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171
"
Ddsa
!
Ddsa
!
"
was
heard
in
the
sky
.
It
was
just
as
if
somebody
was
sneezing
.
172
"
These
are
my
old
northern-lights
,
"
said
the
Reindeer
,
"
look
how
they
gleam
!
And
on
he
now
sped
still
quicker
--
day
and
night
on
he
went
:
the
loaves
were
consumed
,
and
the
ham
too
;
and
now
they
were
in
Lapland
.
173
Suddenly
they
stopped
before
a
little
house
,
which
looked
very
miserable
.
The
roof
reached
to
the
ground
;
and
the
door
was
so
low
,
that
the
family
were
obliged
to
creep
upon
their
stomachs
when
they
went
in
or
out
.
Nobody
was
at
home
except
an
old
Lapland
woman
,
who
was
dressing
fish
by
the
light
of
an
oil
lamp
.
And
the
Reindeer
told
her
the
whole
of
Gerda
's
history
,
but
first
of
all
his
own
;
for
that
seemed
to
him
of
much
greater
importance
.
Gerda
was
so
chilled
that
she
could
not
speak
.
Отключить рекламу
174
"
Poor
thing
,
"
said
the
Lapland
woman
,
"
you
have
far
to
run
still
.
You
have
more
than
a
hundred
miles
to
go
before
you
get
to
Finland
;
there
the
Snow
Queen
has
her
country-house
,
and
burns
blue
lights
every
evening
.
I
will
give
you
a
few
words
from
me
,
which
I
will
write
on
a
dried
haberdine
,
for
paper
I
have
none
;
this
you
can
take
with
you
to
the
Finland
woman
,
and
she
will
be
able
to
give
you
more
information
than
I
can
.
"
175
When
Gerda
had
warmed
herself
,
and
had
eaten
and
drunk
,
the
Lapland
woman
wrote
a
few
words
on
a
dried
haberdine
,
begged
Gerda
to
take
care
of
them
,
put
her
on
the
Reindeer
,
bound
her
fast
,
and
away
sprang
the
animal
.
"
Ddsa
!
Ddsa
!
"
was
again
heard
in
the
air
;
the
most
charming
blue
lights
burned
the
whole
night
in
the
sky
,
and
at
last
they
came
to
Finland
.
They
knocked
at
the
chimney
of
the
Finland
woman
;
for
as
to
a
door
,
she
had
none
.
176
There
was
such
a
heat
inside
that
the
Finland
woman
herself
went
about
almost
naked
.
She
was
diminutive
and
dirty
.
177
She
immediately
loosened
little
Gerda
's
clothes
,
pulled
off
her
thick
gloves
and
boots
;
for
otherwise
the
heat
would
have
been
too
great
--
and
after
laying
a
piece
of
ice
on
the
Reindeer
's
head
,
read
what
was
written
on
the
fish-skin
.
She
read
it
three
times
:
she
then
knew
it
by
heart
;
so
she
put
the
fish
into
the
cupboard
--
for
it
might
very
well
be
eaten
,
and
she
never
threw
anything
away
.
Отключить рекламу
178
Then
the
Reindeer
related
his
own
story
first
,
and
afterwards
that
of
little
Gerda
;
and
the
Finland
woman
winked
her
eyes
,
but
said
nothing
.
179
"
You
are
so
clever
,
"
said
the
Reindeer
;
"
you
can
,
I
know
,
twist
all
the
winds
of
the
world
together
in
a
knot
.
If
the
seaman
loosens
one
knot
,
then
he
has
a
good
wind
;
if
a
second
,
then
it
blows
pretty
stiffly
;
if
he
undoes
the
third
and
fourth
,
then
it
rages
so
that
the
forests
are
upturned
.
Will
you
give
the
little
maiden
a
potion
,
that
she
may
possess
the
strength
of
twelve
men
,
and
vanquish
the
Snow
Queen
?
"
180
"
The
strength
of
twelve
men
!
"
said
the
Finland
woman
.
"
Much
good
that
would
be
!
"
Then
she
went
to
a
cupboard
,
and
drew
out
a
large
skin
rolled
up
.
When
she
had
unrolled
it
,
strange
characters
were
to
be
seen
written
thereon
;
and
the
Finland
woman
read
at
such
a
rate
that
the
perspiration
trickled
down
her
forehead
.