Aiden Lariviere Mrs. Cevoli Fairy Tales 1-12-23 The Grimm Brother Settle Their Differences The Grimm Brothers have a plethora of stories, some are happy, some are sad. But all of them use symbols, and have fantastical factors such as talking animals and unrealistic scenarios. While they have many stories just a few of them include, The Frog Prince also known as the The Frog King, The twelve Huntsmen a tale of a mischievous ex wife and the Twelve Princesses a story about twelve disobedient princesses who run away in the night. Although different, the Grimm Brothers' stories, “The Frog Prince,” “The Twelve Huntsman” and “The Twelve Princesses” all use symbols and morals reflecting their nature as fairy tales. Numbers There are many significant …show more content…
The brothers stories have a wide range of morals within their 200 stories from the common, never judge a book by its cover, all the way to complex morals which take a few reads to finally understand the deeper meaning. The Twelve Huntsmenis one of the brothers' longer, more complex stories. The story begins where the prince has a fiance and his fathers dying wish is that he marries a woman of his choice, which then being unfaithful to his fiance marries the new queen. The king then brings twelve huntsmen who protect him, who happen to be the man's old fiance and eleven children. The moral of this story is that everyone is born to greatness, it does not matter what gender or what you look like on the outside. The Frog Prince is a classic story about a prince trapped in a frog’s body, the princess who loses her golden ball in the frogs pond promises he’ll do whatever it takes to get her ball back. The frog then spends the next 3 nights in the princesses house where he inevitably breaks the curse set on him turning into a young handsome prince. The moral of this story is you should never judge a book by its cover and understand the situation and act appropriately. The final story is The Twelve Princesses or which is a story about a soldier who spies on the twelve princesses to see where they go off to at night because not even the king can find out. The moral of this