THE LITTLE SISTER OF THE GIANTS
Once upon a time there was a little
girl who was very beautiful. Her eyes were like
the eyes of the gazelle; her hair hid in its soft waves
the deep shadows of the night; her smile was like the
sunrise. Each year as she grew older she grew
also more and more beautiful. Her name was Angelita.
The little girl’s mother was
dead, and her father, the image-maker, had married
a second time. The step-mother was a woman who
was renowned in the city for her great beauty.
As her little step-daughter grew more and more lovely
each day of her life she soon became jealous of the
child. Each night she asked the image-maker, “Who
is more beautiful, your wife or your child?”
The image-maker was a wise man and
knew all too well his wife’s jealous disposition.
He always responded, “You, my wife, are absolutely
peerless.”
One day the image-maker suddenly died,
and the step-mother and step-daughter were left alone
in the world. They both mourned deeply the passing
of the kind image-maker.
One day as they were leaning over
the balcony two passers-by observed them, and one
said to the other, “Do you notice those beautiful
women in the balcony? The mother is beautiful,
but the daughter is far more beautiful.”
The step-mother had always been jealous of the daughter’s
loveliness, but now her jealousy was fanned into a
burning flame. The wise image-maker was no longer
there to tell her that she was peerless.
The next day the mother and daughter
again leaned over the balcony. Two soldiers passed
by and one said to the other: “Do you observe
those two beautiful women in the balcony? The
mother is beautiful, but the daughter is far more
beautiful.” The step-mother flew into a
terrible rage. She now knew that it was true as
she had long feared. The girl was more beautiful
than she. Her jealousy knew no bounds. She
seized her step-daughter roughly and shut her up in
a little room in the attic.
The little room in the attic had just
one tiny window high up in the wall. The window
was shut, but Angelita climbed up to open it in order
to get a little air. The next afternoon she grew
weary of the confinement of the little room, so she
dug a foothold in the wall where she could stand and
look out of the window. Her step-mother was leaning
over the balcony all alone when two cavalheiros
passed by. One said to the other, “Do you
observe the beautiful woman in the balcony?”
“Yes,” replied the other. “She
is a beautiful woman, but the little maid who is kept
a prisoner in the attic is far more beautiful.”
The step-mother became desperate.
She ordered the old negro servant to carry the girl
into the jungle and kill her. “Be sure that
you bring back the tip of Angelita’s tongue,
so that I may know that you have obeyed my order,”
she said.
Angelita was very happy to be taken
out of the little attic room, and set out for a walk
with the old negro with a light heart. They walked
through the city streets and out into the open country.
Soon they had reached the deep jungle. “Where
are we going?” the girl asked in surprise.
“We are taking a walk for our
health, yayazinha,” replied the old negro.
Soon they were so far in the jungle
that the path was entirely overgrown. No ray
of light penetrated through the deep foliage.
Angelita became frightened. “I’ll
not go another step if you do not tell me where you
are taking me,” she said as she stamped her little
foot upon the ground.
The old negro burst into tears and
told Angelita all that her step-mother had commanded.
“I could not hurt one hair of your lovely head,
much less cut off the tip of your little tongue, yayazinha,”
sobbed the old man.
Angelita stood still and thought.
“Go back to my step-mother,” she said
to the old man. “On the way you will see
plenty of dogs. Cut off the tip of a little dog’s
tongue and carry it home to my step-mother.”
This is what the old negro did.
The step-mother believed him and thought that he had
slain her step-daughter according to her command.
Angelita, in the meantime, wandered
on and on through the jungle. The big snakes
glided swiftly out of her path. The monkeys and
the parrots chattered to keep her from being lonely.
She wandered on and on until finally she came to an
enormous palace. The front door was wide open.
She went from room to room, but the palace was entirely
deserted. There was not a neat, orderly room
in the entire palace.
“I can make these lovely rooms
neat and clean,” said Angelita. “They
surely need some one to do it!” She found a broom
and went to work at once. Soon the whole palace
was in order once more. Everything was clean
and bright.
Just as Angelita was finishing her
task she heard a great noise. She looked out
of the door, and there were three enormous giants entering
the house. She had never dreamed that giants could
be so big. She was frightened nearly to death
and scrambled under a chair as fast as she could.
When the giants came into the house
they were amazed to find everything in such splendid
order. “This is a different looking place
from what we left,” said the biggest giant.
“What dirty, disorderly giants
we have been, living here all by ourselves,”
said the middle-sized giant. “I just realize
it, now that I see what our house looks like when
it is neat and clean.”
“What kind fairy could have
done all this work while we were away?” said
the littlest giant, who was not little at all, but
almost as big as his enormous brothers.
The three giants fell to discussing
the question. They could not guess how their
house could have been made so clean. Their voices
were so very kind, in spite of being so loud and heavy,
that Angelita decided she dare come out from under
the chair and let them see who had done the work for
them. She quickly crawled out from her hiding
place.
“What lovely fairy is this?”
asked the biggest giant, looking at her kindly.
He thought that she really was a fairy.
“This is the loveliest fairy
I ever saw in all my life,” said the middle-sized
giant.
“How did such a lovely fairy
ever happen to find our dirty, disorderly palace?”
asked the littlest giant who was not little at all.
Angelita told the three giants her
story. Her beauty and her sweet ways completely
entranced them.
“Please live with us always
here in our palace in the jungle and be our little
sister,” said the biggest giant, and the middle-sized
giant and the littlest giant, speaking all at once.
Their three big deep voices all together made a noise
like thunder.
Angelita lived in the palace with
the three giants after that. Every day when they
went out to hunt she would take the broom and make
the palace neat and clean. They called her “little
sister” and loved her with all their big giant
hearts.
All was well until a little bird went
and told Angelita’s step-mother that she was
alive and living in the depths of the jungle with the
three giants. When the step-mother heard about
it she was so angry that she thought she could never
be happy as long as Angelita was living in the world.
She consulted a wicked witch as soon as she could
find her shawl.
The wicked witch gave the step-mother
some poisoned slippers. “These will cause
the immediate death of any person who puts them on,”
said the wicked witch. Then she showed the step-mother
just how to reach the palace where Angelita lived
in the depths of the jungle with the three giants.
Angelita’s step-mother followed
the directions which the witch had given her and easily
found the giants’ palace. Angelita was so
happy living with the giants and keeping house for
them that she had forgotten what fear was like.
She was not frightened at all when she heard some
one clap hands before the door one day when the giants
were away. She went to the door; and, though
she was very much surprised to see her step-mother,
she invited her into the house. Her step-mother
gave her a loving embrace and kissed her upon both
cheeks. “Dear child, it is a long time
since I have seen you,” she said. “I
have brought you a little gift to show you that I
have not forgotten you. It is only a poor, mean
little gift, but it is the best I could bring.”
Angelita was touched at her step-mother’s
gift and accepted it with hearty thanks. As soon
as her step-mother had gone she untied the red ribbon
around the package and opened it. Inside was a
pair of leather slippers. Angelita looked at
the little slippers. They were like the slippers
which her dear father, the image-maker, had once brought
home to her. “How kind it was in my step-mother
to bring these slippers to me,” she said as
she put them on.
As soon as the slippers were on Angelita’s
feet, she fell dead just as the wicked witch had promised
the step-mother she would do. Her step-mother
was watching through the window, and when she saw Angelita
dead she hurried home in joy. “Now I, alone,
am the peerless beauty,” she said.
When the three giants came home to
dinner they knew at once that there was something
wrong. There were dirty tracks on the floor and
dirty finger prints upon the door. “Who
made these dirty marks?” said the biggest giant.
“What has happened to our dear
little sister that she has not cleaned them away?”
asked the middle-sized giant.
“I am afraid there is something
wrong with little sister,” said the littlest
giant who was not little at all.
They clapped their big hands before
the door, but no smiling little sister ran to meet
them. They entered the big hall of the palace
with a bound. There in the middle of the floor
lay Angelita, just as she had fallen when she put
on the poisoned slippers which her step-mother had
given her.
“What evil, has befallen our
dear little sister?” said the biggest giant.
“Who could have slain our little
sister whom we loved so much?” said the middle-sized
giant.
“Who will keep house for us
now that our dear little sister is dead?” asked
the littlest giant.
Then the biggest giant and the middle-sized
giant and the littlest giant all began to sob so loud
that it shook the earth. “Our dear little
sister is dead! What shall we do! What shall
we do!”
The giants could not go into the city
to give their little sister Christian burial, but
they built a beautiful casket out of silver and carried
it to the path which led to the city. Then they
hid themselves to watch and make sure that some one
found it to carry to the burying place.
Soon a handsome prince passed by on
horseback. He noticed the silver casket at once
and opened it. The girl whose still form lay inside
was the most beautiful maid he had ever gazed upon.
“This dead maid is my own true love,”
he said and he carried the silver casket home to his
own palace.
He commanded that no one should enter
the room where he placed the silver casket, and this
aroused the curiosity of his little sister at once.
At the very first opportunity she slipped into the
room. She opened the casket and was surprised
to see the beautiful quiet maid. “You are
very lovely,” she said to the still form, “all
except your slippers. I think they are very ugly.”
With these words she pulled off the leather slippers.
Angelita gave a deep sigh, opened
her beautiful eyes, and asked for a drink of water.
The little sister called the prince
at once. When he saw Angelita was really alive
he could hardly believe the good fortune. He asked
that the wedding night be celebrated immediately.
Angelita begged that she might go
back into the deep jungle and invite the three giants
to the wedding. The biggest giant, the middle-sized
giant, and the littlest giant who was not little at
all, came to the wedding feast. After that they
visited their little sister often at her new home;
and, when she had children of her own, it was the
funniest sight one ever saw to see the biggest giant
hold the tiny babes upon his knee.