
I have a special treat today.
Philip Pullman, author of the His Dark Materials trilogy, wrote a new English version of fifty favorite German fairy tales. This collection, FAIRY TALES FROM THE BROTHERS GRIMM, came out last week and let me tell you: it's a keeper. To celebrate the release, I have an excerpt - the complete text of "The Frog King, or Iron Heinrich" - and one lucky In Bed With Books winner will win a hardcover copy. I'm not normally a hardcover fan, but this is the kind of book you want in hardcover so that you can give it a nice, prominent place on your shelf.
Reprinted by arrangement with Viking, a
member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., from FAIRY TALES FROM THE BROTHERS
GRIMM by Philip Pullman. Copyright © Philip Pullman, 2012
The Frog King, or Iron
Heinrich
In
the olden days, when wishing still worked, there lived a king whose daughters
were all beautiful; but the youngest daughter was so lovely that even the sun,
who has seen many things, was struck with wonder every time he shone on her
face. Not far away from the king’s palace there was a deep dark forest, and
under a lime tree in the forest there was a well. In the heat of the day the
princess used to go into the forest and sit by the edge of the well, from which
a marvellous coolness seemed to flow.
To
pass the time she had a golden ball, which she used to throw up in the air and
catch. It was her favourite game. Now one day it happened that she threw it a
little carelessly, and she couldn’t catch it. Instead the ball rolled away from
her and towards the well, and then it ran right over the edge and disappeared.
The
princess ran after it, and looked down into the water; but it was so deep that
she couldn’t see the ball. She couldn’t even see the bottom of the well.
She
began to cry, and she cried louder and louder, inconsolably. But as she wept
and sobbed, someone spoke to her. “What’s the matter, princess? You’re crying
so bitterly, you’d move a stone to pity.”
She
looked round to see where the voice was coming from, and saw a frog who’d stuck
his big ugly head out of the water.
“Oh,
it’s you, you old splasher,” she said. “I’m crying because my golden ball’s
fallen into the water and it’s so deep and I can’t see it.”
“Well,
you can stop crying now,” said the frog. “I can help you, but what will you
give me if I fetch your ball for you?”
“Whatever
you want, frog! Anything! My clothes, my pearls, my jewels, even the golden
crown I’m wearing.”
“I
don’t want your clothes, and your jewels and your golden crown are no good to
me, but if you love me and take me as your companion and your playmate, if you
let me sit next to you at the table and eat from your dish and drink from your
cup and sleep in your bed, then I’ll dive down and bring up your golden ball.”
The
princess thought “What is this stupid frog saying? Whatever he thinks, he’ll
have to stay in the water where he belongs. But still, perhaps he can get my
ball.” But of course she didn’t say that. Instead she said “Yes, yes, I’ll
promise you all of that if you just bring my ball back.”
As
soon as the frog heard her say “Yes” he put his head under the water and dived
to the bottom. A moment later he came swimming back up with the ball in his
mouth, and he threw it on to the grass.
The
princess was so happy to see it that she snatched it up and ran off at once.
“Wait,
wait!” called the frog. “Take me with you! I can’t hop as fast as you can run!”
But
she took no notice. She hurried home and forgot all about the poor frog, who
had to go back down into his well.
Next
day the princess was sitting at table with her father the king and all the
people of the court, and eating off her golden plate, when something came
hopping up the marble steps: plip plop,
plip plop. When it reached the top it knocked at the door and called:
“Princess! Youngest princess! Open the door for me!”
She
ran to see who it was, and opened the door, and there was the frog.
Frightened,
she slammed the door shut at once and ran back to the table.
The
king saw that her heart was pounding, and said “What are you afraid of, my
child? Is there a giant there at the door?”
“Oh,
no,” she said, “it’s not a giant, it’s a horrible frog.”
“What
does the frog want with you?”
“Oh
papa, yesterday when I was playing in the forest near the well, my golden ball
fell in the water. And I started to cry and because I was crying so much the
frog got it for me, and because he insisted, I had to promise that he could be
my companion. But I didn’t think he’d ever leave the water, not really. But
there he is outside the door and he wants to come in!”
And
then there came a second knock at the door, and a voice called:
“Princess, princess, youngest daughter,
Open up and let me in!
Or else your promise by the water
Isn’t worth a rusty pin.
Keep your promise, royal daughter,
Open up and let me in!”
The
king said “If you make a promise, you have to keep it. Go and let him in.”
She
opened the door and the frog hopped in. He hopped all the way to her chair.
“Lift
me up,” he said. “I want to sit next to you.”
She
didn’t want to, but the king said “Go on. Do as he says.”
So
she lifted the frog up. When he was on the chair, he wanted to be on the table,
so she had to lift him up there as well, and then he said “Push your golden
plate a bit closer so I can eat with you.”
She
did, but everyone could see that she wasn’t enjoying it. The frog was, though;
he ate her food up with great pleasure, while every mouthful seemed to stick in
the princess’s throat.
Finally
the frog said “Well, I’ve had enough now, thank you, I’d like to go to bed.
Carry me up to your room and get your silken bed ready so we can sleep in it.”
The
princess began to cry, because the frog’s cold skin frightened her. She
trembled at the thought of him in her sweet clean bed. But the king frowned and
said “You shouldn’t despise someone who helped you when you were in trouble!”
She
picked the frog up between finger and thumb and set him down outside her
bedroom door.
But
he kept on knocking and called “Let me in! Let me in!”
So
she opened the door and said “All right! You can come in, but you must sleep on
the floor.”
She
made him lie down at the foot of her bed. But still he said “Let me up! Let me
up! I’m just as tired as you.”
“Oh,
for goodness’ sake!” she said, and picked him up and put him at the far end of
her pillow.
“Closer!
Closer!” he said.
But
that was too much. In a flash of anger she scooped up the frog and threw him
against the wall. But when he fell back into the bed, what a surprise! He
wasn’t a frog any more. In fact he’d become a young man – a prince – with
beautiful smiling eyes.
And
she loved him and accepted him as her companion, just as the king would have
wished. The prince told her that an evil witch had put a spell on him, and that
only she, the princess, could have rescued him from the well. What’s more, on
the following day a carriage would come to take them to the prince’s kingdom.
Then they fell asleep side by side.
And
next morning no sooner had the sun awoken them than a carriage drew up outside
the palace, just as the prince had said. It was pulled by eight horses with
ostrich plumes nodding on their heads and golden chains shining among their
harness. At the back of the coach was Faithful Heinrich. He was the prince’s
servant, and when he’d learned that his master had been changed into a frog, he
was so dismayed that he went straight to the blacksmith and ordered three iron
bands to put around his heart to stop it bursting with grief.
Faithful
Heinrich helped them into the carriage and took his place at the back. He was
overjoyed to see the prince again.
When
they’d gone a little way, the prince heard a loud crack from behind. He turned
around and called out:
“Heinrich,
the coach is breaking!”
“No,
no, my lord, it’s just my heart. When you were living in the well, when you
were a frog, I suffered such great pain that I bound my heart with iron bands
to stop it breaking, for iron is stronger than grief. But love is stronger than
iron, and now you’re human again the iron bands are falling off.”
And
twice more they heard the same cracking noise, and each time they thought it
was the carriage, but each time they were wrong: it was an iron band breaking
away from Faithful Heinrich’s heart, because his master was safe again.
Type: ATU 440, The Frog King
Source: the Wild family
Similar
stories:
Briggs: The Frog, The Frog Prince,
The Frog Sweetheart, The Paddo
One of the best-known tales of all. The central notion
of the repulsive frog changing into a prince is so appealing and so full of
moral implication that it’s become a metaphor for a central human experience.
The common memory is that the frog becomes a prince when the princess kisses
him. Grimm’s storyteller knows otherwise, and so do the tellers of the versions
in Briggs, where the frog has to be beheaded by the maiden before changing his
form. The kiss has a lot to be said for it, however. It is, after all, another
form of folklore itself, and what else is the implication of his wishing to
share the princess’s bed?
The
figure of Iron Heinrich appears at the end of the tale out of nowhere, and has
so little connection with the rest of it that he is nearly always forgotten
(but he must have been thought important enough to share the title). His iron
bands are so striking an image that they almost deserve a story to themselves.
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