LITTLE
ONE-EYE, LITTLE TWO-EYES, AND LITTLE THREE-EYES
There
was once a woman who had three daughters, of whom the eldest was called Little
One-eye, because she had only one eye in the middle of her forehead; and the
second, Little Two-eyes, because she had two eyes like other people; and the
youngest, Little Three-eyes, because she had three eyes, and _her_ third eye
was also in the middle of her forehead. But because Little Two-eyes did not
look any different from other children, her sisters and mother could not bear
her. They would say to her, 'You with your two eyes are no better than common
folk; you don't belong to us.' They pushed her here, and threw her wretched
clothes there, and gave her to eat only what they left, and they were as unkind
to her as ever they could be.
It
happened one day that Little Two-eyes had to go out into the fields to take
care of the goat, but she was still quite hungry because her sisters had given
her so little to eat. So she sat down in the meadow and began to cry, and she
cried so much that two little brooks ran out of her eyes. But when she looked
up once in her grief there stood a woman beside her who asked, 'Little
Two-eyes, what are you crying for?' Little Two-eyes answered, 'Have I not
reason to cry? Because I have two eyes like other people, my sisters and my
mother cannot bear me; they push me out of one corner into another, and give me
nothing to eat except what they leave. To-day they have given me so little that
I am still quite hungry.' Then the wise woman said, 'Little Two-eyes, dry your
eyes, and I will tell you something so that you need never be hungry again.
Only say to your goat,
"Little
goat, bleat, Little table, appear,"
and
a beautifully spread table will stand before you, with the most delicious food
on it, so that you can eat as much as you want. And when you have had enough
and don't want the little table any more, you have only to say,
"Little
goat, bleat, Little table, away,"
and
then it will vanish.' Then the wise woman went away.
But
Little Two-eyes thought, 'I must try at once if what she has told me is true,
for I am more hungry than ever'; and she said,
'Little
goat, bleat, Little table appear,'
and
scarcely had she uttered the words, when there stood a little table before her
covered with a white cloth, on which were arranged a plate, with a knife and
fork and a silver spoon, and the most beautiful dishes, which were smoking hot,
as if they had just come out of the kitchen. Then Little Two-eyes said the
shortest grace she knew, and set to work and made a good dinner. And when she
had had enough, she said, as the wise woman had told her,
'Little
goat, bleat, Little table, away,'
and
immediately the table and all that was on it disappeared again. 'That is a
splendid way of housekeeping,' thought Little Two-eyes, and she was quite happy
and contented.
In
the evening, when she went home with her goat, she found a little earthenware
dish with the food that her sisters had thrown to her, but she did not touch
it. The next day she went out again with her goat, and left the few scraps
which were given her. The first and second times her sisters did not notice
this, but when it happened continually, they remarked it and said, 'Something
is the matter with Little Two-eyes, for she always leaves her food now, and she
used to gobble up all that was given her. She must have found other means of
getting food.' So in order to get at the truth, Little One-eye was told to go
out with Little Two-eyes when she drove the goat to pasture, and to notice
particularly what she got there, and whether anyone brought her food and drink.
Now
when Little Two-eyes was setting out, Little One-eye came up to her and said,
'I will go into the field with you and see if you take good care of the goat,
and if you drive him properly to get grass.' But Little Two-eyes saw what
Little One-eye had in her mind, and she drove the goat into the long grass and
said, 'Come, Little One-eye, we will sit down here, and I will sing you
something.'
Little
One-eye sat down, and as she was very much tired by the long walk to which she
was not used, and by the hot day, and as Little Two-eyes went on singing.
'Little
One-eye, are you awake? Little One-eye, are you asleep?'
she
shut her one eye and fell asleep. When Little Two-eyes saw that Little One-eye
was asleep and could find out nothing, she said,
'Little
goat, bleat, Little table, appear,'
and
sat down at her table and ate and drank as much as she wanted. Then she said
again,
'Little
goat, bleat, Little table, away.'
and
in the twinkling of an eye all had vanished.
Little
Two-eyes then woke Little One-eye and said, 'Little One-eye, you meant to
watch, and, instead, you went to sleep; in the meantime the goat might have run
far and wide. Come, we will go home.' So they went home, and Little Two-eyes
again left her little dish untouched, and Little One-eye could not tell her
mother why she would not eat, and said as an excuse, 'I was so sleepy
out-of-doors.'
The
next day the mother said to Little Three-eyes, 'This time you shall go with
Little Two-eyes and watch whether she eats anything out in the fields, and
whether anyone brings her food and drink, for eat and drink she must secretly.'
So Little Three-eyes went to Little Two-eyes and said, 'I will go with you and see
if you take good care of the goat, and if you drive him properly to get grass.'
But little Two-eyes knew what Little Three-eyes had in her mind, and she drove
the goat out into the tall grass and said, 'We will sit down here, Little
Three-eyes, and I will sing you something.' Little Three-eyes sat down; she was
tired by the walk and the hot day, and Little Two-eyes sang the same little
song again:
'Little
Three eyes, are you awake?'
but
instead of singing as she ought to have done,
'Little
Three-eyes, are you asleep?'
she
sang, without thinking,
'Little
_Two-eyes_, are you asleep?'
She
went on singing,
'Little
Three-eyes, are you awake? Little _Two-eyes_, are you asleep?'
so
that the two eyes of Little Three-eyes fell asleep, but the third, which was
not spoken to in the little rhyme, did not fall asleep. Of course Little
Three-eyes shut that eye also out of cunning, to look as if she were asleep,
but it was blinking and could see everything quite well.
And
when Little Two-eyes thought that Little Three-eyes was sound asleep, she said
her rhyme,
'Little
goat, bleat, Little table, appear,'
and
ate and drank to her heart's content, and then made the table go away again, by
saying,
'Little
goat, bleat, Little table, away.'
But
Little Three-eyes had seen everything. Then Little Two-eyes came to her, and
woke her and said, 'Well, Little Three-eyes, have you been asleep? You watch
well! Come, we will go home.' When they reached home, Little Two-eyes did not
eat again, and Little Three-eyes said to the mother, 'I know now why that proud
thing eats nothing. When she says to the goat in the field,
"Little
goat, bleat, Little table, appear,"
a
table stands before her, spread with the best food, much better than we have;
and when she has had enough, she says,
"Little
goat, bleat, Little table, away,"
and
everything disappears again. I saw it all exactly. She made two of my eyes go
to sleep with a little rhyme, but the one in my forehead remained awake,
luckily!'
Then
the envious mother cried out, 'Will you fare better than we do? you shall not
have the chance to do so again!' and she fetched a knife, and killed the goat.
When
Little Two-eyes saw this, she went out full of grief, and sat down in the
meadow and wept bitter tears. Then again the wise woman stood before her, and
said, 'Little Two-eyes, what are you crying for?' 'Have I not reason to cry?'
she answered, 'the goat, which when I said the little rhyme, spread the table
so beautifully, my mother has killed, and now I must suffer hunger and want
again.' The wise woman said, 'Little Two-eyes, I will give you a good piece of
advice. Ask your sisters to give you the heart of the dead goat, and bury it in
the earth before the house-door; that will bring you good luck.' Then she
disappeared, and Little Two-eyes went home, and said to her sisters, 'Dear
sisters, do give me something of my goat; I ask nothing better than its heart.'
Then they laughed and said, 'You can have that if you want nothing more.' And
Little Two-eyes took the heart and buried it in the evening when all was quiet,
as the wise woman had told her, before the house-door. The next morning when
they all awoke and came to the house-door, there stood a most wonderful tree,
which had leaves of silver and fruit of gold growing on it--you never saw
anything more lovely and gorgeous in your life! But they did not know how the
tree had grown up in the night; only Little Two-eyes knew that it had sprung
from the heart of the goat, for it was standing just where she had buried it in
the ground. Then the mother said to Little One-eye, 'Climb up, my child, and
break us off the fruit from the tree.' Little One-eye climbed up, but just when
she was going to take hold of one of the golden apples the bough sprang out of
her hands; and this happened every time, so that she could not break off a
single apple, however hard she tried. Then the mother said, 'Little Three-eyes,
do you climb up; you with your three eyes can see round better than Little
One-eye.' So Little One-eye slid down, and Little Three-eyes climbed up; but
she was not any more successful; look round as she might, the golden apples
bent themselves back. At last the mother got impatient and climbed up herself,
but she was even less successful than Little One-eye and Little Three-eyes in
catching hold of the fruit, and only grasped at the empty air. Then Little
Two-eyes said, 'I will just try once, perhaps I shall succeed better.' The
sisters called out, 'You with your two eyes will no doubt succeed!' But Little
Two-eyes climbed up, and the golden apples did not jump away from her, but
behaved quite properly, so that she could pluck them off, one after the other,
and brought a whole apron-full down with her. The mother took them from her,
and, instead of behaving better to poor Little Two-eyes, as they ought to have
done, they were jealous that she only could reach the fruit and behaved still
more unkindly to her.
It
happened one day that when they were all standing together by the tree that a
young knight came riding along. 'Be quick, Little Two-eyes,' cried the two
sisters, 'creep under this, so that you shall not disgrace us,' and they put
over poor Little Two-eyes as quickly as possible an empty cask, which was
standing close to the tree, and they pushed the golden apples which she had
broken off under with her. When the knight, who was a very handsome young man,
rode up, he wondered to see the marvellous tree of gold and silver, and said to
the two sisters, 'Whose is this beautiful tree? Whoever will give me a twig of
it shall have whatever she wants.' Then Little One-eye and Little Three-eyes
answered that the tree belonged to them, and that they would certainly break
him off a twig. They gave themselves a great deal of trouble, but in vain; the
twigs and fruit bent back every time from their hands. Then the knight said,
'It is very strange that the tree should belong to you, and yet that you have
not the power to break anything from it!' But they would have that the tree was
theirs; and while they were saying this, Little Two-eyes rolled a couple of
golden apples from under the cask, so that they lay at the knight's feet, for
she was angry with Little One-eye and Little Three-eyes for not speaking the
truth. When the knight saw the apples he was astonished, and asked where they
came from. Little One-eye and Little Three-eyes answered that they had another
sister, but she could not be seen because she had only two eyes, like ordinary
people. But the knight demanded to see her, and called out, 'Little Two-eyes,
come forth.' Then Little Two-eyes came out from under the cask quite happily,
and the knight was astonished at her great beauty, and said, 'Little Two-eyes,
I am sure you can break me off a twig from the tree.' 'Yes,' answered Little
Two-eyes, 'I can, for the tree is mine.' So she climbed up and broke off a
small branch with its silver leaves and golden fruit without any trouble, and
gave it to the knight. Then he said, 'Little Two-eyes, what shall I give you
for this?' 'Ah,' answered Little Two-eyes, 'I suffer hunger and thirst, want
and sorrow, from early morning till late in the evening; if you would take me
with you, and free me from this, I should be happy!' Then the knight lifted
Little Two-eyes on his horse, and took her home to his father's castle. There
he gave her beautiful clothes, and food and drink, and because he loved her so
much he married her, and the wedding was celebrated with great joy.
When
the handsome knight carried Little Two-eyes away with him, the two sisters
envied her good luck at first. 'But the wonderful tree is still with us, after
all,' they thought, 'and although we cannot break any fruit from it, everyone
will stop and look at it, and will come to us and praise it; who knows whether
_we_ may not reap a harvest from it?' But the next morning the tree had flown,
and their hopes with it; and when Little Two-eyes looked out of her window
there it stood underneath, to her great delight. Little Two-eyes lived happily
for a long time. Once two poor women came to the castle to beg alms. Then
Little Two-eyes looked at then and recognised both her sisters, Little One-eye
and Little Three-eyes, who had become so poor that they came to beg bread at
her door. But Little Two-eyes bade them welcome, and was so good to them that
they both repented from their hearts of having been so unkind to their sister.
Grimm.
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