King Thrushbeard
The Brothers Grimm would have us believe that this folktale teaches a valuable lesson by documenting the fall of a spoiled princess who judges potential suitors by looks alone and is so ill-mannered that she says cruel things about them to their faces. Through her punishment (being married to a beggar street musician), we also learn that she has almost no household or practical skills. I’m not sure though about the central idea that the best way to teach humility is to publicly humiliate a person. Isn’t this what the princess was punished for at the beginning of the story?
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This story is from Carry on Jeeves, the third of seventeen “Jeeves books” by
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The major theme of this story by
It is hard to like or feel any sympathy for the American-raised Dominican Harvard professor at the centre of this story by
In this moving tale by