Germany
(Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm)
Once upon a time there was a rich man who lived happily for
a long time with his wife. Together they had a single daughter. Then the woman
became ill, and when she was lying on her deathbed, she called her daughter to
her side, and said, "Dear child, I must leave you now, but I will look
down on you from heaven. Plant a little tree on my grave, and when you want
something, just shake the tree, and you shall get what you want. I will help
you in time of need. Just remain pious and good." Then she closed her eyes
and died. The child cried, and planted a little tree on her mother's grave. She
did not need to carry any water to it, because her tears provided all the water
that it needed.
The snow fell over the mother's grave like a white cloth; then after the sun
had retired from it a second time, and the little tree had become green a
second time, the man took another wife.
The stepmother already had two daughters by her first husband. They were
beautiful to look at, but in their hearts they were proud, arrogant, and evil.
After the wedding was over, the three moved into the man's house, and times
grew very bad for his poor child.
"What is that useless creature doing in the best room?" asked the
stepmother. "Away to the kitchen with her! And if
she wants to eat, then she must earn it. She can be our maid."
Her stepsisters took her dresses away from her and made her wear an old gray
skirt. "That is good enough for you!" they said, making fun of her
and leading her into the kitchen. Then the poor child had to do the most
difficult work. She had to get up before sunrise, carry water, and make the
fire, cook, and wash. To add to her misery, her stepsisters ridiculed her and
then scattered peas and lentils into the ashes, and she had to spend the whole
day sorting them out again. At night when she was tired, there was no bed for
her to sleep in, but she had to lie down next to the hearth in the ashes.
Because she was always dirty with ashes and dust, they gave her the name Cinderella.
The time came when the king announced a ball. It was to last, in all
splendor, for three days, and there his son, the
prince, would choose a wife for himself. The two proud sisters were invited.
"Cinderella," they cried, "Come here. Comb our hair. Brush our
shoes, and tighten our laces. We are going to the prince's ball."
Cinderella did the best that she could, but they rewarded her only with
curses. When they were ready, they said with scorn, "Cinderella, wouldn't
you like to go to the ball?"
"Oh, yes. But how can I go? I don't have a dress."
"No," said the oldest one, "and we would be ashamed if you
were to be seen there, and people learned that you are our sister. You belong
in the kitchen. Here is a basin of lentils. Sort the good ones from the bad
ones, and if there is a single bad one in the lot when we return, you can
expect the worst."
With that, they left. Cinderella stood and watched until she could no longer
see them. Then she sadly went into the kitchen and spread the lentils out over
the hearth. There was a very, very large pile of them. "Oh," she said
with a sigh. "I'll have to sit here sorting lentils until midnight, and I can't close my eyes,
no matter how much they hurt. If only my mother knew about this!"
She kneeled down in the ashes next to the hearth and was about to begin her
work when two white pigeons flew in through the window. They lit on the hearth
next to the lentils. Nodding their heads, they said, "Cinderella, do you
want us to help you sort the lentils?"
"Yes," she answered:
The bad ones go into your crop,
The good ones go into the pot.
And peck, peck, peck, peck, they started at once, eating up the bad ones and
leaving the good ones lying. In only a quarter of an hour there was not a
single bad lentil among the good ones, and she brushed them all into the pot.
Then the pigeons said to her, "Cinderella, if you would like to see
your sisters dancing with the prince, just climb up to the pigeon roost."
She followed them and climbed to the top rung of the ladder to the pigeon
roost. There she could see into the hall, and she saw her sisters dancing with
the prince. Everything glistened by the glow of a thousand lights. After she
had seen enough, she climbed back down. With a heavy heart she lay down in the
ashes and fell asleep.
The next morning the two sisters came to the kitchen. They were angry when
they saw that she had sorted the lentils, for they wanted to scold her. Because
they could not, they began telling her about the ball. They said,
"Cinderella, it was so grand at the ball. The prince, who is the best
looking man in the whole world, escorted us, and he is going to choose one of
us to be his wife."
"Yes," said Cinderella, "I saw the glistening lights. It must
have been magnificent."
"Now just how you did that?" asked the oldest one.
"By standing up there on the pigeon roost."
When she heard this, her envy drove her to have the pigeon roost torn down
immediately.
Cinderella had to comb their hair and get them ready again. The youngest
sister, who had a little sympathy in her heart, said, "Cinderella, when it
gets dark you can go and look through the windows from the outside."
"No!" said the oldest one. "That would only make her lazy.
Here is a sack full of seeds. Sort the good ones from the bad ones, and do it
well. If tomorrow there are any bad ones in the lot, then I will dump the whole
sack into the ashes, and you will have to go without eating until you have
picked them all out again."
Cinderella sadly sat down on the hearth and spread out the seeds. The
pigeons flew in again, and said, "Cinderella, do you want us to help you
sort the seeds?"
"Yes," she answered:
The bad ones go into your crop,
The good ones go into the pot.
Peck, peck, peck, peck, it went as fast as if twelve hands were at work.
When they were finished, the pigeons said, "Cinderella, would you like to
go dancing at the ball?"
"Oh, my goodness," she said, "how could I go in these dirty
clothes?"
"Just go to the little tree on your mother's grave, shake it, and wish
yourself some beautiful clothes. But come back before midnight."
So Cinderella went and shook the little tree, and said:
Shake yourself, shake yourself, little tree.
Throw some nice clothing down to me!
She had scarcely spoken these words when a splendid silver dress fell down
before her. With it were pearls, silk stockings with silver decorations, silver
slippers, and everything else that she needed. Cinderella carried it all home.
After she had washed herself and put on the beautiful clothing, she was as
beautiful as a rose washed in dew. She went to the front door, and there was a
carriage with six black horses all decorated with feathers, and servants
dressed in blue and silver. They helped her into the carriage, and away they
galloped to the king's castle.
The prince saw the carriage stop before the gate, and thought that a foreign
princess was arriving. He himself walked down the steps, helped Cinderella out,
and escorted her into the hall. Many thousand lights shone upon her, and she
was so beautiful that everyone there was amazed. The sisters stood there, angry
that someone was more beautiful than they were, but they had no idea that it
was Cinderella, who they thought was lying at home in the ashes. The prince
danced with Cinderella and paid her every royal honor. He thought to himself,
"I am supposed to choose myself a bride. I will have no one but her."
However long she had suffered in ashes and sorrow, Cinderella was now living
in splendor and joy. As midnight
approached, before the clock struck twelve, she stood up, bowed, and said that
she had to go, in spite of the prince's requests for her to stay. The prince
escorted her out. Her carriage stood there waiting for her. And she rode away
just as splendidly as she had come.
Back at home, Cinderella returned to the tree on her
mother's grave, and said:
Shake yourself, shake
yourself, little tree!
Take the clothing back from me!
The tree took back the clothes. Cinderella put on her old ash-dress again,
went home, dirtied her face, and lay down in the ashes to sleep.
The next morning the two sisters came in looking out of sorts, and without
saying a word. Cinderella said, "Did you have a good time yesterday
evening?"
"No. A princess was there who danced with the prince almost the whole
time, but no one knew who she was nor where she came from."
"Was she the one in the splendid carriage drawn by six black
horses?" asked Cinderella.
"How did you know that?"
"I was standing in the front door when she rode by the house."
"In the future do not leave your work," said the oldest one,
giving Cinderella an evil look. "What were you doing, standing in the
front door?"
Cinderella had to get her sisters ready a third time. Her reward was a basin
filled with peas, which she was supposed to sort. "And do not dare to leave
your work," shouted the oldest one, as she was leaving.
Cinderella thought, "If only my pigeons will come again," and her
heart beat a little faster. The pigeons did come, just as they had the evening
before, and said, "Cinderella, would you like us to help you sort the
peas."
"Yes," she said:
The bad ones go into your crop,
The good ones go into the pot.
Once again the pigeons picked out the bad ones, and soon they were finished.
Then they said, "Cinderella, shake the little tree, and it will throw down
even more beautiful clothes. Go to the ball, but be careful to come back before
midnight." Cinderella
went and said:
Shake yourself, shake yourself, little tree.
Throw some nice clothing down to me!
Then a dress fell down that was even more magnificent and more splendid than
the other one, made entirely of gold and precious stones. With it were
stockings decorated with gold, and slippers made of gold. Cinderella put them
on, and she glistened like the sun at midday.
A carriage with six white horses pulled up at the door. The horses had tall
white plumes on their heads, and the servants were dressed in red and gold.
When Cinderella arrived, the prince was waiting for her at the stairway. He
escorted her into the hall. If everyone had been astounded at her beauty
yesterday, today they were even more astounded. The sisters stood in the
corner, pale with envy. If they had known that this was Cinderella, who they
thought was at home lying in the ashes, they would have died of jealousy.
The prince wanted to know who the foreign princess was, where she was from,
and where she was going. He placed his people in the street to keep watch. To
prevent her from running away so fast, he had the stairway covered with pitch.
Cinderella danced with the prince again and again. Filled with joy, she did not
think about midnight.
Suddenly, in the middle of a dance, she heard the clock strike. She suddenly
remembered what the pigeons had warned her. Frightened, she rushed to the door
and ran down the stairs. Because they were covered with pitch, one of her
golden slippers stuck fast, and in her fear she did not think to pick it up.
She reached the last step just as the clock struck twelve. The carriage and the
horses disappeared, and Cinderella was left standing there in the dark street
dressed in her ash-clothes.
The prince had rushed after her. He found the golden slipper on the
stairway, pulled it loose, and picked it up. But by the time he arrived below,
she had disappeared. The people whom he had ordered to keep watch came and said
that they had seen nothing.
Cinderella was glad that it had not been worse. She returned home, lit her
simple oil lamp, hung it in the chimney, and lay down in the ashes. Before long
the two sisters returned, and called out, "Cinderella, get up and light
the way for us."
Cinderella yawned and acted as though she had been asleep. While lighting
their way, she heard one of them say, "God knows who the cursed princess
is. I wish that she were lying beneath the earth! The prince danced only with
her, and after she left, he did not want to stay any longer, and the whole
party came to an end."
"It was as though they suddenly blew out all the lights," said the
other one. Cinderella knew exactly who the foreign princess was, but she did
not say a word.
Now the prince decided that since nothing else had succeeded, he would let
the slipper help him find his bride. He had it proclaimed that he would marry
the person whose foot fit the golden slipper. But it was too small for
everyone. Indeed, some could not have gotten their foot inside, if it had been
twice as large. Finally it came time for the two sisters to try on the slipper.
They were happy, for they had small, beautiful feet, and each one believed that
she could not fail. "If only the prince would come here sooner!" they
thought.
"Listen," said the mother secretly. "Take this knife, and if
the slipper is too tight, just cut off part of your foot. It will hurt a
little, but what harm is that? The pain will soon pass, and then one of you
will be queen." Then the oldest one went to her bedroom and tried on the
slipper. The front of her foot went in, but her heel was too large, so she took
the knife and cut part of it off, so she could force her foot into the slipper.
Then she went out to the prince, and when he saw that she was wearing the
slipper, he said that she was to be his bride. He escorted her to his carriage
and was going to drive away with her. When he arrived at the gate, the two
pigeons were perched above, and they called out:
Rook di goo,
rook di goo!
There's blood in the shoe.
The shoe is too tight,
This bride is not right!
The prince bent over and looked at the slipper. Blood was streaming from it.
He saw that he had been deceived, and he took the false bride back.
The mother then said to her second daughter, "Take the slipper, and if
it is too short for you, then cut off your toes." So she took the slipper
into her bedroom, and because her foot was too long, she bit her teeth
together, and cut off a large part of her toes, then quickly pulled on the
slipper. When she stepped out wearing it, the prince thought that she was the
right one, and wanted to ride away with her. But when they came to the gate,
the pigeons again called out:
Rook di goo,
rook di goo!
There's blood in the shoe.
The shoe is too tight,
This bride is not right!
The prince looked down and saw that her white stockings were stained red,
and that blood and had come up high on them. The prince took her back to her
mother and said, "She is not the right bride either. Is there not another
daughter here in this house?"
"No," said the mother. "There is only a dirty cinder girl
here. She is sitting down there in the ashes. The slipper would never fit
her." She did not want to call her, but the prince insisted. So they
called Cinderella, and when she heard that the prince was there, she quickly
washed her hands and face. She stepped into the best room and bowed. The prince
handed her the golden slipper, and said, "Try it on. If it fits you, you
shall be my wife." She pulled the heavy shoe from her left foot, and then
put her foot into the slipper, pushing ever so slightly. It fit as if it had
been poured over her foot. As she straightened herself up, she looked into the
prince's face, and he recognized her as the beautiful princess. He cried out,
"This is the right bride." The stepmother and the two proud sisters
turned pale with horror. The prince escorted Cinderella away. He helped her
into his carriage, and as they rode through the gate, the pigeons called out:
Rook di goo,
rook di goo!
No blood's in the shoe.
The shoe's not too tight,
This bride is right!
- Source: Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm, Kinder- und Hausmärchen, 1st ed. (Berlin, 1812), v.
1, no. 21. Translated by D. L. Ashliman.
Copyright 1998.
- In the edition of 1819 (and
all subsequent editions) the stepsisters' punishment is more severe: The
pigeons attack them and peck out their eyes, leaving them blind for life.