There was
once a girl who was lazy and would not spin, and her mother could not
persuade her to it, do what she would. At last the mother became angry
and out of patience, and gave her a good beating, so that she cried out
loudly. At that moment the Queen was going by; as she heard the crying,
she stopped; and, going into the house, she asked the mother why she was
beating her daughter, so that every one outside in the street could
hear her cries. The woman was ashamed to tell of her daughter's
laziness, so she said, "I cannot stop her from spinning; she is for ever
at it, and I am poor and cannot furnish her with flax enough." Then the
Queen answered, "I like nothing better than the sound of the
spinning-wheel, and always feel happy when I hear its humming; let me
take your daughter with me to the castle - I have plenty of flax, she
shall spin there to her heart's content." The mother was only too glad
of the offer, and the Queen took the girl with her.
When they reached the castle the Queen showed her three
rooms which were filled with the finest flax as full as they could hold.
"Now you can spin me this flax," said she, "and when you can
show it me all done you shall have my eldest son for bridegroom; you
may be poor, but I make nothing of that - your industry is dowry
enough." The girl was inwardly terrified, for she could not have spun
the flax, even if she were to live to be a hundred years old, and were
to sit spinning every day of her life from morning to evening. And when
she found herself alone she began to weep, and sat so for three days
without putting her hand to it. On the third day the Queen came, and
when she saw that nothing had been done of the spinning she was much
surprised; but the girl excused herself by saying that she had not been
able to begin because of the distress she was in at leaving her home and
her mother. The excuse contented the Queen, who said, however, as she
went away, "Tomorrow you must begin to work."
When the girl found herself alone again she could not tell
how to help herself or what to do, and in her perplexity she went and
gazed out of the window. There she saw three women passing by, and the
first of them had a broad flat foot, the second had a big under-lip that
hung down over her chin, and the third had a remarkably broad thumb.
They all of them stopped in front of the window, and called out to know
what it was that the girl wanted. She told them all her need, and they
promised her their help, and said, "Then will you invite us to your
wedding, and not be ashamed of us, and call us your cousins, and let us
sit at your table; if you will promise this, we will finish off your
flax-spinning in a very short time."
"With all my heart," answered the girl; "only come in now, and begin at once."
Then these same women came in, and she cleared a space in
the first room for them to sit and carry on their spinning. The first
one drew out the thread and moved the treddle that turned the wheel, the
second moistened the thread, the third twisted it, and rapped with her
finger on the table, and as often as she rapped a heap of yarn fell to
the ground, and it was most beautifully spun. But the girl hid the three
spinsters out of the Queen's sight, and only showed her, as often as
she came, the heaps of well-spun yarn; and there was no end to the
praises she received. When the first room was empty they went on to the
second, and then to the third, so that at last all was finished. Then
the three women took their leave, saying to the girl, "Do not forget
what you have promised, and it will be all the better for you."
So when the girl took the Queen and showed her the empty
rooms, and the great heaps of yarn, the wedding was at once arranged,
and the bridegroom rejoiced that he should have so clever and diligent a
wife, and praised her exceedingly.
"I have three cousins," said the girl, "and as they have
shown me a great deal of kindness, I would not wish to forget them in my
good fortune; may I be allowed to invite them to the wedding, and to
ask them to sit at the table with us?" The Queen and the bridegroom said
at once, "There is no reason against it."
So when the feast began in came the three spinsters in
strange guise, and the bride said, "Dear cousins, you are welcome."
"Oh," said the bridegroom, "how come you to have such
dreadfully ugly relations?" And then he went up to the first spinster
and said, "How is it that you have such a broad flat foot?"
"With treading," answered she, "with treading." Then he went
up to the second and said, "How is it that you have such a great
hanging lip?"
"With licking," answered she, "with licking."
Then he asked the third, "How is it that you have such a broad thumb?"
"With twisting thread," answered she, "with twisting
thread." Then the bridegroom said that from that time forward his
beautiful bride should never touch a spinning-wheel. And so she escaped
that tiresome flax-spinning.
* * * END * * *
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