1 Then he was told about Doctor Knowall who lived in such and such a village, and must know what had become of the money.
Grimms' Fairy Tales By Jacob and Wilhelm GrimmContextHighlight In DOCTOR KNOWALL 2 Then she was much grieved, and went to her father and mother, and asked if she had any brothers, and what had become of them.
Grimms' Fairy Tales By Jacob and Wilhelm GrimmContextHighlight In THE SEVEN RAVENS 3 So they sat down, and when Dummling pulled out his cinder-cake, it was a fine sweet cake, and the sour beer had become good wine.
Grimms' Fairy Tales By Jacob and Wilhelm GrimmContextHighlight In THE GOLDEN GOOSE 4 He walked nearer than a hundred paces to it, and yet he did not become fixed as before, but found that he could go quite close up to the door.
Grimms' Fairy Tales By Jacob and Wilhelm GrimmContextHighlight In JORINDA AND JORINDEL 5 Then the son said: 'Now will I show her to you in her own form,' and wished that she might become a maiden, and she stood there looking so beautiful that no painter could have made her look more so.
6 Now, whether it was that they had eaten so many nuts that they could not walk, or whether they were lazy and would not, I do not know: however, they took it into their heads that it did not become them to go home on foot.
Grimms' Fairy Tales By Jacob and Wilhelm GrimmContextHighlight In THE ADVENTURES OF CHANTICLEER AND PARTLET 7 But he would not, and said that it would be a very hazardous thing; for if the least ray of the torch-light should fall upon him his enchantment would become still worse, for he should be changed into a dove, and be forced to wander about the world for seven long years.
Grimms' Fairy Tales By Jacob and Wilhelm GrimmContextHighlight In LILY AND THE LION