The Spirit in the Glass Bottle
by Brothers Grimm · from Household Tales
Original Story
The spirit in the glass bottle
A fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm
Once upon a time there was a poor woodcutter who worked from morning until late at night. When he had finally saved up some money he said to his boy, "You are my only child. I want to spend the money that I have earned by the sweat of my brow on your education. Learn an honest trade so you can support me in my old age when my limbs have grown stiff and I have to sit at home." Then the boy went to a university and studied diligently. His teachers praised him, and he remained there for some time. After he had worked through a few classes, but was still not perfect in everything, the little pittance that the father had saved was all spent, and the boy had to return home to him. "Oh," said the father sadly, "I cannot give you anything more, and in these hard times I cannot earn a heller more than what we need for our daily bread." - "Father, dear," answered the son, "don't worry about it. If it is God's will everything will turn out well for me. I will do all right." When the father said he was going into the woods and earn some money by cutting cordwood, the son said, "I will go with you and help you." - "No, my son," said the father, "you will find it too difficult. You are not used to hard work, and will not be able to do it. Furthermore, I have only one ax and no money left to buy another one with." - "Just go to the neighbor," answered the son. "He will lend you his ax until I have earned enough to buy one for myself."
So the father borrowed an ax from the neighbor, and the next morning at daybreak they went out into the woods together. The son helped his father and was quite cheerful and full of energy. When the sun was directly above them, the father said, "Let us rest now and eat our noon meal. Then all will go twice as well." The son picked up his bread and said, "Just you rest, father. I am not tired. I will walk about a little in the woods and look for birds' nests." - "Oh, you fool," said the father, "why do you want to run about? Afterwards you will be tired and no longer able to lift an arm. Stay here, and sit down beside me."
But the son went into the woods, ate his bread, was very cheerful, and looked into the green branches to see if he could find a bird's nest. He walked to and fro until at last he came to an enormous oak that was certainly many hundred years old, and that five men would not have been able to span. He stood there looking at it, and thought, "Many a bird must have built its nest in that tree." Then suddenly he thought that he heard a voice. Listening, he became aware of someone calling out with a muffled voice, "Let me out. Let me out." He looked around but could not see anything. Then he thought that the voice was coming out of the ground, so he shouted, "Where are you?" The voice answered, "I am stuck down here among the oak roots. Let me out. Let me out." The student began to scrape about beneath the tree, searching among the roots, until at last he found a glass bottle in a little opening. Lifting it up, he held it against the light, and then saw something shaped like a frog jumping up and down inside. "Let me out. Let me out," it cried again, and the student, thinking no evil, pulled the cork from the bottle. Immediately a spirit ascended from it and began to grow. It grew so fast that within a few moments a horrible fellow, half as big as the tree, was standing there before the student. "Do you know," he cried in an terrifying voice, "what your reward is for having let me out?" - "No," replied the student fearlessly. "How should I know that?" - "Then I will tell you," shouted the spirit. "I must break your neck for it." - "You should have said so sooner," answered the student, "for then I would have left you shut up inside. However, my head is going to stay where it is until more people have been consulted." - "More people here, more people there," shouted the spirit. "You shall have the reward you have earned. Do you think that I was shut up there for such a long time as a favor? No, it was a punishment. I am the mighty Mercurius. I must break the neck of whomsoever releases me." - "Calm down," answered the student. "Not so fast. First I must know that you really were shut up in that little bottle, and that you are the right spirit. If you can indeed get inside again, then I will believe it, and you may do with me whatsoever you want." The spirit said arrogantly, "that is an easy trick," pulling himself in and making himself as thin and short as he had been before. He then crept back into the opening and through the neck of the bottle. He was scarcely inside when the student pushed the cork back into the bottle, and threw it back where it had been among the oak roots. And thus the spirit was deceived.
The student was about to return to his father, but the spirit cried out pitifully, "Oh, do let me out. Oh, do let me out." - "No," answered the student, "not a second time. I will not release a person who once tried to kill me, now that I have captured him again." - "If you will set me free," cried the spirit, "I will give you so much that you will have enough for all the days of your life." - "No," answered the student, "you would cheat me like you tried to the first time." - "You are giving away your own good fortune," said the spirit. "I will not harm you, but instead will reward you richly." The student thought, "I will venture it. Perhaps he will keep his word, and in any event he will not get the better of me." So he pulled out the cork, and the spirit rose up from the bottle as before, and extended himself, becoming as large as a giant. "Now you shall have your reward," he said, handing the student a little rag that looked just like a small bandage. He said, "If you rub a wound with the one end, it will heal, and if you rub steel or iron with the other end, it will turn into silver." - "I have to try that," said the student. He went to a tree, scratched the bark with his ax, then rubbed it with the one end of the bandage. It immediately closed together and was healed. "Now it is all right," he said to the spirit, "and we can part." The spirit thanked him for having freed him, and the student thanked the spirit for the present, and returned to his father.
"Where have you been running about?" said the father. "Why have you forgotten your work? I said that you wouldn't get anything done." - "Don't be concerned, father. I will make it up." - "Make it up indeed," said the father angrily. "Don't bother." - "Just watch, father. I will soon cut down that tree there and make it crash." Then he took his bandage, rubbed the ax with it, and struck a mighty blow, but because the iron had turned into silver, the cutting edge bent back on itself. "Hey, father, just look what a bad ax you've given me. It is all bent out of shape." The father was shocked and said, "Oh, what have you done! Now I'll have to pay for the ax, and I don't know what with. That is all the good I have from your work." - "Don't get angry," said the son, "I will pay for the ax." - "Oh, you blockhead," cried the father, "How will you pay for it? You have nothing but what I give you. You have students' tricks stuck in your head, but you don't know anything about chopping wood."
After a little while the student said, "Father, I can't work any longer after all. Let's quit for the day." - "Now then," he answered, "do you think I can stand around with my hands in my pockets like you? I have to go on working, but you may head for home." - "Father, I am here in these woods for the first time. I don't know my way alone. Please go with me." His anger had now subsided, so the father at last let himself be talked into going home with him. There he said to the son, "Go and sell the damaged ax and see what you can get for it. I will have to earn the difference, in order to pay the neighbor." The son picked up the ax and took it into town to a goldsmith, who tested it, weighed it, and then said, "It is worth four hundred talers. I do not have that much cash with me." The student said, "Give me what you have. I will lend you the rest." The goldsmith gave him three hundred talers and owed him one hundred. Then the student went home and said, "Father, I have some money. Go and ask the neighbor what he wants for the ax." - "I already know," answered the old man. "One taler, six groschens." - "Then give him two talers, twelve groschens. That is double its worth and is plenty. See, I have more than enough money." Then he gave the father a hundred talers, saying, "You shall never need anything. Live just like you want to." - "My goodness," said the old man. "Where did you get all that money?" Then the son told him everything that had happened, and how by trusting in his luck he had made such a catch. With the money that was left he went back to the university and continued his studies, and because he could heal all wounds with his bandage he became the most famous doctor in the whole world.
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Story DNA
Moral
Quick wit and cleverness can overcome brute force and even turn misfortune into great fortune.
Plot Summary
A poor woodcutter's son, forced to leave university, helps his father in the woods where he discovers and releases a malevolent spirit from a bottle. Using his quick wit, the son tricks the spirit back into the bottle and negotiates for a magical rag that can heal wounds and turn metal into silver. He accidentally transforms his father's borrowed ax into silver, which he then sells for a fortune, securing his family's financial future and enabling him to become a world-renowned doctor.
Themes
Emotional Arc
struggle to prosperity
Writing Style
Narrative Elements
Cultural Context
The story reflects common themes in 19th-century German folklore, such as the value of cleverness over brute strength, the struggle of the working class, and the aspiration for social mobility through education or unexpected fortune.
Plot Beats (13)
- A poor woodcutter sends his son to university, but their money runs out, and the son returns home.
- The son insists on helping his father cut wood, despite his father's reservations about his lack of experience.
- While resting, the son wanders into the woods and hears a voice calling for release from an ancient oak tree.
- He finds a glass bottle containing a spirit, which he releases.
- The spirit, a giant named Mercurius, immediately threatens to kill the son for releasing him.
- The son, using his wit, challenges the spirit to prove it can re-enter the small bottle, doubting its claim.
- The spirit, in its arrogance, shrinks and re-enters the bottle to prove its power.
- The son quickly corks the bottle, trapping the spirit again.
- The trapped spirit pleads for release, offering great riches, which the son initially refuses, but then accepts after considering the spirit's inability to harm him while trapped.
- Upon release, the spirit gives the son a magical rag that can heal wounds and turn iron/steel into silver.
- The son tests the rag, healing a tree, then accidentally turning his father's borrowed ax into silver.
- The father is initially angry about the ruined ax, but the son sells it to a goldsmith for a large sum.
- The son pays off the neighbor generously for the ax, provides his father with ample money, and uses the rest to continue his studies, becoming a famous doctor with the healing rag.
Characters
The Student
Not explicitly described, but implied to be capable of walking long distances and carrying an ax.
Attire: Simple, practical clothing suitable for a university student from a poor family, later acquiring better attire with wealth.
Diligent, cheerful, clever, fearless, trusting.
The Woodcutter
Implied to be strong from manual labor, later described as having 'limbs grown stiff' in old age.
Attire: Rough, practical work clothes typical of a poor woodcutter (e.g., simple tunic, trousers, sturdy boots).
Hardworking, worried, loving, sometimes quick-tempered.
Mercurius
Initially a frog-like shape in a bottle, then a 'horrible fellow, half as big as the tree', and later 'as large as a giant'.
Attire: None, as a spirit.
Arrogant, deceitful, powerful, vengeful, eventually grateful.
The Goldsmith
Not described.
Attire: Professional attire of a merchant or artisan.
Honest, professional.
Locations
The Woodcutter's Home
A humble dwelling, likely small and simple, reflecting the family's poverty.
Mood: Somber, concerned, then later relieved and joyful.
The father expresses his inability to fund his son's education further; the son reassures him. Later, the son returns with wealth.
The Forest Clearing
A place where the woodcutter and his son take their noon meal, with the sun directly overhead.
Mood: Initially peaceful, then slightly tense due to the father's concern about the son's idleness.
The father and son take a break for lunch before the son wanders deeper into the woods.
Beneath the Enormous Oak Tree
An ancient, massive oak tree, so large that five men couldn't span it, with roots extending into the ground. A small opening among the roots conceals a glass bottle.
Mood: Mysterious, eerie, then tense and confrontational, finally relieved and magical.
The son discovers and releases the spirit from the bottle, then tricks it back inside, and finally releases it again in exchange for a magical bandage.
The Town Goldsmith's Shop
A place where precious metals are worked and traded, equipped for testing and weighing metal.
Mood: Professional, transactional, surprising.
The son sells the silver ax for a large sum of money, revealing the magical properties of the bandage to the reader.