Once upon a time in mid winter, when the snowflakes were falling like   feathers from heaven, a beautiful queen sat sewing at her window, which   had a frame of black ebony wood. As she sewed, she looked up at the   snow and pricked her finger with her needle. Three drops of blood fell   into the snow. The red on the white looked so beautiful, that she   thought, “If only I had a child as white as snow, as red as blood, and   as black as this frame.” Soon afterward she had a little daughter that   was as white as snow, as red as blood, and as black as ebony wood, and   therefore they called her Little Snow-White.
Now  the queen was the most beautiful woman in all the land, and very  proud  of her beauty. She had a mirror, which she stood in front of every   morning, and asked:
Mirror, mirror, on the wall,
Who in this land is fairest of all?
And the mirror always said:
You, my queen, are fairest of all.
And then she knew for certain that no one in the world was more beautiful than she.
Now  Snow-White grew up, and when she was seven years old, she was so   beautiful, that she surpassed even the queen herself. Now when the queen   asked her mirror:
Mirror, mirror, on the wall,
Who in this land is fairest of all?
The mirror said:
You, my queen, are fair; it is true.
But Little Snow-White is still
A thousand times fairer than you.
When the queen heard the mirror say  this, she became pale with envy,  and from that hour on, she hated  Snow-White. Whenever she looked at her,  she thought that Snow-White was  to blame that she was no longer the  most beautiful woman in the world.  This turned her heart around. Her  jealousy gave her no peace. Finally  she summoned a huntsman and said to  him, “Take Snow-White out into the  woods to a remote spot, and stab her  to death. As proof that she is  dead bring her lungs and her liver back  to me. I shall cook them with  salt and eat them.”
The  huntsman took Snow-White into the woods. When he took out his  hunting  knife to stab her, she began to cry, and begged fervently that  he might  spare her life, promising to run away into the woods and never  return.  The huntsman took pity on her because she was so beautiful, and  he  thought, “The wild animals will soon devour her anyway. I’m glad that  I  don’t have to kill her.” Just then a young boar came running by. He   killed it, cut out its lungs and liver, and took them back to the queen   as proof of Snow-White’s death. She cooked them with salt and ate them,   supposing that she had eaten Snow-White’s lungs and liver.
Snow-White was now all alone in the  great forest. She was terribly  afraid, and began to run. She ran over  sharp stones and through thorns  the entire day. Finally, just as the  sun was about to set, she came to a  little house. The house belonged to  seven dwarfs. They were working in a  mine, and not at home. Snow-White  went inside and found everything to  be small, but neat and orderly.  There was a little table with seven  little plates, seven little spoons,  seven little knives and forks, seven  little mugs, and against the wall  there were seven little beds, all  freshly made.
Snow-White  was hungry and thirsty, so she ate a few vegetables and a  little bread  from each little plate, and from each little glass she  drank a drop of  wine. Because she was so tired, she wanted to lie down  and go to  sleep. She tried each of the seven little beds, one after the  other,  but none felt right until she came to the seventh one, and she  lay down  in it and fell asleep.
When  night came, the seven dwarfs returned home from the work. They  lit  their seven little candles, and saw that someone had been in their   house.
The first one said, “Who has been sitting in my chair?”
The second one, “Who has been eating from my plate?”
The third one, “Who has been eating my bread?”
The fourth one, “Who has been eating my vegetables?”
The fifth one, “Who has been sticking with my fork?”
The sixth one, “Who has been cutting with my knife?”
The seventh one, “Who has been drinking from my mug?”
Then the first one said, “Who stepped on my bed?”
The second one, “And someone has been lying in my bed.”
And so forth until the seventh one, and  when he looked at his bed, he  found Snow-White lying there, fast  asleep. The seven dwarfs all came  running, and they cried out with  amazement. They fetched their seven  candles and looked at Snow-White.  “Good heaven! Good heaven!” they  cried.  “She is so beautiful!” They  liked her very much. They did not  wake her up, but let her lie there in  the bed. The seventh dwarf had to  sleep with his companions, one hour  with each one, and then the night  was done.
When  Snow-White woke up, they asked her who she was and how she had  found  her way to their house. She told them how her mother had tried to  kill  her, how the huntsman had spared her life, how she had run the  entire  day, finally coming to their house. The dwarfs pitied her and  said, “If  you will keep house for us, and cook, sew, make beds, wash,  and knit,  and keep everything clean and orderly, then you can stay here,  and  you’ll have everything that you want. We come home in the evening,  and  supper must be ready by then, but we spend the days digging for gold  in  the mine. You will be alone then. Watch out for the queen, and do  not  let anyone in.”
The  queen thought that she was again the most beautiful woman in the  land,  and the next morning she stepped before the mirror and asked:
Mirror, mirror, on the wall,
Who in this land is fairest of all?
The mirror answered once again:
You, my queen, are fair; it is true.
But Little Snow-White beyond the seven mountains
Is a thousand times fairer than you.
It  startled the queen to hear this, and she knew that she had been   deceived, that the huntsman had not killed Snow-White. Because only the   seven dwarfs lived in the seven mountains, she knew at once that they   must have rescued her. She began to plan immediately how she might kill   her, because she would have no peace until the mirror once again said   that she was the most beautiful woman in the land. At last she thought   of something to do. She disguised herself as an old peddler woman and   colored her face, so that no one would recognize her, and went to the   dwarf’s house. Knocking on the door she called out, “Open up. Open up.   I’m the old peddler woman with good wares for sale.”
Snow-White peered out the window, “What do you have?”
“Bodice  laces, dear child,” said the old woman, and held one up. It  was  braided from yellow, red, and blue silk. “Would you like this one?”
“Oh,  yes,” said Snow-White, thinking, “I can let the old woman come  in. She  means well.” She unbolted the door and bargained for the bodice  laces.
“You  are not laced up properly,” said the old woman. “Come here, I’ll  do it  better.” Snow-White stood before her, and she took hold of the  laces  and pulled them so tight that Snow-White could not breathe, and  she  fell down as if she were dead. Then the old woman was satisfied, and   she went away.
Nightfall soon came, and the seven  dwarfs returned home. They were  horrified to find their dear Snow-White  lying on the ground as if she  were dead. They lifted her up and saw  that she was laced up too tightly.  They cut the bodice laces in two,  and then she could breathe, and she  came back to life. “It must have  been the queen who tried to kill you,”  they said. “Take care and do not  let anyone in again.”
The queen asked her mirror:
Mirror, mirror, on the wall,
Who in this land is fairest of all?
The mirror answered once again:
You, my queen, are fair; it is true.
But Little Snow-White with the seven dwarfs
Is a thousand times fairer than you.
She  was so horrified that the blood all ran to her heart, because she  knew  that Snow-White had come back to life. Then for an entire day and a   night she planned how she might catch her. She made a poisoned comb,   disguised herself differently, and went out again. She knocked on the   door, but Snow-White called out, “I am not allowed to let anyone in.”
Then  she pulled out the comb, and when Snow-White saw how it  glistened, and  noted that the woman was a complete stranger, she opened  the door, and  bought the comb from her. “Come, let me comb your hair,”  said the  peddler woman. She had barely stuck the comb into Snow-White’s  hair,  before the girl fell down and was dead. “That will keep you lying   there,” said the queen. And she went home with a light heart.
The  dwarfs came home just in time. They saw what had happened and  pulled  the poisoned comb from her hair. Snow-White opened her eyes and  came  back to life. She promised the dwarfs not to let anyone in again.
The queen stepped before her mirror:
Mirror, mirror, on the wall,
Who in this land is fairest of all?
The mirror answered:
You, my queen, are fair; it is true.
But Little Snow-White with the seven dwarfs
Is a thousand times fairer than you.
When  the queen heard this, she shook and trembled with anger,  “Snow-White  will die, if it costs me my life!” Then she went into her  most secret  room — no one else was allowed inside — and she made a  poisoned,  poisoned apple. From the outside it was red and beautiful, and  anyone  who saw it would want it. Then she disguised herself as a  peasant  woman, went to the dwarfs’ house and knocked on the door.
Snow-White peeped out and said, “I’m not allowed to let anyone in. The dwarfs have forbidden it most severely.”
“If  you don’t want to, I can’t force you,” said the peasant woman. “I  am  selling these apples, and I will give you one to taste.”
“No, I can’t accept anything. The dwarfs don’t want me to.”
“If  you are afraid, then I will cut the apple in two and eat half of  it.  Here, you eat the half with the beautiful red cheek!” Now the apple  had  been so artfully made that only the red half was poisoned. When   Snow-White saw that the peasant woman was eating part of the apple, her   desire for it grew stronger, so she finally let the woman hand her the   other half through the window. She bit into it, but she barely had the   bite in her mouth when she fell to the ground dead.
The queen was happy, went home, and asked her mirror:
Mirror, mirror, on the wall,
Who in this land is fairest of all?
And it answered:
You, my queen, are fairest of all.
“Now  I’ll have some peace,” she said, “because once again I’m the  most  beautiful woman in the land. Snow-White will remain dead this  time.”
That evening the dwarfs returned home  from the mines. Snow-White was  lying on the floor, and she was dead.  They loosened her laces and looked  in her hair for something poisonous,  but nothing helped. They could not  bring her back to life. They laid  her on a bier, and all seven sat next  to her and cried and cried for  three days. They were going to bury her,  but they saw that she remained  fresh. She did not look at all like a  dead person, and she still had  beautiful red cheeks. They had a glass  coffin made for her, and laid  her inside, so that she could be seen  easily. They wrote her name and  her ancestry on it in gold letters, and  one of them always stayed at  home and kept watch over her.
Snow-White  lay there in the coffin a long, long time, and she did not  decay. She  was still as white as snow and as red as blood, and if she  had been  able to open her eyes, they still would have been as black as  ebony  wood. She lay there as if she were asleep.
One  day a young prince came to the dwarfs’ house and wanted shelter  for  the night. When he came into their parlor and saw Snow-White lying   there in a glass coffin, illuminated so beautifully by seven little   candles, he could not get enough of her beauty. He read the golden   inscription and saw that she was the daughter of a king. He asked the   dwarfs to sell him the coffin with the dead Snow-White, but they would   not do this for any amount of gold. Then he asked them to give her to   him, for he could not live without being able to see her, and he would   keep her, and honor her as his most cherished thing on earth. Then the   dwarfs took pity on him and gave him the coffin.
The prince had it carried to his castle,  and had it placed in a room  where he sat by it the whole day, never  taking his eyes from it.  Whenever he had to go out and was unable to  see Snow-White, he became  sad. And he could not eat a bite, unless the  coffin was standing next to  him. Now the servants who always had to  carry the coffin to and fro  became angry about this. One time one of  them opened the coffin, lifted  Snow-White upright, and said, “We are  plagued the whole day long, just  because of such a dead girl,” and he  hit her in the back with his hand.  Then the terrible piece of apple  that she had bitten off came out of her  throat, and Snow-White came  back to life.
She  walked up to the prince, who was beside himself with joy to see  his  beloved Snow-White alive. They sat down together at the table and  ate  with joy.
Their  wedding was set for the next day, and Snow-White’s godless  mother was  invited as well. That morning she stepped before the mirror  and said:
Mirror, mirror, on the wall,
Who in this land is fairest of all?
The mirror answered:
You, my queen, are fair; it is true.
But the young queen
Is a thousand times fairer than you.
She  was horrified to hear this, and so overtaken with fear that she  could  not say anything. Still, her jealousy drove her to go to the  wedding  and see the young queen. When she arrived she saw that it was   Snow-White. Then they put a pair of iron shoes into the fire until they   glowed, and she had to put them on and dance in them. Her feet were   terribly burned, and she could not stop until she had danced herself to   death.
Sumber cerita : http://duniadongeng.wordpress.com/2008/08/13/putri-salju-snow-white/








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