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Gambling Hansel

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Gambling Hansel
Gambling Hansel summoned by Death (c1890)
Folk tale
NameGambling Hansel
Aarne–Thompson groupingATU 330A
CountryGermany
Published inGrimms' Fairy Tales

Gambling Hansel (De Spielhansl): KHM 82 is a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm and published in their first edition of Children's and Household Tales in 1812. The story contains elements of Aarne–Thompson type 330A: The Smith's Three Wishes.[1]

Story

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Margaret Raine Hunt (1831–1912) translated the tale in 1884:

Once upon a time, there was a man who did nothing but gamble, and for that reason people never called him anything but Gambling Hansel. As he never ceased to gamble, he played and lost his house and all that he had. Now the very day before his creditors were to take his house from him, the Lord and St. Peter came and asked him to give them shelter for the night. Then Gambling Hansel said, "For my part, you may stay the night, but I cannot give you a bed or anything to eat." So the Lord said he was just to take them in, and they themselves would buy something to eat, to which Gambling Hansel made no objection. St. Peter gave him three groschen, and said he was to go to the baker's and fetch some bread. So Gambling Hansel went, but when he reached the house where the other gambling vagabonds were gathered together, they, although they had won all that he had, greeted him clamorously, and said, "Hansel, do come in." "Oh," said he, "do you want to win the three groschen too?" On this they would not let him go. So he went in, and played away the three groschen.

Meanwhile St. Peter and the Lord were waiting, and as he was so long in returning, they set out to meet him. When Gambling Hansel came, however, he pretended that the money had fallen into the gutter, and kept raking about in it to pretend to look for it, but the Lord knew what he had done. St. Peter again gave him three groschen, and this time fetched them the loaf. Our Lord then inquired if he had no wine, and he said, "Alack, sir, the casks are all empty!" But the Lord said he was to go down into the cellar, for the best wine was still there. For a long time he would not believe this, but at length he said, "Well, I will go down, but I know that there is none there." When he turned the tap, however, the best of wine ran out. So he took it to them, and the two passed the night there. Early the next day, the Lord told Gambling Hansel that he might beg three favours. The Lord expected that he would ask to go to Heaven, but Gambling Hansel asked for a pack of cards with which he would always win, for dice with which he would always win, and for a tree whereon every kind of fruit would grow, and from which no one who had climbed up, could descend until he bade him do so. The Lord gave him all that he had asked, and departed with St. Peter.

Gambling Hansel at once set about gambling in earnest, and before long he had won half the world. St. Peter said to the Lord, "Lord, this thing must not go on, he will win, and thou lose, the whole world. We must send Death to him." Death said, "Hansel, come out a while." But Gambling Hansel said, "Just wait a little until the game is done, and in the meantime get up into that tree out there, and gather a little fruit that we may have something to munch on our way." Death climbed up, but when he wanted to come down again, he could not, and Gambling Hansel left him up there for seven years, during which time no one died.

St. Peter said to the Lord, "Lord, this thing must not go on. People no longer die; we must go ourselves." And they did. The Lord commanded Hansel to let Death come down. So Hansel went at once to Death and said to him, "Come down," and Death took him to the next world. Gambling Hansel made straight for the door of Heaven, and knocked at it. "Who is there?" "Gambling Hansel." "Ah, we will have nothing to do with him! Begone!" So he went to the door of Purgatory, and knocked once more. "Who is there?" "Gambling Hansel." "Ah, there is quite enough weeping and wailing here without him. We do not want to gamble, just go away again." Then he went to the door of Hell, and there they let him in.

There was, however, no one at home but old Lucifer and the crooked devils who had been doing their evil work in the world. And no sooner was Hansel there than he sat down to gamble again. Lucifer, however, had nothing to lose, but his misshapen devils, and Gambling Hansel won them from him, as with his cards he could not fail to do so. He took his crooked devils to Hohenfuert and pulled up a hop-pole, and with it went to Heaven and began to thrust the pole against it, and Heaven began to crack. St. Peter said, "Lord, this thing cannot go on, we must let him in, or he will throw us down from Heaven." And they let him in. But Gambling Hansel instantly began to play again, and there was such a noise and confusion that there was no hearing what they themselves were saying. Therefore St. Peter said, "Lord, this cannot go on, we must throw him down, or he will make all Heaven rebellious." So they threw him down, and his soul broke into fragments, which went into the gambling vagabonds who are living this very day.[2]

Analysis

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The Brothers Grimm tell two stories in which the main characters try to fool the Devil, Saint Peter and God - Brother Lustig and Gambling Hansel.[3] This tale explains why there are so many compulsive gamblers in the world - especially those who gamble to their financial and social ruination - as each has within them a fragment of the shattered Hansel. What the story does not explain is why an omniscient God who therefore knows what will happen endangers heaven by granting wishes to an addicted gambler that will eventually lead to his downfall - unless this is related to free will.

References

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  1. ^ Gambling Hansel - The Grimm Brothers Project - University of Pittsburgh
  2. ^ Public Domain One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Margaret Raine Hunt (transl), Household Tales, London: George Bell (1884)
  3. ^ Walter Rankin, Grimm Pictures: Fairy Tale Archetypes in Eight Horror and Suspense Films, McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers (2007) - Google Books p. 121