Once upon a time, a king, hunting
in a great forest, chased a wild boar so eagerly, that none of his
people could follow him. When evening came, he stopped to look about
him, and saw that he had lost himself. He sought everywhere for a
way out of the wood, but could find none. Then he perceived coming
towards him an old woman, whose head kept constantly shaking. She
was a witch.
"My good woman," said he to her, "cannot you show me the way through
the wood?"
"O yes, your majesty," answered she, "that I can, but only on one
condition, and if you do not agree to it, you will never get out,
and must die here of hunger."
"What is the condition?" asked the king.
"I have an only daughter," said the old woman, "she is as beautiful
as any one you could find in the wide world, and well deserves to be
your wife; if you will make her your queen, I will show you the way
out of the wood."
The king, in the fear of his heart, consented, and the old woman led
him to her house, where her daughter sat by the fire. She received
the king as if she had expected him, and he saw that she was very
beautiful; but still she did not please him, and he could not look
at her without a secret shudder. After he had lifted up the maiden
beside him on his horse, the old woman showed him the way, and the
king arrived again at his royal castle, where the wedding was
celebrated.
He had been married once before, and had by his first wife seven
children, six boys and a girl, whom he loved more than anything in
the world. But, because he was afraid that the stepmother might not
treat them well, or might even do them some harm, he took them to a
lonely castle which stood in the middle of a wood. It was so hidden,
and the road was so difficult to find, that he himself would not
have found it, if a wise woman had not given him a wonderful skein
of thread; which, when he threw it down before him, unrolled of
itself and showed him the way. The king went out so often to his
dear children, that the queen noticed his absence, and was full of
curiosity to know what business took him thus alone to the wood. So
she gave his servants a sum of money, and they told her the secret,
and also told her of the skein, which was the only thing that could
show the way. After that she never rested till she had found out
where the king kept the skein. Then she made some little white silk
shirts, and as she had learned witchcraft from her mother, she sewed
a spell into every one of them. And one day when the king was gone
out to hunt, she took the little shirts and went into the wood, and
the skein showed her the way.
The six brothers, who saw some one in the distance, thought their
dear father was coming, and ran to meet him, full of joy. As they
approached, the queen threw one of the shirts over each of them, and
when the shirts touched their bodies, they were changed into swans,
and flew away over the wood. The witch's daughter went home quite
happy, and thought she had got rid of all her stepchildren; but the
one little girl had not run out with her brothers, and the queen
knew nothing about her.
Next day, the king came joyfully to visit his children, but he found
nobody except the little sister.
"Where are your brothers?" asked he.
"Oh, dear father," she answered, "they are gone, and have left me
alone," and then she told him all that she had seen out of her
window; how her brothers were turned into swans, and had flown away
over the wood; she also showed him the feathers which they had
dropped into the courtyard, and which she had picked up.
The king was grieved, but he never thought that the queen had done
this wicked deed; however, because he dreaded lest the little girl
would be stolen from him likewise, he wished to take her away with
him. But she was afraid of the stepmother, and begged the king to
let her stay one night more in the castle in the wood.
The poor little girl thought, "I cannot rest here any longer, I will
go and look for my brothers."
And when the night came, she ran away, and went straight into the
wood. She went on all through the night, and the next day too, till
she was so tired that she could go no further. Then she saw a little
house, and went in, and found a room with six little beds; she did
not dare to lie down in any, but crept under one of them, laid
herself on the hard floor, and meant to pass the night there. But
when the sun was just going to set, she heard a rustling, and saw
six swans come flying in at the window. They sat down on the floor,
and blew at one another, and blew all their feathers off, and took
off their swan's-skins like shirts. Then the little girl saw them
and recognised her brothers, and was very glad, and crept out from
under the bed.
The brothers were not less rejoiced when they saw their little
sister, but their joy did not last long.
"You cannot stop here," said they to her, "this is a house belonging
to robbers; if they come home, and find you, they will kill you."
"Cannot you protect me?" asked the little sister.
"No," answered they, "we can only take off our swan's-skins for a
quarter of an hour every evening, and have our natural shape for
that time, but afterwards we are turned into swans again."
The little sister cried and said, "Cannot you be released?"
"Oh, no!" answered they, "the conditions are too hard. You must not
speak or laugh for six years, and must make for us six shirts out of
stitchweed during that time. If while you are making them a single
word comes from your mouth, all your work will be of no use." When
her brothers had said this, the quarter of an hour was over, and
they turned into swans again, and flew out of the window.
But the little girl made a firm resolution to release her brothers,
even if it cost her her life. She left the house, and went into the
middle of the wood, and climbed up in a tree and spent the night
there. Next morning she got down, collected a quantity of stitchweed,
and began to sew. She could not speak to any one, and she did not
want to laugh; so she sat, and only looked at her work.
When she had been there a long time, it happened that the king of
the country was hunting in the wood, and his hunters came to the
tree on which the little girl sat. They called to her, and said,
"Who are you?"
But she gave them no answer.
"Come down to us," said they, "we will not do you any harm."
But she only shook her head. As they kept teasing her with their
questions, she threw them down her gold necklace, and thought they
would be satisfied with that. But they did not leave off, so she
threw her sash down to them, and as that was no good, she threw down
her garters, and at last everything that she had on, and could
spare; so that she had nothing left but her shift. But the hunters
would not be sent away, and climbed up the tree and brought down the
little girl and took her to the king.
The king asked, "Who are you? what were you doing up in the tree?"
But she did not answer. He asked it in all the languages that he
knew, but she remained as dumb as a fish. But, because she was so
beautiful, the king's heart was moved, and he fell deeply in love
with her. He wrapped his cloak round her, took her before him on his
horse, and brought her to his castle. Then he had her dressed in
rich clothes, and she shone in her beauty like bright sunshine; but
they could not get a word out of her. He set her by him at the
table, and her modest look and proper behaviour pleased him so much,
that he said, "I will marry her, and no one else in the world," and
after a few days he was married to her.
But the king had a wicked mother, who was not pleased with this
marriage, and spoke ill of the young queen. "Who knows where the
girl comes from," said she, "she cannot speak; she is not good
enough for a king."
A year after, when the queen brought her first child into the world,
the old mother took it away, and smeared her mouth with blood while
she was asleep. Then she went to the king, and accused her of eating
her child. The king would not believe it, and would not let anyone
do her any harm. And she always sat and sewed the shirts, and took
no notice of anything else. Next time, when she had another
beautiful baby, the wicked stepmother did the same as before; but
the king could not resolve to believe what she said.
He said, "My wife is too pious and good to do such a thing; if she
were not dumb, and if she could defend herself, her innocence would
be made clear."
But when for the third time the old woman took away the new-born
child, and accused the queen, who could not say a word in her own
defence, the king could not help himself; he was forced to give her
up to the court of justice, and she was condemned to suffer death by
fire.
When the day came upon which the sentence was to be executed, it was
exactly the last day of the six years, in which she might not speak
or laugh; and she had freed her dear brothers from the power of the
spell. The six little shirts were finished, except that on the last
one a sleeve was wanting. When she came to the place of execution,
she laid the shirts on her arm, and when she stood at the stake, and
the fire was just going to be lit, she looked round, and there came
six swans flying through the air. Then her heart leaped with joy,
for she saw that her deliverance was near.
The swans flew to her, and crouched down, so that she could throw
the shirts over them; as soon as the shirts were touched by them,
their swan's-skins fell off, and her brothers stood before her. They
were all grown up, strong and handsome; only the youngest had no
left arm, but instead of it a swan's wing.
They hugged and kissed their sister many times, and then the queen
went to the king, and began to speak, and said, "Dearest husband,
now I may speak, and declare to you that I am innocent and falsely
accused;" and she told him about the deceit of the old mother, who
had taken away her three children, and hidden them.
However they were soon fetched safely back, to the great joy of the
king; and the wicked mother-in-law was tied to the stake, and burnt
to ashes. But the king and queen, with their six brothers, lived
many years in peace and happiness.