Once upon a time there was a widow
who had two daughters; one of them was beautiful and industrious, the
other ugly and lazy. The mother, however, loved the ugly and lazy one
best, because she was her own daughter, and so the other, who was only
her stepdaughter, was made to do all the work of the house, and was
quite the Cinderella of the family. Her stepmother sent her out every
day to sit by the well in the high road, there to spin until she made
her fingers bleed. Now it chanced one day that some blood fell on to the
spindle, and as the girl stopped over the well to wash it off, the
spindle suddenly sprang out of her hand and fell into the well. She ran
home crying to tell of her misfortune, but her stepmother spoke harshly
to her, and after giving her a violent scolding, said unkindly, 'As you
have let the spindle fall into the well you may go yourself and fetch it
out.'
The girl went back to the well not knowing what to do, and at last in
her distress she jumped into the water after the spindle.
She remembered nothing more until she awoke and found herself in a
beautiful meadow, full of sunshine, and with countless flowers blooming
in every direction.
She walked over the meadow, and presently she came upon a baker's oven
full of bread, and the loaves cried out to her, 'Take us out, take us
out, or alas! we shall be burnt to a cinder; we were baked through long
ago.' So she took the bread-shovel and drew them all out.
She went on a little farther, till she came to a free full of apples.
'Shake me, shake me, I pray,' cried the tree; 'my apples, one and all,
are ripe.' So she shook the tree, and the apples came falling down upon
her like rain; but she continued shaking until there was not a single
apple left upon it. Then she carefully gathered the apples together in a
heap and walked on again.
The next thing she came to was a little house, and there she saw an old
woman looking out, with such large teeth, that she was terrified, and
turned to run away. But the old woman called after her, 'What are you
afraid of, dear child? Stay with me; if you will do the work of my house
properly for me, I will make you very happy. You must be very careful,
however, to make my bed in the right way, for I wish you always to shake
it thoroughly, so that the feathers fly about; then they say, down there
in the world, that it is snowing; for I am Mother Holle.' The old woman
spoke so kindly, that the girl summoned up courage and agreed to enter
into her service.
She took care to do everything according to the old woman's bidding and
every time she made the bed she shook it with all her might, so that the
feathers flew about like so many snowflakes. The old woman was as good
as her word: she never spoke angrily to her, and gave her roast and
boiled meats every day.
So she stayed on with Mother Holle for some time, and then she began to
grow unhappy. She could not at first tell why she felt sad, but she
became conscious at last of great longing to go home; then she knew she
was homesick, although she was a thousand times better off with Mother
Holle than with her mother and sister. After waiting awhile, she went to
Mother Holle and said, 'I am so homesick, that I cannot stay with you
any longer, for although I am so happy here, I must return to my own
people.'
Then Mother Holle said, 'I am pleased that you should want to go back to
your own people, and as you have served me so well and faithfully, I
will take you home myself.'