Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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anʲsʲəx joɒ̯ aŋkəʃk olsəɣ | pelym mansi (PM) | Ljalkin, Andrei Petrovich | prose (pro) | Tales (tal) | 1264 | glossed | – |
Text Source | Editor | Collector |
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Kannisto, Artturi - Liimola, Matti (1956): Wogulische Volksdichtung gesammelt und übersetzt von Artturi Kannisto, bearbeitet und herausgegeben von Matti Liimola. III. Band. Märchen. In: Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne, 111. Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, 139-148. | Liimola, Matti; Kuzjomkin, Andrei Aleksejevich | Kannisto & Liimola (KL) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"There was an old man and an old woman" | – | – | – |
by Riese, Timothy |
Citation |
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Kannisto & Liimola 1956: OUDB Pelym Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1264. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1264 (Accessed on 2024-11-10) |
anʲsʲəx joɒ̯ aŋkəʃk olsəɣ (glossed version) |
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1 |
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There was an old man and an old woman. |
2 |
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They have three daughters. |
3 |
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He sends his oldest daughter to check on the weir. |
4 |
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She went there, she saw nothing. |
5 |
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She runs back, on the seashore there's a hut. |
6 |
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Her hands were freezing, she went in to warm up. |
7 |
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When she goes inside, there's a man with skewer-legs and skewer-arms walking around. |
8 |
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The girl starts to leave. |
9 |
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He grabbed a knife and blocked the door. |
10 |
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He won't let the girl out, he says, you marry me, I won't kill you, if you don't marry me, I kill you. |
11 |
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The girl married him. |
12 |
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The old man waited and waited, no daughter. |
13 |
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He says to the middle daughter, go (and see) where your sister has gone. |
14 |
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The girl ran to check on the weir. |
15 |
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She ran there, likewise she saw nothing. |
16 |
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She runs back, her hands are freezing. |
17 |
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Again, the hut caught her eye. |
18 |
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Whoever lives (there), I'm going inside to warm up. |
19 |
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When she goes in her sister is sitting there. |
20 |
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You, she says, what are you doing sitting here? |
21 |
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Her sister said, you won't be leaving, she says. |
22 |
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The girl started to leave, the man grabbed a knife and planted himself in the door, and doesn't let her (leave), he says, if you marry me, I'll let you live, if you won't marry me, I'll kill you. |
23 |
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How can the two of us marry you? |
24 |
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At first she didn't want to, (but) he blocked the door of the hut with a knife and won't let her (out). |
25 |
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The girl married him and the man took two wives. |
26 |
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The old man waited and waited, no second daughter. |
27 |
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He says to his last daughter, go (and see) where your sisters have gone, have they fallen into the water, or have they frozen! |
28 |
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The girl ran to check the weir. |
29 |
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When she got there, there were no sisters. |
30 |
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She runs back, there's a hut standing. |
31 |
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She says, I'll just go inside and warm up. |
32 |
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When she enters, the two sisters are sitting there. |
33 |
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She started to scold the sisters, just what, she says, are you doing sitting here? |
34 |
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Again, the old man blocked the door of the hut with a knife. |
35 |
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The girl tries to leave. |
36 |
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The old man says, where are you going? |
37 |
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If you marry me, I'll let you live, if you won't marry me, then I'll kill you. |
38 |
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The girl berated and berated him, finally she married him, where (should) she go? |
39 |
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The man began to go hunting. |
40 |
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He went up to his eldest wife. |
41 |
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He says, what will you have made by the time I return? |
42 |
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he says. |
43 |
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She says, I'll make you a hundred sazhens of linen. |
44 |
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He went to his middle wife. |
45 |
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You, he says, what will you have made by the time I return? |
46 |
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She says, by the time you return I'll have made you a net one hundred sazhens long. |
47 |
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He came to his last wife. |
48 |
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You, he says, what will you have made by the time I return? |
49 |
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She says, by the time you return I will have borne you a son. |
50 |
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His arms will be silver up to the elbows, his legs will be silver up to the knees, on his forehead there will be a sun, on the back of his neck a moon. |
51 |
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The old man went off hunting. |
52 |
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His oldest wife made a hundred sazhens of linen, his middle wife made a net one hundred sazhens long, his youngest wife bore a son, his arms were silver up to the elbows, its legs were silver up to the knees, his forehead a sun, the back of his neck a moon. |
53 |
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The two (other) women became envious that she had borne a son: she'll start being loved, the two of them won't be, they haven't borne a son. |
54 |
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The woman who had given birth fell asleep, the other two stole the boy and threw him into the sea. |
55 |
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They placed a puppy and a young magpie next to the woman. |
56 |
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So, the old man returned home from the forest. |
57 |
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He went up to his eldest wife. |
58 |
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What, he says, did you make for me? |
59 |
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She brought out a hundred sazhens of linen for her husband. |
60 |
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He went up to his middle wife. |
61 |
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What did you make by the time I returned? |
62 |
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The middle wife brought out a net one hundred sazhens long for her husband. |
63 |
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He went to his last wife. |
64 |
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He says, what did you give birth to for me? |
65 |
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Next to his last wife a puppy and a young magpie are lying. |
66 |
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He grabbed his wife, and broke her arms and legs. |
67 |
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He carried her out and threw her onto the seashore. |
68 |
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The woman started to rub herself with dew water. |
69 |
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She rubbed and rubbed herself, her arms and legs healed. |
70 |
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Together with the puppy she walked along the seashore. |
71 |
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And now to build a small hut! |
72 |
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She built herself a hut to live in. |
73 |
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At some time her puppy goes off somewhere. |
74 |
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She is brought food by her puppy. |
75 |
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At some point her little dog began not to bring food. |
76 |
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How is it that you're bringing me no food? |
77 |
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Its mother says. |
78 |
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The little dog says to her, how is it I'm bringing no food? |
79 |
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I play during the day, a handsome boy arises from the sea and we're busy playing by day. |
80 |
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The mother started to think. |
81 |
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The little dog went, its mother prowled behind silently, hid, sat down. |
82 |
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Suddenly she looks, out of the sea a boy did emerge. |
83 |
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The two of them started playing with one another. |
84 |
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When the woman took notice, (it's) her own son! |
85 |
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The next day the woman made three bark baskets. |
86 |
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She squeezed her breast milk into the bark baskets. |
87 |
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The next morning before her son got up, she placed the bark baskets there at their play spot. |
88 |
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She herself hid nearby. |
89 |
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Suddenly her son emerged to the little dog. |
90 |
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They started playing. |
91 |
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The little dog came to a bark basket. |
92 |
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It enticed the boy, look, I found really sweet milk in a bark basket! |
93 |
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And the boy came over. |
94 |
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The boy dipped (his finger) in once, he says, it almost smells like my mother. |
95 |
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The little dog found another bark basket, it says, here it's even sweeter. |
96 |
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The boy came over, he drinks, oh, he says, it smells like my mother here. |
97 |
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The little dog found a third bark basket farther up the beach. |
98 |
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Look, here is even sweeter milk again. |
99 |
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The two of them sat down to eat. |
100 |
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His mother then crept up silently. |
101 |
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She suddenly caught her son. |
102 |
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She caught him and brought him back home into her meager hut. |
103 |
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The boy says, I'm not your son. |
104 |
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His mother says, you are my son, the one I bore. |
105 |
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If you are not the son I bore, I'll place you there to the back and I'll place myself to the door here. |
106 |
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I'll milk my breasts for you. |
107 |
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If you're the son I bore, it will squirt into your mouth. |
108 |
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When she milked, it squirted into her son's mouth. |
109 |
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Then her son spoke, he says, it's true, I really am your son. |
110 |
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Now I'll build a hut to live in for good. |
111 |
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The boy went to the forest, cut a chip and split it small. |
112 |
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He flung it over his head, he spoke, he says, if I am to become a hero, may a six sazhen house appear from the larch, may a seven sazhen house appear from the fir. |
113 |
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From the larch a six sazhen house appeared, from the fir a seven sazhen house appeared. |
114 |
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He got noticed, the boy. |
115 |
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There used to be just forest, now, they say, who has built such a house village? |
116 |
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A ship is sailing, a merchant. |
117 |
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Well, they say, and what kind of a person is living (here)? Let's put in to shore to see. |
118 |
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When they put in to shore, it is such a man, his forehead is a sun, the back of his neck is a moon, his arms are silver up to the elbows, his legs are silver up to the knees. |
119 |
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Whatever ship comes, they put in to shore to him, whatever goods they're carrying, he buys them all. |
120 |
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The merchants go off and say to the old man, what kind of man so rich has appeared? |
121 |
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The old man says, I'll go and look. |
122 |
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His wife says, what kind of man so very rich is this one? |
123 |
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She says. |
124 |
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On the other side of the sea, now there's a really rich man. |
125 |
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Under his window stands an ox, between the horns of the ox there's a bathing room. |
126 |
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(When) people come, they bathe in the bathing room and then go into the house. |
127 |
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When the people had lain down, the boy came out, took a mirror, tossed it from one hand to the other and says, servant, serve! |
128 |
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By the time I get up let a bathing room with its ox arise here. |
129 |
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When he gets up the next morning, a bathing room has appeared under the window. |
130 |
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Again, a ship is sailing. |
131 |
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Again they put in to shore. |
132 |
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They put in to shore, bathed in the bathing room and then entered the house. |
133 |
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Again they left. |
134 |
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They came to the old man again. |
135 |
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Again they say, what kind of a man so rich appeared? |
136 |
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People come, bathe in the bathing room, and then enter the house. |
137 |
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The old man says, I'll go there and look. |
138 |
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The old woman says, what kind of rich man is this? |
139 |
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On the other side of the sea is a rich man, under his window stands a birch tree, when the cuckoo calls, silver rises up to his knee. |
140 |
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This man also desires to acquire a birch tree for himself. |
141 |
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It grew dark and the people lay down to sleep. |
142 |
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He took his mirror, went out, and tossed it from one hand to the other, he says, servants, when I get up in the morning, let there be a birch tree under my window. |
143 |
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When he gets up the next morning: under his window (stands) a birch tree. |
144 |
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Again a ship is sailing on the sea. |
145 |
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They put in to the shore again, under the window (stands) a birch tree, when the cuckoo calls, silver rises knee-high. |
146 |
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Between the horns of the ox (there is) a bathing room. |
147 |
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They bathed in the bathing room and then entered the house. |
148 |
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They went again and came to the old man. |
149 |
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So, they say, what kind of a man so rich is there! |
150 |
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You come, a birch tree stands under the window, when the cuckoo calls, silver rises knee-high. |
151 |
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Between the horns of the ox there is a bathing room, you bathe, then you enter. |
152 |
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The old man says, I'll go and look what kind of a man so rich has appeared. |
153 |
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The old man went there. |
154 |
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When he comes he can't raise his eyes. |
155 |
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He was taken in by his son and fed, even if his mother became angry. |