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Page:Grimm's Household Tales, vol.1.djvu/434

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GRIMM'S HOUSEHOLD TALES.

From two stories from the Maine district which complete each other; in one of them the incident is wanting of the little stag springing into the midst of the chase, and enticing the King by its beauty. According to another version which H. R. von Schröter has communicated to us, the little brother is changed by the step-mother into a fawn, and is hunted by her hounds. It stands by the river, and calls across to the little sister's window,

"Ah, little sister, save me!
The dogs of the lord they chase me;
They chase me, oh! so quickly;
They seek, they seek to rend me,
They wish to drive me to the arrows,
And thus to rob me of my life."

But the little sister had already been thrown out of the window by the stepmother and changed into a duck, and from the water a voice came to him, saying,

"Patience, dear brother mine,
I lie in the lowest depths,
The earth is the bed I sleep on,
The water it is my coverlid,
Patience, dear brother mine,
I lie in the lowest depths."

Afterwards when the little sister goes into the kitchen to the cook, and makes herself known to him, she asks

"What do my maids do, do they still spin?
What does my bell do, does it still ring?
What does my little son, does he still smile?"

He replies,

"Thy maids they spin no more,
Thy bell it rings no more,
Thy little son, he weeps right sore."

Here, as in the story of The Three Little Men in the Forest (No. 13), the mother comes out of her grave to suckle and attend to her child, so likewise in the old Danish Volkslied (Danske viser, 1. 206-208. Altd. Blätter, 1. 186.) The Swedish story, which is otherwise identical, lacks this feature. (See further on.) Melusina, after her disappearance, comes to her little sons Dietrich and Raimund, warms them at the fire, and suckles them; the nurses watch her, but dare not speak (Volksbuch). The Servian song of the walled-up mother who hushes her child, may be compared with this, and