A long time ago there were a king
and queen who said every day, “Ah, if only we had a child,” but they never had
one. But it happened that once when the queen was bathing, a frog crept out of
the water on to the land, and said to her, “Your wish shall be fulfilled,
before a year has gone by, you shall have a daughter.”
What the frog had said came true, and the queen had a little girl who was so
pretty that the king could not contain himself for joy, and ordered a great
feast. He invited not only his kindred, friends and acquaintances, but also the
wise women, in order that they might be kind and well disposed towards the
child. There were thirteen of them in his kingdom, but, as he had only twelve
golden plates for them to eat out of, one of them had to be left at home.
The feast was held with all manner
of splendor and when it came to an end the wise women bestowed their magic
gifts upon the baby – one gave virtue, another beauty, a third riches, and so
on with everything in the world that one can wish for.
When eleven of them had made their
promises, suddenly the thirteenth came in. She wished to avenge herself for not
having been invited, and without greeting, or even looking at anyone, she cried
with a loud voice, “The king’s daughter shall in her fifteenth year prick
herself with a spindle, and fall down dead.” And, without saying a word more,
she turned round and left the room.
They were all shocked, but the
twelfth, whose good wish still remained unspoken, came forward, and as she
could not undo the evil sentence, but only soften it, she said, it shall not be
death, but a deep sleep of a hundred years, into which the princess shall fall.
The king, who would fain keep his
dear child from the misfortune, gave orders that every spindle in the whole
kingdom should be burnt. Meanwhile the gifts of the wise women were plenteously
fulfilled on the young girl, for she was so beautiful, modest, good-natured,
and wise, that everyone who saw her was bound to love her.
It happened that on the very day
when she was fifteen years old, the king and queen were not at home, and the
maiden was left in the palace quite alone. So she went round into all sorts of
places, looked into rooms and bed-chambers just as she liked, and at last came
to an old tower. She climbed up the narrow winding staircase, and reached a
little door. A rusty key was in the lock, and when she turned it the door
sprang open, and there in a little room sat an old woman with a spindle, busily
spinning her flax.
“Good day, old mother,” said the
king’s daughter, “what are you doing there?”
“I am spinning,” said the old woman,
and nodded her head.
“What sort of thing is that, that
rattles round so merrily,” said the girl, and she took the spindle and wanted to
spin too. But scarcely had she touched the spindle when the magic decree was
fulfilled, and she pricked her finger with it.
And, in the very moment when she
felt the prick, she fell down upon the bed that stood there, and lay in a deep
sleep. And this sleep extended over the whole palace, the king and queen who
had just come home, and had entered the great hall, began to go to sleep, and
the whole of the court with them. The horses, too, went to sleep in the stable,
the dogs in the yard, the pigeons upon the roof, the flies on the wall, even
the fire that was flaming on the hearth became quiet and slept, the roast meat
left off frizzling, and the cook, who was just going to pull the hair of the
scullery boy, because he had forgotten something, let him go, and went to
sleep. And the wind fell, and on the trees before the castle not a leaf moved
again.
But round about the castle there
began to grow a hedge of thorns, which every year became higher, and at last
grew close up round the castle and all over it, so that there was nothing of it
to be seen, not even the flag upon the roof. But the story of the beautiful
sleeping Briar Rose, for so the princess was named, went about the country, so
that from time to time kings’ sons came and tried to get through the thorny
hedge into the castle. But they found it impossible, for the thorns held fast
together, as if they had hands, and the youths were caught in them, could not
get loose again, and died a miserable death.
After long, long years a king’s son
came again to that country, and heard an old man talking about the thorn hedge,
and that a castle was said to stand behind it in which a wonderfully beautiful
princess, named Briar Rose, had been asleep for a hundred years, and that the
king and queen and the whole court were asleep likewise. He had heard, too,
from his grandfather, that many kings, sons had already come, and had tried to
get through the thorny hedge, but they had remained sticking fast in it, and
had died a pitiful death.
Then the youth said, “I am not
afraid, I will go and see the beautiful Briar Rose.” The good old man might
dissuade him as he would, he did not listen to his words.
But by this time the hundred years
had just passed, and the day had come when Briar Rose was to awake again. When
the king’s son came near to the thorn hedge, it was nothing but large and
beautiful flowers, which parted from each other of their own accord, and let
him pass unhurt, then they closed again behind him like a hedge. In the castle
yard he saw the horses and the spotted hounds lying asleep, on the roof sat the
pigeons with their heads under their wings. And when he entered the house, the
flies were asleep upon the wall, the cook in the kitchen was still holding out
his hand to seize the boy, and the maid was sitting by the black hen which she
was going to pluck.
He went on farther, and in the great
hall he saw the whole of the court lying asleep, and up by the throne lay the
king and queen. Then he went on still farther, and all was so quiet that a
breath could be heard, and at last he came to the tower, and opened the door
into the little room where Briar Rose was sleeping.
There she lay, so beautiful that he
could not turn his eyes away, and he stooped down and gave her a kiss. But as
soon as he kissed her, Briar Rose opened her eyes and awoke, and looked at him
quite sweetly.
Then they went down together, and
the king awoke, and the queen, and the whole court, and looked at each other in
great astonishment. And the horses in the courtyard stood up and shook themselves,
the hounds jumped up and wagged their tails, the pigeons upon the roof pulled
out their heads from under their wings, looked round, and flew into the open
country, the flies on the wall crept again, the fire in the kitchen burned up
and flickered and cooked the meat, the joint began to turn and sizzle again,
and the cook gave the boy such a box on the ear that he screamed, and the maid
finished plucking the fowl.
And then the marriage of the king’s
son with Briar Rose was celebrated with all splendor, and they lived contented
to the end of their days.
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