If we approach fairy tales
expecting nothing but sexist stereotypes, we will miss the irony, the
inflections; we won’t get the jokes. In this tale of the Brothers Grimm, a
princess dresses herself and eleven ladies-in-waiting as huntsmen and goes to
work for her lover, a king who has promised his dying father to marry a
different woman.
This
king has a talking lion. (As you do.) The lion suspects the twelve young huntsmen of being
women. He sets traps to get them to betray themselves – such as an array of
twelve spinning wheels which he assures the king these ‘women’ will be unable
to resist. You have to imagine this story being told aloud in mixed company, at
a time when spinning was a woman’s repetitive, endless work. It’s as if, in a
modern version, the lion had set out a line of twelve vacuum cleaners! Readers
who take it at face value are missing the comedy of the princess’s satirical
aside to her followers as they stride past: ‘Hold back, girls, don’t give those
spinning wheels a glance…’
It is
all too easy to misinterpret a tale when it’s pinned to the page like a dead
butterfly – still more so when the original transcript is over two centuries
old and even the English translation was made over 130 years ago. The classic
translation of the Grimms’ tales into English is the one by Margaret Hunt
(published 1884), whose clear, unadorned style now unavoidably feels somewhat stiff. I’ve stuck quite closely to her version for this post, I
didn’t want to change it much; but I have loosened it up a little. It’s best to
regard ‘the story on the page’ in much the same way as we regard sheet-music:
it requires performance – the voice of the story-teller – to bring it to
multi-dimensional life. But the information on the page still has to be examined and
respected. Like some others in the Grimms’ collection, The Twelve Huntsmen directs sly, subversive humour at male
assumptions about female ability, and if we fail to notice when a story is inviting us to laugh, it’s we who
are naïve.
Once upon a time, a king’s son was betrothed to a woman he
loved very much. One day when they were sitting together, and very happy, news
came that the prince’s father lay on his deathbed and wanted to see his son
once more before the end. So the prince said to his beloved, ‘Though I have to leave
you, I give you this ring to remember me by, and when I am king I will return
for you.’
Away he rode, but when he came to his
father’s bedside the old man was desperately ill and near death. ‘My dear son,’
said he, ‘now that I see you, promise me that you will marry as I advise,’ and
he named another king’s daughter to be his bride. The son was too distraught to
think what he was doing and said, ‘Yes dear father, yes, whatever you wish
shall be done.’ On hearing these words the old king closed his eyes and died.
So after the son had been proclaimed
king and the period of mourning was over, he felt compelled to keep the promise
he had made to his father, and he sent for permission to court the other king’s
daughter’s, and permission was granted. When his lover heard of this she was so
unhappy she nearly died. Her father said to her, ‘Dear child, what makes you so
sad? Tell me what you want; anything in my power to grant shall be yours.’ The
young woman thought for a moment and said, ‘My dear father, I wish for eleven
girls just like myself in face, figure and height.’ So her father searched
throughout his kingdom until eleven young women were found who were just like
his daughter in face, figure and height.
When they were assembled, the king’s
daughter had twelve suits of huntsmen’s clothes made, all alike, and she and
the eleven girls put them on and rode away together to the court of her former
lover, where she asked if he would take twelve fine huntsmen into his service.
The king did not recognise her, but the huntsmen were all such handsome fellows
he said, yes, willingly he would hire them! And so they became the king’s royal
huntsmen.
Now the king had a lion, and this
lion knew everything. Nothing could be kept from him, and one evening he said
to the king, ‘You think you have twelve huntsmen?’
‘Of course I have twelve
huntsmen!’
‘You are wrong,’ said the lion, ‘they
are twelve girls.’
The king couldn’t believe this, so
the lion told him to throw handfuls of dried peas over the floor of the
antechamber: ‘And then you’ll see! Men tread firmly, so the peas won’t move
when they step on them, but girls trip and skip and slide their feet, and the
peas will roll in all directions.’ The king liked this idea, so he ordered the
peas to be thrown on the floor.
But one of the king’s servants who
was friendly with the huntsmen had overheard what the lion said, so he ran to
them with the news. ‘The lion wants to make the king think you are girls!’ The king’s daughter thanked him. When he had
gone she said to her women, ‘Time to
show your strength, girls! Make sure you tread firmly on those peas!’ And next
morning when the king called the twelve huntsmen before him, they walked into
the antechamber with such a strong, sure tread that not a single pea rolled or even
shifted.
After they had left, the king turned
on the lion: ‘What you told me was false! They walk just like men.’ The lion
replied, ‘They were pretending. Someone must have warned them! But here’s an
idea: bring twelve spinning wheels into the antechamber. Then you’ll see!
They’ll be so thrilled they won’t be able to resist going over and examining
them. No man would do that!’ This advice pleased the king, and he had the
spinning wheels placed in the antechamber.
But the servant who was friendly to
the huntsmen told them about this plan too. ‘Hang on to yourselves, girls!’
said the king’s daughter to her eleven women. ‘Don’t give those spinning wheels
a glance!’ So when the king summoned them, the twelve huntsmen strode through
the antechamber without so much as turning their heads to look at the spinning
wheels. And the king said to the lion, ‘You’ve been proved false again. They’re
men! They showed no interest in the spinning wheels.’
‘They knew we were trying to trick
them,’ said the lion, ‘that’s why they restrained themselves.’ But the king no
longer trusted the lion’s opinions. The twelve huntsmen became his companions
whenever he went out hunting, and he valued them more and more.
One day as they were out riding in
the forest, news came that the king’s new bride-to-be was approaching with her
retinue. When his true lover heard this, her heart hurt so much she fell
fainting to the ground. Seeing the accident that had befallen his dear
huntsman, the king ran to help him, grasped his hand and drew off the glove
that covered it. Then he saw the ring he had given his first beloved, and
looking again in her face, he recognised her. His heart was so touched that he
kissed her, and said as she opened her eyes, ‘You are mine and I am yours, and
no one in the world can change that.’ He sent a messenger to the other bride,
begging her to return to her own kingdom, for he had a wife already and someone
who has found an old key doesn’t need a new one. So their wedding was celebrated,
and the lion was vindicated and taken back into favour – for after all, he had
got one thing right.
Picture credits: The Twelve Huntsmen by HJ Ford, illustration from The Green Fairy Book.
I haven’t come across this one before! And yes, amusing! Thanks for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed it, Sue!
DeleteI love it! And I'm wondering why twelve identical huntsmen - was there ever a "you can have the princess if you can identify her" test wound up in this story?
ReplyDeleteI think that's very possible, Jane!
ReplyDelete