The Brother and Sister
by Brothers Grimm · from Household Tales
Adapted Version
Brother and Sister had a mean step-mom. She was not kind to them. One day, Brother took Sister's hand. "Let us run away," he said. So they ran into the forest.
But the step-mom was a witch. She put a spell on the water.
They found a small stream. Sister heard the water whisper. "Do not drink!" she cried. "It will change you!" Brother was so thirsty. But he did not drink.
Then they found a new stream. Brother was very, very thirsty. "I must drink," he said. He drank the water. A bad thing then took place. Brother began to change! He got small. He grew soft brown fur. He was now a little deer! Sister was so sad. She hugged the deer. "I will care for you," she said.
They walked deep in the forest. They found a small house. "We can live here!" said Sister. She made a soft bed for Deer. She tied her gold band on his neck. Each day she found food. Each night they slept warm. Sister loved her dear little deer.
One day, a kind King rode by. He saw the little deer. "What a pretty deer!" he said. Deer ran to the small house. The King came after him.
The King knocked on the door. Sister let him in. The King saw her and smiled. "You are kind and good," he said. "Come to my castle." Sister looked at her dear Deer. "He must come too," she said. "Of course!" said the King. So they all went to the castle. Sister and the King wed. She was now a Queen! The little deer lived there too.
But the step-mom heard the news. She was very mad. "She is a Queen?" she said. "No! I will trick them!" She made a bad plan.
The step-mom used her magic. She put the Queen in a deep sleep. She hid the Queen far off. Then she used a spell. Her girl took the Queen's place. The King did not know.
But each night, magic took place. The real Queen woke up. She came to see her baby. She came to see her deer. She held her baby close. She sang a soft song. Then she went back to sleep.
Someone saw the Queen at night. They told the King. "The real Queen comes at night!" The King had to see.
That night, the King hid. Then the door slid open. The real Queen came in! She held her baby. She sang her soft song. The King ran to her. He held her hand. "You are my Queen!" he said. And the spell broke! The Queen was well now. She smiled at the King. "Yes, I am your Queen," she said. They hugged and cried warm tears.
The King sent the step-mom far away. She could not come back. All her magic was gone.
And then a great thing took place. The little deer began to change! He grew tall. His fur went away. He was a boy once more! Sister hugged her Brother tight. "You are back!" she cried. Brother laughed and hugged her too. The King smiled. The baby laughed.
They were all here now. Safe and glad. And they were happy ever after.
Original Story
The brother and sister
A fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm
The brother took his sister's hand and said to her, "Since our mother died we have had no good days; our stepmother beats us every day, and if we go near her she kicks us away; we have nothing to eat but hard crusts of bread left over; the dog under the table fares better," he gets a good piece every now and then. If our mother only knew, how she would pity us! Come, let us go together out into the wide world!" So they went, and journeyed the whole day through fields and meadows and stony places, and if it rained the sister said, "The skies and we are weeping together." In the evening they came to a great wood, and they were so weary with hunger and their long journey, that they climbed up into a high tree and fell asleep.
The next morning, when they awoke, the sun was high in heaven, and shone brightly through the leaves. Then said the brother, "Sister, I am thirsty; if I only knew where to find a brook, that I might go and drink! I almost think that I hear one rushing."
So the brother got down and led his sister by the hand, and they went to seek the brook. But their wicked stepmother was a witch, and had known quite well that the two children had run away, and had sneaked after them, as only witches can, and had laid a spell on all the brooks in the forest.
So when they found a little stream flowing smoothly over its pebbles, the brother was going to drink of it; but the sister heard how it said in its rushing, "He a tiger will be who drinks of me, Who drinks of me a tiger will be!"
Then the sister cried, "Pray, dear brother, do not drink, or you will become a wild beast, and will tear me in pieces."
So the brother refrained from drinking, though his thirst was great, and he said he would wait till he came to the next brook. When they came to a second brook the sister heard it say, "He a wolf will be who drinks of me, Who drinks of me a wolf will be!"
Then the sister cried, "Pray, dear brother, do not drink, or you will be turned into a wolf, and will eat me up!"
So the brother refrained from drinking, and said, "I will wait until we come to the next brook, and then I must drink, whatever you say; my thirst is so great."
And when they came to the third brook the sister heard how in its rushing it said, "Who drinks of me a fawn will be, He a fawn will be who drinks of me!"
Then the sister said, "O my brother, I pray drink not, or you will be turned into a fawn, and run away far from me."
But he had already kneeled by the side of the brook and stooped and drunk of the water, and as the first drops passed his lips he became a fawn.
And the sister wept over her poor lost brother, and the fawn wept also, and stayed sadly beside her. At last the maiden said, "Be comforted, dear fawn, indeed I will never leave you." Then she untied her golden girdle and bound it round the fawn's neck, and went and gathered rushes to make a soft cord, which she fastened to him; and then she led him on, and they went deeper into the forest. And when they had gone a long long way, they came at last to a little house, and the maiden looked inside, and as it was empty she thought, "We might as well live here." And she fetched leaves and moss to make a soft bed for the fawn, and every morning she went out and gathered roots and berries and nuts for herself, and fresh grass for the fawn, who ate out of her hand with joy, frolicking round her. At night, when the sister was tired, and had said her prayers, she laid her head on the fawn's back, which served her for a pillow, and softly fell asleep. And if only the brother could have got back his own shape again, it would have been a charming life.
So they lived a long while in the wilderness alone. Now it happened that the King of that country held a great hunt in the forest. The blowing of the horns, the barking of the dogs, and the lusty shouts of the huntsmen sounded through the wood, and the fawn heard them and was eager to be among them.
"Oh," said he to his sister," do let me go to the hunt; I cannot stay behind any longer," and begged so long that at last she consented.
"But mind," said she to him," come back to me at night. I must lock my door against the wild hunters, so, in order that I may know you, you must knock and say, ' Little sister, let me in,' and unless I hear that I shall not unlock the door." Then the fawn sprang out, and felt glad and merry in the open air. The King and his huntsmen saw the beautiful animal, and began at once to pursue him, but they could not come within reach of him, for when they thought they were certain of him he sprang away over the bushes and disappeared. As soon as it was dark he went back to the little house, knocked at the door, and said, "Little sister, let me in." Then the door was opened to him, and he went in, and rested the whole night long on his soft bed.
The next morning the hunt began anew, and when the fawn heard the hunting-horns and the tally-ho of the huntsmen he could rest no longer, and said, "Little sister, let me out, I must go"
The sister opened the door and said, "Now, mind you must come back at night and say the same words." When the King and his hunters saw the fawn with the golden collar again, they chased him closely, but he was too nimble and swift for them. This lasted the whole day, and at last the hunters surrounded him, and one of them wounded his foot a little, so that he was obliged to limp and to go slowly. Then a hunter slipped after him to the little house, and heard how he called out," Little sister, let me in," and saw the door open and shut again after him directly., The hunter noticed all this carefully, went to the King, and told him all he had seen and heard. Then said the King, "To-morrow we will hunt again."
But the sister was very terrified when she saw that her fawn was wounded. She washed his foot, laid cooling leaves round it, and said," Lie down on your bed, dear fawn, and rest, that you may be soon well." The wound was very slight, so that the fawn felt nothing of it the next morning. And when he heard the noise of the hunting outside, he said, "I cannot stay in, I must go after them; I shall not be taken easily again!"
The sister began to weep, and said, "I know you will be killed, and I left alone here in the forest, and forsaken of everybody. I cannot let you go!"
"Then I shall die here with longing," answered the fawn;" when I hear the sound of the horn I feel as if I should leap out of my skin."
Then the sister, seeing there was no help for it, unlocked the door with a heavy heart, and the fawn bounded away into the forest, well and merry.
When the King saw him, he said to his hunters, "Now, follow him up all day long till the night comes, and see that you do him no hurt." So as soon as the sun had gone down, the King said to the huntsmen:" Now, come and show me the little house in the wood." And when he got to the door he knocked at it, and cried, "Little sister, let me in!" Then the door opened, and the King went in, and there stood a maiden more beautiful than any he had seen before. The maiden shrieked out when she saw, instead of the fawn, a man standing there with a gold crown on his head. But the King looked kindly on her, took her by the hand, and said, "Will you go with me to my castle, and be my dear wife?"
"Oh yes," answered the maiden, "but the fawn must come too. I could not leave him." And the King said, "He shall remain with you as long as you live, and shall lack nothing." Then the fawn came bounding in, and the sister tied the cord of rushes to him, and led him by her own hand out of the little house.
The King put the beautiful maiden on his horse, and carried her to his castle, where the wedding was held with great pomp; so she became lady Queen, and they lived together happily for a long while; the fawn was well tended and cherished, and he gambolled about the castle garden. Now the wicked stepmother, whose fault it was that the children were driven out into the world, never dreamed but that the sister had been eaten up by wild beasts in the forest, and that the brother, in the likeness of a fawn, had been slain by the hunters. But when she heard that they were so happy, and that things had gone so well with them, jealousy and envy arose in her heart, and left her no peace, and her chief thought was how to bring misfortune upon them. Her own daughter, who was as ugly as sin, and had only one eye, complained to her, and said, "I never had the chance of being a Queen."
"Never mind," said the old woman, to satisfy her;" when the time comes, I shall be at hand." After a while the Queen brought a beautiful baby-boy into the world, and that day the King was out hunting. The old witch took the shape of the bedchamber woman, and went into the room where the Queen lay, and said to her, "Come, the bath is ready; it will give you refreshment and new strength. Quick, or it will be cold." Her daughter was within call, so they carried the sick Queen into the bath-room, and left her there. And in the bath-room they had made a great fire, so as to suffocate the beautiful young Queen.
When that was managed, the old woman took her daughter, put a cap on her, and laid her in the bed in the Queen's place, gave her also the Queen's form and countenance, only she could not restore the lost eye. So, in order that the King might not remark it, she had to lie on the side where there was no eye. In the evening, when the King came home and heard that a little son was born to him, he rejoiced with all his heart, and was going at once to his dear wife's bedside to see how she did. Then the old woman cried hastily, "For your life, do not draw back the curtains, to let in the light upon her; she must be kept quiet." So the King went away, and never knew that a false Queen was lying in the bed.
Now, when it was midnight, and every one was asleep, the nurse, who was sitting by the cradle in the nursery and watching there alone, saw the door open, and the true Queen come in. She took the child out of the cradle, laid it in her bosom, and fed it. Then she shook out its little pillow, put the child back again, and covered it with the coverlet. She did not forget the fawn either: she went to him where he lay in the corner, and stroked his back tenderly. Then she went in perfect silence out at the door, and the nurse next morning asked the watchmen if any one had entered the castle during the night, but they said they had seen no one.
And the Queen came many nights, and never said a word; the nurse saw her always, but she did not dare speak of it to any one.
After some time had gone by in this manner, the Queen seemed to find voice, and said one night,
"My child my fawn twice more I come to see,
Twice more I come, and then the end must be."
The nurse said nothing, but as soon as the Queen had disappeared she went to the King and told him all. The King said, "Ah, heaven! what do I hear! I will myself watch by the child to-morrow night." So at evening he went into the nursery, and at midnight the Queen appeared, and said,
"My child my fawn once more I come to see,
Once more I come, and then the end must be."
And she tended the child, as she was accustomed to do, before she vanished. The King dared not speak to her, but he watched again the following night, and heard her say,
"My child my fawn this once I come to see,
This once I come, and now the end must be."
Then the King could contain himself no longer, but rushed towards her, saying, "You are no other than my dear wife!"
Then she answered, "Yes, I am your dear wife," and in that moment, by the grace of heaven, her life returned to her, and she was once more well and strong. Then she told the King the snare that the wicked witch and her daughter had laid for her.
The King had them both brought to judgment, and sentence was passed upon them. The daughter was sent away into the wood, where she was devoured by the wild beasts, and the witch was burned, and ended miserably. And as soon as her body was in ashes the spell was removed from the fawn, and he took human shape again; and then the sister and brother lived happily together until the end.
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Story DNA
Moral
Goodness and loyalty will ultimately triumph over wickedness and jealousy, and true love can break even the strongest curses.
Plot Summary
Two abused siblings flee their wicked stepmother, a witch who curses forest brooks. The brother drinks from a cursed stream and transforms into a fawn, but his sister faithfully cares for him. They are discovered by a King, who marries the sister, but the jealous stepmother replaces the Queen with her own one-eyed daughter after the Queen gives birth. The true Queen, now a ghost, secretly visits her child and fawn until the King discovers her, breaking the spell. The wicked stepmother and daughter are punished, the fawn is restored to human form, and the family lives happily ever after.
Themes
Emotional Arc
suffering to triumph
Writing Style
Narrative Elements
Cultural Context
Grimm's fairy tales often reflect societal anxieties and moral lessons prevalent in 19th-century Germany, including the dangers of envy and the triumph of virtue.
Plot Beats (15)
- Abused by their stepmother, a brother and sister flee into the forest.
- The stepmother, a witch, curses all the brooks in the forest.
- The sister warns her thirsty brother not to drink from the first two brooks, which would turn him into a tiger or a wolf.
- The brother, overcome with thirst, drinks from the third brook and transforms into a fawn.
- The sister cares for her fawn-brother, and they find a secluded cottage to live in.
- The King's hunt draws the fawn out, and the King is captivated by its beauty.
- A hunter follows the fawn back to the cottage and reports the beautiful maiden to the King.
- The King proposes to the maiden, who agrees on the condition that her fawn can come too; they marry and she becomes Queen.
- The jealous stepmother and her one-eyed daughter plot to kill the Queen after she gives birth to a son.
- The stepmother suffocates the Queen in a bath and replaces her with her own daughter, disguised to look like the Queen (except for the missing eye).
- The true Queen, now a ghost, secretly visits her child and fawn every night.
- The nurse overhears the ghostly Queen's lament about her limited visits and reports it to the King.
- The King watches and confronts the Queen on her final visit, breaking the spell and restoring her to life.
- The King punishes the wicked stepmother and her daughter (devoured by beasts, burned at the stake).
- The stepmother's death breaks the spell on the fawn, who returns to human form, and the family lives happily.
Characters
Brother ★ protagonist
Not described, but becomes a fawn
Attire: Simple peasant clothing
Thirsty, trusting, loyal
Image Prompt & Upload
A young man in his late teens or early twenties, with a determined expression and kind eyes. He has short, tousled brown hair and a light stubble on his jaw. He wears a simple, well-worn forest green tunic over brown trousers, sturdy leather boots, and a leather belt with a small pouch. He stands confidently on a forest path, one hand resting on a wooden walking staff, the other holding a leather satchel strap over his shoulder. His posture is upright and ready for an adventure. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Sister ★ protagonist
Not described
Attire: Simple peasant clothing, golden girdle
Protective, resourceful, loving
Image Prompt & Upload
A young woman in her late teens with long, flowing chestnut hair and determined hazel eyes. She wears a simple yet elegant embroidered blue dress over a white chemise, with a leather corset belt and sturdy brown boots. A deep green hooded cloak is draped over her shoulders, clasped with a silver brooch. She stands with a confident posture, one hand resting on her hip and the other gently holding a worn leather-bound book against her side. Her expression is focused and kind, with a slight, hopeful smile. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Stepmother ⚔ antagonist
Not described, but can change form
Attire: Dark, concealing clothing
Jealous, cruel, manipulative
Image Prompt & Upload
A stern woman in her late forties with sharp cheekbones and a severe expression. She wears a high-collared, dark velvet gown with a tightly laced bodice, her raven-black hair pulled into a tight, intricate bun. Her posture is rigid and authoritative, one hand resting on her hip while the other holds a silver hand mirror. Her gaze is cold and calculating, her lips pressed into a thin line. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
King ◆ supporting
Not described
Attire: Royal hunting attire, gold crown
Kind, easily deceived, just
Image Prompt & Upload
A wise elderly monarch in his 60s with a long white beard and kind eyes, wearing a golden crown adorned with jewels, a rich purple robe with ermine fur trim, and a royal scepter in his right hand. He stands upright with a dignified posture, looking directly forward with a gentle smile. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature
Stepmother's Daughter ⚔ antagonist
Ugly, one-eyed
Attire: Attempts to wear queenly garments
Envious, resentful, cruel
Image Prompt & Upload
A young woman in her early twenties with pale, flawless skin and sharp, angular features. Her dark, almost black hair is styled in an elaborate updo with intricate braids and jeweled pins. Cold, envious eyes gaze downward with a cruel sneer. She wears a luxurious deep crimson gown with black lace trim and a fitted bodice, her posture haughty with arms crossed defiantly. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Locations
Deep Forest
A vast, dense wood with stony places, brooks flowing over pebbles, and enough space to get lost in.
Mood: Mysterious, dangerous, isolating, but also potentially peaceful.
The children flee into the forest, the brother is transformed into a fawn, and they find the little house.
Image Prompt & Upload
An early morning mist hangs in the air of a vast, ancient deep forest. Towering, gnarled oaks and pines with thick, moss-covered bark form a dense, shadowy canopy, their leaves a deep emerald green. Shafts of golden sunlight pierce through, illuminating floating dust motes and the swirling vapor. A clear, shallow brook winds over smooth, grey pebbles and around large, lichen-speckled boulders, its water glistening. The forest floor is a carpet of ferns, fallen leaves, and damp earth, with patches of bright green moss clinging to every stone and root. The perspective suggests immense depth, with trees receding into a soft, blue-grey haze, emphasizing the feeling of being wonderfully lost. No border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
Little House in the Woods
A small, empty house deep within the forest, furnished with leaves and moss.
Mood: Secluded, safe, humble, a refuge from the dangers of the forest.
The sister and fawn live here for a long time, until the King discovers them.
Image Prompt & Upload
Misty morning in an ancient, enchanted forest. A tiny, crooked house with moss-covered stone walls and a thatched roof of dried leaves sits nestled between colossal, gnarled oak trees. Sunbeams pierce the dense canopy, illuminating floating dust motes and the damp, emerald-green moss carpeting the ground. The forest floor is blanketed with fallen autumn leaves in shades of amber and rust. The house's small, round door is slightly ajar, revealing an interior softly furnished with piles of dry leaves and thick, velvety moss. The atmosphere is serene, quiet, and deeply magical. Soft, diffused light, earthy greens, browns, and muted golds. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
Royal Castle
A grand castle with a garden, bedchambers, and a nursery.
Mood: Luxurious, opulent, but also a place of danger and intrigue.
The sister becomes Queen, the witch attempts to murder her, and the Queen returns as a ghost to care for her child.
Image Prompt & Upload
A grand fairy tale castle at golden hour, bathed in warm, soft light with long shadows. The majestic stone castle features tall spires, arched windows, and fluttering banners. A sprawling, manicured garden surrounds it, with blooming rose bushes, trimmed hedges, and a central stone fountain. Gravel pathways wind through vibrant flower beds. The sky is a gradient of peach and lavender with a few wispy clouds. Lush green trees frame the scene, and distant rolling hills fade into a misty horizon. The atmosphere is serene, magical, and inviting. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.