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Searching The Poetry and Meaning of Fairy Tales
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  • Title: Poetry/Fairy Tales: Lecture 1: The Poetry of Fairy Tales
    Matching lines:
    • comes out to the yard, and kills the paddock. And now the child loses
    • The innkeeper hung a medallion around his neck that said: He killed a
    • ever and again into my kingdom. Look! if you've killed a hundred with
    • who had killed a hundred with one blow told them, “I can do
    • fairy tale. The man who “killed a hundred with one blow”
  • Title: Poetry/Fairy Tales: Lecture 2: The Interpretation of Fairy Tales
    Matching lines:
    • killed, and found it amounted to a hundred. So he got a slate from
    • the innkeeper and wrote on it: “He killed a hundred at one
    • killed a hundred at one blow!” — and told the king. “Ho!”
    • damage. They are so strong that no one can kill them. You will of
    • course be able to kill them, if you live up to the statement on your
    • cannot slay the bears, and they kill me, I shall at least have eaten
    • of each bear and in this way killed them all. When the king saw this,
    • said: “I simply killed the bears and then cut off their heads.”
    • giants come to our country. No one can kill them or drive them away;
    • arranging to kill him. Therefore he made preparations. He got a
    • they were determined to kill him. So he took a pig's bladder and
    • giant who had been chosen to kill him came and stabbed at his head,
    • got out of bed and killed one giant after another as they slept. Then
    • was at work the magic horse stepped up and wanted to kill the spider.
    • but the magic horse killed them both. Then instantly the glass king
    • alarmed, for the giants wanted to kill him; however, they struck a
    • with the second giant and the third, and so he killed them all. Then



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