Endless dancing
Red Shoes (Boots) modelled by Power Ranger Jason Lee ScottFairy tales often conceal dark thoughts and fears. Frequently, they’re based on unpleasant and unpalatable facts, and are used as moral fables.
The Brothers Grimm wrote the story of Snow White in 1812, though it traces its origins to earlier folk tales in which a mother wished for a beautiful child, ‘’with skin as white as snow, lips as red as blood, and hair as black as ebony.”
In Snow White the lovely child was born and adored, but her loving mother died soon after the baby’s birth. Her father married a beautiful woman who was excessively vain and despised the pretty little girl. Many times, she sought to kill her, but each time her efforts were thwarted.
After the trials and tribulations visited upon the poor child by her stepmother, Snow White was awoken from her living death and married her handsome prince. The evil stepmother was invited to the wedding, but was overcome with envy and hatred at seeing the lovely young woman, who had displaced her as “the fairest in all the land.” Her wickedness was repaid with a curse. She was compelled to wear a pair of shoes of red-hot iron and dance until she collapsed and died.
Evil is as evil does, you might say.
A little more than thirty years later, Hans Christian Andersen wrote The Red Shoes in 1845.
If you have ever wondered why ‘Karen’ became a pejorative term for rude, privileged women, the clue may lie within the story. It wasn’t adopted as an insult until the twenty-first century, after an unpleasant incident in Central Park, New York.
In defence of Karens everywhere, I have known several by that name, all perfectly pleasant.
In the story, poor orphaned Karen was adopted by a wealthy lady and indulged in everything, growing up spoilt and conceited. Spotting a pretty pair of red shoes in a cobbler’s shop window, Karen could not rest until she acquired them. Once in possession of them, she could not bear to remove them.
Dressed in white for her confirmation, she refused to change them for something more appropriate, greatly upsetting those around her, particularly her guardian. Later, as her guardian lay seriously ill Karen wore the shoes to a ball, giving little heed to the woman who had taken her in and looked after her.
To her shock, as she left the ball, she found herself dancing and unable to stop. An angel appeared and told her she was cursed to wear the shoes and dance through all eternity. In desperation, Karen begged for her feet to be chopped off, and they danced away from her. She was then given wooden feet and crutches, and lived the rest of her life humbly.
That is a profound object lesson.
There are shades of eternal dancing in the Pied Piper of Hamelin, another story written by the Brothers Grimm. It is a strange tale that has its roots in history.
After the Pied Piper had been cheated of his agreed fee for ridding the town of Hamelin of its plague of rats, he took his revenge by enticing the children to follow him out of the town. The children could not resist the strains of the Piper’s tunes, and danced away to a lair in the mountains, never to be seen again. One poor crippled boy, unable to keep up with his companions, was left behind to tell the tale.
As always, there are several versions of the story, but there is a street in Hamelin which is said to be the last place the children were seen alive before they disappeared. It is called ‘Bungelosenstrasse,’ (street without drums) and no music or dancing is ever allowed on that thoroughfare.
You can't beat traditional fairy stories for horror!
ReplyDeleteThe Grimm fairy tales lived up to their name. There was not so much 'happily ever after'.
ReplyDeleteOur poor children, fairy tales, nursery rhymes, all with horrible undertones.
ReplyDeleteThose tales gave me nightmares as a child 😱
ReplyDeleteI do remember being scared reading some of these as a child. Today I can see them being the basis of horror movies with the usual embellishments.
ReplyDeleteI know that many fairy tales I read as a child were, shall we say, edited to take out most of the gore, but they were still frightening. I should go back and read the unedited versions. This was an interesting followup on your post about uncontrollable dancing.
ReplyDeleteYou make fascinating connections between the stories and modernity here. These details also reminded me of some girls I went to middle school with whose religion did not allow them to dance. I think that puritanical notion might be connected too as in limiting freedoms and then disparaging said freedoms to maintain control. The oldest stories are indeed like nesting dolls.
ReplyDeleteThese timeless tales remind us that beneath their enchantment lie enduring moral warnings about vanity, greed, and the consequences of human folly
ReplyDeleteI read quite a few compilations of original fairy tales as a tween, and was shocked at how different they were from the Disney tales I was used to.
ReplyDeleteThat is a new take on Snow White for me. I didn't know that.
ReplyDeleteThe original fairy tales were often quite grim.
ReplyDeleteI know the story of Snow White well but never heard the part about the stepmother and the shoes of red hot iron
ReplyDeleteNasty story by the Brothers Grimm.
ReplyDeleteI never read these Fairy tales to my kids, we read different kid stories.
ReplyDeleteOf course as a child in Germany, I knew my Grimms Märchen inside out, and found nearly all of them quite horrible and scary. Pushing a woman (even if she's a witch) into a burnig oven? Shutting up someone in a tower for 100 years? Hot iron shoes that kill you? Poisoned apples, kidnapping and all sorts of cruel stuff? Yes, the Good usually wins over the Bad in those tales, but at what price!
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I didn't know the name Karen was associated with rude, privileged women; it certainly isn't here, and like you, I know some very nice Karens who are neither privileged nor rude.