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The Little Mermaid


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Then the little mermaid sighed and looked sadly at her fish's tail.
Let us be happy,' said the grandmother; 'we will hop and skip during our three hundred years of life; it is surely a long enough time; and after it is over we shall rest all the better in our graves. There is to be a court ball to-night.'
This was a much more splendid affair than we ever see on earth.
The walls and the ceiling of the great ballroom were of thick but transparent glass.
Several hundreds of colossal mussel shells, rose red and grass green, were ranged in order round the sides holding blue lights, which illuminated the whole room and shone through the walls, so that the sea outside was quite lit up.
You could see countless fish, great and small, swimming towards the glass walls, some with shining scales of crimson hue, while others were golden and silvery.
In the middle of the room was a broad stream of running water, and on this the mermaids and mermen danced to their own beautiful singing.
No earthly beings have such lovely voices.
[line 151]
The little mermaid sang more sweetly than any of them, and they all applauded her.