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This document was prepared with borrowed Etext for Arthur's Classic Novels. , April 30, 2001
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<acknowledge>
This document was prepared with borrowed Etext for Arthur's Classic Novels. XML markup by Arthur Wendover. April 30, 2001.
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<meta id="Description" content="This is the e-text version of the book The Beam, taken from the original e-text thebem10.txt." />



<frontmatter>
<titlepage>
<subtitle>Grimms Fairy Tales </subtitle>
<title>The Beam  </title>
<author>Jacob Ludwig Grimm and Wilhelm Carl Grimm  </author>
<subtitle>(1812)</subtitle>
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<para>
  <emph>THERE WAS</emph> once a magician who was standing in the midst of a great        
crowd of people performing his wonders. He had a cock brought in,           
which lifted a heavy beam and carried it as if it were as light as a        
feather. But a girl was present who had just found a bit of                 
four-leaved clover, and had thus become so wise that no deception           
could stand out against her, and she saw that the beam was nothing but      
a straw. So she cried, &quot;You people, do you not see that it is a             
straw that the cock is carrying, and no beam?&quot; Immediately the              
enchantment vanished, and the people saw what it was, and drove the         
magician away in shame and disgrace. He, however, full of inward            
anger, said, &quot;I will soon revenge myself.&quot;
</para><para>
After some time the girl's wedding-day came, and she was decked out,      
and went in a great procession over the fields to the place where           
the church was. All at once she came to a stream which was very much        
swollen, and there was no bridge and no plank to cross it. Then the         
bride nimbly took her clothes up, and wanted to wade through it. And        
just as she was thus standing in the water a man- and it was the            
enchanter- cried mockingly close beside her, &quot;Aha! Where are thine          
eyes that thou takest that for water?&quot; Then her eyes were opened,           
and she saw that she was standing with her clothes lifted up in the         
middle of a field that was blue with flowers of blue flax. Then all         
the people saw it likewise, and chased her away with ridicule and           
laughter.
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<emph>-- End --</emph>
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End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Patchwork Girl of Oz by Baum
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