Hello and welcome to Fairy Tale Friday. Are you
sitting comfortably? Good. Then I’ll begin.
Since November of 2018 we have been exploring
variations on the classic fairy tale Cinderella. For seven months we have
looked at the Aarne-Thompson Uther classification 510a which deals with persecuted
heroines. This is the most well know variant of the Cinderella style
tales. But there is another variation.
ATU classification 510b is entitled unnatural
love. This is a subcategory of persecuted heroines where our young and
beautiful protagonist is pursued sexually by her own father. She must disguise
herself as ugly to ward off unwanted sexual advances and travel far and wide on
her own to another kingdom. These disguises often involve the skin or feathers
of animals (e.g. Donkeyskin or Thousand Furs). There the story often
merges with the 510a motifs. She sheds her animalistic appearance, goes to a
ball and wins the hand of the Prince.
Pitt.edu says that 510b folktales include the follow
the following motifs:
- · A dying woman extracts from her husband the promise that he will remarry only if he can find a woman that fits a certain description.
- After a period of mourning, the widower discovers that only his daughter meets the requirements for remarriage set by his deceased wife, and he asks her to marry him.
- The daughter, in order to buy time, and in hope of dissuading her father, asks for a number of gifts, but he finds these with little difficulty.
- Seeing no other solution to her dilemma, the girl dresses herself in an unusual garb and runs away.
- She finds both refuge and abuse in another man's household, where she serves as a maid.
- She temporarily escapes from the kitchen where she works and makes a series of appearances at a dress ball.
- A prince falls in love with the heroine in her beautiful attire. He discovers that the beautiful woman is none other than his maid, and he marries her.
- In some versions of the story, the incest motif that sets the plot into motion is suppressed, with a different conflict being given between father and daughter.
So
for the next few months, we will be looking at variations of this classic tales
with an incest theme.
The story that I chose to look at first is All-Kinds-Of-Fur (or Allerleirauh in German) which roughly translates as Thousand Furs. It was collected by the Brothers Grimm and published in Kinder- und Hausmärchen in 1812. It was republished in a slightly sanitised form in 1819 where the Grimms de-emphasise the abusive nature of their relationship (he throws his boots at her head every night). They also made clearer in later version that her fiancé that is mentioned is not her father. There are some difficulty with pronouns in this one right at the start—it is hard to work out which he we are talking about, her father or her sweetheart.
This version is unusual in that she flees to her fiancé’s
kingdom and works in his household as a servant before revealing herself. Most versions
the prince is a stranger to her, and she earns his love when she is all cleaned
up. I found it interesting that he does not readily recognise her, despite
being engaged to her. He sort of does—she looks like his fiancée, but he is never
certain until the end. However he does recognise the small golden trinkets that
he gave her. I found it quite interesting that he can recognise objects over a
person.
You can read it in the original German {HERE}
by Henry Justice Ford |
All-Kinds-of-Fur source
Once upon a time there was a king whose
wife was the most beautiful woman in the world, with hair of pure gold.
Together they had a daughter, and she was as beautiful as her mother, and she had
the same golden hair. The queen became ill, and when she felt that she was
about to die, she called the king to her side and asked him not to marry anyone
following her death, unless she was just as beautiful as she, and unless her
hair was just as golden as hers. The king made this promise, and she died.
For a long time the king was so grieved
that he did not think about a second wife, but finally his councillors advised
him to marry again. He sent messengers to all the princesses, but none was as
beautiful as the deceased queen, and such golden hair could not be found
anywhere in the world.
Then one day the king's glance fell on his
daughter, and he saw that she looked just like her mother, and that she had the
same golden hair. He thought to himself, "You will never find anyone in
the world this beautiful. You will have to marry your daughter." And in
that instant, he felt such a strong love for her, that he immediately announced
his decision to his councillors. They tried to dissuade him, but to no avail.
The princess was horrified at his godless
intentions, but because she was clever, she told the king that he should first
get her three dresses: one as golden as the sun, one as white as the moon, one
that glistened like the stars. Further, he was to get her a coat made from a
thousand kinds of fur. Every animal in the kingdom would have to give up a
piece of its skin for it.
The king was so fervent in his desires,
that he had his huntsmen capture animals from across the entire kingdom. They
were skinned, and a coat was made from their pelts. Thus, it did not take long
before he brought the princess everything that she had asked for.
The princess said that she would marry him
the next day. That night she sought out the presents that she had received from
her fiancé: a golden ring, a little golden spinning wheel, and a little golden
yarn reel. She put the three dresses into a nutshell, blackened her hands and
face with soot, put on the coat of all kinds of fur, and left. She walked the
entire night until she came to a great forest. She would be safe there. Because
she was tired, she sat down in a hollow tree and fell asleep.
She was still asleep the next day when the
king, her fiancé, came to this forest to hunt. His dogs ran up to the tree and
sniffed at it. The king sent his huntsmen to see what kind of animal was in the
tree. They came back and said that it was a strange animal, the likes of which
they had never seen before. It had every kind of fur on its skin, and it was
lying there asleep. The king ordered them to capture it and to tie it onto the
back of his carriage. As the huntsmen were doing this, they saw that it was a
girl. They tied her onto the back of the carriage and rode home with her.
"All-Kinds-of-Fur," they said,
"you are good for the kitchen. You can carry water and wood and clean out
the ashes." Then they gave her a little stall beneath the steps, where the
light of day never shone, and said, "This is where you can live and
sleep."
So she had to help the cook in the
kitchen. She plucked chickens, tended the fire, gathered vegetables, and did
all the dirty work. Because she did very well at all this, the cook was good to
her, and in the evening, he often invited her in and gave her something to eat
from the leftovers. Before the king went to bed, she had to go upstairs and
pull off his boots. When she had pulled them off, he always threw them at her
head. Poor All-Kinds-of-Fur lived like this for a long time. Oh, you beautiful
maiden, what will become of you?
Once there was a ball at the castle, and
All-Kinds-of-Fur thought that she might see her fiancé once again, so she went
to the cook and asked him if he would allow her to go upstairs a little and
look in at the splendour from the doorway. "Go ahead," said the cook,
"but do not stay longer than a half hour. You still have to clean out the
ashes tonight."
Then All-Kinds-of-Fur took her little oil
lamp and went to her stall where she washed off the soot. Her beauty came forth
just like blossoms in the springtime. She took off the fur coat, opened up the
nut and took out the dress that glistened like the sun. She put it on and went
upstairs. Everyone made room for her and thought that a noble princess had
entered the hall. The king immediately invited her to dance, and as he danced
with her, he thought how closely this unknown princess resembled his own
fiancée. The longer he looked at her, the stronger the resemblance. He was
almost certain that this was his fiancée, and at the end of the dance, he was
going to ask her. However, when they finished dancing, she bowed, and before
the king knew what was happening, she disappeared.
He asked the watchmen, but none of them
had seen the princess leave the castle. She had run quickly to her stall, taken
off the dress, blackened her hands and face, and put on the fur coat once
again. Then she went to the kitchen to clean out the ashes, but the cook said,
"Leave them until morning. I want to go upstairs and have a look at the
dance. You make some soup for the king, but don't let any hairs fall into it,
or there will be nothing more to eat for you."
All-Kinds-of-Fur made some bread soup for
the king, then she put the golden ring in it that he had given her. When the
ball was over, the king had his bread soup brought to him. It tasted better
than any he had ever eaten. When he was finished, he found the ring on the
bottom of the bowl. Looking at it carefully, he saw that it was his engagement
ring. Astonished, he could not understand how it had gotten there. He summoned
the cook, who then became very angry with All-Kinds-of-Fur. "You must have
let a hair fall into the soup," he said. "If you did, there will be
blows for you."
However, when the cook went upstairs, the
king asked him who had made the soup, because it had been better than usual.
The king had to confess that it had been All-Kinds-of-Fur. Then the king had
her sent up to him. "Who are you?" he asked upon her arrival.
"What are you doing in my castle, and where did you get the ring that was
lying in the soup?"
She answered, "I am only a poor child
whose father and mother are dead. I have nothing, and I am good for nothing
more than having boots thrown at my head. And I know nothing about the
ring." With that she ran away.
Soon there was another ball.
All-Kinds-of-Fur again asked the cook to allow her to go upstairs. The cook
gave his permission, but only for a half hour, because by then she would have
to be back in the kitchen to make the king's bread soup. All-Kinds-of-Fur went
to her stall, washed herself clean, and took out the moon-dress. It was purer
and brighter than newly fallen snow. When she arrived upstairs the dance had
just begun. The king extended his hand to her, and danced with her, and no
longer doubted that this was his fiancée, for no one else in the world had such
golden hair. However, the princess immediately slipped out when the dance
ended, and the king, in spite of his great effort, could not find her. Further,
he had not spoken a single word with her.
She was All-Kinds-of-Fur once again, with
blackened hands and face. She took her place in the kitchen and made bread soup
for the king, while the cook went upstairs to have a look. When the soup was
ready, she put the golden spinning wheel in it. The king ate the soup and
thought that it was even better this time. When he found the golden spinning
wheel, he was even more astonished, because it had been a present from him to
his fiancée some time ago. The cook was summoned again, and then
All-Kinds-of-Fur, but once again she answered by saying that she knew nothing
about it, and that she was there only to have boots thrown at her head.
For the third time, the king held a ball.
He hoped that his fiancée would come again, and he would not let her escape
this time. All-Kinds-of-Fur again asked the cook to allow her to go upstairs,
but he scolded her, saying, "You are a witch. You are always putting
things in the soup. And you can cook better than I can." But because she
begged so, and promised to behave herself, he gave her permission to go
upstairs for a half hour.
She put on the dress of stars. It
glistened like stars in the night. She went upstairs and danced with the king,
and he thought that he had never seen her more beautiful. While dancing, he
slipped a ring onto her finger. He had ordered that it should be a very long
dance. He could not bring himself to speak to her, nor could he keep her from
escaping. As soon as the dance ended, she jumped into the crowd and disappeared
before he could turn around.
She ran to her stall. Because she had been
gone more than a half hour, she quickly took off her dress, and in her rush she
failed to blacken herself entirely. One finger remained white. When she
returned to the kitchen, the cook had already left. She quickly made some bread
soup and put the golden yarn reel into it.
The king found it, just as he had found
the ring and the golden spinning wheel, and now he knew for sure that his
fiancée was nearby, for no one else could have had these presents.
All-Kinds-of-Fur was summoned. Once again, she tried to make an excuse and then
run away, but as she ran by, the king noticed a white finger on her hand, and
he held her fast. He found the ring that he had slipped onto her finger, and
then he ripped off her fur coat. Her golden hair flowed out, and he saw that it
was his dearly beloved fiancée. The cook received a generous reward. Then they
got married and lived happily until they died.
That’s
all for this week. Stay tuned next week for another version of All-Kinds-Of-Fur
from Greece.
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