RUMPELSTILTZKIN
There
was once upon a time a poor miller who had a very beautiful daughter. Now it
happened one day that he had an audience with the King, and in order to appear
a person of some importance he told him that he had a daughter who could spin
straw into gold. "Now that's a talent worth having," said the King to
the miller; "if your daughter is as clever as you say, bring her to my
palace to-morrow, and I'll put her to the test." When the girl was brought
to him he led her into a room full of straw, gave her a spinning-wheel and
spindle, and said: "Now set to work and spin all night till early dawn,
and if by that time you haven't spun the straw into gold you shall die."
Then he closed the door behind him and left her alone inside.
So
the poor miller's daughter sat down, and didn't know what in the world she was
to do. She hadn't the least idea of how to spin straw into gold, and became at
last so miserable that she began to cry. Suddenly the door opened, and in
stepped a tiny little man and said: "Good-evening, Miss Miller-maid; why
are you crying so bitterly?" "Oh!" answered the girl, "I
have to spin straw into gold, and haven't a notion how it's done."
"What will you give me if I spin it for you?" asked the manikin. "My
necklace," replied the girl. The little man took the necklace, sat himself
down at the wheel, and whir, whir, whir, the wheel went round three times, and
the bobbin was full. Then he put on another, and whir, whir, whir, the wheel
went round three times, and the second too was full; and so it went on till the
morning, when all the straw was spun away, and all the bobbins were full of
gold. As soon as the sun rose the King came, and when he perceived the gold he
was astonished and delighted, but his heart only lusted more than ever after
the precious metal. He had the miller's daughter put into another room full of
straw, much bigger than the first, and bade her, if she valued her life, spin
it all into gold before the following morning. The girl didn't know what to do,
and began to cry; then the door opened as before, and the tiny little man
appeared and said: "What'll you give me if I spin the straw into gold for
you?" "The ring from my finger," answered the girl. The manikin
took the ring, and whir! round went the spinning-wheel again, and when morning
broke he had spun all the straw into glittering gold. The King was pleased
beyond measure at the sights but his greed for gold was still not satisfied,
and he had the miller's daughter brought into a yet bigger room full of straw,
and said: "You must spin all this away in the night; but if you succeed
this time you shall become my wife." "She's only a miller's daughter,
it's true," he thought; "but I couldn't find a richer wife if I were
to search the whole world over." When the girl was alone the little man
appeared for the third time, and said: "What'll you give me if I spin the
straw for you once again?" "I've nothing more to give," answered
the girl. "Then promise me when you are Queen to give me your first child."
"Who knows what may not happen before that?" thought the miller's
daughter; and besides, she saw no other way out of it, so she promised the
manikin what he demanded, and he set to work once more and spun the straw into
gold. When the King came in the morning, and found everything as he had
desired, he straightway made her his wife, and the miller's daughter became a
queen. When a year had passed a
beautiful son was born to her, and she thought no more of the little man, till
all of a sudden one day he stepped into her room and said: "Now give me
what you promised." The Queen was in a great state, and offered the little
man all the riches in her kingdom if he would only leave her the child. But the
manikin said: "No, a living creature is dearer to me than all the treasures
in the world." Then the Queen began to cry and sob so bitterly that the
little man was sorry for her, and said: "I'll give you three days to guess
my name, and if you find it out in that time you may keep your child."
Then
the Queen pondered the whole night over all the names she had ever heard, and
sent a messenger to scour the land, and to pick up far and near any names he
could come across. When the little man arrived on the following day she began
with Kasper, Melchior, Belshazzar, and all the other names she knew, in a
string, but at each one the manikin called out: "That's not my name."
The next day she sent to inquire the names of all the people in the
neighborhood, and had a long list of the most uncommon and extraordinary for
the little man when he made his appearance. "Is your name, perhaps,
Sheepshanks Cruickshanks, Spindleshanks?" but he always replied:
"That's not my name." On the third day the messenger returned and
announced: "I have not been able to find any new names, but as I came upon
a high hill round the corner of the wood, where the foxes and hares bid each
other good-night, I saw a little house, and in front of the house burned a
fire, and round the fire sprang the most grotesque little man, hopping on one
leg and crying:
"To-morrow
I brew, to-day I bake,
And then the child away I'll take;
For little deems my royal dame
That Rumpelstiltzkin is my name!"
You
can imagine the Queen's delight at hearing the name, and when the little man
stepped in shortly afterward and asked: "Now, my lady Queen, what's my
name?" she asked first: "Is your name Conrad?" "No."
"Is your name Harry?" "No." "Is your name perhaps,
Rumpelstiltzkin?" "Some demon has told you that! some demon has told
you that!" screamed the little man, and in his rage drove his right foot
so far into the ground that it sank in up to his waist; then in a passion he
seized the left foot with both hands and tore himself in two.[1]
[1]
Grimm.
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