In a faraway kingdom, there lives a widowed king with his twelve children: eleven princes and one princess. One day, he decides to remarry, but marries a wicked queen who is a witch. Out of spite, the queen turns her eleven stepsons into magnificent swans who are allowed to temporarily become human only at night and forced to fly by day. When their sister Elisa has reached the age of fifteen, the queen tries to bewitch her—but Elisa's goodness is too strong for this, so the queen has her banished after making her unrecognizable by dirtying her face and ripping her dress. Elisa finds her brothers, who carry Elisa to safety in a foreign land where she is out of the reach of her evil stepmother.
There, Elisa is guided by the queen of the fairies to gather stinging nettles in graveyards to knit into shirts that will eventually help her brothers regain their human shapes. Elisa endures painfully blistered hands from nettle stings, and she must also take a vow of silence for the duration of her task, for speaking one word will kill herself and her brothers. The handsome king of another faraway land happens to come across Elisa, who cannot talk, and falls in love with her. He grants her a room in his castle where she continues her knitting. Eventually he proposes to crown her as his queen and wife, and she accepts.
However, the archbishop is chagrined because he thinks Elisa is herself a witch, but the king will not believe him. One night Elisa runs out of nettles and is forced to collect more in a nearby church graveyard where the archbishop is watching. Ghoulish spirits that devour the bodies of the dead are also in the churchyard, and the archbishop believes that Elisa is in league with them. He reports the incident to the king as proof of witchcraft. The statues of the saints shake their heads in protest, but the archbishop misinterprets this sign as confirmation of Elisa's guilt. The archbishop orders Elisa put on trial for witchcraft. She can speak no word in her defense, and is sentenced to death by burning at the stake.
The brothers discover Elisa's plight and try to speak to the king but fail, thwarted by the rising sun. Even as the tumbril bears Elisa away to execution, she continues knitting, determined to continue up to the last moment of her life. This enrages the people, who are on the brink of snatching and ripping the shirts into pieces when the swans descend and rescue Elisa. The people interpret this as a sign from Heaven that Elisa is innocent, but the executioner still prepares for the burning. When Elisa finishes the last shirt, she throws the shirts over the swans, and her brothers return to their human forms. The youngest brother has a swan's wing instead of an arm, as Elisa did not have time to finish one sleeve of his shirt. Elisa is now free to speak and tell the truth but faints from exhaustion, so her brothers explain. As they do so, the firewood around Elisa's stake miraculously takes root and bursts into flowers. The king plucks the topmost flower and places it on Elisa's chest. She is revived by the white flower, and the king and Elisa are married.
Variants
Danish folktale collector Mathias Winther [da] collected a similar tale named De elleve Svaner (English: "The Eleven Swans"), first published in 1823, from which Andersen probably took inspiration.[3][4][5]
Adaptations
The Wild Swans, a Soviet traditionally-animated feature film.
A Wild Swan: And Other Tales by Michael Cunningham, which retells the story from the point of view of the youngest brother who was left with the swan's wing.
Spinning Starlight, a sci-fi retelling of the story by R.C Lewis.
De Wilde Zwanen (The Wild Swans), a comical audio play adaptation accompanied by a book, by Belgian production house Het Geluidshuis.
A Wild Winter Swan, a novel by Gregory Maguire based on Andersen’s tale, with an emphasis on the sixth brother (who was left with one wing in place of his arm).[7]
Metsluiged, a 1987 Soviet-Estonian movie directed by Helle Karis.[8]
The Three Ravens, from Jim Henson's The Storyteller (TV Series) 1988. This adaptation uses a repetition of the number three throughout.[9]
Birdwing, a novel by Rafe Martin that reimagines the story from the youngest brother, Ardwin's, perspective of being left with a swan wing.
Six Crimson Cranes, a novel by Elizabeth Lim that reimagines the story in a fantasy setting inspired by Ancient Japan from the perspective of the Emperor's Seventh Child and only daughter.
”The Nettle Witch” by Nicole Chartrand, a short comic in the Valor anthology published by Fairylogue Press.
"Tongue-Tied" by Emily Portman, an adaptation of part of the story to a folk-style song.
"Mail-Order Princess" by Jessica Day George is a short story retelling that sets the story in the American frontier, and the princess sent over as a "mail order bride" for an older German nobleman.
^Winther, Matthias. Danish Folk Tales. Translated by T. Sands and James Rhea Massengale. Department of Scandinavian Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison. 1989. pp. 5-11.
^Hans Christian Andersen, Fiabe, from I grandi classici della fiaba, vol. 2, Fabbri Editori, pg. 640.
Williams, Christy. "The Silent Struggle: Autonomy for the MaidenWho Seeks Her Brothers." The Comparatist 30 (2006): 81-100. www.jstor.org/stable/26237126.