Rapunzel's Story
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by Jacob Ludwig Karl Grimm & Wilhelm Karl Grimm
'What ails you,
dear wife?'
'Oh,' she answered,
'if I don't get some rampion to eat out of the
garden behind the house, I know I shall die.'
'How dare you,' she
said, with a wrathful glance, 'climb into my garden
and steal my rampion like a common thief? You shall
suffer for your foolhardiness.' 'Oh!' he implored,
'pardon my presumption; necessity alone drove me to
the deed. My wife saw your rampion from her window,
and conceived such a desire for it that she would
certainly have died if her wish had not been
gratified.' Then the Witch's anger was a little
appeased, and she said: 'If it's as you say, you may
take as much rampion away with you as you like, but
on one condition only -- that you give me the child
your wife will shortly bring into the world. All
shall go well with it, and I will look after it like
a mother.'
The man in his
terror agreed to everything she asked, and as soon
as the child was born the Witch appeared, and having
given it the name of Rapunzel, which is the same as
rampion, she carried it off with her.
Rapunzel was the
most beautiful child under the sun. When she was
twelve years old the Witch shot her up in a tower,
in the middle of a great wood, and the tower had
neither stairs nor doors, only high up at the very
top a small window. When the old Witch wanted to get
in she stood underneath and called out:
'Rapunzel, Rapunzel,
for Rapunzel had
wonderful long hair, and it was as fine as spun
gold. Whenever she heard the Witch's voice she
unloosed her plaits, and let her hair fall down out
of the window about twenty yards below, and the old
Witch climbed up by it.
After they had
lived like this for a few years, it happened one day
that a Prince was riding through the wood and passed
by the tower. As he drew near it he heard someone
singing so sweetly that he stood still spell-bound,
and listened. It was Rapunzel in her loneliness
trying to while away the time by letting her sweet
voice ring out into the wood. The Prince longed to
see the owner of the voice, but he sought in vain
for a door in the tower. He rode home, but he was so
haunted by the song he had heard that he returned
every day to the wood and listened.
One day, when he
was standing thus behind a tree, he saw the old
Witch approach and heard her call out:
'Rapunzel,
Rapunzel,
Then Rapunzel let
down her plaits, and the Witch climbed up by them.
'So that's the
staircase, is it?' said the Prince. 'Then I too will
climb it
So on the following
day, at dusk, he went to the foot of the tower and
'Rapunzel, Rapunzel,
and as soon as she
had let it down the Prince climbed up.
At first Rapunzel
was terribly frightened when a man came in, for she
had never seen one before; but the Prince spoke to
her so kindly, and told her at once that his heart
had been so touched by her singing, that he felt he
should know no peace of mind till he had seen her.
Very soon Rapunzel forgot her fear, and when he
asked her to marry him she consented at once. 'For,'
she thought, 'he is young and handsome, and I'll
certainly be happier with him than with
'Yes, I will gladly
go with you, only how am I to get down out of the
tower? Every time you come to see me you must bring
a skein of silk with you, and I will make a ladder
of them, and when it is finished I will climb down
by it, and you will take me away on your horse.'
They arranged that
till the ladder was ready, he was to come to her
every evening, because the old woman was with her
during the day. The old Witch, of course, knew
nothing of what was going on, till one day Rapunzel,
not thinking of what she was about, turned to the
Witch and said: 'How is it, good mother, that you
are so much harder to pull up than the young Prince?
He is always with me in a moment.'
'Oh! you wicked
child,' cried the Witch. 'What is this I hear? I
thought I had hidden you safely from the whole
world, and in spite of it you have managed to
deceive me.'
In her wrath she
seized Rapunzel's beautiful hair, wound it round and
round her left hand, and then grasping a pair of
scissors in her right, snip snap, off it came, and
the beautiful plaits lay on the ground. And, worse
than this, she was so hard-hearted that she took
Rapunzel to a lonely desert place, and there left
her to live in loneliness and misery.
But on the evening
of the day in which she had driven poor Rapunzel
away, the Witch fastened the plaits on to a hook in
the window, and when the Prince came and called out:
'Rapunzel, Rapunzel,
she let them down,
and the Prince climbed up as usual, but instead of
his beloved Rapunzel he found the old Witch, who
fixed her evil, glittering eyes on him, and cried
mockingly:
'Ah, ah! you
thought to find your lady love, but the pretty bird
has flown and its song is dumb; the cat caught it,
and will scratch out your eyes too. Rapunzel is lost
to you for ever -- you will never see her more.'
The Prince was
beside himself with grief, and in his despair he
jumped right down from the tower, and, though he
escaped with his life, the thorns among which he
fell pierced his eyes out. Then he wandered, blind
and miserable, through the wood, eating nothing but
roots and berries, and weeping and lamenting the
loss of his lovely bride. So he wandered about for
some years, as wretched and unhappy as he could well
be, and at last he came to the desert
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ONCE
upon a
time there lived a man and his wife who were very
unhappy because they had no children. These good
people had alittle window at the back of their
house, which looked into the most lovely garden,
full of all manner of beautiful flowers and
vegetables; but the garden was surrounded by a high
wall, and no one dared to enter it, for it belonged
to a witch of great power, who was feared by the
whole world. One day the woman stood at the window
overlooking the garden, and saw there a bed full of
the finest rampion: the leaves looked so fresh and
green that she longed to eat them. The desire grew
day by day, and just because she knew she couldn't
possibly get any, she pined away and became quite
pale and wretched. Then her husband grew alarmed and
said:
The
man, who loved her dearly, thought to himself,
'Come! rather than let your wife die you shall fetch
her some rampion, no matter the cost.' So at dusk he
climbed over the wall into the witch's garden, and,
hastily gathering a handful of rampion leaves, he
returned with them to his wife. She made them into a
salad, which tasted so good that her longing for the
forbidden food was greater than ever. If she were to
know any peace of mind, there was nothing for it but
that her husband should climb over the garden wall
again, and fetch her some more. So at dusk over he
got, but when he reached the other side he drew back
in terror, for there, standing before him, was the
old witch. 