The Blue Fairy Book Quotes
The Blue Fairy Book
by
Andrew Lang10,344 ratings, 4.05 average rating, 497 reviews
The Blue Fairy Book Quotes
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“So labour at your Alphabet,
For by that learning shall you get
To lands where Fairies may be met.”
― The Blue Fairy Book
For by that learning shall you get
To lands where Fairies may be met.”
― The Blue Fairy Book
“The advantage of possessing a great empire is not to be able to do the evil that one desires, but to do all the good that one possibly can.”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“My dear Prince, might I beg you to move a little more that way, for your nose casts such a shadow that I really cannot see what I have on my plate”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“She believes that I love her!" cried the King. "What a fatal mistake! What is to be done to undeceive her?" "You know best," answered the Mermaid, smiling kindly at him. "When people are as much in love with one another as you two are, they don't need advice from anyone else.”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“SNOW-WHITE AND ROSE-RED A POOR widow once lived in a little cottage with a garden in front of it, in which grew two rose trees, one bearing white roses and the other red. She had two children, who were just like the two rose trees; one was called Snow-white and the other Rose-red, and they were the sweetest and best children in the world, always diligent and always cheerful; but Snow-white was quieter and more gentle than Rose-red. Rose-red loved to run about the fields and meadows, and to pick flowers and catch butterflies ; but Snow-white sat at home with her mother and helped her in the household, or read aloud to her when there was no work to do. The two children loved each other so dearly that they always walked about hand-in-hand whenever they went out together, and when Snow-white said: ‘ We will never desert each other,’ Rose-red answered : ‘No, not as long as we live;’ and the mother added : ‘ Whatever one gets she shall share with the other.’ They often roamed about in the woods gathering berries and no beast offered to hurt them ; on the contrary, they came up to them in the most confiding manner ; the little hare would eat a cabbage leaf from their hands, the deer grazed beside them, the stag would bound past them merrily, and the birds remained on the branches and sang to them with all their might. No evil ever befell them ; if they tarried late in the wood and night”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“Once upon a time there lived a king who was deeply in love with a princess, but she could not marry anyone, because she was under an enchantment. So the King set out to seek a fairy, and asked what he could do to win the Princess's love. The Fairy said to him: "You know that the Princess has a great cat which she is very fond of. Whoever is clever enough to tread on that cat's tail is the man she is destined to marry." The King said to himself that this would not be very difficult, and he left the Fairy, determined to grind the cat's tail to powder rather than not tread on it at all.”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“Once upon a time in a certain country there lived a king whose palace was surrounded by a spacious garden. But, though the gardeners were many and the soil was good, this garden yielded neither flowers nor fruits, not even grass or shady trees.”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“Her mother, who, since the death of the King, her father, had nothing in the world she cared for so much as this little Princess, was so terribly afraid of losing her that she quite spoiled her, and never tried to correct any of her faults. The consequence was that this little person, who was as pretty as possible, and was one day to wear a crown, grew up so proud and so much in love with her own beauty that she despised everyone else in the world.”
― The Blue Fairy Book: Enriched edition. Magical Tales and Enchanted Worlds: A Literary Anthology of Fantasy Stories and Folklore from Around the World
― The Blue Fairy Book: Enriched edition. Magical Tales and Enchanted Worlds: A Literary Anthology of Fantasy Stories and Folklore from Around the World
“The next day the sorcerer, tied to the tail of a savage mule loaded with nuts, was broken into as many pieces as there were nuts upon the mule’s back.[1]”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“never”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
“You see how self-love keeps us from knowing our own defects of mind and body. Our reason tries in vain to show them to us; we refuse to see them till we find them in the way of our interests.”
― The Blue Fairy Book
― The Blue Fairy Book
