Today we’re gonna talk about a story I found in my
collection “The Turnip Princess,” which is all stories compiled by Schonwerth.
(Guys they’re amazing.)
So it’s a pretty basic story. Think “The Boy Who Set Forth
to Learn What Fear Was.” Same basic pattern. You’re trying to win the hand of a
princess, so you go and spend a long weekend at the local haunted castle.
There are a lot of things that can happen when you spend
three nights in a haunted castle. Demons might go bowling, with your head as
the ball and your ribs as the pins. They might roast you on a spit. They might
peel off your skin. The ghosts come. The ghouls come. Every night you die, and
if you’re brave enough you wake up in the morning alive.
Each night it gets worse. The third is the climax. And on
this particular third night, in this particular story, there appear twelve
turtles the size of washbasins.
In order to win the princess, you must kiss each one of
these twelve turtles.
Now, fairy tales tend to have a lot of euphemisms, granted,
but I don’t think that’s what we’re dealing with here. Schonwerth and his
translator tend to be pretty direct. All this dude has to do on his final night
in the haunted castle is kiss some turtles.
Which brings us to the next thing about Schonwerth. He
actually did that thing we like to pretend the Grimms did, where he wandered
around collecting stories from random people across the country. And then he
just wrote them down. Didn’t edit, didn’t clean them up, just wrote them down.
So these ridiculous stories he’s telling are all stories
that someone told to him. Educated people, uneducated people, old people,
children, mothers and fathers, people from the city, people from the country—we
have no idea who.
For this particular story, I like to imagine it being told
by a small child. A girl of six, perhaps.
“And then the demons boil him into soup!” she tells
Schonwerth, very excited.
“Oh? And what happens next?”
She pauses, considering. “And then there are turtles.”
“And what happens with the turtles?”
“He’s gotta kiss ‘em!”
I just love Schonwerth so much, guys. There’s so much
personality in his stories, and not even his own personality, a good chunk of
the time. I’ve talked a lot over the
years about collective storytelling, about folklore as a conversation we’re
having throughout history. Men like Schonwerth make our conversation partners
feel like real people again. And it’s beautiful.
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