THE IRON STOVE [\[7\]](#Footnote77)

by Unknown · from The Yellow Fairy Book

fairy tale quest hopeful Ages 8-14 2086 words 10 min read
Cover: THE IRON STOVE [\[7\]](#Footnote77)

Adapted Version

CEFR A1 Age 5 503 words 3 min Canon 85/100

Prince Leo was stuck. In a big forest. He was in a big iron box. An old witch put him there. He waited for many years. He could not get out.

Princess Lily walked in the wood. She was lost. She cried. She came to the iron box. A voice spoke from inside. "Where do you go?" it asked. Lily said, "I am lost. I want to go home." Prince Leo said. "I help you. You must free me. Then you will marry me." Lily said yes.

Princess Lily went home. King Father was happy. But Lily remembered her promise. She took a small knife. She went back to the iron box. She scraped the iron. She scraped and scraped. A small hole appeared. Prince Leo came out. He was handsome. Lily loved him.

Prince Leo wanted to go. Lily asked, "See King Father?" Leo said, "Yes, go. But say only three words. Come back." Lily said, "I am quick." She went.

Lily saw King Father. She was happy. She spoke many words. Prince Leo vanished. It went far away. Over big, bumpy hills.

Princess Lily was sad. She missed Prince Leo. She went to find him. She walked a long way. She came to a small house. Big toads lived there.

A Wise Toad spoke. "You seek Prince Leo. Take these magic nuts. They will help you." Lily took the nuts.

Lily walked over glass hills. She crossed sharp swords. She swam a big lake. The magic nuts helped her. She saw a big castle. Prince Leo was there. He would marry another princess.

Lily went inside. She worked in the kitchen. She cracked a magic nut. A beautiful dress appeared. It was golden. She hid it.

That night, Lily wore the golden dress. She went to Leo's door. She asked to sleep there. The other princess wanted the dress. Lily gave it to her. The princess gave Leo a drink. It made him very sleepy. Lily cried, "Leo, it is me!" But Leo slept.

Next night, Lily cracked a nut. A silver dress appeared. She wore it. She went to Leo's door. She traded the dress. The other princess gave Leo a drink. He slept again. Lily cried, "Leo, it is me!" But Leo slept.

Third night, Lily cracked a nut. A diamond dress appeared. She wore it. She went to Leo's door. She traded the dress. The other princess gave Leo a drink. But Leo did not drink it all. He heard Lily's voice. "Lily! Is that you?" he asked. Lily was so happy. Leo remembered her.

Leo and Lily ran away. They used the magic nuts. They crossed the lake. They passed the swords. They climbed the glass hills. They went back to the small house.

The small house changed. It became a big castle! The toads were not toads. They were king's children. They were free now.

Prince Leo and Princess Lily married. King Father came. They lived happily ever after. Promises are important. True love is brave.

Original Story 2086 words · 10 min read

THE IRON STOVE [7]

Once upon a time when wishes came true there was a king’s son who was enchanted by an old witch, so that he was obliged to sit in a large iron stove in a wood. There he lived for many years, and no one could free him. At last a king’s daughter came into the wood; she had lost her way, and could not find her father’s kingdom again. She had been wandering round and round for nine days, and she came at last to the iron case. A voice came from within and asked her, ‘Where do you come from, and where do you want to go?’ She answered, ‘I have lost my way to my father’s kingdom, and I shall never get home again.’ Then the voice from the iron stove said, ‘I will help you to find your home again, and that in a very short time, if you will promise to do what I ask you. I am a greater prince than you are a princess, and I will marry you.’ Then she grew frightened, and thought, ‘What can a young lassie do with an iron stove?’ But as she wanted very much to go home to her father, she promised to do what he wished. He said, ‘You must come again, and bring a knife with you to scrape a hole in the iron.’

Then he gave her someone for a guide, who walked near her and said nothing, but he brought her in two hours to her house. There was great joy in the castle when the Princess came back, and the old King fell on her neck and kissed her. But she was very much troubled, and said, ‘Dear father, listen to what has befallen me! I should never have come home again out of the great wild wood if I had not come to an iron stove, to whom I have had to promise that I will go back to free him and marry him!’ The old King was so frightened that he nearly fainted, for she was his only daughter. So they consulted together, and determined that the miller’s daughter, who was very beautiful, should take her place. They took her there, gave her a knife, and said she must scrape at the iron stove. She scraped for twenty-four hours, but did not make the least impression. When the day broke, a voice called from the iron stove, ‘It seems to me that it is day outside.’ Then she answered, ‘It seems so to me; I think I hear my father’s mill rattling.’

‘So you are a miller’s daughter! Then go away at once, and tell the King’s daughter to come.’

Then she went away, and told the old King that the thing inside the iron stove would not have her, but wanted the Princess. The old King was frightened, and his daughter wept. But they had a swineherd’s daughter who was even more beautiful than the miller’s daughter, and they gave her a piece of gold to go to the iron stove instead of the Princess. Then she was taken out, and had to scrape for four-and-twenty hours, but she could make no impression. As soon as the day broke the voice from the stove called out, ‘It seems to be daylight outside.’ Then she answered, ‘It seems so to me too; I think I hear my father blowing his horn.’ ‘So you are a swineherd’s daughter! Go away at once, and let the King’s daughter come. And say to her that what I foretell shall come to pass, and if she does not come everything in the kingdom shall fall into ruin, and not one stone shall be left upon another.’ When the Princess heard this she began to cry, but it was no good; she had to keep her word. She took leave of her father, put a knife in her belt, and went to the iron stove in the wood. As soon as she reached it she began to scrape, and the iron gave way and before two hours had passed she had made a little hole. Then she peeped in and saw such a beautiful youth all shining with gold and precious stones that she fell in love with him on the spot. So she scraped away harder than ever, and made the hole so large that he could get out. Then he said, ‘You are mine, and I am thine; you are my bride and have set me free!’ He wanted to take her with him to his kingdom, but she begged him just to let her go once more to her father; and the Prince let her go, but told her not to say more than three words to her father, then to come back again. So she went home, but alas! she said more than three words; and immediately the iron stove vanished and went away over a mountain of glass and sharp swords. But the Prince was free, and was no longer shut up in it. Then she said good-bye to her father, and took a little money with her, and went again into the great wood to look for the iron stove; but she could not find it. She sought it for nine days, and then her hunger became so great that she did not know how she could live any longer. And when it was evening she climbed a little tree and wished that the night would not come, because she was afraid of the wild beasts. When midnight came she saw afar off a little light, and thought, ‘Ah! if only I could reach that!’ Then she got down from the tree and went towards the light. She came to a little old house with a great deal of grass growing round, and stood in front of a little heap of wood. She thought, ‘Alas! what am I coming to?’ and peeped through the window; but she saw nothing inside except big and little toads, and a table beautifully spread with roast meats and wine, and all the dishes and drinking-cups were of silver. Then she took heart and knocked. Then a fat toad called out:

‘Little green toad with leg like crook,

Open wide the door, and look

Who it was the latch that shook.’

And a little toad came forward and let her in. When she entered they all bid her welcome, and made her sit down. They asked her how she came there and what she wanted. Then she told everything that had happened to her, and how, because she had exceeded her permission only to speak three words, the stove had disappeared with the Prince; and how she had searched a very long time, and must wander over mountain and valley till she found him.

Then the old toad said:

‘Little green toad whose leg doth twist,

Go to the corner of which you wist,

And bring to me the large old kist.’

And the little toad went and brought out a great chest. Then they gave her food and drink, and led her to a beautifully made bed of silk and samite, on which she lay down and slept soundly. When the day dawned she arose, and the old toad gave her three things out of the huge chest to take with her. She would have need of them, for she had to cross a high glass mountain, three cutting swords, and a great lake. When she had passed these she would find her lover again. So she was given three large needles, a plough-wheel, and three nuts, which she was to take great care of. She set out with these things, and when she came to the glass mountain which was so slippery she stuck the three needles behind her feet and then in front, and so got over it, and when she was on the other side put them carefully away.

Then she reached the three cutting swords, and got on her plough-wheel and rolled over them. At last she came to a great lake, and, when she had crossed that, arrived at a beautiful castle. She went in and gave herself out as a servant, a poor maid who would gladly be engaged. But she knew that the Prince whom she had freed from the iron stove in the great wood was in the castle. So she was taken on as a kitchenmaid for very small wages. Now the Prince was about to marry another princess, for he thought she was dead long ago.

‘Then she reached the three cutting swords, and got on her plough-wheel and rolled over them’

In the evening, when she had washed up and was ready, she felt in her pocket and found the three nuts which the old toad had given her. She cracked one and was going to eat the kernel, when behold! there was a beautiful royal dress inside it! When the bride heard of this, she came and begged for the dress, and wanted to buy it, saying that it was not a dress for a serving-maid. Then she said she would not sell it unless she was granted one favour—namely, to sleep by the Prince’s door. The bride granted her this, because the dress was so beautiful and she had so few like it. When it was evening she said to her bridegroom, ‘That stupid maid wants to sleep by your door.’

‘If you are contented, I am,’ he said. But she gave him a glass of wine in which she had poured a sleeping-draught. Then they both went to his room, but he slept so soundly that she could not wake him. The maid wept all night long, and said, ‘I freed you in the wild wood out of the iron stove; I have sought you, and have crossed a glassy mountain, three sharp swords, and a great lake before I found you, and will you not hear me now?’ The servants outside heard how she cried the whole night, and they told their master in the morning.

When she had washed up the next evening she bit the second nut, and there was a still more beautiful dress inside. When the bride saw it she wanted to buy it also. But the maid did not want money, and asked that she should sleep again by the Prince’s door. The bride, however, gave him a sleeping-draught, and he slept so soundly that he heard nothing. But the kitchenmaid wept the whole night long, and said, ‘I have freed you in a wood and from an iron stove; I sought you and have crossed a glassy mountain, three sharp swords, and a great lake to find you, and now you will not hear me!’ The servants outside heard how she cried the whole night, and in the morning they told their master. And when she had washed up on the third night she bit the third nut, and there was a still more beautiful dress inside that was made of pure gold. When the bride saw it she wanted to have it, but the maid would only give it her on condition that she should sleep for the third time by the Prince’s door. But the Prince took care not to drink the sleeping-draught. When she began to weep and to say, ‘Dearest sweetheart, I freed you in the horrible wild wood, and from an iron stove,’ he jumped up and said, ‘You are right. You are mine, and I am thine.’ Though it was still night, he got into a carriage with her, and they took the false bride’s clothes away, so that she could not follow them. When they came to the great lake they rowed across, and when they reached the three sharp swords they sat on the plough-wheel, and on the glassy mountain they stuck the three needles in. So they arrived at last at the little old house, but when they stepped inside it turned into a large castle. The toads were all freed, and were beautiful King’s children, running about for joy. There they were married, and they remained in the castle, which was much larger than that of the Princess’s father’s. But because the old man did not like being left alone, they went and fetched him. So they had two kingdoms and lived in great wealth.

A mouse has run,

My story’s done.



Story DNA

Moral

Promises should be kept, and true love requires perseverance and sacrifice.

Plot Summary

A king's son is enchanted and trapped in an iron stove. A lost princess promises to free and marry him in exchange for guidance home, but her father tries to substitute other girls. The princess eventually frees the prince, but breaks a promise by speaking too many words to her father, causing the prince to vanish. She embarks on a long quest, aided by magical toads and items, overcoming a glass mountain, sharp swords, and a lake. She finds the prince about to marry another, and over three nights, uses magical dresses to gain access to him, finally awakening him to their true love. They escape, return to the transformed toad house, marry, and live happily ever after.

Themes

perseverancefidelityconsequence of actionstrue love

Emotional Arc

fear to determination to suffering to triumph

Writing Style

Voice: third person omniscient
Pacing: moderate
Descriptive: moderate
Techniques: repetition, rule of three

Narrative Elements

Conflict: person vs supernatural
Ending: happy
Magic: enchanted prince, talking iron stove, magical guide, talking toads, magical chest, magical needles, magical plough-wheel, magical nuts containing dresses, sleeping draught, transformation of toad house into castle, toads transforming into king's children
the iron stove (imprisonment, enchantment)the three nuts/dresses (perseverance, identity)the glass mountain, sharp swords, great lake (insurmountable obstacles)

Cultural Context

Origin: German
Era: timeless fairy tale

This tale is part of the Brothers Grimm collection, reflecting common European folk motifs of enchanted princes, quests, and tests of fidelity.

Plot Beats (15)

  1. An enchanted prince is trapped in an iron stove in a wood.
  2. A lost princess stumbles upon the stove and promises to free and marry the prince inside in exchange for guidance home.
  3. The princess returns home, but her father attempts to send a miller's daughter and then a swineherd's daughter in her place, both of whom are rejected by the prince.
  4. The princess, compelled by a threat to her kingdom, returns to the stove, scrapes a hole, and frees the prince, falling in love with him.
  5. She asks to visit her father one last time, and the prince allows it, but warns her to speak no more than three words.
  6. The princess disobeys, speaking more than three words, causing the prince and the iron stove to vanish over a mountain of glass and sharp swords.
  7. The princess sets out on a long journey to find the prince, eventually reaching a house inhabited by toads.
  8. The old toad gives her three magical items: three needles, a plough-wheel, and three nuts, to help her cross a glass mountain, three cutting swords, and a great lake.
  9. She successfully navigates the obstacles and arrives at a castle, where she discovers her prince is about to marry another princess.
  10. She takes a job as a kitchenmaid and, over three evenings, uses the magical nuts to produce three increasingly beautiful dresses.
  11. She trades each dress to the false bride for permission to sleep by the prince's door, but the false bride gives the prince a sleeping draught.
  12. On the first two nights, the prince sleeps through her pleas, but on the third night, he avoids the sleeping draught and recognizes her voice.
  13. The prince and princess escape together, using the magical items to re-cross the obstacles.
  14. They return to the toad's house, which transforms into a grand castle, revealing the toads to be enchanted king's children.
  15. They marry, and the princess's father joins them, living in wealth and happiness.

Characters

👤

The Princess

human young adult female

Slender build, average height for a young woman of noble birth. Her features are delicate, reflecting a life of comfort, but she possesses an underlying resilience that becomes apparent through her trials.

Attire: Initially, a modest but well-made dress of fine linen or wool, suitable for travel in a forest, perhaps in muted blues or greens. Later, as a kitchenmaid, she wears simple, coarse grey or brown smocks. The nuts reveal three increasingly magnificent gowns: the first, a beautiful royal dress; the second, an even more beautiful dress; the third, a dress of pure gold, likely intricately embroidered and shimmering.

Wants: To return home to her father, then to free the Prince, and ultimately to reunite with and marry him.

Flaw: Her initial naivety and her inability to strictly follow the Prince's instruction to speak only three words to her father, which causes her separation from him.

Transforms from a frightened, lost princess into a courageous, determined woman who overcomes magical obstacles and societal barriers to claim her true love and her destiny as a queen.

Her three magical dresses, especially the one made of pure gold, emerging from a nut.

Kind, dutiful, persistent, loving, and initially somewhat naive. She is brave enough to keep her promises and endure hardship for love.

👤

The Prince (in the Iron Stove)

human young adult male

Initially unseen, trapped within the stove. Once freed, he is described as a beautiful youth, shining with gold and precious stones, suggesting a radiant and noble appearance. He is likely tall and well-built, befitting a prince.

Attire: When freed, he is described as 'shining with gold and precious stones,' implying rich, royal attire, possibly a tunic or doublet of fine silk or velvet, adorned with jewels and gold embroidery.

Wants: To be freed from the enchantment and marry the Princess who frees him.

Flaw: Vulnerable to the witch's enchantment and susceptible to sleeping draughts, making him temporarily unaware of the Princess's suffering.

Freed from his enchantment, he initially almost marries a false bride due to a misunderstanding, but ultimately recognizes and reunites with his true love, reclaiming his kingdom and gaining another.

His radiant appearance, 'shining with gold and precious stones,' upon being freed from the iron stove.

Determined, honorable (he keeps his promise to help the Princess), loving, and somewhat impatient when enchanted. He is quick to recognize his true love once freed.

👤

The Old King

human elderly male

A man of advanced years, likely with a slightly stooped posture from age, but still possessing a dignified bearing. His face shows the wisdom and worry of ruling a kingdom and caring for his only daughter.

Attire: Royal robes of a traditional European monarch, perhaps in deep reds or purples, made of heavy velvet or brocade, possibly trimmed with ermine, reflecting his wealth and position.

Wants: To protect his only daughter from a frightening marriage and ensure her happiness and safety.

Flaw: His fear for his daughter's well-being leads him to try deceitful measures, which ultimately fail.

Initially tries to prevent his daughter from fulfilling her promise, but eventually accepts her destiny and is brought to live with her in her new, grander kingdom.

His long, white beard and worried, paternal expression.

Loving, protective, worried, and somewhat fearful for his daughter's safety. He is willing to resort to deception to protect her, but ultimately respects her word.

✦

The Old Toad

magical creature (toad, later human) ageless (appears elderly as a toad) non-human

A large, fat toad, with warty green skin and prominent, wise eyes. As a freed king's child, they would be a beautiful youth, similar to the Prince.

Attire: As a toad, no clothing. As a human, likely fine, royal attire.

Wants: To help the Princess find her true love, which in turn leads to their own freedom from enchantment.

Flaw: Enchanted into a toad, unable to act directly to free themselves.

Freed from enchantment by the Princess and Prince's reunion, transforming back into a human royal.

A large, warty green toad, speaking in rhymes.

Wise, benevolent, and helpful. They possess magical knowledge and are instrumental in guiding the Princess.

👤

The False Bride

human young adult female

Likely beautiful, as she is chosen to marry the Prince. Her beauty is superficial, lacking the inner strength and kindness of the Princess.

Attire: Luxurious and fashionable gowns, befitting a princess about to marry a prince. She desires the Princess's magical dresses, indicating a love for opulence.

Wants: To marry the Prince and gain his kingdom and wealth.

Flaw: Her vanity and reliance on deception, which ultimately leads to her downfall.

Her deception is exposed, and she is left behind, losing her chance at marriage and status.

Her elaborate, luxurious gowns, and her covetous gaze upon the Princess's magical dresses.

Vain, selfish, manipulative (using sleeping draughts), and covetous. She wants the Prince and his status, but not truly for love.

Locations

The Great Wild Wood

outdoor Implied temperate climate, possibly autumn or late summer given the wandering for nine days.

A dense, expansive forest, likely in Central Europe, characterized by tall, ancient trees and thick undergrowth, making it easy to get lost. It is where the enchanted prince is trapped.

Mood: Mysterious, daunting, initially frightening for the lost princess, later a place of desperate searching.

The Princess first encounters the enchanted Prince in the iron stove and promises to free him. Later, she desperately searches for the vanished stove.

dense tree canopy thick undergrowth winding, unmarked paths large iron stove

Princess's Father's Castle

indoor Varies, implied temperate.

A royal castle, likely a medieval European design, with a grand hall and living quarters, serving as the home of the Princess and her father, the King.

Mood: Initially joyful upon the Princess's return, then filled with anxiety and fear due to her promise, later a place of farewell.

The Princess returns home and reveals her promise. The King attempts to substitute other maidens. The Princess eventually bids farewell to fulfill her vow.

grand halls royal chambers throne room (implied) stone walls heavy wooden doors

The Little Old House / Transformed Castle

transitional night (initially), then varies Implied temperate, possibly cool night air.

Initially a small, unassuming, grass-encircled cottage in the woods, inhabited by toads. It transforms into a large, magnificent castle upon the Prince's return.

Mood: Eerie and mysterious at first, then welcoming and magical, finally joyful and grand.

The Princess finds refuge and receives magical aid from the toads. Later, it becomes the site of the Prince and Princess's wedding and their new, grand kingdom.

small, moss-covered cottage grass growing around it heap of wood outside interior with toads silver dishes and cups large chest (kist) silk and samite bed transformed into a grand castle

The Glass Mountain, Three Cutting Swords, and Great Lake

outdoor day Implied clear, possibly windy conditions on the mountain.

A series of perilous, magical obstacles: a mountain made of slippery glass, three sharp, moving swords, and a wide body of water, all located between the toad's house and the Prince's temporary castle.

Mood: Dangerous, challenging, surreal, a test of perseverance.

The Princess uses the magical items to overcome these obstacles in her quest to find the Prince. The Prince and Princess later cross them together on their return journey.

sheer, reflective glass mountain three vertically oriented, sharp, moving swords wide, calm lake

The Prince's Temporary Castle

indoor varies, especially evening/night Varies, implied temperate.

A beautiful, but temporary, castle where the Prince resides and is about to marry another princess, possibly a grand European-style palace with many servants and a kitchen.

Mood: Initially deceptive and tense, with an undercurrent of impending doom for the Princess, later a place of revelation and reunion.

The Princess works as a kitchenmaid and uses the magical dresses to gain access to the Prince's door, eventually breaking the sleeping spell and reminding him of their bond.

grand halls kitchen Prince's bedchamber servants' quarters stone and timber construction