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Introductory Note
Introductory Note
The "Kinder und Hausmarchen" of the brothers Grimm was the first
deliberate attempt to preserve in their pure form the traditional domestic
tales of the German people. The stories published in their volumes of 1812 and
1815, and revised and added to in successive editions, were collected by them
chiefly from the mouths of the peasantry in their native county of Hanau in
Prussia and in Hesse, but the other provinces of Germany, as well as German,
Austria and Switzerland, also contributed. It was the aim of the collectors,
carried out with great fidelity and a remarkable instinct for the truly
popular, to avoid all additions, logical or artistic; to retain as far as
possible the actual language of the peasants, and to eliminate all foreign and
sophisticated elements.
The result of their labors, extending through a long stretch of years,
was twofold: they produced one of the most delightful story books in the
world, and they preserved for the scientific student of mythology and folk -
lore a mass of invaluable material which was even then beginning to disappear.
Further, in the discussion and classification of variant forms of these tales,
gathered in different parts of the world, they advanced notably the science of
comparative mythology.
Wilhelm Grimm, the younger brother, who did the greater part of the work
of collecting and revising, was born at Hanau on February 24, 1786. Toether
with Jakob, he acted as librarian at Cassel, and professor at Gottingen and at
Berlin, where he died, December 16, 1859. Besides the works in which he
collaborated with his brother, he produced an important book on the German
Heroic Legend.
The elder brother, Jakob, was born in 1785, also at Hanau, and died in
Berlin in 1863. He is chiefly distinguished for his work in Germanic
philology, his German Grammar being practically the foundation work of this
branch of learning. The brothers lived in the closest intimacy, occupying the
same house and often working on the same subjects, and both the great German
Dictionary known by their name and the collection of "Marchen" from which the
following stories are taken were the result of this collaboration.
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