The Six Swans
Tales Collected by the Brothers Grimm
Once upon a time, a certain King was hunting in a great forest,
and he chased a wild beast so eagerly that none of his attendants
could follow him. When evening drew near he stopped and looked
around him, and then he saw that he had lost his way. He
sought a way out, but could find none. Then he perceived an aged
woman with a head which nodded perpetually, who came towards
him, but she was a witch. "Good woman," said he to her, "Can
you not show me the way through the forest?" "Oh, yes, Lord
King," she answered, "that I certainly can, but on one condition,
and if you do not fulfil that, you will never get out of the
forest, and will die of hunger in it."
"What kind of condition is it?" asked the King.
"I have a daughter," said the old woman, "who is as beautiful
as any one in the world, and well deserves to be your consort,
and if you will make her your Queen, I will show you the way out
of the forest." In the anguish of his heart the King consented,
and the old woman led him to her little hut, where her daughter
was sitting by the fire. She received the King as if she had been
expecting him, and he saw that she was very beautiful, but still
she did not please him, and he could not look at her without
secret horror. After he had taken the maiden up on his horse,
the old woman showed him
the way, and the King reached his royal palace again, where the
wedding was celebrated.
The King had already been married once, and had by his first
wife, seven children, six boys and a girl, whom he loved
better than anything else in the world. As he now feared that
the step-mother might not treat them well, and even do them some
injury, he took them to a lonely castle which stood in the
midst of a forest. It lay so concealed, and the way was so
difficult to find that he himself would not have found it,
if a wise woman had not given him a ball of yarn with wonderful
properties. When he threw it down before him, it unrolled
itself and showed him his path. The King, however, went so
frequently away to his dear children that the Queen observed
his absence; she was curious and wanted to know what he did
when he was quite alone in the forest. She gave a great deal
of money to his servants, and they betrayed the secret to her,
and told her likewise of the ball which alone could point out
the way. And now she knew no rest until she had learnt where
the King kept the ball of yarn, and then she made little shirts
of white silk, and as she had learnt the art of witchcraft from
her mother, she sewed a charm inside them. And once when the
King had ridden forth to hunt, she took the little shirts and
went into the forest, and the ball showed her the way. The
children, who saw from a distance that some one was approaching,
thought that their dear father was coming to them, and full of
joy, ran to meet him. Then she threw one of the little shirts
over each of them, and no sooner had the shirts touched their
bodies than they were changed into swans, and flew away over
the forest. The Queen went home quite delighted, and thought
she had got rid of her step-children, but the girl had not run
out with her brothers, and the Queen knew nothing about her. Next day the King went to visit
his
children, but he found no one but the little girl. "Where are thy brothers?' asked
the King. "Alas, dear father," she answered, "they have gone away
and left me alone!" and she told him that she had seen from
her little window how her brothers had flown away over the
forest
in the shape of swans, and she showed him the feathers, which
they had let fall in the courtyard, and which she had picked up. The King mourned, but he did
not think that the Queen had
done this wicked deed, and as he feared that the girl would
also be stolen away from him, he wanted to take her away with him.
But she was afraid of her step-mother, and entreated the King
to let her stay just this one night more in the forest castle.
The poor girl thought, "I can no longer stay here. I will go
and seek my brothers." And when night came, she ran away, and
went straight into the forest. She walked the whole night long,
and next day also without stopping, until she could go no farther
for weariness. Then she saw a forest-hut, and went into it, and
found a room with six little beds, but she did not venture to
get into one of them, but crept under one, and lay down on the
hard ground, intending to pass the night there. Just before
sunset, however, she heard a rustling, and saw six swans come
flying in at the window. They alighted on the ground and blew
at each other, and blew all the feathers off, and their swan's
skins stripped off like a shirt. Then the maiden looked at them
and recognized her brothers, was glad and crept forth from beneath
the bed. The brothers were not less delighted to see their
little sister, but their joy was of short duration. "Here canst thou not abide," they said to her.
"This is a shelter for robbers,
if they come home and find thee, they will kill thee." "But can you
not protect me?" asked the little sister. "No," they replied, "only
for one quarter of an hour each evening can we lay aside our
swan's skins and have during that time our human form; after
that, we are once more turned into swans." The little sister
wept and said, "Can you not be set free?" "Alas, no," they answered,
"the conditions are too hard! For six years thou mayst neither
speak nor laugh, and in that time thou must sew together six
little shirts of starwort for us. And if one single word falls
from thy lips, all thy work will be lost." And when the brothers
had said this, the quarter of an hour was over, and they flew
out of the window again as swans.
The maiden, however, firmly resolved to deliver her brothers, even
if it should cost her her life. She left the hut, went into
the midst of the forest, seated herself on a tree, and there
passed the night. Next morning she went out and gathered starwort
and began to sew. She could not speak to any one, and she had
no inclination to laugh; she sat there and looked at nothing
but her work. When she had already spent a long time there it
came to pass that the King of the country was hunting in the
forest, and his huntsmen came to the tree on which the maiden
was sitting. They called to her and said, "Who art thou?" But
she made no answer. "Come down to us," said they. "We will not
do thee any harm." She only shook her head. As they pressed her
further with questions she threw her golden necklace down to
them, and thought to content them thus. They, however, did
not cease, and then she threw her girdle down to them, and as
this also was to no purpose, her garters, and by degrees
everything that she had on that she could do without
until she had nothing left but her shift. The huntsmen,
however, did not let themselves be turned aside by that, but
climbed the tree and fetched the maiden down and led her before
the King. The King asked, "Who art thou? What art thou doing on the
tree?" But she did not answer. He put the question in every
language that he knew, but she remained as mute as a fish. As
she was so beautiful, the King's heart was touched, and he was
smitten with a great love for her. He put his mantle on her,
took her before him on his horse, and carried her to his
castle. Then he caused her to be dressed in rich garments, and
she shone in her beauty like bright daylight, but no word
could be drawn from her. He placed her by his side at table, and
her modest bearing and courtesy pleased him so much that he said,
"She is the one whom I wish to marry, and no other woman in the
world." And after some days he united himself to her.
The King, however, had a wicked mother who was dissatisfied
with this marriage and spoke ill of the young Queen. "Who knows,"
said she, "from whence the creature who can't speak, comes?
She is not worthy of a king!" After a year had passed, when
the Queen brought her first child into the world, the old
woman took it away from her, and smeared her mouth with blood
as she slept. Then she went to the King and accused the Queen
of being a man-eater. The King would not believe it, and would
not suffer any one to do her any injury. She, however, sat
continually sewing at the shirts, and cared for nothing else. The next time, when she again bore
a
beautiful boy, the false
step-mother used the same treachery, but the King could not
bring himself to give credit to her words. He said, "She is
too pious and good to do anything of that kind; if she were not
dumb, and could defend herself, her innocence would come to light." But when the old woman
stole away the newly-born child for the
third time, and accused the Queen, who did not utter one word
of defence, the King could do no otherwise than deliver her over
to justice, and she was sentenced to suffer death by fire.
When the day came for the sentence to be executed, it was
the last day of the six years during which she was not to speak
or laugh, and she had delivered her dear brothers from the
power of the enchantment. The six shirts were ready, only the
left sleeve of the sixth was wanting. When, therefore, she was
led to the stake, she laid the shirts on her arm, and when she
stood on high and the fire was just going to be lighted, she
looked around and six swans came flying through the air towards
her. Then she saw that her deliverance was near, and her heart
leapt with joy. The swans swept towards her and sank down so that
she could throw the shirts over them, and as they were touched by them, their swan's skins fell
off, and her
brothers stood in their own bodily form before her, and were
vigorous and handsome. The youngest only lacked his left arm,
and had in the place of it a swan's wing on his shoulder. They
embraced and kissed each other, and the Queen went to the King,
who was greatly moved, and she began to speak and said, "Dearest
husband, now I may speak and declare to thee that I am innocent,
and falsely accused." And she told him of the treachery of the
old woman who had taken away her three children and hidden them. Then to the great joy of the
King they were brought thither,
and as a punishment, the wicked step-mother was bound to
the stake, and burnt to ashes. But the King and the Queen with
their six brothers lived many years in happiness and peace.
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