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Cindrulino

L. Milho

"Cindrulino by L. Milho" is an illustrated children’s fairy-tale retelling in Esperanto, likely written in the early 20th century. Adapted from an English story, it recounts the classic Cinderella tale, focusing on kindness, patience, and forgiveness as virtues that triumph over envy and cruelty. The story follows a gentle girl mistreated by her older stepsisters, who force her to toil and mockingly call her Cindrulino. When a royal ball is announced, her fairy godmother appears, transforming a pumpkin, a rat, and mice into a carriage, coachman, and footmen, and her rags into a splendid gown with glass slippers, warning her to return before midnight. She captivates the prince at several balls, but on the third night she flees at the stroke of twelve, losing a slipper. The prince vows to marry the one whom the slipper fits; after the stepsisters fail, it fits Cindrulino, who produces the matching shoe. Revealed and restored, she marries the prince, forgives her sisters, becomes a kind queen, and the famous glass slippers are kept as treasured tokens of her story. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Kleuterboekje

Anna Sutorius

"Kleuterboekje by Anna Sutorius" is an illustrated collection of children’s verses written in the early 20th century. The book offers gentle, rhymed snapshots of everyday family life, with playful scenes and mild moral hints aimed at very young readers. The poems move through small domestic moments: a sister coveting her brother’s porridge, two boys playing horse until their game ends in a quarrel and broken gear, a girl daydreaming of being a gardener and wishing to water the flowers, and a sulky boy who skipped breakfast. Other pieces show a child soothed to sleep on mother’s lap, a little girl fiercely loyal to a battered teddy bear, a stubborn Wies who resists an outing but soon makes amends, and a calm bedtime vignette where the clock strikes eight and lights go out. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The wanderer in Africa : A tale illustrative of the thirty-second Psalm

A. L. O. E.

"The wanderer in Africa : A tale illustrative of the thirty-second Psalm." by A. L. O. E. is a didactic Christian adventure tale written in the mid-19th century. It follows the fall and repentance of young Englishman David Aspinall as he wanders in southern Africa, with Psalm 32 shaping a story of guilt, grace, and providence amid desert perils and a cruel Boer master. Blending travel hazard with moral instruction, it likely targets younger or family readers who enjoy faith-centered adventure. The opening of the tale shows David, a worn and remorseful servant to the hard-hearted Boer Hans Kuhe, keeping a lonely night watch in the African waste, where memories of home and verses from Psalm 32 awaken true repentance. Flashbacks tell how he defied his parents, fled rural Dorset for London, slid into vice, was shamed in court before his father, and then fled further to Africa to serve the Boer. Forsaken in the desert with a swollen ankle, he confesses his sins, survives on a providential melon and root, drives off wild dogs from a springbok, and keeps vigil through a lion-haunted night. At dawn a lion closes in, but two English hunters, Manners and Carlton, shoot it and befriend him; David resists the temptation to keep his cruel master’s lost purse, returns it via the hunters, and later they find the Boer stripped by Bushmen and dying from a poisoned arrow, underscoring the Psalm’s themes of confession, guidance, and deliverance. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Book cover of "The Musket Boys of Old Boston : or, The first blow for liberty"