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The Horror Library

Grimm

5 stories

The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage

Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm·1912·3 min read

This classic Grimm fairy tale tells of three companions—a mouse, a bird, and a sausage—who live contentedly together, each performing assigned household duties. When the bird becomes dissatisfied and convinces the others to swap roles, a series of catastrophic consequences unfolds that destroys their happy home. Published as part of the Brothers Grimm's influential collection of German folktales, this darkly comedic story functions as a cautionary tale about the dangers of discontent and disrupting established order.

Clever Elsie

Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm·1912·6 min read

This Grimm fairy tale is a clever satire on folk wisdom and the valorization of cunning over genuine intelligence. "Clever Elsie" tells the story of a young woman whose reputation for cleverness—based largely on her parents' boasts—attracts a suitor, but whose actions reveal a disturbing absence of reason. Originally collected in the early 19th century by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, the tale uses comedic escalation and a surreal ending to critique both parental delusion and the ease with which foolishness can masquerade as wisdom. Readers should expect dark humor and a conclusion that abandons the usual fairy-tale resolution.

The Lambkin and the Little Fish

Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm·1912·3 min read

This classic German fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm tells of two orphaned siblings tormented by a cruel, witchcraft-practicing stepmother who transforms them into a lamb and a fish as punishment. When their shared suffering and poignant communion nearly costs the lamb its life, a compassionate cook and wise woman intervene to restore them to human form. The story explores themes of familial love, redemption through kindness, and the triumph of goodness over malevolent magic.

The Old Beggar-Woman

Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm·1912·1 min read

This brief moral tale from the Brothers Grimm presents a simple but troubling encounter between a charitable boy and a vulnerable beggar woman. Written in the Grimms' characteristic folk narrative style, the story exemplifies their interest in ethical lessons and the consequences of human neglect. Readers should expect a deceptively straightforward narrative that questions moral responsibility and the duty we owe to the most vulnerable.

The Three Sluggards

Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm·1912·1 min read

This brief fairy tale from the Brothers Grimm presents a darkly comic inversion of virtue and merit: a dying king declares that his laziest son shall inherit the throne. The story exemplifies the Grimms' tradition of moral fables with unexpected twists, where the conventional values of diligence and ambition are humorously inverted. Readers should expect a short, witty tale with a paradoxical lesson about human nature and succession.