翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Twisted Thing
・ The Twisted Whiskers Show
・ The Twisted World of Marge Simpson
・ The Twisters
・ The Twits
・ The Two Admirals
・ The Two and a Half Feathers
・ The Two and Only
・ The Two Babylons
・ The Two Baronesses
・ The Two Blind Men
・ The Two Brides
・ The Two Brothers
・ The Two Brothers (film)
・ The Two Captains
The Two Caskets
・ The Two Colonels
・ The Two Coreys
・ The Two Coreys (TV series)
・ The Two Cultures
・ The Two Deaths of Quincas Wateryell
・ The Two Dianas
・ The Two Doctors
・ The Two Dollar Pistols with Tift Merritt
・ The Two EPs
・ The Two EPs (Rock n Roll Soldiers)
・ The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll
・ The Two Faces of Fear
・ The Two Faces of January
・ The Two Faces of January (film)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

The Two Caskets : ウィキペディア英語版
The Two Caskets
The Two Caskets is a Scandinavian fairy tale included by Benjamin Thorpe in his ''Yule-Tide Stories: A Collection of Scandinavian and North German Popular Tales and Traditions''. Andrew Lang included it in ''The Orange Fairy Book''.〔Andrew Lang, ("The Two Caskets" ), ''The Orange Fairy Book''〕
It is Aarne-Thompson type 480, the kind and the unkind girls. Others of this type include ''Shita-kiri Suzume'', ''Diamonds and Toads'', ''Mother Hulda'', ''Father Frost'', ''The Three Little Men in the Wood'', ''The Enchanted Wreath'', ''The Old Witch'', and ''The Three Heads in the Well''.〔Heidi Anne Heiner, ("Tales Similar to Diamonds and Toads" )〕 Literary variants include ''The Three Fairies'' and ''Aurore and Aimée''.〔Jack Zipes, ''The Great Fairy Tale Tradition: From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm'', p 543, ISBN 0-393-97636-X〕
==Synopsis==

A woman had a daughter and stepdaughter. One day she set them to spin while sitting on the edge of a well, giving her daughter good flax and her stepdaughter coarse, unusable flax, and declared that whoever's thread broke first would be thrown in. When her stepdaughter's thread broke, she threw her in.
The girl fell to a wonderful land. She walked on and came to a tumble-down fence, overgrown with vines. It pled with her not to hurt it, because it did not have long to live, and she carefully jumped over it where the vines were less. She found an oven full of loaves, and it told her she could eat what she liked, but begged her not to hurt it. She ate a loaf, thanked it for such fine bread, and shut its door. She came to a cow with a bucket on its horns; it said she could milk it and drink, but asked her not to hurt it or spill its milk. She agreed, and when a drop of milk was left, the cow told her to throw it over its hooves and hang the bucket back up.
She came to a house. An old woman asked her to comb her hair. When she did, the old woman showed her a farm where she could take service. She took good care of the cows, gave milk to the cats, and when she sieved corn, gave some to the birds.
One day, her mistress summoned her and told her to fill a sieve full of water and bring it back. The birds told her to use ashes to stop up the holes. Another day, she had to wash some black yarn until it became white, and white yarn until it became black. The birds told her to face east to turn the black white, and west to turn the white black. Then her mistress had her weave them into a robe as smooth as a king's by sunset, but the skiens tangled and broke every moment. The cats wove it on her behalf.
She wanted to leave and go home. Her mistress sent her to an attic and told her to take whatever casket she liked. She considered many beautiful ones, but the cats directed her to a black one, so she took it and went home. Her stepmother took her wages, but the box was filled with marvelous treasures.
Her stepmother put her own daughter on the edge of the well, to spin with coarse stuff, and threw her down the well when it broke. The daughter proceeded as her sister had, but was rude to everyone on the wall, and worked very poorly at the farm, including the three tasks her stepsister had done. At the end of the year, she went on her way with a large red casket. When she opened it at home, fire burst out and burned her and her mother to death.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Two Caskets」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.