.
At that very instant, the Queen drove by, and, hearing the screams,
she stopped the carriage, came into the house, and asked the mother
why she beat her daughter in such a way that people in passing could
hear the cries.
Then the mother felt ashamed that her daughter's laziness should be
known, so she said: "Oh, your Majesty, I cannot take her away from her
spinning: she spins from morning till night, and I am so poor that I
cannot afford to buy the flax."
"There is nothing I like better than to hear the sound of spinning,"
the Queen replied, "and nothing pleases me more than the whirl of
spinning-wheels. Let me take your daughter home with me to the castle;
I have flax enough, and she may spin there to her heart's content."
The mother rejoiced greatly in her heart, and the Queen took the
maiden home with her. When they arrived in the castle, she led her up
into three rooms, which were piled from top to bottom with the finest
flax.
"Now spin me this flax," said the Queen, "and when thou has spun it
all, thou shalt have my eldest son for a husband. Although thou art
poor, yet I do not despise thee on that account, for thy untiring
industry is dowry enough."
The maiden was filled with inward terror, for she could not have spun
the flax had she sat there day and night until she was three hundred
years old! When she was left alone, she began to weep, and thus she
sat for three days without stirring a finger.
On the third day the Queen came, and when she saw that nothing was
as yet spun, she wondered over it, but the maiden excused herself by
saying that she could not begin in consequence of the great sorrow she
felt in being separated from her mother.
This satisfied the Queen, who, on leaving her, said:
"Thou must begin to work for me to-morrow."
But when the maiden was once more alone, she did not know what to do,
or how to help herself, and in her distress she went to the window and
looked out. She saw three women passing by, the first of whom had a
great broad foot, the second such a large under-lip that it hung down
to her chin, and the third an enormous thumb.
They stopped under the window, and, looking up, asked the maiden what
was the matter.
When she had told them of her trouble, they immediately offered her
their help, and said:
"Wilt thou invite us to the wedding, and not be ashamed of us, but
call us thy aunts, and let us sit at thy table? If thou wilt, we will
spin all the flax,
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