Page:Stories and story-telling (1915).djvu/37

 as in the novel and the drama, the action arises from love, hate, envy, spirit of adventure, friendship, malice, spirit of fun and play. Grasp the details of the action. In some versions of "The Frog Prince" the falling of the princess's golden ball into the well is made the occasion for the appearance of the magical frog, which, for the aid he offers, imposes the condition of companionship and love. The princess pretends agreement. Her repugnance to the frog becomes the complicating force. And (in some tales) her father's insistence that she keep her promise to the frog makes all come out happily; the frog stands revealed a prince in disguise, and marries the princess. In "Dummling" the despised stupid third and youngest brother sets out to seek his elders; then come the three acts of unkindness he prevents; then the failure of the elders at the task set forth in the enchanted castle, and Dummling's success, due to the aid of the creatures to whom he had shown kindness, followed by his triumphant marriage to the youngest and dearest of the princesses. In "The Cat and the Mouse in Partnership," the story opens with the doubtful compact entered into by the mouse on the cat's representation of friendship, and her agreement to his proposal that they lay by a pot of fat for the winter. The cat has the hardihood to pro