"The Ass", "The Donkey", or "The Little Donkey" (German: Das Eselein) is a German fairy tale collected by Brothers Grimm compiled in the Grimm's Fairy Tales.[1]
Tale type
"The Ass", "The Donkey" or "The Little Donkey" (Das Eselein) is cataloged as KHM 144 (since the second edition of the Grimms' Fairy Tales), in the compilation of the Brothers Grimm.[2][3][4]
This tale was not collected from oral recitation but was reworked by Wilhelm Grimm from the fourteenth-century Latin tale Asinarius.[5][6]
The piece is representative of the Aarne-Thompson tale type 430 "The Ass"[5][2] (or "The Donkey Bridegroom"[4]), and exhibits the motif D721.3 "Disenchantment by destroying skin (covering)".[5]
Synopsis
A king and queen had everything they wished for but no children. Eventually, the queen gave birth, but to a young donkey. They were disappointed but the king decided to raise the donkey as his son and heir. The donkey requested to learn to play the lute and became an accomplished player. Seeing the reflection of himself in the mirror one day, he became sad and decided to travel outside of the kingdom.
He eventually arrived to a kingdom that was ruled by an old king who had a beautiful daughter. When he knocked on the gate the gatekeeper did not give him admittance, but when he played his lute, the gatekeeper ran to the king and told him. Initially mocked by the king's attendance, the donkey insists on being treated as a nobleman and the king lets the donkey sit beside his daughter and he behaves like a gentleman.
After many days, the donkey grew sad and the king offered him many things to make him happy, as the king liked him a great deal. The donkey would only accept the king's beautiful daughter as his wife, and they married. After the wedding, the king sent a servant to watch their bedroom to see that the donkey behaved himself. The servant observed the donkey take off his skin and underneath he was a handsome young man. He related this to the king, who observed for himself later and threw the donkey skin away in the night. When the young man awoke, he panicked and decided to run away. On his way out, the king found him and told him to stay and offered to make him his heir. The young man accepted, and when the old king died the next year, he became king and had a glorious life.
See also
References
Citations
- ^ "The Donkey". Sur la lune fairy tales. Archived from the original on July 7, 2017. Retrieved Feb 2, 2022.
- ^ a b Thompson, Stith (1977). The Folktale. University of California Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-520-03537-9.
- ^ Ziolkowski (2010), pp. 168, 341ff
- ^ a b Ashliman, D.L., "The Little Donkey"
- ^ a b c Aarne, Antti (1987). Thompson, Stith (ed.). The Types of the Folk-tale: A Classification and Bibliography. FF communications 84. p. 145. ISBN 978-951-41-0132-8.
- ^ Ziolkowski (2010), pp. 168, 200
Bibliography
Further reading
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| Works | |
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Notable tales |
- "Allerleirauh"
- "The Beam"
- "Bearskin"
- "The Brave Little Tailor"
- "The Bright Sun Brings It to Light"
- "Brother and Sister"
- "Brother Lustig"
- "Cat and Mouse in Partnership"
- "Cinderella"
- "Clever Elsie"
- "Clever Hans"
- "Clever Gretel"
- "The Clever Little Tailor"
- "Death's Messengers"
- "The Devil's Sooty Brother"
- "The Devil and his Grandmother"
- "The Devil with the Three Golden Hairs"
- "Doctor Know-all"
- "The Dog and the Sparrow"
- "The Donkey"
- "Donkey Cabbages"
- "The Elves and the Shoemaker"
- "Fair Katrinelje and Pif-Paf-Poltrie"
- "Ferdinand the Faithful and Ferdinand the Unfaithful"
- "The Fisherman and His Wife"
- "Fitcher's Bird"
- "The Flail from Heaven"
- "Foundling-Bird"
- "The Four Skillful Brothers"
- "The Fox and the Cat"
- "The Fox and the Geese"
- "Frederick and Catherine"
- "The Frog Prince"
- "Gambling Hansel"
- "The Girl Without Hands"
- "The Gnome"
- "Going a Traveling"
- "The Gold-Children"
- "The Godfather"
- "Godfather Death"
- "The Golden Bird"
- "The Golden Goose"
- "The Good Bargain"
- "The Goose Girl"
- "The Goose-Girl at the Well"
- "The Grave Mound"
- "Hans in Luck"
- "Hans My Hedgehog"
- "Hansel and Gretel"
- "The Hare's Bride"
- "Herr Korbes"
- "How Six Made Their Way in the World"
- "The Hurds
- "The Hut in the Forest"
- "Iron John"
- "The Iron Stove"
- "The Jew Among Thorns"
- "Jorinde and Joringel"
- "The Juniper Tree"
- "The Knapsack, the Hat, and the Horn"
- "The King of the Golden Mountain"
- "King Thrushbeard"
- "The Lambkin and the Little Fish"
- "The Lazy Spinner"
- "The Little Peasant"
- "Little Red Riding Hood"
- "Looking for a Bride"
- "The Louse and the Flea"
- "The Maid of Brakel"
- "Mary's Child"
- "Mother Trudy"
- "The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage"
- "Mother Holle"
- "Old Hildebrand"
- "Old Sultan"
- "The Old Man and his Grandson"
- "The Old Woman in the Wood"
- "One-Eye, Two-Eyes, and Three-Eyes"
- "The Pack of Ragamuffins"
- "The Peasant's Wise Daughter
- "Pied Piper of Hamelin"
- "The Pink"
- "The Queen Bee"
- "Rapunzel"
- "The Raven"
- "The Riddle"
- "The Robber Bridegroom"
- "Rumpelstiltskin"
- "The Seven Ravens"
- "The Seven Swabians"
- "The Shroud"
- "The Singing, Springing Lark"
- "The Singing Bone"
- "The Six Servants"
- "The Six Swans"
- "Sleeping Beauty"
- "Snow White"
- "Snow-White and Rose-Red"
- "The Spirit in the Bottle"
- "The Star Money"
- "The Story of the Youth Who Went Forth to Learn What Fear Was"
- "The Straw, the Coal, and the Bean"
- "Sweet Porridge"
- "Sweetheart Roland"
- "The Tailor in Heaven"
- "The Thief and His Master"
- "The Three Apprentices"
- "The Three Army Surgeons"
- "The Three Feathers"
- "The Three Languages"
- "The Three Little Birds"
- "The Three Little Men in the Wood"
- "The Three Snake-Leaves"
- "The Three Spinners"
- "The Twelve Idle Servants"
- "The Two Kings' Children"
- "The Water Nixie"
- "Thumbling"
- "Thumbling's Travels"
- "Town Musicians of Bremen"
- "Trusty John"
- "The Turnip"
- "The Twelve Brothers"
- "The Twelve Dancing Princesses"
- "The Twelve Huntsmen"
- "The Two Brothers"
- "The Water of Life"
- "The Wedding of Mrs. Fox"
- "The White Bride and the Black One"
- "The White Snake"
- "The Willful Child"
- "The Wishing-Table, the Gold-Ass, and the Cudgel in the Sack"
- "The Wolf and the Fox"
- "The Wolf and the Seven Young Goats"
- "The Wonderful Musician"
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| Other | |
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"Animal as Bridegroom" |
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| Literary tales | |
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| Main tale types | | ATU 425 |
- Pintosmalto
- Master Semolina/Mr Simigdáli
- Fairer-than-a-Fairy
- The Ram
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| ATU 425A | |
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| ATU 425B |
- Cupid and Psyche
- Graciosa and Percinet
- The Green Serpent
- The King of Love
- Prince Wolf (Ulv Kongesøn)
- The Golden Root
- The Horse-Devil and the Witch
- Tulisa, the Wood-Cutter's Daughter
- Khastakhumar and Bibinagar
- Habrmani
- The Son of the Ogress
- Yasmin and the Serpent Prince
- The Little Crab
- Pájaro Verde
- Los Tres Claveles
- The Castle of Return and No Return
- Es Negret
- The Story of the Abandoned Princess
- Grünkappe
- The Snake-Prince Sleepy-Head
- The Padisah's Youngest Daughter and Her Donkey-Skull Husband
- The Princess Who Could Not Keep a Secret
- The Tale of Aftab
- The King's Daughter and the Dragon
- The Spotted Deer
- The Stone of Patience
- The Tale of the Woodcutter and his Daughters
- Sea-Horse
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| ATU 425C | |
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| ATU 425D |
- The Golden Crab
- The Donkey's Head
- The Donkey's Head (Turkish folktale)
- The Camel Husband
- Saint Passaway
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| ATU 425E |
- The Padlock
- The Story of Oimè
- Filek-Zelebi
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| Other tale types | | AaTh 425Gp | |
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| ATU 425M | |
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| AaTh 425Np |
- The Story of Princess Zeineb and King Leopard
- María, manos blancas
- Feather O' My Wing
- The Man Who Came Out Only at Night
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| Related tales | | ATU 426 | |
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| AaTh 428p |
- Prunella
- The Little Girl Sold with the Pears
- La Fada Morgana
- The Man and the Girl at the Underground Mansion
- The Girl as Soldier
- The Tale About Baba-Yaga
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| ATU 430 | |
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| ATU 431 | |
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| ATU 432 | |
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| ATU 433 |
- King Lindworm
- The Bewitched Prince
- The Stepdaughter and the Black Serpent
- The Dragon-Prince and the Stepmother
- The Girl with Two Husbands
- Dragon-Child and Sun-Child
- Muchie-Lal
- Champavati
- The Story of the Hamadryad
- The Origin of the Sirenia
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| AaTh 437p |
- The Dead Prince and the Talking Doll
- Kajalrekha
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| ATU 440 |
- The Frog Prince
- The Well of the World's End
- The Tale of the Queen Who Sought a Drink From a Certain Well
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| ATU 441 | |
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| ATU 442 |
- The Old Woman in the Wood
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| ATU 444* | |
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Notes: "Literary" indicates tale whose origin is traceable to a literary source with a known author; p indicates a previous tale type extant until 2004. "AaTh" refers to the Aarne–Thompson–Uther Index pre-2004; "ATU" refers to the system post-2004. |