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1. The Piper wrinkled his lips(a) to begin dancing. (b) to blow his pipe.(C) to whistle a tune. |
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Answer» Explanation:Ratcatchers Who Abduct Children The Children of Hameln (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm). The Pied Piper of Hamelin: A Child's Story (Robert Browning). A Miracle of God at Hameln (Graf Froben Christoph von Zimmern). A Miraculous Passage in Hamelen (James HOWELL). The Pide Piper (Richard Verstegan). The Pyed Piper (Nathaniel Wanley). A MARVELLOUS Prank Plaid by the Devil at Hamelen, a Town in Germany (George Sinclair). Link to The Ratcatcher. The Grimms' "Children of Hameln" as retold by Charles Marelle. Source: Andrew Lang, The Red Fairy Book (London and New York: Longmans, Green, and Company, 1890), pp. 208-14. Lang's source: Charles Marelle, "Le preneur de rats," Affenschwanz, et cetera: Variantes orales de contes populaires français et étrangers (Braunschweig: George Westermann, 1888), pp. 53-59. The Magic Fife (Germany). The Ratcatcher of Korneuburg (Austria). The Pied Piper of NEWTOWN (England) |
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