The Turnip Princess and Other Newly Discovered Fairy Tales (Penguin Classics) (22 page)

THE SUN TAKES AN OATH

The Sun and the Moon are man and wife. When they married, the Moon, who had a reputation for being cold and dull, was not passionate enough for his ardent wife. He liked to take naps.

The exasperated Sun proposed a wager: “Whoever wakes up first will have the right to shine during the day, and the lazy one will have the night. If we both wake up at the same time, we can shine next to each other in the skies.” The naive Moon had a good laugh. He agreed to the deal because he was convinced that he could not possibly lose. With a smile on his face, he fell asleep. And from that day on, he kept his smile.

The Sun was so upset that she could not sleep for long. By two in the morning she was already awake and lighting up the world, and then she woke up the frosty Moon. She boasted about her victory and reminded him that, as his punishment, the two would never be able to spend a night together again. That’s why she had proposed the wager, and she strengthened the result with a vow that she was bound to the terms and would not back down. Since then the Moon shines at night, and the Sun by day.

After a while, the Sun began to regret the vow she had taken in anger, for she was in love with the Moon. And the Moon likewise felt drawn to his wife and had imagined the entire wager a mere joke. His iciness had been playful rather than serious. Now the two were hoping to reunite. They started moving closer to each other, and from time to time, they met, at moments that we call solar eclipses. But then they began to
quarrel again, each blaming the other for their separation. They were unable to smooth over their differences.

The time remaining for a reconciliation began to run out, and soon the Sun had to begin her journey, as she had sworn she would do. She was red-hot with rage as she went her way. If they had not fought again, they would be together now. A long time passed before her anger died down. During one period of complete darkness, they must have met again.

And so the Sun always appears in a state of heated, passionate resentment. But sometimes, when she is moving along, she sees how wrong she was and weeps bloody tears and goes down in fiery flames.

The Moon is equally sad and distressed that he cannot meet the Sun. For that reason he keeps shrinking until all that is left of him is a small crescent. He then begins to grow with the hope of meeting the Sun again, but once he is restored to full size, he realizes that he must be wrong and begins to wane once again. He has become melancholy from his unhappiness in love. And that’s why his light is so dim and soft. It’s also why unhappy lovers send their laments up to the Moon.

THE SUN’S SHADOW

After the Sun and the Moon were created, Death ruled the world. Once the two celestial bodies grew up, they drove Death underground and into a corner, and it, in turn, killed off everything created by the Sun and Moon.

The three began quarreling so violently that all things created nearly perished in a flood.

The Titans decided to hold a meeting and sat down on some stone benches they had gathered together in the mountains. They were unable to come to any decisions, until a white weasel crawled out from a crevice and began licking their eyes. They decided to take the side of Death. Death refused to give them the final word on the matter, for as a man he was able to rule over the Sun in any case, since she was a woman. Quarrels broke out again, but with such passion that the Titans tore all of Death’s clothes from his stout body. The Sun took pity on Death and threw a dark cape over him so that he could cover himself and hide from the Titans.

Since that day, Death wears a cape from the Sun, and the Sun throws dark shadows.

WHAT THE MOON TRIED TO WEAR

One evening the Moon was traveling alongside a tailor on a cold winter night. Every once in a while the Moon chatted with the tailor and said: “I’m so cold that my heart is about to break into pieces.”

The tailor laughed and said: “I don’t feel a thing, because my fur coat is protecting me. Have one made up for you!”

“I’ve been dying to do just that,” the Moon replied. “And I’ll give you a huge reward if you can manage to have one made for me.”

A few days went by, and the tailor appeared with a coat for the Moon to try on. It was just a bit too small and the Moon said: “I can’t wear it unless you let it out.” The tailor left and returned a week later, but this time the Moon could not even manage to slip on the coat. The tailor was furious and said: “I’ve never seen anyone as fat as you are.” The tailor took the coat back, and he let it out even more. He returned to the Moon and said: “Here’s your coat, and it is going to fit you perfectly!” The Moon put on the coat, but now it was way too large. The tailor threw a fit, took the coat, and tossed it to the ground, right at the Moon’s feet. “Go find yourself a tailor up in heaven!” he said, and then he disappeared.

THE SINGING TREE

A carefree young tailor was making his way through the woods one day when he heard a sweet melody in the air. He had to search for a long time before he tracked the sound to a tree growing on a patch of green grass. Fascinated and unable to stop himself, he took a needle from his pocket and poked it into the trunk of the tree. He was determined to figure out how music could come from that tree. Presto! The needle turned into a key lodged right in the bark. The tree opened up like a door, swallowed the tailor, and pushed him right down its gullet.

The tailor was out cold for a while. When he came to his senses, he was lying in a room filled with thousands of sharp needles glittering like frost and crystal. He rolled himself into a ball to keep from getting scratched or stabbed. He was about to burst into tears when it suddenly occurred to him to take his scissors and make a hole in the wall. He slipped through the wall and reached another opening in the tree, and there he found thousands of scissors, making a din, dancing up and down.

The tailor feared for his life. The needles had turned his body into one big sponge, and the scissors had torn his garments to shreds. He suddenly remembered that he had a heavy iron with him, and he used it to force his way through the onslaught and pass through the wall. He crawled out and fell straight down, this time into a thicket of thorny shrubs. Worse yet, a storm was on the way, and suddenly it began pouring—but not in raindrops. Big, heavy irons were falling down all over the place.

The tailor was black and blue from the irons that had hit him. He pulled himself out of the thorny underbrush and crawled into a hollow tree, where he was hoping to recover from the barrage.

All at once thousands of tiny red ants started marching in his direction, and they bit and stung the miserable young man. He groaned and moaned, sneezed and wheezed, and he would have hightailed it out of there, but outside the irons were still falling from the sky. They would have killed him. And so the tailor hopped around, scratching and scraping the bites. He swore to high heaven that he would never again do anything to harm a leaf on a tree, let alone the entire tree, as long as he survived this time around.

Suddenly the rain came to a stop. The tailor tore off and got out of those woods as fast as he could.

Commentary

THE TURNIP PRINCESS

Combining the ordinary with the extraordinary even in its title, this tale works magic with rusty nails and turnips, turning metals and plants into fairy-tale gold. The prince faces numerous mysterious ordeals, and even when he follows instructions, he finds himself in trouble. Pulling a rusty nail from the wall of a cave seems an odd, somewhat surreal means of lifting a curse, but that is the action that leads to the final disenchantment of the old woman and the bear.

THE ENCHANTED QUILL

“Pull one of my feathers out, and if you use it to write down a wish, the wish will come true,” a crow tells the youngest of three sisters in Schönwerth’s “The Enchanted Quill.” The girl reluctantly plucks the feather, uses it as a pen, and what does she do first but write down the names of the very finest dishes. The food promptly appears in bowls that sparkle and glow. This microdrama packs wisdom about fairy tales into a small golden nugget. Wish fulfillment often takes the form of enough food to eat, and in this case it means that the heroine, who lacks culinary skills and burns all the dishes she tries to prepare, will no longer be the target of ridicule. In fairy tales, the highest good, whatever it may be, is always bathed in an aura of golden light, luminous and radiant, yet also contained and framed with metallic substantiality. And finally, in a self-reflexive gesture, the crow’s magical writing instrument reveals
the power of words to build fairy-tale worlds, sites that remove us from reality and enable us to feel the power of what-if in a way that is palpably real. You can almost see and smell the dishes, even if you can’t necessarily touch and taste them.

The German title can be translated as “The Enchanted Feather” or as “The Enchanted Quill.” The crow’s feather turns out to operate as a writing instrument, and this tale gives us a rare instance of wishes written down in order to make them come true, reminding us that there is magic in language, in the dramatic shorthand of curses, spells, and charms. With the magic quill, an instrument that signals the power of the pen over the sword, the youngest of the three sisters succeeds in duping the trio of would-be suitors and inflicting bodily punishments on them and the monarchs in the tale.

Closely related to “Cupid and Psyche,” as well as to “East o’ the Sun and West o’ the Moon,” in addition to Beauty and the Beast tales, this story gives us a beast less ferocious and slimy than most. Although crows and ravens are part of the same family of birds, the crow is smaller than the raven. In Norse mythology, Odin was often represented as accompanied by two black birds, Huginn and Muninn, thought and memory. The bird in this tale may be regal in some instances, but he seems less divine emissary than understated symbol for an ordinary man awaiting transformation back into human shape.

THE IRON SHOES

“The Search for the Lost Husband” (ATU 425) is a familiar tale in Western culture, and it includes such classic stories as “Beauty and the Beast” and “East o’ the Sun and West o’ the Moon.” Less well known is “The Man on a Quest for His Lost Wife” (ATU 400), in which a boy leaves home, liberates a bewitched princess, loses her by boasting about her beauty, and sets out in search of his wife, enduring a series of tests to win her back. Note that folklorists describe the wife’s efforts as a mere search, while the husband has set out on a quest, even though both endure similar hardships.

Hans’s tenacity is captured in the iron shoes he uses to reach
his wife, footwear rarely seen on the male protagonists of fairy tales. This dim-witted numbskull quickly becomes a fleet-footed trickster.

THE WOLVES

Many fairy tales begin with a childless couple, but few demonize so powerfully the woman in the couple. Often a couple can be so desperate to have a child that they will settle for a hedgehog, as in the Grimms’ “Hans My Hedgehog.” In this case, the princess’s decision to abandon her seven boys and throw them to the wolves turns her into the most wicked of them all. The red-hot iron shoes that are fitted on the princess appear in the Grimms’ “Snow White,” and it is in that tale that the evil queen dances to death after seeking to murder her stepdaughter. The magic mirror that reveals Snow White to be the fairest of them all finds an analogue in the revelatory mirror, which shows the true nature of the evil princess.

In “The Wolves,” the main conflict is less generational than class based, with high-spirited peasants pitted against mean-spirited royalty. Naming the boys “wolves” suggests a disavowal of the princess’s maternal title and emphasizes that even wild beasts can make better parents than some biological progenitors. Class resentment and anxieties about infidelity place this tale decisively in the category of adult fare.

THE FLYING TRUNK

Cinderella and the magic slipper are so familiar to us that it is hard to imagine a story in which there is a search for a young man whose foot fits a boot. Flying trunks will be familiar from Hans Christian Andersen’s tale about a merchant’s son whose adventures end with an abandoned princess and a hero who is left without bride or trunk and has only stories to tell.

KING GOLDENLOCKS

Blond beauties may appear to be overrepresented in fairy tales, but their male counterparts—young men who conceal their
standing by covering up their golden tresses—turn up with some frequency as well. The term
blond(e)
is most likely related to the Latin
blandus
, which means “charming,” making the word all the more apt for fairy-tale princes. As fairy-tale scholar Marina Warner has pointed out, the term has a “double resonance,” signifying both light coloring and beauty and thereby overlapping with the English usage of
fairy
as beautiful or pleasing: “Blondeness and beauty have provided a conceptual rhyme in visual and literary imagery ever since the goddess of Love’s tresses were described as
xanthe
, golden, by Homer.”

Although not a part of the European canon, this tale seems to kaleidoscopically reassemble bits and pieces of it. The opening episode, with the boy and the wild man, evokes the beginning of the Grimms’ “The Frog King,” with its lost ball and bargain for the return of it. And the king’s decision to have his son killed closely resembles the scene in “Snow White,” with the wicked queen demanding the lungs and liver of her beautiful stepdaughter. This tale reminds us that fair-haired princes, like sleeping princes and Cinderfellas, can play as prominent a role in fairy tales as their female counterparts do today. Part two of the story modulates into another canonical tale, one that is also in the Grimms’ collection: “The Water of Life.” In this second part, we learn about the medieval practice of branding criminals with an image of the gallows or the rack.

THE BEAUTIFUL SLAVE GIRL

The slave girl as heroine is something of a novelty in Schönwerth’s collection. Both the princess’s writing of letters and Karl’s painting of landscapes are unusual motifs for a fairy tale, where there is generally not much writing or art. Karl is described as a young man of few words, but he loves beauty, dwelling in a lovely garden and falling in love with the slave girl because of her attractiveness. That he becomes a painter seems not entirely accidental. Both protagonists engineer scenes of recognition, showing that they are evenly matched when it comes to wits.

THREE FLOWERS

The rapid-fire narrative pace suggests that the storyteller hoped to keep his audience engaged and alert, with surprise twists and turns throughout, along with mysterious figures and events. The woman in the woods, for example, remains enigmatic, a helper who warms up milk in a thimble, understands the language of the flowers, and disappears, perhaps living on as the chirping cricket under the hearthstone.

THE FIGS

The figs in the title are native to Mediterranean regions, and they appear frequently in myth and folklore as a source of strength and nourishment. A tale that displays the rewards of compassion and generosity is oddly also full of class resentment and revenge plots. The first two of the hero’s three tasks figure prominently in other tales. Fetching a ring from the ocean and sorting grains are conventional “impossible tasks.” By contrast, retrieving a flower from heaven and acquiring a burning torch from hell are unusual assignments, with the flower representing beauty and fire standing for its destruction.

THE ENCHANTED MUSKET

The heroic youngest son is a bundle of contradictions in many ways. On the one hand he is a kind fellow who gives alms to beggars, but he also does not hesitate to slay giants and appropriate their property. Despite the sensitivity he shows when it comes to beggars, he is thick-skinned and indestructible in the castle when ghosts try to torture him. And, oddly, he makes no effort to prove his family identity, waiting instead for the princess to liberate him from the Cinderfella role to which he has been consigned. His serial adventures seem designed to show his humility, strength, endurance, as well as his good fortune—he seems always to be in the right place at the right time.

THE THREE ABDUCTED DAUGHTERS

This story is closely related to the biblical narrative about Joseph and his brothers, in which Joseph’s half brothers betray him and throw him into an empty cistern. As in “Cinderella,” two same-sex siblings gang up on the principal character and are punished or forgiven in the end.

Ferocious animals in the form of lions and snakes threaten the hero with death, but in the end it is a grateful animal that enables the hero to outwit his treacherous companions and triumph.

THE PORTRAIT

The portrait of the sister and the mirror to which she speaks remind us of the importance of appearance in fairy tales. When the squire falls in love, it is with the portrait rather than the sister herself. And when the boy is thrown into prison, his sister’s portrait is kept on display by the hearth. The girl in turn uses the mirror as an apotropaic device, intended to break the witch’s spell by speaking truth to power in an indirect fashion. In typical fairy-tale fashion, the sister makes three visits to the mirror, and it is only on the third, when the squire is present, that the spell is mysteriously broken. In variants of the tale type, the act of speaking the truth has the same magical power, modeling how to do things with words without using spells. In the end, the family is reconstituted as a new kind of nuclear unit, with sister and squire “adopting” the boy and treating him like a son.

ASHFEATHERS

Ashfeathers is more assertive than many of her folkloric cousins. While it is true that she receives a “modest” gift, she is insistent that her father finally bring her a gift when he returns from one of his many journeys. And yet, the gentleman suitor who pursues her does not seem to need her consent. He falls in love, woos her, and whisks her off to his castle, without a word from her. Consent is coded through the display of beauty she puts on in church. We learn almost nothing about Ashfeathers’
mother, and Ashfeathers plays a pious Cinderella, going to church rather than to a ball.

Everything seems scaled down in this version of the tale, with an innkeeper father, a nobleman in place of a prince, and a dwarf instead of Perrault’s fairy godmother. Schönwerth’s story does not dwell in detail on the amputations of the toe and heel and instead presents the mutilations in a matter-of-fact tone. The stepsisters escape the fate of the Grimms’ version, in which doves peck out their eyes, first the left one and then the right one.

TWELVE TORTOISES

“The Princess on the Glass Mountain” has a long and venerable history, charting the trials and tribulations of a young man who must reach an inaccessible, remote place to break a curse that keeps a beautiful princess bound to a castle. The tale begins with abandonment, but the two children get into real trouble when Elias curses Caroline and his words prove to be transformative. Magical thinking, the fear that words can change reality (wishing someone dead will make it so), takes hold of many young children, and this tale enacts that anxiety.

Kissing the tortoises, the last act required of Elias, proves to be the easiest of all the tasks assigned—not at all “impossible” in the usual sense of fairy-tale challenges. “Twelve Tortoises” gives us a kaleidoscopic swirl of demands made of heroes, revealing that there is no real logic or order to the transformative energy of tasks carried out and deeds done.

THUMBNICKEL

Whether called Tom Thumb, Thumbling, Petit Poucet, Svend Tomling, or Pulgarcito, the diminutive hero found in this tale plays his pranks, revealing that size does not always matter. Standard features of the tale include the supernatural birth to a childless couple, the child’s survival skills on a farm, and the outsmarting of thieves or of the wealthy. A distant ancestor of Pinocchio, Tom Thumb is something of a miniature picaresque hero, moving from one adventure to the next, putting his survival skills to the test. His size often seems to work in
his favor, for he can hide in unlikely places (the ear of an animal), but it works against him too, for he is often swallowed by larger creatures, though inevitably regurgitated or excreted.

Tom’s origins can be traced to English folklore, and in 1621 his deeds were celebrated in a publication titled
The History of Tom Thumbe, the Little, for his small stature surnamed, King Arthur’s Dwarfe: whose Life and adventures containe many strange and wonderfull accidents, published for the delight of merry Time-spenders
, by Richard Johnson
.
In Germany, Tom Thumb was known as Däumling or Daumesdick, and he was frequently associated with the numbskull figure known as Dümmling, a full-grown man, but one seen as a simpleton until he outwits everyone around him.

HANS THE STRONG MAN

Most folkloric heroes triumph by keeping their wits about them, but Hans succeeds with brawn rather than brains. His literal-mindedness, on the other hand, creates difficulties for his masters, who are at their wit’s end when they discover that strength and stupidity do not necessarily yield positive results for them. What is striking about Hans is that he seeks and makes no allies—even his own brother turns on him, irritated by his overbearing strength.

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