Anne Lisbeth is like milk and blood, young and happy, and she looks so cute. Her teeth were gleaming white, her eyes were bright, her feet danced with ease, and her temperament was also light. What will be the fruit of all this? ..."A nasty child! ..." Indeed, the child was not good-looking at all, so he was sent to the home of a ditch digger's wife to be raised.
Anne Lisbeth herself moved into the mansion of an earl. She was wearing clothes made of silk and velvet, and she was sitting in a luxurious room. Not a breath of wind could blow on her, and no one could say an unkind word to her, because it would make her sad, and sadness was what she suffered. Can't. She raised the Count's children. This child is as handsome as a prince and as beautiful as an angel. How she loved this child!
As for her own child, yes, he was at home, in the ditchdigger's house. In this house, the pot is boiled less often and the mouth is opened more. In addition, there is often no one at home. The child started to cry. But since no one heard him cry, no one felt sorry for him. He cried until he slowly fell asleep. In his sleep he felt neither hungry nor thirsty. What an invention sleep is!
Many years passed. Yes, as the saying goes, over time, the weeds will grow. Anne Lisbeth's children also grew up. Everyone said he was stunted, but he was now a full member of the family he was staying with. The family received a sum of money to support him, and Anne Lisbeth got rid of him from then on. She herself became a city woman and lived very comfortably; when she went out, she even wore a hat. But she never went to the ditch digger's house because it was too far from the city. In fact, she had nothing to do. The child belongs to someone else; and they say that the child can now feed himself. He should find a job to make a living, so he acted like a red-haired cow for Maz. He can already herd cattle and do something useful.
Next to the laundry pool of an aristocratic mansion, a guard dog sat on the dog roof and basked in the sun. Whenever anyone walks by, it barks several times. If it rains, it goes into its house and sleeps on the dry and comfortable ground. Anne Lisbeth's children sat on the edge of the ditch, basking in the sun and whittling the stakes for the cattle. In the spring he saw three strawberry trees in bloom; his only happy thought was that the flowers would bear fruit, but the fruit did not bear fruit. He sat in the wind and rain and got soaked to the skin. Later, the strong wind dried his clothes. When he came home, some men and women either pushed or pulled him because he was so ugly. No one loves him and he is used to this kind of thing!
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