The Grimms' version of "The Frog Prince" describes the princess throwing the frog against a wall instead of kissing him.
The little princess climbed up into her lap and kissed her.
The Dastard had been suspicious, but the princess had kissed him and said it would be all right.
In it, "the princess kissed the frog and instead of him turning into a prince she turned into a frog and then the two sort of went on an adventure together."
The princess went up to her husband, kissed him and was about to leave; but he held her back, embraced her and tenderly, like a young lover, smiling, kissed her several times.
Hardly had he spoken, when the princess, who had been listening, ran up and kissed him on the forehead.
Some of the most moving things in the great house are faded photographs, showing Vaux in the process of resurrection, like some fairy-tale princess kissed awake through a path of hacked brambles.
The princess kissed the frog and he didn't turn into a handsome prince but that was all right because she liked him as a frog.
He said the princess had kissed him for a rabbit, and that filled the first sack; the queen had turned somersaults for a rabbit, and that filled the second.
Shortshanks sent him into the house, saying that whichever princess kissed him would marry him, because the older was stronger and bigger and would reach him first.