Goose Girl – Character Connections

Deconstructing Grimm’s Goosegirl
(disclaimer: although, with the exception of the notes on symbolism and the description of a knacker’s duties, these
thoughts came spontaneously as I reread and wrote, I do not claim that they are original. I’m sure that many readers,
tellers, and interpreters of folktales have arrived at similar conclusions. I’m also certain that many people smarter
than I could set me straight on some of the things I’ve gotten wrong and I welcome such correction.)
Characters (in order of appearance)
Old Queen
Princess
Maid
Falada
Handkerchief & Blood
Young King
Old King
Conrad
Geese
the Knacker
Character Connections
The Old Queen is the princess’s mother. She arranges her betrothal to the young king. Not only
does the mother shower her daughter with extravagant material goods, she also sheds blood for
her. She gives her a charm, a blessing in the form of three drops of her own blood on a white
“rag.” Neither the goods nor the blood can help the princess in her time of need.
The old queen is the maid’s mistress and her sovereign. She puts her only child in the keeping of
the maid. Does she have some reason to trust her? The old queen is also Falada’s mistress, in the
sense that she rules or owns every sentient being in her realm. Was it her decision that he should
be the princess’s mount for the journey? Falada repeats the words spoken by the blood.
The old queen uses the handkerchief (Grimm says ‘rag’) to hold the blood she gives her
daughter. The rag falls into the river (water is feminine, symbolizes mother -- source of all life),
presumably the blood becomes one with the water.
The old queen bestows her daughter on the young king and she sends her daughter to the realm
of the old king. She knows nothing of Conrad. Is the river where Conrad takes the geese to graze
the same one that carried away the rag and blood?
The old queen and the geese – geese are symbols of mother earth and fertility.
The old queen and the knacker – the queen approaches death; the knacker renders the body, finds
uses for the body once the soul has fled.
The Princess / Goosegirl embarks on a journey with the maid. (It’s strange that these two
women, the princess and the maid, travel alone. Perhaps it means that one is always alone on the
journey.) Like her mother, she is the maid’s mistress and sovereign. She gives orders to the maid.
She ends up giving her clothes, her horse, and her word of honor to the maid. The maid takes the
princess’s betrothed and her rightful place in the house of the two kings.
The princess rides Falada as she embarks on her journey. She bargains for his head when she
hears he is going to die. She speaks to Falada’s head. He is the only one to whom she can speak
openly because he saw what happened by the river bank. There is no need to reveal her secret to
him; he knows it and is clearly sympathetic.
The princess is betrothed to the young king, yet he doesn’t recognize her when they meet. He
doesn’t even seem to see her.
The princess is seen by the old king. He does recognize her, but he doesn’t know who she is. He
begins to put things into balance. The first man who acts on her behalf. She begins to gain power
once he enters the story.
The princess is plagued by Conrad but his antics seem to help her understand her power. She
calls the wind to rescue her from his advances.
The princess and the geese – does she also derive power from their influence?
The princess and the knacker – Falada seems to become useful to the princess only after his
death. She gives the knacker gold for the head. (gold in the story – golden cup, golden coin,
golden hair.)
When The Maid switches places with the princess, she is taking the only chance she will ever
have to escape her caste. She also, inadvertently, gives the princess her only chance to discover
her own strengths. In a conglomerate character, she may be the princess’s id.
The maid takes Falada from the Princess. She fears him, his power of speech, and is responsible
for his death. The maid fools the young king. She tricks him into ordering Falada’s death, then
into marriage. The maid doesn’t fool the old king. He watches her and bides his time. I don’t
think he knows what he knows, but he paves the way for the princess’s return to power. The king
sets up the maid’s self-destruction.
The maid might be Conrad’s feminine counterpart. She is wily where he seems simple, but that
fits the pattern. The maid is separate from the geese. She has closed herself in a castle, away
from natural forces. The maid brings the knacker into the story when she calls for Falada’s death.
Falada can speak with a human voice, but we hear this voice only after he is dead. Falada bears
the princess away from her mother, the old queen. When he speaks, he reminds her of her
mother’s love? fate? wisdom?
Falada carries the maid to the castle of the two kings. He dies at the order of the young king.
His head speaks and is heard by the old king. Falada’s head hangs over Conrad as he drives the
geese through the gate to the river bank. Falada’s head hangs over the geese as they pass through
the gate. Falada and the geese are animal characters, but not the kind we expect to find in
folktales. The don’t ‘help’ the protagonist in any simple way. Falada’s life is taken by the
knacker.
Rag and Blood - This talisman contains part of the old queen. The blood speaks to the princess
like a conscience, reminding her that things aren’t what they should be. I think it speaks in her
mother’s voice. The blood protects the princess from the evil designs of the maid. The maid can’t
hurt her until she loses it. Then the princess becomes the maid. With no ego (she can’t take a
stand against the maid at the stream) and no super-ego to remind her of how things should be,
she becomes all id.
The old king notices the ‘other girl’ and it bothers him. He has picked up the thread that was
dropped at the river.
Conrad doesn’t know about the blood, but he feels its long-suppressed effects on the princess as
she comes into her own by the river bank.
Do the geese drink from the same river into which the rag feel and the queen’s blood was
dispersed?
When the knacker spills Falada’s blood, the horse’s head begins to speak in the voice of the old
queen.
The Young King is the princess’s male other. He is also too inexperienced to recognize the
maid’s ruse, although he seems to disturbed to be aligned with the woman who spitefully
demands the death of a horse. He seems to take no part in the life of the ‘true bride’ when she
enters his realm. His father arranges everything. However, when he finally meets the real
princess, he recognizes her immediately.
The Old King begins to put the male/female power into balance. He is the old queen’s male
other, the princess/young king’s male superego. He has the power to control the impulses of
Conrad and the maid. The old king hears Falada’s voice; he sees the princess wrapped in a cloud
of golden hair among the geese at the river bank. He watches her put Conrad in his place.
Finally, through the medium of the stove, he restores her voice and balances her soul.
Conrad is the male other of the maid. He is all id, all desire. He becomes so obsessed with the
princess’s gold(en hair -- gold represents virtue, intelligence, superiority, revealed truth,
marriage, and fruitfulness (Olderr 1986)) that he tries to take it for himself. He spends his days
among the geese beside the river and seems influenced by their feminine power. However, the
old king, the male superego can control him and, in the old king’s realm, the princess also learns
to control him.
The Geese symbolize feminine traits, both wise and silly (earth, fertility, motherhood, love,
constancy, female sexuality, stupidity, innocence). They move between the castle and the river.
Until the day the princess arrives at the castle, they have been under the hand of Conrad who
drove them back and forth. Do their lives change when goosegirl enters their world?
The Knacker is responsible for doing away with the animals who are no longer useful. Unlike a
butcher, he doesn’t kill the beast to turn it into food. He renders the body for other uses – the
hooves for glue, the bones for soap, the hide for leather, etc. The butcher, because he kills for the
nourishment of life could be said to extend the life of the beast. How does the knacker’s job
affect his victim’s afterlife?
Summary – putting them all together
The Goosegirl begins in an exclusively feminine environment. The old queen’s husband is
“long since dead,” but she has a daughter and a serving maid who become the protagonist and
antagonist of the tale. So, in the beginning, we have the complete female: youth and age;
superego, id. However, these characters constitute a trinity so the princess, herself, must fit in
somewhere. I think she is the kore/maiden in the age/youth cycle. The maid is older, or at least,
more worldly. Because she is the central character of the tale, she is also what will become the
ego, the place where everything converges to balance the character. (I am using Freudian
terminology for the convenience of brevity. I don’t have a sophisticated understanding of his
work.)
So in the beginning of the tale, the kore/ego kernel leaves the mother/crone to seek her (the
princess’s) male counterpart and unite in marriage. She is accompanied by the maid and by the
horse, Falada. (Falada is a talking horse who never uses his voice to advise or speak in defense of
the princess. I think this is unusual for talking animals in folktales. Falada is male.) When she
leaves home, she also takes a part of her mother – the blood on the rag. This she is advised to
“keep with her always (so that she) will always be protected by (the mother’s) blessing.” The
blood, as it turns out, can also speak. The queen’s advisement is tantamount to telling the
reader/listener that the talisman will be lost.
Shortly after the princess passes the threshold of her home, the id/maid begins to assert
herself and the princess seems to have no power to stand up to her on her own. Only the blood,
the mother’s charm, the reminder that “if this your mother knew, her heart would break in two”
keeps her from falling completely under the power of the maid. When the blood stained rag falls
into the river, the maid’s power becomes complete. She becomes the princess (takes away her
clothes, horse, and voice) and the little shell of the maiden ego becomes silent and almost
invisible. When the two women arrive at their destination, the realm of two kings, the young
king, her betrothed, does not seem to see her at all, and takes the maid to wife.
However, it is here that the masculine influence comes into play and begins to put things
back in balance. Although the young king doesn’t notice the true bride, his father, the old king,
does. He doesn’t see through the maid’s ruse, but on some level, he recognizes the princess and
asks what is to be done with her. The maid, who seems to have forgotten the girl’s existence tells
him to “find something for her to do so her hands won’t be idle.” This instruction puts the
princess in a position to begin to integrate her soul. The father, so conspicuously missing in the
beginning of the story, is replaced in the person of the old king. The male ego counterpart has
been introduced, and the little kore is put to doing women’s work, driving and grazing the geese
and dealing with the maid’s male counterpart, Conrad the goose boy.
At this point in the story, Falada, who has thus far remained mute, is killed by the knacker.
The young king orders the horse’s death at the false bride/maid’s request. This is an unnatural
act in every sense. For one thing, Falada is by no means a useless beast. He is a mount fit for a
princess and, presumably, has many useful years left before he should become fodder for the
knacker’s blade. However, because she knows he is capable of speech, and because he witnessed
the transformation of the maid into princess, the maid fears he will speak on the princess’s
behalf. So it is Falada’s supernatural power that seals his fate.
The princess, we now learn, isn’t completely powerless and is already coming into herself,
for she produces a golden (royalty, virtue, intelligence, power) coin which she uses to buy the
head of Falada from the knacker. She has this head placed over the gate through which she
passes every morning and evening as she drives the geese back and forth to the river. Once the
head is in place, the mother’s voice returns. Now it not only reminds the princess that things are
out of order, it also mentions her proper role in her present life – “alas, dear queen, how much
you bear.”
The picture of the princess tending the geese by the river bank teems with symbols of
feminine power: the flowing water, the grazing, gabbling geese, the cloud of golden hair. The
mother/crone is present, symbolically in the earth, water, and geese; and actually, in the
homeopathic trace of blood that washed from the rag into the flowing river. The maid is also
present in the male form of Conrad. Here by the river, the prime-mover power of the wild,
animal part of the soul becomes apparent. Without the actions of the maid, our princess would
have remained the meek, voiceless girl who couldn’t properly get herself a drink of water, but in
her present position, she finds the power to reintegrate with the mother and to protect herself
from the desires of the beastly boy. She commands the wind (which must be a masculine force,
since we know it inseminated mares in ancient Greece!) and it does her bidding. Her actions
force Conrad to interact with the old king who, consequently acts to close the circle, to bring the
princess back to her rightful place – giving her back her voice, her clothing, and uniting her with
her male counterpart (who, presumably has gained some wisdom from his own interactions with
the female id persona).
When the maid is finally rendered passive enough to be reintegrated, it is through her own
voice. The old king sets the stage, but she doesn’t recognize (willfully refuses to acknowledge?
acquiesces to?) the trap and designs the punishment that results in her painful demise. By the
end of the tale, the princess has found both a father and a husband, has synthesized the wisdom
and knowledge of her mother, and has gained control of the wilder parts of her soul.