rdfs:comment
| - The next day, at the palace, the doors opened, and an angry Ratcliffe stormed into the room. "Grr! I've never been so insulted!" Ratcliffe shouted. He passed by King Pacha, Rapunzel's father. "Governor Ratcliffe, you're not leaving so soon, are you?" Pacha asked. "Good luck marrying her off!" Ratcliffe said, as he stormed off. And with that, the angry governor was gone. Pacha then groaned as he looked at a piece of Ratcliffe's cape. He then said, "Rapunzel?" as he went into the courtyard to find his daughter.
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abstract
| - The next day, at the palace, the doors opened, and an angry Ratcliffe stormed into the room. "Grr! I've never been so insulted!" Ratcliffe shouted. He passed by King Pacha, Rapunzel's father. "Governor Ratcliffe, you're not leaving so soon, are you?" Pacha asked. "Good luck marrying her off!" Ratcliffe said, as he stormed off. And with that, the angry governor was gone. Pacha then groaned as he looked at a piece of Ratcliffe's cape. He then said, "Rapunzel?" as he went into the courtyard to find his daughter. "Rapunzel! Rapunzel!" Pacha called. He spotted an 18-year-old girl with golden blonde hair and green eyes, sitting on a fountain. She wears a purple dress with long pink sleeves and a lavender bodice. She is also barefoot. It was Rapunzel, the princess of Toongrabah and Pacha's daughter. "Rapunzel," Pacha said. He walked toward her until a yellow-orange dog with a black nose and ears and a green dog collar came up and growled at him. In his mouth was a fuchsia torn sheet. It was Pluto. "Ooh, confound it, Pluto!" Pacha scolded, pulling on a torn sheet out of Pluto's mouth. He looked at the sheet, and suddenly realized that it was a piece of Ratcliffe's suit. "So this is why Governor Ratcliffe stormed out." "Oh, father," Rapunzel smiled, "Pluto was just playing with him." Then she leaned over to Pluto and said to him in a cute tone, "Weren't you, Pluto? You were just playing with that over-dressed, self-absorbed Governor Ratcliffe, right?" She hugged Pascal, and the dog giggled. Pacha gave Rapunzel a stern look as he tapped his foot. Then Rapunzel cleared her throat. Pacha followed Rapunzel to the birdcage. "Dearest," he said. "You've got to stop rejecting every suitor who comes to call. The law says you must be …" "…married to a prince…" Pacha and Rapunzel said together. "…by your next birthday." Pacha finished. "The law is wrong," Rapunzel said as she opened the bird cage and picked up the bird. "You've only got three more days," Pacha said. "Father, I hate being forced into this. If I do marry, I want it to be for love," Rapunzel said. "Rapunzel," Pacha said before he placed the bird back in the cage, "it's not only this law. I'm not going to be around forever. I just want to make sure you're taken care of. Provided for."
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