Thus when a heart wish for the touch of respect for one will feel the sun that will warm a heart with a warm smile but when one see a rose thus every rose that one see shall touch a heart with respect for every moment that one wish for the touch of respect the stronger respect will get thus some where a heart wish for the touch of respect but when the sun shine for there a heart that been touch with respect but for every rose is the rose of respect. Time after time for one who look to the sky thus one wish for the touch of respect but to the family respect mean a lot to the family that fill the air with respect for every heart to feel and yet the more one smile the more a rose will bloom with respect but for one who sing for a bird will sing a sweet song of respect to touch a heart that wish for respect night after night for one look to the sky but one wish for the touch of respect and yet for every rose is the rose of the angel of respect.įor Every Rose Is The Rose Of Respect. Thus for the sun shall raise for every min that the sun raise for there a rose of the angel of respect but yet just to see a rose is like being touch by a beautiful lily that been touch with respect oh sweet lily for where the hand that will touch a heart with respect for one wish to feel a warm smile that mean respect and yet for every birds that one see for every rose is the rose of the angel yet for every rose is the rose of the angel of respect. The last line of the fairy tale – its moral – is as follows: "Lucky people, so ’tis said, Are blessed by Fortune whilst in bed.For Every Rose Is The Rose Of The Angel Of Respect Raymond Sawyer The king and Talia marry and the cook is rewarded with the title of royal chamberlain. The cook explains how he had saved Sun and Moon. The king commands that his wife, his secretary, and the cook be thrown into the fire instead. His wife tells him that Talia would be burned and that he had unknowingly eaten his own children. Talia undresses and utters screams of grief with each piece of clothing. Talia asks to take off her fine garments first. She commands that a huge fire be lit in the courtyard, and that Talia be thrown into the flames. Then the queen has Talia brought to court. But the cook hides them, and cooks two lambs instead. She orders the cook to kill the children and serve them to the king. She forces the king's secretary to tell her everything, and then, using a forged message, has Talia's children brought to court. He calls out the names of Talia, Sun and Moon in his sleep, and his wife, the queen, hears him. The king returns and finds Talia is awake – and a mother of twins. She names them "Sun" and "Moon" and lives with them in the house. One day, the girl cannot find her mother's breast and instead she begins to suck on Talia's finger and draws the flax splinter out. Still deep in sleep, she gives birth to twins (a boy and a girl). Afterwards, he leaves the girl on the bed and returns to his own city. He finds Talia, overcome by her beauty, he tries unsuccessfully to wake her, and then rapes her in her sleep. Some time later, a king, hunting in nearby woods, follows his falcon into the house. Unable to stand the thought of burying his child, Talia's father, the lord, puts his daughter Talia in one of his country estates. She asks the woman if she can stretch the flax herself, but as soon as she begins to spin, a splinter of flax goes under her fingernail, and she drops to the ground, apparently dead. Years later, Talia sees an old woman spinning flax on a spindle. To protect his daughter, the father commands that no flax would ever be brought into his house. It is Aarne-Thompson type 410 other tales of this type include The Glass Coffin and The Young Slave.Īfter the birth of a great lord's daughter, Talia, wise men and astrologers cast the child's horoscope and told the lord that Talia would be later endangered by a splinter of flax. Charles Perrault retold this fairy tale in 1697 as the Sleeping Beauty and also the Brothers Grimm in 1812 as Little Briar Rose. Sun, Moon, and Talia ( Sole, Luna, e Talia) is an Italian literary fairy tale written by Giambattista Basile in his 1634 work, the Pentamerone.