There was once an old goose who
had seven young goslings, and loved them as only a mother can love
her children. One day she was going into the wood to seek for
provender, and before setting off she called all seven to her and
said, "Dear children, I am obliged to go into the wood, so be on
your guard against the wolf; for if he gets in here he will eat you
up, feathers, skin, and all. The villain often disguises himself,
but you can easily recognise him by his rough voice and black paws."
The children answered, "Dear mother, we will take great care; you
may go without any anxiety." So the old lady was comforted, and set
off cheerfully for the wood.
Before long, some one knocked at the door, and cried, "Open, open,
my dear children; your mother is here, and has brought something for
each of you."
But the goslings soon perceived, by the rough voice, that it was the
wolf. "We will not open," said they; "you are not our mother, for
she has a sweet and lovely voice; but your voice is rough—you are
the wolf."
Thereupon the wolf set off to a merchant and bought a large lump of
chalk; he ate it, and it made his voice sweet. Back he came, knocked
at the door, and cried, "Open, open, my dear children; your mother
is here, and has brought something for each of you."
But the wolf had laid his black paw on the window-sill, and when the
children saw it, they cried, "We will not open; our mother has not
black feet like you—you are the wolf."
So the wolf ran off to the baker, and said, "I have hurt my foot,
put some dough on it." And when the baker had plastered it with
dough, the wolf went to the miller and cried, "Strew some meal on my
paws." But the miller thought to himself, "The wolf wants to deceive
some one," and he hesitated to do it; till the wolf said, "If you
don't do it at once, I will eat you up." So the miller was afraid
and made his paws white. Such is the way of the world!
Now came the rogue back for the third time, knocked and said, "Open
the door, dear children; your mother has come home, and has brought
something for each of you out of the wood."
The little goslings cried, "Show us your paws first, that we may see
whether you are indeed our mother." So he laid his paws on the
window-sill, and when the goslings saw that they were white, they
believed it was all right, and opened the door; and who should come
in but the wolf!
They screamed out and tried to hide themselves; one jumped under the
table, another into the bed, the third into the oven; the fourth ran
into the kitchen, the fifth hopped into a chest, the sixth under the
wash-tub, and the seventh got into the clock-case. But the wolf
seized them, and stood on no ceremony with them; one after another
he gobbled them all up, except the youngest, who being in the
clock-case he couldn't find. When the wolf had eaten his fill, he
strolled forth, laid himself down in the green meadow under a tree,
and went fast asleep.
Not long after, back came the old goose home from the wood; but
what, alas! did she see? The house-door stood wide open; table,
chairs, benches, were all overthrown; the wash-tub lay in the ashes;
blankets and pillows were torn off the bed. She looked for her
children, but nowhere could she find them; she called them each by
name, but nobody answered. At last, when she came to the youngest, a
little squeaking voice answered, "Dear mother, I am in the
clock-case." She pulled him out, and he told her how the wolf had
come and had eaten up all the others. You may think how she wept for
her dear children.
At last, in her grief, she went out, and the youngest gosling ran
beside her. And when she came to the meadow there lay the wolf under
the tree, snoring till the boughs shook. She walked round and
examined him on all sides, till she perceived that something was
moving and kicking about inside him.
"Can it be," thought she, "that my poor children whom he has
swallowed for his supper are yet alive?" So she sent the little
gosling back to the house for scissors, needle, and thread, and
began to slit up the monster's stomach. Scarcely had she given one
snip, when out came the head of a gosling, and when she had cut a
little further, the six jumped out one after another, not having
taken the least hurt, because the greedy monster had swallowed them
down whole. That was a joy! They embraced their mother tenderly, and
skipped about as lively as a tailor at his wedding.
But the old goose said, "Now go and find me six large stones, which
we will put inside the greedy beast while he is still asleep." So
the goslings got the stones in all haste, and they put them inside
the wolf; and the old goose sewed him up again in a great hurry,
while he never once moved nor took any notice.
Now when the wolf at last woke up and got upon his legs, he found he
was very thirsty, and wished to go to the spring to drink. But as
soon as he began to move the stones began to shake and rattle inside
him, till he cried,—
"What's this rumbling and tumbling,
What's this rattling like bones?
I thought I had eaten six little geese,
But they've turned out only stones."
And when he came to the spring and bent down his head to drink, the
heavy stones overbalanced him, and in he went head over heels. Now
when the seven goslings saw this, they came running up, crying
loudly, "The wolf is dead, the wolf is dead!" and danced for joy all
round the spring, and their mother with them.