The Hare's Bride
[2023-12-12 19:33:16]
There was a woman who had a beautiful cabbage garden and her daughter. A rabbit entered it and in the winter he ate all the cabbage. So the mother told her daughter: "Go to the garden and chase the rabbit."
The next day the rabbit came again and ate the cabbage, and my daughter said "I went to the garden and caught up with the rabbits."
On the third day a rabbit came again and ate cabbage and her daughter said to her daughter, "Go to the garden to catch a rabbit."
So the girl sat on the rabbit 's tail and the rabbit took her to his cabin and say,' Grill some green cabbage and millet now with cake '. I will go out to invite guests to our wedding.
Then all wedding guests are coming. Who are the married guests? I can tell you because someone told me. They are all rabbits, crows as a priest licking brides and grooms, foxes like Sexton, their altars under the rainbow.
The rabbit walked to her, "Open the door, open the door, said the wedding guest is happy."
The bride cried and said nothing. The rabbit is gone. Then the rabbit comes back and "Open the door! Open the door, the wedding guests are very hungry."
The bride kept crying and said nothing. The rabbit is gone. Then he returned and said, "Open the door! Open the door, wedding guests are waiting."
The bride said nothing, the rabbit passed away. Then she wrapped herself in a straw doll, gave it a spoon to stir it and put it next to a millet pot. Then she returned to her mother
A rabbit came again and said, "Open the door! Open the door." Then he opened the door by himself and hit a doll on his head to get his hat off. Then the rabbit saw that this was not his bride, he passed away sadly.
Source: Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, Haychenbroad, Kinderdowhausen (children's and family's story - Grimm's fairy tale), no. 66
Information sources of the Grimm brothers: an unnamed informant from Buckow of Mecklenburg (probably Hans Rudolfvon Schröder)
Survivors include husband, Edwin Hale of Boonville, two daughters, Sue Lawson of Boonville, and two sons Sony Hair and Tim Ha, Boonville, two sisters, Earline Rinehart and Peggy included. Nabors, Booneville, brothers, Warson Lambert of Booneville, ten grandchildren, eleven great-grandchildren. For survivors, her husband Charles "Sony" rabbit, three daughters, Rebecca Bowden, Deborah Bowden, Susan Apple Gate, All Boonville, all the sons, Charles "Randy" rabbit and William "Billy" rabbit It is included. Boonville, five sisters, Judy George, Elapipine, Betty Hahn, Patricia Hopper, Boonville, Florida Winter Haven, Ahren Smith, two brothers, Dorman Holland, Cherokee, Alabama, Bobby Holland, Myrtle. 8 grandchildren, Amber Mullins, Randall Hair, Joshua Hawkins, Brandy Hair, Jessica Bowden, Kelly Hair, Crystal Bowden, Evan Hair
Initially, this rabbit was a concept involving specific changes and milestones. The origin of the word hare is "hare" (the weather is good). It is used for expressions such as "stage of swelling" (in a very important case, occurring almost once) and "Hare gi" (clothing worn when milestones and certain changes occur). On the other hand, daily arrival is called "Keki", but since the Meiji period it is no longer used as a word. Also today, we call a simple weather a "hare rabbit". However, during the Edo period there was a record that "rabbits" were used only to express the day of change, when the weather improved and the weather improved, the fine weather broke into.
The predominant predator of snow rabbits is Canada and the history of animals captured by fur hunters for hundreds of years shows that the number of rabbits and rabbits cyclically increases and decreases. Case studies on the relationship between the number of predators and the number of preyed rabbits Snow rabbit field rabbits are mainly found in the northern forests and highland forests; in these forests they prefer dense shrub bed habitats. Snow rabbit rabbits occupy various habitats such as mature conifers (mainly Douglas fir and