The RED Fairy Book - online children's book

Illustrated classic fairy tales for children by Andrew Lang

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82
BROTHER AND SISTER
B ROTHER took sister by the hand and said : ' Look here ; we haven't had one single happy hour since our mother died. That stepmother of ours beats us regularly every day, and if we dare go near her she kicks us away. We never get anything but hard thy crusts to eat—why, the dog under the table is better off than we are. She does throw him a good morsel or two now and then. Oh dear ! if our own dear mother only knew all about it! Come along, and let us go forth into the wide world together.'
So off they started through fields and meadows, over hedges and ditches, and walked the whole day long, and when it rained sister said:
' Heaven and our hearts are weeping together.'
Towards evening they came to a large forest, and were so tired out with hunger and their long walk, as well as all then- trouble, that they crept into a hollow tree and soon fell fast asleep.
Next morning, when they woke up, the sun was already high in the heavens and was shining down bright and warm into the tree. Then said brother:
' I'm so thirsty, sister; if I did but know where to find a little stream, I'd go and have a drink. I do believe I hear one.' He jumped up, took sister by the hand, and they set off to hunt for the brook.
Now their cruel stepmother was in reality a witch, and she knew perfectly well that the two children had run away. She had crept secretly after them, and had cast her spells over all the streams in the forest.
Presently the children found a little brook dancing and glitter­ing over the stones, and brother was eager to drink of it, but as it rushed past sister heard it murmuring :
' Who drinks of me will be a tiger! who drinks of me will be a tiger!/
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