Short Story
Snow White
Snow-White
The child’s song broke off in a little scream, for things are sometimes startling
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even when you have been expecting them; but the scream bubbled into a laugh.
I...I
“Ah! I – I mean I’m laughing because you look so funny. I took some bread and
milk because I was hungry.” She stopped abruptly, feeling that sob somewhere
about her again. The dwarf advanced toward her, and she held on to the back of
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the chair; but he held out his hand and smiled.
“How do you do?” he said. “I am very glad to see you, pray sit down again
and finish your supper.”
“It’s your supper,” said the child, who was honest. “I didn’t mean to steal
it; I don’t know perhaps there isn’t enough for both of us.” She had a way of
leaving out words in her sentences that sometimes confused people, but the
dwarf seemed to understand.
“There’s plenty for both!” he said. “Come! I’ll sit down here, and you shall
give me some milk. I am hungry, too. Have some honey!” He nodded at her, and
smiled again; he had the most delightful smile the child had ever seen. Somebody
once said you could warm yourself at it it as at a fire. The child took a piece of
bread and looked at him over it as she nibbled. He was not a tiny dwarf, not one
gets
fights grass-blades
of the kind that get into flowers, and fight with grassblades, and that sort of
thing. No, indeed! He was just a little man; why, he was taller than she was,
though not so very much taller. He had brown hair and a soft brown beard; his
eyes were brown, too, and full of light. All brown and gray, for his dress was gray
and soft, “kind of humplety velvet,” the child said to herself, though it was really
only corduroy. He seemed all of a piece with the house, and the gray rock behind
it. Now he looked at her, and smiled again.
“You look as if you were wondering something very much,” he said. “Have
some more milk! What are you wondering?”
“Partly I was wondering where the rest of you was!” said the child.
any more
“The rest of me?” said the man. “There isn’t anymore of me. This is all
there is. Don’t you think it’s enough?” He smiled still, but this time it was only his
mouth, and his eyes looked dark, as if something hurt him.
“I mean the others,” the child explained. “The rest of the seven. I guess it’s
Snow White
’em
six, perhaps. There was seven of ‘em where Snow-white came to, you know.”
“Seven what?” asked the man.
“Dwarfs!” said the child.
“Oh!” said the man.
he
He was silent for a moment, as if were thinking; then he laughed, and the
child laughed, too. “Isn’t it funny?” she said. “What are you laughing at?”
Snow White
“Yes, it is funny!” said the man. “Why, you are just like Snow-white, aren’t
you? but there aren’t any more dwarfs. I’m the only one there is here.”