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Here is a link to the story of Peronella. I got it from a public domain book. I deleted it and then put the link to my edit in case there are any issues. If this too is frowned upon, I am sorry. Since it is short and in the public domain, I did not expect too many issues. I was hoping to at least avoid having the content indexed by search engines this way. I just wanted people to be able to see the story before this article gets deleted. I think that I was just cleaning up another article or disambiguation page, when I made this article from a disambiguation entry or something. I have no real investment in it, and it is fine with me if it is found to be non-notable, although when Wikipedia has articles on individual episodes of TV shows (and not just the top-rated ones), it is hard to claim other things as non-notable, in my opinion. I have found that the story of Peronella was told in half a dozen or more books from the 1800s and early 1900s. I did a search that excluded irrelevant results, but I did not keep going past the first results page. I would not say that this makes the story particularly notable, but I think it might barely be notable enough to keep. It is not the greatest fairy tale, but it does at least paint a decent picture of how serious ill-health can rob a person of any enjoyment in life. People should keep in mind that it is not just old age that will do that to a person, and they should take good care of their health. In addition, they should enjoy their health to the fullest while they still have it (without getting into a reckless area). -- Kjkolb (talk) 04:54, 28 March 2020 (UTC)[reply]