| There was once a man whose wife died, and a woman whose husband | |
| died, and the man had a daughter, and the woman also had a | |
| daughter. The girls were acquainted with each other, and went | |
| out walking together, and afterwards came to the woman in her | |
| house. Then said she to the man's daughter, listen, tell your | |
| father that I would like to marry him, and then you shall | |
| wash yourself in milk every morning, and drink wine, but my own | |
| daughter shall wash herself in water and drink water. The girl | |
| went home, and told her father what the woman had said. The | |
| man said, what shall I do. Marriage is a joy and also a torment. | |
| At length as he could come to no decision, he pulled off his boot, | |
| and said, take this boot, it has a hole in the sole of it. Go with | |
| it up to the loft, hang it on the big nail, and then pour water into | |
| it. If it hold the water, then I will again take a wife, but if it | |
| run through, I will not. The girl did as she was bid, but the water | |
| drew the hole together and the boot became full to the top. She | |
| informed her father how it had turned out. Then he himself went up, | |
| and when he saw that she was right, he went to the widow and wooed | |
| her, and the wedding was celebrated. | |
| The next morning, when the two girls got up, there stood before | |
| the man's daughter milk for her to wash in and wine for her to | |
| drink, but before the woman's daughter stood water to wash | |
| herself with and water for drinking. On the second morning, stood | |
| water for washing and water for drinking before the man's | |
| daughter as well as before the woman's daughter. And on the third | |
| morning stood water for washing and water for drinking before the | |
| man's daughter, and milk for washing and wine for drinking, before | |
| the woman's daughter, and so it continued. The woman became her | |
| step-daughter's bitterest enemy, and day by day did her best to | |
| treat her still worse. She was also envious because her | |
| step-daughter was beautiful and lovable, and her own daughter ugly | |
| and repulsive. | |
| Once, in winter, when everything was frozen as hard as a stone, | |
| and hill and vale lay covered with snow, the woman made a frock | |
| of paper, called her step-daughter, and said, here, put on this | |
| dress and go out into the wood, and fetch me a little basketful of | |
| strawberries - I have a fancy for some. Good heavens, said the | |
| girl, no strawberries grow in winter. The ground is frozen, and | |
| besides the snow has covered everything. And why am I to go in | |
| this paper frock. It is so cold outside that one's very breath | |
| freezes. The wind will blow through the frock, and the thorns | |
| tear it off my body. Will you contradict me, said the step-mother. | |
| See that you go, and do not show your face again until you have | |
| the basketful of strawberries. Then she gave her a little piece of | |
| hard bread, and said, this will last you the day, and thought, | |
| you will die of cold and hunger outside, and will never be seen | |
| again by me. | |
| Then the maiden was obedient, and put on the paper frock, and | |
| went out with the basket. Far and wide there was nothing but snow, | |
| and not a green blade to be seen. When she got into the wood she | |
| saw a small house out of which peeped three little men. She wished | |
| them good day, and knocked modestly at the door. They cried, | |
| come in, and she entered the room and seated herself on the bench by | |
| the stove, where she began to warm herself and eat her breakfast. | |
| The little men said, give us some of it, too. Willingly, | |
| she said, and divided her piece of bread in two 'and gave | |
| them the half. They asked, what do you here in the forest in the | |
| winter time, in your thin dress. Ah, she answered, I am to look | |
| for a basketful of strawberries, and am not to go home until I can | |
| take them with me. When she had eaten her bread, they gave her | |
| a broom and said, sweep away the snow at the back door. But | |
| when she was outside, the three little men said to each other, what | |
| shall we give her as she is so good, and has shared her bread with | |
| us. Then said the first, my gift is, that she shall every day grow | |
| more beautiful. The second said, my gift is, that gold pieces shall | |
| fall out of her mouth every time she speaks. The third said, my | |
| gift is, that a king shall come and take her to wife. | |
| The girl, however, did as the little men had bidden | |
| her, swept away the snow behind the little house with | |
| the broom, and what did she find but real ripe strawberries, | |
| which came up quite dark-red out of the snow. In her | |
| joy she hastily gathered her basket full, thanked the | |
| little men, shook hands with each of them, and ran | |
| home to take her step-mother what she had longed for so much. | |
| When she went in and said good-evening, a piece of gold at once | |
| fell out of her mouth. Thereupon she related what had happened | |
| to her in the wood, but with every word she spoke, gold pieces fell | |
| from her mouth, until very soon the whole room was covered with | |
| them. Now look at her arrogance, cried the step-sister, to throw | |
| about gold in that way. But she was secretly envious of it, and | |
| wanted to go into the forest also to seek strawberries. The mother | |
| said, no, my dear little daughter, it is too cold, you might freeze | |
| to death. However, as her daughter let her have no peace, the | |
| mother at last yielded, made her a magnificent coat of fur, which | |
| she was obliged to put on, and gave her bread-and-butter and cake | |
| for her journey. | |
| The girl went into the forest and straight up to the little house. | |
| The three little men peeped out again, but she did not greet them, | |
| and without looking round at them and without speaking to them, | |
| she went awkwardly into the room, seated herself by the stove, and | |
| began to eat her bread-and-butter and cake. Give us some of it, | |
| cried the little men. But she replied, there is not enough for | |
| myself, so how can I give it away to other people. When she had | |
| finished eating, they said, there is a broom for you, sweep it all | |
| clean in front of the back-door. Sweep for yourselves, she | |
| answered, I am not your servant. When she saw that they were | |
| not going to give her anything, she went out by the door. Then the | |
| little men said to each other, what shall we give her as she is so | |
| naughty, and has a wicked envious heart, that will never let her do | |
| a good turn to any one. The first said, I grant that she may grow | |
| uglier every day. The second said, I grant that at every word she | |
| says, a toad shall spring out of her mouth. The third said, I grant | |
| that she may die a miserable death. The maiden looked for | |
| strawberries outside, but as she found none, she went angrily home. | |
| And when she opened her mouth, and was about to tell her mother what | |
| had happened to her in the wood, with every word she said, a toad | |
| sprang out of her mouth, so that everyone was seized with horror | |
| of her. | |
| Then the step-mother was still more enraged, and thought of | |
| nothing but how to do every possible injury to the man's daughter, | |
| whose beauty, however, grew daily greater. At length she took a | |
| cauldron, set it on the fire, and boiled yarn in it. When it was | |
| boiled, she flung it on the poor girl's shoulder, and gave her an | |
| axe in order that she might go on the frozen river, cut a hole in | |
| the ice, and rinse the yarn. She was obedient, went thither and cut | |
| a hole in the ice. And while she was in the midst of her cutting, a | |
| splendid carriage came driving up, in which sat the king. The | |
| carriage stopped, and the king asked, my child, who are you, and | |
| what are you doing here. I am a poor girl, and I am rinsing yarn. | |
| Then the king felt compassion, and when he saw that she was so very | |
| beautiful, he said to her, will you go away with me. Ah, yes, with | |
| all my heart, she answered, for she was glad to get away from the | |
| mother and sister. | |
| So she got into the carriage and drove away with the king, and | |
| when they arrived at his palace, the wedding was celebrated with | |
| great pomp, as the little men had granted to the maiden. When a | |
| year was over, the young queen bore a son, and as the step-mother | |
| had heard of her great good-fortune, she came with her daughter | |
| to the palace and pretended that she wanted to pay her a visit. | |
| But, when the king had gone out, and no one else was present, the | |
| wicked woman seized the queen by the head, and her daughter | |
| seized her by the feet, and they lifted her out of the bed, and | |
| threw her out of the window into the stream which flowed by. Then | |
| the ugly daughter laid herself in the bed, and the old woman | |
| covered her up over her head. When the king came home again and | |
| wanted to speak to his wife, the old woman cried, hush, hush, that | |
| can't be now, she is lying in a violent sweat. You must let her | |
| rest to-day. The king suspected no evil, and did not come back | |
| again till next morning. And as he talked with his wife and she | |
| answered him, with every word a toad leaped out, whereas formerly a | |
| piece of gold had fallen. Then he asked what that could be, but the | |
| old woman said that she had got that from the violent sweat, and | |
| would soon lose it again. During the night, however, the scullion | |
| saw a duck come swimming up the gutter, and it said - | |
| king, what art thou doing now. | |
| Sleepest thou, or wakest thou. | |
| And as he returned no answer, it said - | |
| and my guests, what may they do. | |
| The scullion said - | |
| they are sleeping soundly, too. | |
| Then it asked again - | |
| what does little baby mine. | |
| He answered - | |
| sleepeth in her cradle fine. | |
| Then she went upstairs in the form of the queen, nursed the | |
| baby, shook up its little bed, covered it over, and then swam away | |
| again down the gutter in the shape of a duck. She came thus for | |
| two nights. On the third, she said to the scullion, go and tell the | |
| king to take his sword and swing it three times over me on the | |
| threshold. Then the scullion ran and told this to the king, who | |
| came with his sword and swung it thrice over the spirit, and at the | |
| third time, his wife stood before him strong, living, and healthy | |
| as she had been before. Thereupon the king was full of great joy, | |
| but he kept the queen hidden in a chamber until the sunday, when | |
| the baby was to be christened. And when it was christened he said, | |
| what does a person deserve who drags another out of bed and | |
| throws him in the water. The wretch deserves nothing better, | |
| answered the old woman, than to be taken and put in a barrel | |
| stuck full of nails, and rolled down hill into the water. Then, | |
| said the king, you have pronounced your own sentence. And he | |
| ordered such a barrel to be brought, and the old woman to be put | |
| into it with her daughter, and then the top was hammered on, and | |
| the barrel rolled down hill until it went into the river. | |