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The Little Mermaid

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Far out at sea the water is as blue as the bluest cornflower, and as clear as the clearest crystal; but it is very deep, too deep for any cable to fathom, and if many steeples were piled on the top of one another they would not reach from the bed of the sea to the surface of the water. Voice Reading
It is down there that the Mermen live. Voice Reading
Now don't imagine that there are only bare white sands at the bottom; oh no! the most wonderful trees and plants grow there, with such flexible stalks and leaves, that at the slightest motion of the water they move just as if they were alive. Voice Reading
All the fish, big and little, glide among the branches just as, up here, birds glide through the air. Voice Reading
The palace of the Merman King lies in the very deepest part; its walls are of coral and the long pointed windows of the clearest amber, but the roof is made of mussel shells which open and shut with the lapping of the water. Voice Reading
This has a lovely effect, for there are gleaming pearls in every shell, any one of which would be the pride of a queen's crown. Voice Reading
The Merman King had been for many years a widower, but his old mother kept house for him; she was a clever woman, but so proud of her noble birth that she wore twelve oysters on her tail, while the other grandees were only allowed six. Voice Reading
Otherwise she was worthy of all praise, especially because she was so fond of the little mermaid princesses, her grandchildren. Voice Reading
They were six beautiful children, but the youngest was the prettiest of all; her skin was as soft and delicate as a roseleaf, her eyes as blue as the deepest sea, but like all the others she had no feet, and instead of legs she had a fish's tail. Voice Reading
All the livelong day they used to play in the palace in the great halls, where living flowers grew out of the walls. Voice Reading
When the great amber windows were thrown open the fish swam in, just as the swallows fly into our rooms when we open the windows, but the fish swam right up to the little princesses, ate out of their hands, and allowed themselves to be patted. Voice Reading
The Merman King had been for many years a widower, but his old mother kept house for him; she was a clever woman, but so proud of her noble birth that she wore twelve oysters on her tail, while the other grandees were only allowed six. Voice Reading
Outside the palace was a large garden, with fiery red and deep blue trees, the fruit of which shone like gold, while the flowers glowed like fire on their ceaselessly waving stalks. Voice Reading
The ground was of the finest sand, but it was of a blue phosphorescent tint. Voice Reading
Everything was bathed in a wondrous blue light down there; you might more readily have supposed yourself to be high up in the air, with only the sky above and below you, than that you were at the bottom of the ocean. Voice Reading
In a dead calm you could just catch a glimpse of the sun like a purple flower with a stream of light radiating from its calyx. Voice Reading
Each little princess had her own little plot of garden, where she could dig and plant just as she liked. Voice Reading
One made her flower-bed in the shape of a whale; another thought it nice to have hers like a little mermaid; but the youngest made hers quite round like the sun, and she would only have flowers of a rosy hue like its beams. Voice Reading
She was a curious child, quiet and thoughtful, and while the other sisters decked out their gardens with all kinds of extraordinary objects which they got from wrecks, she would have nothing besides the rosy flowers like the sun up above, except a statue of a beautiful boy. Voice Reading
It was hewn out of the purest white marble and had gone to the bottom from some wreck. Voice Reading
By the statue she planted a rosy red weeping willow which grew splendidly, and the fresh delicate branches hung round and over it, till they almost touched the blue sand where the shadows showed violet, and were ever moving like the branches. Voice Reading
It looked as if the leaves and the roots were playfully interchanging kisses. Voice Reading
Nothing gave her greater pleasure than to hear about the world of human beings up above; she made her old grandmother tell her all that she knew about ships and towns, people and animals. Voice Reading

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