The Nightingale and the Blindworm

by Brothers Grimm · from Household Tales

fairy tale origin story solemn Ages 8-14 245 words 2 min read
Original Story 245 words · 2 min read

The Nightingale and the Blindworm

A fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm

Once upon a time there was a nightingale and a blindworm, each with one eye. For a long time they lived together peacefully and harmoniously in a house. However, one day the nightingale was invited to a wedding, and she said to the blindworm: "I've been invited to a wedding and don't particularly want to go with one eye. Would you be so kind as to lend me yours? I'll bring it back to you tomorrow."

The blindworm gave her the eye out of the kindness of her heart. But when the nightingale came home the following day, she liked having two eyes in her head and being able to see on both sides. So she refused to return the borrowed eye to the blindworm. Then the blindworm swore that she would revenge herself on the nightingale's children and the children of her children. "Well," replied the nightingale, "see if you can find me.

I'll build my nest in the linden,

so high, so high, so high.

You'll never be able to find it,

no matter how hard you try."

Since that time all nightingales have had two eyes, and all the blindworms, none. But wherever the nighingale builds her nest, a blindworm lives beneath it in the bushes and constantly endeavours to crawl up the tree, pierce the eggs of her enemy, and drink them up.

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Story DNA

Moral

Betrayal of trust leads to lasting enmity and suffering for future generations.

Plot Summary

A nightingale and a blindworm, each possessing one eye, live together peacefully. When the nightingale needs two eyes for a wedding, the blindworm kindly lends its eye. However, the nightingale, enjoying her newfound full sight, refuses to return the borrowed eye. Enraged by this betrayal, the blindworm swears eternal revenge on the nightingale's offspring, leading to a lasting enmity where nightingales have two eyes, blindworms have none, and blindworms perpetually attempt to destroy nightingale eggs.

Themes

betrayalrevengeconsequences of deceitthe origin of natural phenomena

Emotional Arc

harmony to conflict

Writing Style

Voice: third person omniscient
Pacing: brisk
Descriptive: sparse
Techniques: etiological explanation, rhyming verse for character speech

Narrative Elements

Conflict: person vs person
Ending: moral justice
Magic: animals with human-like intelligence and speech, transferable eyes
the eye (symbolizing sight, trust, vulnerability)the nest (symbolizing home, offspring, safety)

Cultural Context

Origin: German
Era: timeless fairy tale

The Grimm's tales often served to explain natural phenomena or societal norms through fantastical narratives, reflecting common folk beliefs.

Plot Beats (12)

  1. A nightingale and a blindworm, each with one eye, live together harmoniously.
  2. The nightingale is invited to a wedding and wishes to have two eyes for the occasion.
  3. The nightingale asks the blindworm to borrow its eye, promising to return it.
  4. The kind blindworm lends its eye to the nightingale.
  5. The nightingale enjoys having two eyes and decides to keep the blindworm's eye.
  6. The nightingale refuses to return the borrowed eye upon her return.
  7. The blindworm, betrayed, swears revenge on the nightingale's offspring.
  8. The nightingale, in a rhyming verse, boasts that her nest will be too high to find.
  9. Since that time, all nightingales have two eyes.
  10. Since that time, all blindworms have no eyes.
  11. Blindworms now live beneath nightingale nests, constantly trying to climb the tree.
  12. Blindworms attempt to pierce and drink the nightingale's eggs as an act of revenge.

Characters

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The Nightingale

animal adult female

A small bird, initially with one eye, later with two. Known for beautiful singing.

Attire: Natural bird plumage, likely brown or grey, typical of a nightingale.

A small brown bird with two bright, watchful eyes, perched high in a linden tree.

Deceptive, self-serving, clever, a bit vain.

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The Blindworm

animal adult female

A legless lizard, initially with one eye, later none. Resembles a small snake.

Attire: Scaly skin, typically brownish or grey, resembling a small snake.

A legless, snake-like creature with a smooth, eyeless head, perpetually attempting to climb a tree.

Kind-hearted (initially), vengeful, persistent.

Locations

Shared House

indoor implied temperate, no specific weather

A dwelling where the nightingale and blindworm lived together peacefully.

Mood: harmonious, domestic, later tense

The nightingale borrows the blindworm's eye here, and later refuses to return it.

shared living space

Linden Tree

outdoor implied spring/summer (nesting season)

A tall linden tree where the nightingale builds her nest 'so high, so high, so high'.

Mood: secure, elevated, later a place of constant vigilance

The nightingale declares she will build her nest here to escape the blindworm's revenge.

linden tree high nest branches

Bushes beneath the Linden Tree

outdoor implied spring/summer

Bushes located directly beneath the linden tree where the blindworm lives.

Mood: shadowy, persistent, vengeful

The blindworm resides here, constantly attempting to reach the nightingale's nest and destroy her eggs.

bushes base of a linden tree ground