
She kills a helpless baby, her own granddaughter-a piece of evil which is never undone, as many spells often are at the end of a fairy tale. I found myself disappointed she ended up with that creepy guy and wishing she had fallen in love with one of the robbers.Īnd then, after the wedding when many other versions end, the mother gets one more chance to be cruel. You don't get that sense of sexual desire from the versions with dwarves! They love her and treat her as a sister, whereas the prince blatantly objectifies her, calling her lifeless body a "precious statue" (yes, that was a direct quote!!). The twelve men, who could easily have overpowered one young girl, restrain their desires even though they each want to marry her. In this version they provide a fascinating contrast to the prince, who cannot control himself. Possibly more shocking is that a band of twelve male thieves-exactly who you would expect to present the most danger to a young, beautiful girl, end up protecting her. But though she could have killed her right away (she clearly had no qualms about that), she prolongs the episode, causing her daughter to hunger and thirst, gauging out her eyes one by one, and THEN sending her to her supposed death.

First of all, the heartless violence of the natural mother who does not initially hire anyone to get rid of her daughter (no huntsman here), but determines right away to personally get rid of her daughter. I find several aspects of this story, from a 1845 collection, to be fascinating. The emperor jumped in between his wife and her mother and saved his wife the story of her mother was found and she was put to death, and the couple was able to live undisturbed for many, many years. "But I must murder anyone more beautiful than me!" the woman cried. When the prince had gone to sleep, she put a knife in the baby's heart, and was about to kill her daughter as well, when the prince woke up and said, "don't you dare, you witch!" After her daughter had delivered her first baby, the mother came to be the new midwife. Yet her mother discovered she was alive once again. The prince was delighted and took the girl home to marry her. One of the king's men had decided to take the flower as a gift for his own beloved, and when it was removed, the girl woke up. He ordered them to bring her down carefully, lest anything happen to the precious statue. Soon the prince of the land found the beautiful girl's body, and, unable to restrain himself, kissed the dead girl fervently. And as the daughter often wore a flower, they could not undo the magic the third time, and set her body in a bier made of firs, evergreens, and flowers, and put her in the open air of the forest.

When the robbers discovered the earrings, the mother decided to enchant a flower, for the robbers wouldn't notice such a natural thing. The mother sent the hag again, with enchanted earrings, which also were poisoned. When the robbers returned they discovered the ring and removed it.

The ring made her faint and she fell down in a deathlike sleep. The girl did not let the old hag in, but as she hadn't been instructed not to accept anything through the door, she took the ring. So she instructed an old hag to take a poisoned ring to her daughter in the woods. Yet by this time the girl's mother had discovered that her daughter was alive and well, and now more fair than her again. The next day when they went out, they warned her not to answer the door for anyone. She chose the latter and went home with them. When she woke up, they told her they were each willing to take her as a wife, but if she did not desire any of them, they would take her home and treat her as a sister. They each wanted her for themselves, but decided to let her decide. She fell asleep and was found by twelve robbers. The daughter, after giving thanks to God for her safety, was instructed by the Virgin Mary to wash her eyes in a fountain, and her sight was restored. The mirror conceded that the mother was now fairer than her blind daughter. She pushed her daughter over a slope that ended in a savage river and hurried home.

She begged for water, which her mother would only give if she gauged out her other eye, so the girl was now blind. After a while, the salted cake made the daughter extremely thirsty. The mother gauged out her daughter's eye and kept walking. "If you want something to eat, take this cake, but you must cut out your eye first," said her mother. After they had gone a ways, the girl began to get hungry, and begged her mother for something to eat. She took the cake and a jug of water, and took her daughter into the forest. When her daughter grew older, the mirror told her that her daughter's beauty had surpassed her, and she hated her daughter and was determined to kill her. Once there was a beautiful woman who possessed a magic mirror, who always told her that she was the fairest woman in the land.
