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«Frederick and Catherine» in Spanish

Federico y Catalinita

51 vote
✒ Author
📖 Pages6
⏰ Reading time 30 minutes
💡 Originally published1819
🌏 Original language German
📌 Type Fairy tale
📌 Genres Children's literature, Parable, Ironic

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Federico y Catalinita: read the book with parallel translation into English

Había una vez un hombre llamado Federico, y una mujer llamada Catalinita, que acababan de contraer matrimonio y empezaban su vida de casados. Un día dijo el marido: "Catalinita, me voy al campo; cuando vuelva, me tendrás en la mesa un poco de asado para calmar el hambre, y un trago fresco para apagar la sed." - "Márchate tranquilo, que cuidaré de todo." Al acercarse la hora de comer, descolgó la mujer una salchicha de la chimenea, la echó en una sartén, la cubrió de mantequilla y la puso al fuego. La salchicha comenzó a dorarse y hacer ¡chup, chup!, mientras Catalina, sosteniendo el mango de la sartén, dejaba volar sus pensamientos. De pronto se le ocurrió: Mientras se acaba de dorar la salchicha, bajaré a la bodega a preparar la bebida. Dejando, pues, afianzada la sartén, cogió una jarra, bajó a la bodega y abrió la espita de la cerveza; y mientras ésta fluía a la jarra, ella lo miraba. De repente pensó: ¡Caramba! El perro no está atado; si se le ocurre robar la salchicha de la sartén, me habré lucido. Y, en un santiamén, se plantó arriba. Pero ya el chucho tenía la salchicha en la boca y se escapaba con ella, arrastrándola por el suelo. Catalinita, ni corta ni perezosa, se lanzó en su persecución y estuvo corriendo buen rato tras él por el campo; pero el perro, más ligero que Catalinita, sin soltar su presa pronto estuvo fuera de su alcance. "¡Lo perdido, perdido está!" exclamó Catalinita, renunciando a la morcilla; y como se había sofocado y cansado con la carrera, volvióse despacito para refrescarse. Mientras tanto seguía manando la cerveza del barril, pues la mujer se había olvidado de cerrar la espita, y cuando ya la jarra estuvo llena, el líquido empezó a correr por la bodega hasta que el barril quedó vacío. Catalinita vio el desastre desde lo alto de la escalera: "¡Diablos!" exclamó, "¿qué hago yo ahora para que Federico no se dé cuenta?" Después de reflexionar unos momentos, recordó que de la última feria había quedado en el granero un saco de buena harina de trigo; lo mejor sería bajarla y echarla sobre la cerveza. "Quien ahorra a su tiempo, día viene en que se alegra," se dijo; subió al granero, cargó con el saco y lo vació en la bodega, con tan mala suerte que fue a dar precisamente sobre la jarra llena de cerveza, la cual se volcó, perdiéndose incluso la bebida destinada a Federico. "¡Eso es!" exclamó Catalinita; "donde va el uno, que vaya el otro," y esparció la harina por el suelo de la bodega. Cuando hubo terminado, sintióse muy satisfecha de su trabajo y dijo: "¡Qué aseado y limpio queda ahora!"
There was once on a time a man who was called Frederick and a woman called Catherine, who had married each other and lived together as young married folks. One day Frederick said, "I will now go and plough, Catherine; when I come back, there must be some roast meat on the table for hunger, and a fresh draught for thirst." - "Just go, Frederick," answered Kate, "just go, I will have all ready for you." Therefore when dinner-time drew near she got a sausage out of the chimney, put it in the frying-pan, put some butter to it, and set it on the fire. The sausage began to fry and to hiss, Catherine stood beside it and held the handle of the pan, and had her own thoughts as she was doing it. Then it occurred to her, "While the sausage is getting done thou couldst go into the cellar and draw beer." So she set the frying-pan safely on the fire, took a can, and went down into the cellar to draw beer. The beer ran into the can and Kate watched it, and then she thought, "Oh, dear! The dog upstairs is not fastened up, it might get the sausage out of the pan. Well thought of." And in a trice she was up the cellar-steps again, but the Spitz had the sausage in its mouth already, and trailed it away on the ground. But Catherine, who was not idle, set out after it, and chased it a long way into the field; the dog, however, was swifter than Catherine and did not let the sausage journey easily, but skipped over the furrows with it. "What's gone is gone!" said Kate, and turned round, and as she had run till she was weary, she walked quietly and comfortably, and cooled herself. During this time the beer was still running out of the cask, for Kate had not turned the tap. And when the can was full and there was no other place for it, it ran into the cellar and did not stop until the whole cask was empty. As soon as Kate was on the steps she saw the mischance. "Good gracious!" she cried. "What shall I do now to stop Frederick knowing it!" She thought for a while, and at last she remembered that up in the garret was still standing a sack of the finest wheat flour from the last fair, and she would fetch that down and strew it over the beer. "Yes," said she, "he who saves a thing when he ought, has it afterwards when he needs it," and she climbed up to the garret and carried the sack below, and threw it straight down on the can of beer, which she knocked over, and Frederick's draught swam also in the cellar. "It is all right," said Kate, "where the one is the other ought to be also," and she strewed the meal over the whole cellar. When it was done she was heartily delighted with her work, and said, "How clean and wholesome it does look here!"
A mediodía llegó Federico. "Bien, mujercita, ¿qué me has preparado?" - "¡Ay, Federiquito!" respondió ella, "quise freírte una salchicha, pero mientras bajé por cerveza, el perro me la robó de la sartén, y cuando salí detrás de él, la cerveza se vertió, y al querer secar la cerveza con harina, volqué la jarra. Pero no te preocupes, que la bodega está bien seca. Replicó Federico: "¡Catalinita, no debiste hacer eso! ¡Dejas que te roben la salchicha, que la cerveza se pierda, y aun echas a perder nuestra harina!" - "¡Tienes razón, Federiquito, pero yo no lo sabía! Debiste avisármelo."
At mid-day home came Frederick: "Now, wife, what have you ready for me?" - "Ah, Freddy," she answered, "I was frying a sausage for you, but whilst I was drawing the beer to drink with it, the dog took it away out of the pan, and whilst I was running after the dog, all the beer ran out, and whilst I was drying up the beer with the flour, I knocked over the can as well, but be easy, the cellar is quite dry again." Said Frederick, "Kate, Kate, you should not have done that! to let the sausage be carried off and the beer run out of the cask, and throw out all our flour into the bargain!" - "Indeed, Frederick, I did not know that, you should have told me."
Pensó el hombre: Con una mujer así, habrá que ser más previsor. Tenía ahorrada una bonita suma de ducados; los cambió en oro y dijo a Catalinita: "Mira, eso son chapitas amarillas; las meteré en una olla y las enterraré en el establo, bajo el pesebre de las vacas. Guárdate muy bien de tocarlas, pues, de lo contrario, lo vas a pasar mal." Respondió ella: "No, Federiquito, puedes estar seguro de que no las tocaré." Mas he aquí que cuando Federico se hubo marchado, se presentaron unos buhoneros que vendían escudillas y cacharros de barro, y preguntaron a la joven si necesitaba algunas de sus mercancías. "¡Oh, buena gente!" dijo Catalinita, "no tengo dinero y nada puedo comprar; pero si quisieseis cobrar en chapitas amarillas, sí que os compraría algo." - "Chapitas amarillas, ¿por qué no? Deja que las veamos." - "Bajad al establo y buscad debajo del pesebre de las vacas; las encontraréis allí; yo no puedo tocarlas." Los bribones fueron al establo y, removiendo la tierra, encontraron el oro puro. Cargaron con él y pusieron pies en polvorosa, dejando en la casa su carga de cacharros. Catalinita pensó que debía utilizar aquella alfarería nueva para algo; pero como en la cocina no hacía ninguna falta, rompió el fondo de cada una de las piezas y las colocó todas como adorno en los extremos de las estacas del vallado que rodeaba la casa. Al llegar Federico, sorprendido por aquella nueva ornamentación, dijo: "Catalinita, ¿qué has hecho?" - "Lo he comprado, Federiquito, con las chapitas amarillas que guardaste bajo el pesebre de las vacas. Yo no fui a buscarlas; tuvieron que bajar los mismos buhoneros." - "¡Dios mío!" exclamó Federico, "¡buena la has hecho, mujer! Si no eran chapitas, sino piezas de oro puro; ¡toda nuestra fortuna! ¿Cómo hiciste semejante disparate?" - "Yo no lo sabía, Federiquito. ¿Por qué no me advertiste?"
The man thought, "If my wife is like this, I must look after things more." Now he had got together a good number of thalers which he changed into gold, and said to Catherine, "Look, these are counters for playing games; I will put them in a pot and bury them in the stable under the cow's manger, but mind you keep away from them, or it will be the worse for you." Said she, "Oh, no, Frederick, I certainly will not go." And when Frederick was gone some pedlars came into the village who had cheap earthen-bowls and pots, and asked the young woman if there was nothing she wanted to bargain with them for? "Oh, dear people," said Catherine, "I have no money and can buy nothing, but if you have any use for yellow counters I will buy of you." - "Yellow counters, why not? But just let us see them." - "Then go into the stable and dig under the cow's manger, and you will find the yellow counters. I am not allowed to go there." The rogues went thither, dug and found pure gold. Then they laid hold of it, ran away, and left their pots and bowls behind in the house. Catherine though she must use her new things, and as she had no lack in the kitchen already without these, she knocked the bottom out of every pot, and set them all as ornaments on the paling which went round about the house. When Frederick came and saw the new decorations, he said, "Catherine, what have you been about?" - "I have bought them, Frederick, for the counters which were under the cow's manger. I did not go there myself, the pedlars had to dig them out for themselves." - "Ah, wife," said Frederick, "what have you done? Those were not counters, but pure gold, and all our wealth; you should not have done that." - "Indeed, Frederick," said she, "I did not know that, you should have forewarned me."
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Download the free e-book by Brothers Grimm, «Frederick and Catherine» , in Spanish with parallel translation. You can also print the text of the book. For this, the PDF and DOC formats are suitable.

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