Hansel ve Gratel
ONCE
upon a time there dwelt on the outskirts of a large forest a poor woodcutter
with his wife and two children; the boy was called Hansel and the girl Grettel.
He had always little enough to live on, and once, when times were bad, they had
to get by with one piece of bread and butter each. One night, as he was tossing
about in bed, full of cares and worry, he sighed and said to his wife: “What’s
to become of us? how are we to feed our poor children, now that we have nothing
more for ourselves?” “I’ll tell you what, husband,” answered the woman; “early
to-morrow morning we’ll take the children out into the thickest part of the
wood; there we shall light a fire for them and give them each a piece of bread;
then we’ll go on to our work and leave them alone. They won’t be able to find
their way home, and we shall be rid of them.” “No, wife,” said her husband,
“that I won’t do; how could I find it in my heart to leave my children alone in
the wood? The wild beasts would soon come and tear them to pieces.” “Oh! you
fool,” said she, “then we must all four die of hunger, and you may just as well
go and saw the boards for our coffins”; and they argued and argued, until he
agreed that they must get rid of Hansel and Grettel. “But I can’t help feeling
sorry for the poor children,” added the husband.
The
children, too, had not been able to sleep for hunger, and had heard what their
step-mother had said to their father. Grettel wept bitterly and spoke to
Hansel: “Now it’s all up with us.” “No, no, Grettel,” said Hansel, “don’t fret
yourself; I’ll be able to find a way to escape, no fear.” And when the old
people had fallen asleep he got up, slipped on his little coat, opened the back
door and stole out. The moon was shining clearly, and the white pebbles which
lay in front of the house glittered like bits of silver. Hansel bent down and
filled his pocket with as many of them as he could cram in. Then he went back
and said to Grettel: “Be comforted, my dear little sister, and go to sleep: God
will not desert us”; and he lay down in bed again.
At
daybreak, even before the sun was up, the woman came and woke the two children:
“Get up, you lie-abeds, we’re all going to the forest to fetch wood.” She gave
them each a bit of bread and said: “There’s something for your luncheon, but
don’t you eat it up before, for it’s all you’ll get.” Grettel took the bread
under her apron, as Hansel had the stones in his pocket. Then they all set out
together on the way to the forest. After they had walked for a little, Hansel
stood still and looked back at the house, and this maneuver he repeated again
and again. His father observed him, and said: “Hansel, what are you gazing at
there, and why do you always remain behind? Take care, and don’t lose your
footing.” “Oh! father,” said Hansel, “I am looking back at my white kitten, which
is sitting on the roof, waving me a farewell.” The woman exclaimed: “What a
donkey you are! that isn’t your kitten, that’s the morning sun shining on the
chimney.” But Hansel had not looked back at his kitten, but had always dropped
one of the white pebbles out of his pocket on to the path.
When
they had reached the middle of the forest the father said: “Now, children, go
and fetch a lot of wood, and I’ll light a fire that you may not feel cold.”
Hansel and Grettel heaped up brushwood till they had made a pile nearly the
size of a small hill. The brushwood was set fire to, and when the flames leaped
high the woman said: “Now lie down at the fire, children, and rest yourselves:
we are going into the forest to cut down wood; when we’ve finished we’ll come
back and fetch you.” Hansel and Grettel sat down beside the fire, and at midday
ate their little bits of bread. They heard the strokes of the axe, so they
thought their father was quite near. But it was no axe they heard, but a bough
he had tied on a dead tree, and that was blown about by the wind. And when they
had sat for a long time their eyes closed with fatigue, and they fell fast
asleep. When they awoke at last it was pitch dark. Grettel began to cry, and
said: “How are we ever to get out of the wood?” But Hansel comforted her. “Wait
a bit,” he said, “till the moon is up, and then we’ll find our way sure
enough.” And when the full moon had risen he took his sister by the hand and
followed the pebbles, which shone like new threepenny bits, and showed them the
path. They walked on through the night, and at daybreak reached their father’s
house again. They knocked at the door, and when the woman opened it she
exclaimed: “You naughty children, what a time you’ve slept in the wood! we
thought you were never going to come back.” But the father rejoiced, for his
conscience had reproached him for leaving his children behind by themselves.
Not
long afterward there was again great dearth in the land, and the children heard
their mother address their father thus in bed one night: “Everything is eaten
up once more; we have only half a loaf in the house, and when that’s done it’s
all up with us. The children must be got rid of; we’ll lead them deeper into
the wood this time, so that they won’t be able to find their way out again.
There is no other way of saving ourselves.” The man’s heart smote him heavily,
and he thought: “Surely it would be better to share the last bite with one’s
children!” But his wife wouldn’t listen to his arguments, and did nothing but
scold and reproach him. If a man yields once he’s done for, and so, because he
had given in the first time, he was forced to do so the second.
But
the children were awake, and had heard the conversation. When the old people
were asleep Hansel got up, and wanted to go out and pick up pebbles again, as
he had done the first time; but the woman had barred the door, and Hansel
couldn’t get out. But he consoled his little sister, and said: “Don’t cry,
Grettel, and sleep peacefully, for God is sure to help us.”
At
early dawn the woman came and made the children get up. They received their bit
of bread, but it was even smaller than the time before. On the way to the wood
Hansel crumbled it in his pocket, and every few minutes he stood still and
dropped a crumb on the ground. “Hansel, what are you stopping and looking about
you for?” said the father. “I’m looking back at my little pigeon, which is
sitting on the roof waving me a farewell,” answered Hansel. “Fool!” said the
wife; “that isn’t your pigeon, it’s the morning sun glittering on the chimney.”
But Hansel gradually threw all his crumbs on the path. The woman led the
children still deeper into the forest farther than they had ever been in their
lives before. Then a big fire was lit again, and the mother said: “Just sit down
there, children, and if you’re tired you can sleep a bit; we’re going into the
forest to cut down wood, and in the evening when we’re finished we’ll come back
to fetch you.” At midday Grettel divided her bread with Hansel, for he had
strewn his all along their path. Then they fell asleep, and evening passed
away, but nobody came to the poor children. They didn’t awake till it was pitch
dark, and Hansel comforted his sister, saying: “Only wait, Grettel, till the
moon rises, then we shall see the bread-crumbs I scattered along the path; they
will show us the way back to the house.” When the moon appeared they got up,
but they found no crumbs, for the thousands of birds that fly about the woods
and fields had picked them all up. “Never mind,” said Hansel to Gret- tel;
“you’ll see we’ll find a way out”; but all the same they did not. They wandered
about the whole night, and the next day, from morning till evening, but they
could not find a path out of the wood. They were very hungry, too, for they had
nothing to eat but a few berries they found growing on the ground. And at last
they were so tired that their legs refused to carry them any longer, so they
lay down under a tree and fell fast asleep.
On
the third morning after they had left their father’s house they set about their
wandering again, but only got deeper and deeper into the wood, and now they
felt that if help did not come to them soon they must perish. At midday they
saw a beautiful little snow-white bird sitting on a branch, which sang so
sweetly that they stopped still and listened to it. And when its song was
finished it flapped its wings and flew on in front of them. They followed it
and came to a little house, on the roof of which it perched; and when they came
quite near they saw that the cottage was made of bread and roofed with cakes,
while the window was made of transparent sugar. “Now we’ll set to,” said
Hansel, “and have a regular blow-out.[1] I’ll eat a bit of the roof, and you,
Grettel, can eat some of the window, which you’ll find a sweet morsel.” Hansel
stretched up his hand and broke off a little bit of the roof to see what it was
like, and Grettel went to the casement and began to nibble at it. Thereupon a
shrill voice called out from the room inside:
“Nibble,
nibble, little mouse, Who’s nibbling my house?”
The
children answered:
“Tis
Heaven’s own child, The tempest wild,”
and
went on eating, without putting themselves about. Hansel, who thoroughly
appreciated the roof, tore down a big bit of it, while Grettel pushed out a
whole round window-pane, and sat down the better to enjoy it. Suddenly the door
opened, and an ancient dame leaning on a staff hobbled out. Hansel and Grettel
were so terrified that they let what they had in their hands fall. But the old
woman shook her head and said: “Oh, ho! you dear children, who led you here?
Just come in and stay with me, no ill shall befall you.” She took them both by
the hand and let them into the house, and laid a most sumptuous dinner before
them–milk and sugared pancakes, with apples and nuts. After they had finished,
two beautiful little white beds were prepared for them, and when Hansel and
Grettel lay down in them they felt as if they had got into heaven.
[1] He was a vulgar boy!
The
old woman had appeared to be most friendly, but she was really an old witch who
had waylaid the children, and had only built the little bread house in order to
lure them in. When anyone came into her power she killed, cooked, and ate him,
and held a regular feast-day for the occasion. Now witches have red eyes, and
cannot see far, but, like beasts, they have a keen sense of smell, and know
when human beings pass by. When Hansel and Grettel fell into her hands she
laughed maliciously, and said jeeringly: “I’ve got them now; they sha’n’t
escape me.” Early in the morning, before the children were awake, she rose up,
and when she saw them both sleeping so peacefully, with their round rosy
cheeks, she muttered to herself: “That’ll be a dainty bite.” Then she seized
Hansel with her bony hand and carried him into a little stable, and barred the
door on him; he might scream as much as he liked, it did him no good. Then she
went to Grettel, shook her till she awoke, and cried: “Get up, you lazy-bones,
fetch water and cook something for your brother. When he’s fat I’ll eat him
up.” Grettel began to cry bitterly, but it was of no use; she had to do what
the wicked witch bade her.
So
the best food was cooked for poor Hansel, but Grettel got nothing but
crab-shells. Every morning the old woman hobbled out to the stable and cried:
“Hansel, put out your finger, that I may feel if you are getting fat.” But
Hansel always stretched out a bone, and the old dame, whose eyes were dim,
couldn’t see it, and thinking always it was Hansel’s finger, wondered why he
fattened so slowly. When four weeks had passed and Hansel still remained thin,
she lost patience and determined to wait no longer. “Hi, Grettel,” she called
to the girl, abe quick and get some water. Hansel may be fat or thin, I’m going
to kill him to-morrow and cook him.” Oh! how the poor little sister sobbed as
she carried the water, and how the tears rolled down her cheeks! “Kind heaven
help us now!” she cried; “if only the wild beasts in the wood had eaten us,
then at least we should have died together.” “Just hold your peace,” said the
old hag; “it won’t help you.”
Early
in the morning Grettel had to go out and hang up the kettle full of water, and
light the fire. “First we’ll bake,” said the old dame; “I’ve heated the oven
already and kneaded the dough.” She pushed Grettel out to the oven, from which
fiery flames were already issuing. “Creep in,” said the witch, “and see if it’s
properly heated, so that we can shove in the bread.” For when she had got
Grettel in she meant to close the oven and let the girl bake, that she might
eat her up too. But Grettel perceived her intention, and said: “I don’t know
how I’m to do it; how do I get in?” “You silly goose!” said the hag, “the
opening is big enough; see, I could get in myself,” and she crawled toward it,
and poked her head into the oven. Then Grettel gave her a shove that sent her
right in, shut the iron door, and drew the bolt. Gracious! how she yelled, it
was quite horrible; but Grettel fled, and the wretched old woman was left to
perish miserably.
Grettel
flew straight to Hansel, opened the little stable- door, and cried: “Hansel, we
are free; the old witch is dead.” Then Hansel sprang like a bird out of a cage
when the door is opened. How they rejoiced, and fell on each other’s necks, and
jumped for joy, and kissed one another! And as they had no longer any cause for
fear, they went in the old hag’s house, and here they found, in every corner of
the room, boxes with pearls and precious stones. “These are even better than pebbles,”
said Hansel, and crammed his pockets full of them; and Grettel said: “I too
will bring something home,” and she filled her apron full. “But now,” said
Hansel, “let’s go and get well away from the witch’s wood.” When they had
wandered about for some hours they came to a big lake. “We can’t get over,”
said Hansel; “I see no bridge of any sort or kind.” “Yes, and there’s no
ferry-boat either,” answered Grettel; “but look, there swims a white duck; if I
ask her she’ll help us over,” and she called out:
“Here
are two children, mournful very, Seeing neither bridge nor ferry; Take us upon
your white back, And row us over, quack, quack!”
The
duck swam toward them, and Hansel got on her back and bade his little sister
sit beside him. “No,” answered Grettel, “we should be too heavy a load for the
duck: she shall carry us across separately.” The good bird did this, and when
they were landed safely on the other side, and had gone for a while, the wood
became more and more familiar to them, and at length they saw their father’s
house in the distance. Then they set off to run, and bounding into the room
fell on their father’s neck. The man had not passed a happy hour since he left
them in the wood, but the woman had died. Grettel shook out her apron so that
the pearls and precious stones rolled about the room, and Hansel threw down one
handful after the other out of his pocket. Thus all their troubles were ended,
and they lived happily ever afterward.
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