| There were once upon a time a king and a queen who lived | |
| happily together and had twelve children, but they were | |
| all boys. Then said the king to his wife, if the thirteenth | |
| child which you are about to bring into the world, is a girl, the | |
| twelve boys shall die, in order that her possessions may be great, | |
| and that the kingdom may fall to her alone. He even caused twelve | |
| coffins to be made, which were already filled with shavings, and | |
| in each lay a little death pillow, and he had them taken into a | |
| locked-up room, and then he gave the queen the key of it, and bade | |
| her not to speak of this to anyone. | |
| The mother, however, now sat and lamented all day long, until | |
| the youngest son, who was always with her, and whom she had | |
| named benjamin, from the bible, said to her, dear mother, why | |
| are you so sad. | |
| Dearest child, she answered, I may not tell you. But he let | |
| her have no rest until she went and unlocked the room, and showed | |
| him the twelve coffins ready filled with shavings. Then she said, | |
| my dearest benjamin, your father has had these coffins made for | |
| you and for your eleven brothers, for if I bring a little girl into | |
| the world, you are all to be killed and buried in them. And as she | |
| wept while she was saying this, the son comforted her and said, weep | |
| not, dear mother, we will save ourselves, and go hence. But she | |
| said, go forth into the forest with your eleven brothers, and let | |
| one sit constantly on the highest tree which can be found, and keep | |
| watch, looking towards the tower here in the castle. If I give | |
| birth to a little son, I will put up a white flag, and then you may | |
| venture to come back. But if I bear a daughter, I will hoist a red | |
| flag, and then fly hence as quickly as you are able, and may the | |
| good God protect you. And every night I will rise up and pray for | |
| you - in winter that you may be able to warm yourself at a fire, and | |
| in summer that you may not faint away in the heat. | |
| After she had blessed her sons therefore, they went forth into | |
| the forest. They each kept watch in turn, and sat on the highest | |
| oak and looked towards the tower. When eleven days had passed | |
| and the turn came to benjamin, he saw that a flag was being raised. | |
| It was, however, not the white, but the blood-red flag which | |
| announced that they were all to die. When the brothers heard that, | |
| they were very angry and said, are we all to suffer death for the | |
| sake of a girl. We swear that we will avenge ourselves - | |
| wheresoever we find a girl, her red blood shall flow. | |
| Thereupon they went deeper into the forest, and in the midst | |
| of it, where it was the darkest, they found a little bewitched hut, | |
| which was standing empty. Then said they, here we will dwell, | |
| and you benjamin, who are the youngest and weakest, you shall | |
| stay at home and keep house, we others will go out and fetch food. | |
| Then they went into the forest and shot hares, wild deer, birds and | |
| pigeons, and whatsoever there was to eat. This they took to | |
| benjamin, who had to dress it for them in order that they might | |
| appease their hunger. They lived together ten years in the little | |
| hut, and the time did not appear long to them. | |
| The little daughter which their mother the queen had given | |
| birth to, was now grown up. She was good of heart, and fair of | |
| face, and had a golden star on her forehead. Once, on a great | |
| washing, she saw twelve men's shirts among the things, and asked her | |
| mother, to whom do these twelve shirts belong, for they are far | |
| too small for father. Then the queen answered with a heavy | |
| heart, dear child, these belong to your twelve brothers. Said the | |
| maiden, where are my twelve brothers, I have never yet heard | |
| of them. She replied, God knows where they are, they are | |
| wandering about the world. Then she took the maiden and opened | |
| the chamber for her, and showed her the twelve coffins with the | |
| shavings, and the death pillows. These coffins, said she, | |
| were destined for your brothers, who went away secretly before you | |
| were born, and she related to her how everything had happened. | |
| Then said the maiden, dear mother, weep not, I will go and seek | |
| my brothers. | |
| So she took the twelve shirts and went forth, and straight into | |
| the great forest. She walked the whole day, and in the evening she | |
| came to the bewitched hut. Then she entered it and found a young | |
| boy, who asked, from whence do you come, and whither are you | |
| bound, and was astonished that she was so beautiful, and wore | |
| royal garments, and had a star on her forehead. And she answered, | |
| I am a king's daughter, and am seeking my twelve brothers, and | |
| I will walk as far as the sky is blue until I find them. And she | |
| showed him the twelve shirts which belonged to them. Then | |
| benjamin saw that she was his sister, and said, I am benjamin, your | |
| youngest brother. And she began to weep for joy, and benjamin | |
| wept also, and they kissed and embraced each other with the | |
| greatest love. But after this he said, dear sister, there is still | |
| one difficulty. We have agreed that every maiden whom we meet | |
| shall die, because we have been obliged to leave our kingdom on | |
| account of a girl. Then said she, I will willingly die, if by so | |
| doing I can save my twelve brothers. | |
| No, answered he, you shall not die. Seat yourself beneath this | |
| tub until our eleven brothers come, and then I will soon come to | |
| an agreement with them. | |
| She did so, and when it was night the others came from hunting, | |
| and their dinner was ready. And as they were sitting at table, and | |
| eating, they asked, what news is there. Said benjamin, don't | |
| you know anything. No, they answered. He continued, you have | |
| been in the forest and I have stayed at home, and yet I know | |
| more than you do. Tell us then, they cried. He answered, but | |
| promise me that the first maiden who meets us shall not be killed. | |
| Yes, they all cried, she shall have mercy, only do tell us. | |
| Then said he, our sister is here, and he lifted up the tub, and | |
| the king's daughter came forth in her royal garments with the | |
| golden star on her forehead, and she was beautiful, delicate and | |
| fair. Then they were all rejoiced, and fell on her neck, and kissed | |
| and loved her with all their hearts. | |
| Now she stayed at home with benjamin and helped him with | |
| the work. The eleven went into the forest and caught game, and | |
| deer, and birds, and wood-pigeons that they might have food, and | |
| the little sister and benjamin took care to make it ready for them. | |
| She sought for the wood for cooking and herbs for vegetables, and | |
| put the pans on the fire so that the dinner was always ready when | |
| the eleven came. She likewise kept order in the little house, and | |
| put beautifully white clean coverings on the little beds and the | |
| brothers were always contented and lived in great harmony with her. | |
| Once upon a time the two at home had prepared a wonderful | |
| feast, and when they were all together, they sat down and ate and | |
| drank and were full of gladness. There was, however, a little | |
| garden belonging to the bewitched house wherein stood twelve lily | |
| flowers, which are likewise called student-lilies. She wished to | |
| give her brothers pleasure, and plucked the twelve flowers, and | |
| thought she would present each brother with one while at dinner. | |
| But at the self-same moment that she plucked the flowers the twelve | |
| brothers were changed into twelve ravens, and flew away over the | |
| forest, and the house and garden vanished likewise. And now the | |
| poor maiden was alone in the wild forest, and when she looked | |
| around, an old woman was standing near her who said, my child, | |
| what have you done. Why did you not leave the twelve white | |
| flowers growing. They were your brothers, who are now forevermore | |
| changed into ravens. The maiden said, weeping, is there no way of | |
| saving them. | |
| No, said the woman, there is but one in the whole world, and | |
| that is so hard that you will not save them by it, for you must be | |
| dumb for seven years, and may not speak or laugh, and if you speak | |
| one single word, and only an hour of the seven years is wanting, all | |
| is in vain, and your brothers will be killed by the one word. | |
| Then said the maiden in her heart, I know with certainty that | |
| I shall set my brothers free, and went and sought a high tree and | |
| seated herself in it and spun, and neither spoke nor laughed. Now | |
| it so happened that a king was hunting in the forest, who had a | |
| great greyhound which ran to the tree on which the maiden was | |
| sitting, and sprang about it, whining, and barking at her. Then | |
| the king came by and saw the beautiful king's daughter with the | |
| golden star on her brow, and was so charmed with her beauty that | |
| he called to ask her if she would be his wife. She made no answer, | |
| but nodded a little with her head. So he climbed up the tree | |
| himself, carried her down, placed her on his horse, and bore her | |
| home. Then the wedding was solemnized with great magnificence and | |
| rejoicing, but the bride neither spoke nor smiled. When they had | |
| lived happily together for a few years, the king's mother, who was | |
| a wicked woman, began to slander the young queen, and said to | |
| the king, this is a common beggar girl whom you have brought | |
| back with you. Who knows what wicked tricks she practises secretly. | |
| Even if she be dumb, and not able to speak, she still might | |
| laugh for once. But those who do not laugh have bad consciences. | |
| At first the king would not believe it, but the old woman urged this | |
| so long, and accused her of so many evil things, that at last the | |
| king let himself be persuaded and sentenced her to death. | |
| And now a great fire was lighted in the courtyard in which she | |
| was to be burnt, and the king stood above at the window and | |
| looked on with tearful eyes, because he still loved her so much. | |
| And when she was bound fast to the stake, and the fire was licking | |
| at her clothes with its red tongue, the last instant of the seven | |
| years expired. Then a whirring sound was heard in the air, and | |
| twelve ravens came flying towards the place, and sank downwards, and | |
| when they touched the earth they were her twelve brothers, whom | |
| she had saved. They tore the fire asunder, extinguished the flames, | |
| set their dear sister free, and kissed and embraced her. And now | |
| as she dared to open her mouth and speak, she told the king why she | |
| had been dumb, and had never laughed. The king rejoiced when | |
| he heard that she was innocent, and they all lived in great unity | |
| until their death. The wicked step-mother was taken before the | |
| judge, and put into a barrel filled with boiling oil and venomous | |
| snakes, and died an evil death. | |