The
Wicked Stepmother
Kashmir
ONE day a Brahman adjured his wife not to eat anything without him lest
she should become a she goat. In reply the Brahman's wife begged him
not to eat anything without her, lest he should be changed into a
tiger. A long time passed by and neither of them broke their word,
until one day the Brahman's wife, while giving food to her children,
herself took a little to taste; and her husband was not present. That
very moment she was changed into a goat.
When the Brahman came home and saw the she goat running about the house
he was intensely grieved, because he knew that it was none other than
his own beloved wife. He kept the goat tied up in the yard of his
house, and tended it very carefully.
In a few years he married again, but this wife was not kind to the
children. She at once took a dislike to them, and treated them unkindly
and gave them little food. Their mother, the she goat, heard their
complainings, and noticed that they were getting thin, and therefore
called one of them to her secretly, and bade the child tell the others
to strike her horns with a stick whenever they were very hungry, and
some food would fall down for them. They did so, and instead of getting
weaker and thinner, as their stepmother had expected, they became
stronger and stronger. She was surprised to see them getting so fat and
strong while she was giving them so little food.
In course of time a one-eyed daughter was born to this wicked woman.
She loved the girl with all her heart, and grudged not any expense or
attention that she thought the child required. One day, when the girl
had grown quite big and could walk and talk well, her mother sent her
to play with the other children, and ordered her to notice how and
whence they obtained anything to eat. The girl promised to do so, and
most rigidly stayed by them the whole day, and saw all that happened.
On hearing that the goat supplied her stepchildren with food the woman
got very angry, and determined to kill the beast as soon as possible.
She pretended to be very ill, and sending for the hakim, bribed him to
prescribe some goat's flesh for her. The Brahman was very anxious about
his wife's state, and although he grieved to have to slay the goat (for
he was obliged to kill the goat, not having money to purchase another),
yet he did not mind if his wife really recovered. But the little
children wept when they heard this, and went to their mother, the she
goat, in great distress, and told her everything.
"Do not weep, my darlings," she said. "It is much better for me to die
than to live such a life as this. Do not weep. I have no fear
concerning you. Food will be provided for you, if you will attend to my
instructions. Be sure to gather my bones, and bury them all together in
some secret place, and whenever you are very hungry go to that place
and ask for food. Food will then be given you."
The poor she goat gave this advice only just in time. Scarcely had it
finished these words and the children had departed than the butcher
came with a knife and slew it. Its body was cut into pieces and cooked,
and the stepmother had the meat, but the stepchildren got the bones.
They did with them as they had been directed, and thus got food
regularly and in abundance.
Some time after the death of the she goat one morning one of the
stepdaughters was washing her face in the stream that ran by the house,
when her nose ring unfastened and fell into the water. A fish happened
to see it and swallowed it, and this fish was caught by a man and sold
to the king's cook for his majesty's dinner. Great was the surprise of
the cook when, on opening the fish to clean it, he found the nose ring.
He took it to the king, who was so interested in it that he issued a
proclamation and set it to every town and village in his dominions,
that whosoever had missed a nose ring should apply to him. Within a few
days the brother of the girl reported to the king that the nose ring
belonged to his sister, who had lost it one day while bathing her face
in the river. The king ordered the girl to appear before him, and was
so fascinated by her pretty face and nice manner that he married her,
and provided amply for the support of her family.