<h3><SPAN name="chap40"></SPAN>40 The Robber Bridegroom</h3>
<p>There was once on a time a miller, who had a beautiful daughter, and as she was
grown up, he wished that she was provided for, and well married. He thought,
“If any good suitor comes and asks for her, I will give her to
him.” Not long afterwards, a suitor came, who appeared to be very rich,
and as the miller had no fault to find with him, he promised his daughter to
him. The maiden, however, did not like him quite so much as a girl should like
the man to whom she is engaged, and had no confidence in him. Whenever she saw,
or thought of him, she felt a secret horror. Once he said to her, “Thou
art my betrothed, and yet thou hast never once paid me a visit.” The
maiden replied, “I know not where thy house is.” Then said the
bridegroom, “My house is out there in the dark forest.” She tried
to excuse herself and said she could not find the way there. The bridegroom
said, “Next Sunday thou must come out there to me; I have already invited
the guests, and I will strew ashes in order that thou mayst find thy way
through the forest.” When Sunday came, and the maiden had to set out on
her way, she became very uneasy, she herself knew not exactly why, and to mark
her way she filled both her pockets full of peas and lentils. Ashes were strewn
at the entrance of the forest, and these she followed, but at every step she
threw a couple of peas on the ground. She walked almost the whole day until she
reached the middle of the forest, where it was the darkest, and there stood a
solitary house, which she did not like, for it looked so dark and dismal. She
went inside it, but no one was within, and the most absolute stillness reigned.
Suddenly a voice cried,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Turn back, turn back, young maiden dear,<br/>
’Tis a murderer’s house you enter here.”</p>
<p>The maiden looked up, and saw that the voice came from a bird, which was
hanging in a cage on the wall. Again it cried,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Turn back, turn back, young maiden dear,<br/>
’Tis a murderer’s house you enter here.”</p>
<p>Then the young maiden went on farther from one room to another, and walked
through the whole house, but it was entirely empty and not one human being was
to be found. At last she came to the the cellar, and there sat an extremely
aged woman, whose head shook constantly. “Can you not tell me,”
said the maiden, “if my betrothed lives here?”</p>
<p>“Alas, poor child,” replied the old woman, “whither hast thou
come? Thou art in a murderer’s den. Thou thinkest thou art a bride soon
to be married, but thou wilt keep thy wedding with death. Look, I have been
forced to put a great kettle on there, with water in it, and when they have
thee in their power, they will cut thee to pieces without mercy, will cook
thee, and eat thee, for they are eaters of human flesh. If I do not have
compassion on thee, and save thee, thou art lost.”</p>
<p>Thereupon the old woman led her behind a great hogshead where she could not be
seen. “Be as still as a mouse,” said she, “do not make a
sound, or move, or all will be over with thee. At night, when the robbers are
asleep, we will escape; I have long waited for an opportunity.” Hardly
was this done, than the godless crew came home. They dragged with them another
young girl. They were drunk, and paid no heed to her screams and lamentations.
They gave her wine to drink, three glasses full, one glass of white wine, one
glass of red, and a glass of yellow, and with this her heart burst in twain.
Thereupon they tore off her delicate raiment, laid her on a table, cut her
beautiful body in pieces and strewed salt thereon. The poor bride behind the
cask trembled and shook, for she saw right well what fate the robbers had
destined for her. One of them noticed a gold ring on the little finger of the
murdered girl, and as it would not come off at once, he took an axe and cut the
finger off, but it sprang up in the air, away over the cask and fell straight
into the bride’s bosom. The robber took a candle and wanted to look for
it, but could not find it. Then another of them said, “Hast thou looked
behind the great hogshead?” But the old woman cried, “Come and get
something to eat, and leave off looking till the morning, the finger
won’t run away from you.”</p>
<p>Then the robbers said, “The old woman is right,” and gave up their
search, and sat down to eat, and the old woman poured a sleeping-draught in
their wine, so that they soon lay down in the cellar, and slept and snored.
When the bride heard that, she came out from behind the hogshead, and had to
step over the sleepers, for they lay in rows on the ground, and great was her
terror lest she should waken one of them. But God helped her, and she got
safely over. The old woman went up with her, opened the doors, and they hurried
out of the murderers’ den with all the speed in their power. The wind had
blown away the strewn ashes, but the peas and lentils had sprouted and grown
up, and showed them the way in the moonlight. They walked the whole night,
until in the morning they arrived at the mill, and then the maiden told her
father everything exactly as it had happened.</p>
<p>When the day came when the wedding was to be celebrated, the bridegroom
appeared, and the Miller had invited all his relations and friends. As they sat
at table, each was bidden to relate something. The bride sat still, and said
nothing. Then said the bridegroom to the bride, “Come, my darling, dost
thou know nothing? Relate something to us like the rest.” She replied,
“Then I will relate a dream. I was walking alone through a wood, and at
last I came to a house, in which no living soul was, but on the wall there was
a bird in a cage which cried,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Turn back, turn back, young maiden dear,<br/>
’Tis a murderer’s house you enter here.”</p>
<p>And this it cried once more. ‘My darling, I only dreamt this. Then I went
through all the rooms, and they were all empty, and there was something so
horrible about them! At last I went down into the cellar, and there sat a very
very old woman, whose head shook; I asked her, ‘Does my bridegroom live
in this house? She answered, ‘Alas poor child, thou hast got into a
murderer’s den, thy bridegroom does live here, but he will hew thee in
pieces, and kill thee, and then he will cook thee, and eat thee.’ My
darling, I only dreamt this. But the old woman hid me behind a great hogshead,
and, scarcely was I hidden, when the robbers came home, dragging a maiden with
them, to whom they gave three kinds of wine to drink, white, red, and yellow,
with which her heart broke in twain. My darling, I only dreamt this. Thereupon
they pulled off her pretty clothes, and hewed her fair body in pieces on a
table, and sprinkled them with salt. My darling, I only dreamt this. And one of
the robbers saw that there was still a ring on her little finger, and as it was
hard to draw off, he took an axe and cut it off, but the finger sprang up in
the air, and sprang behind the great hogshead, and fell in my bosom. And there
is the finger with the ring!” And with these words she drew it forth, and
showed it to those present.</p>
<p>The robber, who had during this story become as pale as ashes, leapt up and
wanted to escape, but the guests held him fast, and delivered him over to
justice. Then he and his whole troop were executed for their infamous deeds.</p>
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