Saturday, 15 April 2017
M is for... Mouse, Bird, Sausage
Once upon a time, in a little cottage in the woods, there lived a mouse, a bird and and sausage. They lived together for many years in harmony and friendship, all helping each other and sharing the daily chores.
The bird flew out into the woods every day to fetch wood. The mouse would set the fire, collect water and set the table for meals. The sausage would cook all the meals.
One day, while out collecting wood, the bird came across an old friend who laughed at him for working so hard when his friends did so little. The bird thought about this and became quite mad, so he flew home and insisted that they all swap jobs the very next day. The mouse and the sausage argued against the change, but the bird would not back down, so eventually they all agreed.
The next morning the sausage headed out to collect wood from the forest but he did not return. Fearing something may have happened to his friend, the bird flew out to see if he could find him. He eventually found the sausage in the mouth of a dog. The bird begged the dog to let his friend go, but the dog claimed that the sausage had been carrying forged papers and so would have to die.
Filled with grief and sorrow, the bird flew back home again to tell the mouse what had happened. However, when he got inside he found that while trying to cook a meal the mouse had accidentally fallen into the pot and boiled to death.
The bird was devastated and flew about the house in a rage. In his carelessness he scattered the wood from the fire around the house and soon the little cottage was engulfed in flames. The bird quickly rushed to get some water to douse the flames, but he fell down the well along with the bucket and drowned.
This strange tale was collected by the brothers Grimm and included in their published collection 'Kinder- ind Hausmärchen' in 1812.
It went on to be featured in all seven editions.
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Definitely a strange tale. Sometimes I wonder about the brothers Grimm. Weird. But I must admit, I will be mulling this story over for awhile.
ReplyDeleteTrudy @ Reel Focus
Food in Film: Meatloaf
this is quite depressing, why was it even written? I guess I prefer tales that has some sort of redemption or at least not kill every off like they do these days with television shows.
ReplyDeletehave a lovely day.
~ my M post - the seven moods of a blogger ~
No one gets a happy ending... :D
ReplyDeleteIt reminds me of a Hungarian tale where the sausage cooks by jumping into the soup water and soaking in it a little, and when his friends find out what they have been eating they are disgusted
The Multicolored Diary: WTF - Weird Things in Folktales
Now that is truly a GRIMM tale...yikes!
ReplyDeleteM: Montana & Mexico
DB McNicol, author & traveler
Theme: Oh, the places we will go!
The mouse died when he accidentally fell into the pot and drowned. That could just as easily have been the fate of the sausage. At least that would have been a happy ending.
ReplyDeleteNamaste: Exotic Words with no English Equivalent
well, they collected a lot of folk tales from oral sources. this could be one of them. i don't remember this one, but it's probably in my complete grimm's at home.
ReplyDeleteDismal ending, yes, but I can't help being amused that the sausage gets eaten because it was allegedly carrying forged papers! Was it framed? Or was it indeed operating under a false identity - like maybe it claimed to be organic but really wasn't? And why do sausages need identity papers, anyway?
ReplyDeleteA-Z of Printmakers
That's a very strange story and they all die!
ReplyDeleteI wonder what the meaning of this is?
It's strange about the sausage having ID papers. What's that all about?
Dinh @Arlene's Book Club