Type a new keyword(s) and press Enter to search

Just Ella

 

            This is sort of like the Cinderella story, but meaning to say the true facts on how she got to the point she was then and how it really finished as a happy ending. Ella was a poor girl who lived in a little town with her stepmother and stepsisters. She was most likely there servant, since the day her father had past away. It begins as her being in the castle of Prince Charming after all the commotion of the ball and marriage. She wakes up at the castle and sees that she is able to do things for herself, since she was always able at her little town, but at the castle she must let herself be served by others, since she is soon going to be a princess. She has to be taught how to be a princess and how to live in there customs. She gets a teacher named Madame Bisset in which throughout the story is her teacher, which teaches her how to be proper and elegant.
             .
             The prince had assigned her many teachers and as one of them was Jed, who is soon of a former teacher there, but died of a heart attack. Jed had to take his fathers place as a grammar teacher. Ella passes through a lot of problems with Madame Bissset because Ella sometimes does things herself instead of the servants. Mary, a little servant girl, helps Ella in any necessary needs and gives her information of how the house is. In the story Ella talks about how she ended where she did. She was never helped by fairy godmothers or had ever seen the prince before the ball. All the things she went then was caused and made possible by her. As she sees through out living in the castle is that the prince is not, so charming how she thought he was.
             .
             Jed had become good friends with her, but later he planned to leave and go help at an army camp. Ella then realized that she didn't want to marry Prince Charming because she really didn't know him that well. When they where able to see each other they had to be accompanied and had just a little bit of time to spend together.


Essays Related to Just Ella