Andrew Lang included it in ''The Yellow Fairy Book'' and Arthur Ransome in ''Old Peter's Russian Tales''.
Uri Shulevitz illustrated a version of Ransome's tale, ''The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship'', for which he won the Caldecott Medal in 1969. Also, a made-for-TV stop motion-animated film with the same name was released in the United Kingdom in 1990. It aired as part of WGBH's children's series, Long Ago and Far Away. Rabbit Ears Productions has also made an audiotape version, featuring Robin Williams, which was released on Showtime in 1991. It aired as part of Rabbit Ears's We All Have Tales series. In addition, Terry Gilliam's 1988 film The Adventures of Baron Munchausen contains several elements inspired by this story, particularly the opening sequence set at the court of the Grand Turk.
==Synopsis==

A couple had three sons, and the youngest was a fool. One day, the Tsar declared that whoever made him a ship that could sail through the air would marry his daughter. The older two set out, with everything their parents could give them; then the youngest set out as well, despite their ridicule and being given less fine food. He met a little man and, when the man asked to share, he hesitated only because it was not fit. But when he opened it, the food had become fine.
The man told him how to strike a tree with an axe; then, he was not to look at it but fall to his knees. When he was lifted up, he would find the tree had been turned into a boat, and could fly it to the Tsar's palace, but he should give anyone who asked a lift. He obeyed.
On the way, he met and gave a lift to a man who was listening to everything in the world, a man who hopped on one leg so that he would not reach the end of the world in one bound, a man who could shoot a bird at a hundred miles, a man who needed a great basket of bread for his breakfast, a man whose thirst could not be sated by a lake, a man with a bundle of wood that would become soldiers, and a man with straw that would make everything cold.
At the Tsar's place, the Tsar did not want to marry the princess to a peasant. He decided to send him to the end of the world to get healing water, before the Tsar finished his dinner. But the man who could hear heard him and told the youngest son, who lamented his fate. The fleet-footed man went after it. He fell asleep by the spring, and the huntsman shot the tree he was leaning against to wake him up, and he brought back the water in time. The Tsar then ordered him to eat twelve oxen and twelve tons of bread, but the glutton ate them all. The Tsar then ordered him to drink forty casks of wine, with forty gallons each, but the thirsty man drank them all.
The Tsar said that the betrothal would be announced after the youngest son bathed, and went to have him stifled in the bath by heat. The straw cooled it, saving him.
The King demanded that he present him with an army on the spot, and with the wood, the youngest son had it and threatened to attack if the Tsar did not agree. The Tsar had him dressed in fine clothing, and the princess fell in love with him on sight. They were married, and even the glutton and the thirsty man had enough to eat and drink at the feast.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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