<h2>THE LITTLE BROTHER AND SISTER</h2>
<p>There was once a little brother who took his Sister by the hand,
and said, "Since our own dear mother's death we have not had one
happy hour; our stepmother beats us every day, and, when we come
near her, kicks us away with her foot. Come, let us wander forth
into the wide world." So all day long they travelled over meadows,
fields, and stony roads. By the evening they came into a large
forest, and laid themselves down in a hollow tree, and went to
sleep. When they awoke the next morning, the sun had already risen
high in the heavens, and its beams made the tree so hot that the
little boy said to his sister, "I am so very thirsty, that if I
knew where there was a brook, I would go and drink. Ah! I think I
hear one running;" and so saying, he got up, and taking his
Sister's hand they went to look for the brook.</p>
<p>The wicked stepmother, however, was a witch, and had witnessed
the departure of the two children: so, sneaking after them
secretly, as is the habit of witches, she had enchanted all the
springs in the forest.</p>
<p>Presently they found a brook, which ran trippingly over the
pebbles, and the Brother would have drunk out of it, but the Sister
heard how it said as it ran along, "Who drinks of me will become a
tiger!" So the Sister exclaimed, "I pray you, Brother, drink not,
or you will become a tiger, and tear me to pieces!" So the Brother
did not drink, although his thirst was very great, and he said, "I
will wait till the next brook." As they came to the second, the
Sister heard it say, "Who drinks of me becomes a wolf!" The Sister
ran up crying, "Brother, do not, pray do not drink, or you will
become a wolf and eat me up!" Then the Brother did not drink,
saying, "I will wait until we come to the next spring, but then I
must drink, you may say what you will; my thirst is much too
great." Just as they reached the third brook, the Sister heard the
voice saying, "Who drinks of me will become a fawn—who drinks
of me will become a fawn!" So the Sister said, "Oh, my Brother do
not drink, or you will be changed into a fawn, and run away from
me!" But he had already kneeled down, and he drank of the water,
and, as the first drops passed his lips, his shape took that of a
fawn.</p>
<p>At first the Sister wept over her little, changed Brother, and
he wept too, and knelt by her, very sorrowful; but at last the
maiden said, "Be still, dear little fawn, and I will never forsake
you!" and, taking off her golden garter, she placed it around his
neck, and, weaving rushes, made a girdle to lead him with. This she
tied to him, and taking the other end in her hand, she led him
away, and they travelled deeper and deeper into the forest. After
they had gone a long distance they came to a little hut, and the
maiden, peeping in, found it empty, and thought, "Here we can stay
and dwell." Then she looked for leaves and moss to make a soft
couch for the Fawn, and every morning she went out and collected
roots and berries and nuts for herself, and tender grass for the
Fawn. In the evening when the Sister was tired, and had said her
prayers, she laid her head upon the back of the Fawn, which served
for a pillow, on which she slept soundly. Had but the Brother
regained his own proper form, their lives would have been happy
indeed.</p>
<p>Thus they dwelt in this wilderness, and some time had elapsed
when it happened that the King of the country had a great hunt in
the forest; and now sounded through the trees the blowing of horns,
the barking of dogs, and the lusty cry of the hunters, so that the
little Fawn heard them, and wanted very much to join in. "Ah!" said
he to his Sister, "let me go to the hunt, I cannot restrain myself
any longer;" and he begged so hard that at last she consented.
"But," she told him," "return again in the evening, for I shall
shut my door against the wild huntsmen, and, that I may know you,
do you knock, and say, 'Sister, dear, let me in,' and if you do not
speak I shall not open the door."</p>
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<p>As soon as she had said this, the little Fawn sprang off quite
glad and merry in the fresh breeze. The King and his huntsmen
perceived the beautiful animal, and pursued him; but they could not
catch him, and when they thought they certainly had him, he sprang
away over the bushes, and got out of sight. Just as it was getting
dark, he ran up to the hut, and, knocking, said, "Sister mine, let
me in." Then she unfastened the little door, and he went in, and
rested all night long upon his soft couch. The next morning the
hunt was commenced again, and as soon as the little Fawn heard the
horns and the tally-ho of the sportsmen he could not rest, and
said, "Sister, dear, open the door; I must be off." The Sister
opened it, saying, "Return at evening, mind, and say the words as
before." When the King and his huntsmen saw him again, the Fawn
with the golden necklace, they followed him, close, but he was too
nimble and quick for them. The whole day long they kept up with
him, but towards evening the huntsmen made a circle around him, and
one wounded him slightly in the hinder foot, so that he could run
but slowly. Then one of them slipped after him to the little hut,
and heard him say, "Sister, dear, open the door," and saw that the
door was opened and immediately shut behind him. The huntsman,
having observed all this, went and told the King what he had seen
and heard, and he said, "On the morrow I will pursue him once
again."</p>
<p>The Sister, however, was terribly afraid when she saw that her
Fawn was wounded, and, washing off the blood, she put herbs upon
the foot, and said, "Go and rest upon your bed, dear Fawn, that
your wound may heal." It was so slight, that the next morning he
felt nothing of it, and when he heard the hunting cries outside, he
exclaimed, "I cannot stop away—I must be there, and none
shall catch me so easily again!" The Sister wept very much and told
him, "Soon will they kill you, and I shall be here alone in this
forest, forsaken by all the world: I cannot let you go."</p>
<p>"I shall die here in vexation," answered the Fawn, "if you do
not, for when I hear the horn, I think I shall jump out of my
skin." The Sister, finding she could not prevent him, opened the
door, with a heavy heart, and the Fawn jumped out, quite delighted,
into the forest. As soon as the King perceived him, he said to his
huntsmen, "Follow him all day long till the evening, but let no one
do him any harm." Then when the sun had set, the King asked his
huntsman to show him the hut; and as they came to it he knocked at
the door and said, "Let me in, dear Sister." Upon this the door
opened, and, stepping in, the King saw a maiden more beautiful than
he had ever beheld before. She was frightened when she saw not her
Fawn, but a man enter, who had a golden crown upon his head. But
the King, looking at her with a kindly glance, held out to her his
hand, saying, "Will you go with me to my castle, and be my dear
wife?" "Oh, yes," replied the maiden; "but the Fawn must go too:
him I will never forsake." The King replied, "He shall remain with
you as long as you live, and shall never want."</p>
<p>The King took the beautiful maiden upon his horse, and rode to
his castle, where the wedding was celebrated with great splendor
and she became Queen, and they lived together a long time; while
the Fawn was taken care of and played about the castle garden.</p>
<p>The wicked stepmother, however, on whose account the children
had wandered forth into the world, had supposed that long ago the
Sister had been torn into pieces by the wild beasts, and the little
Brother in his Fawn's shape hunted to death by the hunters. As
soon, therefore, as she heard how happy they had become, and how
everything prospered with them, envy and jealousy were aroused in
her wicked heart, and left her no peace; and she was always
thinking in what way she could bring misfortune upon them.</p>
<p>Her own daughter, who was as ugly as night, and had but one eye,
for which she was continually reproached, said, "The luck of being
a Queen has never happened to me." "Be quiet, now," replied the old
woman, "and make yourself contented: when the time comes I will
help and assist you." As soon, then, as the time came when the
Queen gave birth to a beautiful little boy, which happened when the
King was out hunting, the old witch took the form of a chambermaid,
and got into the room where the Queen was lying, and said to her,
"The bath is ready, which will restore you and give you fresh
strength; be quick before it gets cold." Her daughter being at
hand, they carried the weak Queen between them into the room, and
laid her in the bath, and then, shutting the door, they ran off;
but first they made up an immense fire in the stove, which must
soon suffocate the poor young Queen.</p>
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<p>When this was done, the old woman took her daughter, and,
putting a cap upon her head, laid her in the bed in the Queen's
place. She gave her, too, the form and appearance of the real
Queen, as far as she was able; but she could not restore the lost
eye, and, so that the King might not notice it, she turned her upon
that side where there was no eye.</p>
<p>When midnight came, and every one was asleep, the nurse, who sat
by herself, wide awake, near the cradle, in the nursery, saw the
door open and the true Queen come in. She took the child in her
arms, and rocked it a while, and then, shaking up its pillow, laid
it down in its cradle, and covered it over again. She did not
forget the Fawn, either, but going to the corner where he was,
stroked his head, and then went silently out of the door. The nurse
asked in the morning of the guards if any one had passed into the
castle during the night; but they answered, "No, we have not seen
anybody." For many nights afterwards she came constantly, but never
spoke a word; and the nurse saw her always, but she would not trust
herself to speak about it to any one.</p>
<p>When some time had passed away, the Queen one night began to
speak, and said—</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"How fares my child! how fares my fawn?</p>
<p>Twice more will I come, but never again."</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The nurse made no reply; but, when she had disappeared, went to
the King, and told him. The King exclaimed, "Oh, mercy! what does
this mean?—the next night I will watch myself by the child."
So in the evening he went into the nursery, and about midnight the
Queen appeared, and said—</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"How fares my child! how fares my fawn?</p>
<p>Once more will I come, but never again."</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>And she nursed the child, as she usually did, and then
disappeared. The King dared not speak; but he watched the following
night, and this time she said—</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"How fares my child! how fares my fawn?</p>
<p>This time have I come, but never again."</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>At these words the King could hold back no longer, but,
springing up, cried, "You can be no other than my dear wife!" Then
she answered, "Yes, I am your dear wife;" and at that moment her
life was restored by God's mercy, and she was again as beautiful
and charming as ever. She told the King the fraud which the witch
and her daughter had practised upon him, and he had them both
tried, and sentence was pronounced against them. The little Fawn
was disenchanted, and received once more his human form; and the
Brother and Sister lived happily together to the end of their
days.</p>
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