I had to cheat a bit with the photo. There are really seven swans, five cygnets and the parents, in the original photo but no way I could get them completely in a square.
Just to show that I was only cheating a little bit, here is the photo with mum and dad cut in the middle:
Another non-Grimm fairy tale. After finding Little Thumbling by Charles Perrault I started looking around and found Die sieben Schwanen (The seven swans). This tale is one retold by Ludwig Bechstein, a German Romantic who also collected fairy tales like the Grimms. The story is similar to the one about the seven ravens except that in this case the seven brothers are babies born to the Prince’s wife. Mother-in-law hates the wife and replaces the babies with dog pups. She orders the babies killed but the servant tasked with the deed lets them live. They survive, their days split between being swans and boys. The mother-in-law is decidedly cruel against her daughter-in-law, has her buried in a hole up to her neck, only gives her dog food to eat and – quite unusual – has a fountain built close by so that people who come to wash their hands dry them afterwards on the woman’s hair. The swans carry gold chains around their necks, gifts from their mother. When the bad queen hears of this she has the swans caught and collects the chains as the boys can only become human again through the chains. She orders the chains to be melted down but after she has done this with one she is discovered and buried in the self-same hole the wife of the prince is freed from. Six of the swans turn permanently into boys but the seventh swan has to stay a bird and according to the storyteller has many adventures afterwards.
–
–
–
–
.
.



That’s a great story
LikeLike
What a tale. Somehow I always think of swans as females.
LikeLike
What a creepy tale. But your ingenuity with your photo dilemma is excellent.
LikeLiked by 1 person
exactly what Margaret says . . . in fact I am awe of your creativity, and that tale is going to stick with me all day!
LikeLiked by 2 people
It’s a horrible story. Normally bad m-i-ls and stepmothers just kill. But that #%&!! went out of her way to maim and humiliate in graphic detail.
LikeLiked by 1 person
it does make me wonder what happened in their own lives to have been writing this kind of stuff!
LikeLiked by 2 people
The guy who wrote down this story collected fairy tales from the spinning rooms of the villages. It was one of the stories floating around. This is why we have so many Cinderella versions – oral tradition.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Interesting! So good that these slightly nerdy people exist and save so much oral tradition from being lost.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I do love how stories were shared and changed with whoever was delivering them
LikeLiked by 1 person