The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales (Pantheon Books) - Jacob Grimm [241]
In the morning when the three army surgeons got up, they told the girl she was to bring them the plate on which the hand, heart, and eyes were lying. Then she brought it out of the cupboard, and the first fixed the thief’s hand on and smeared it with his salve, and it promptly grew to his arm. The second took the cat’s eyes and put them in his own head. The third fixed the pig’s heart firm in the place where his own had been, and the innkeeper stood by, admired their skill, and said he had never yet seen such a thing as that done, and would sing their praises and recommend them to everyone. Then they paid their bill, and traveled farther.
As they were on their way, the one with the pig’s heart did not stay with them at all, but wherever there was a corner he ran to it, and rooted about in it with his nose as pigs do. The others wanted to hold him back by the tail of his coat, but that did no good; he tore himself loose, and ran wherever the dirt was deepest. The second also behaved very strangely; he rubbed his eyes, and said to the others: “Comrades, what has happened? These are not my eyes! I don’t see at all Will one of you lead me, so that I do not fall.” Then with difficulty they traveled on till evening, when they reached another inn. They went into the bar together, and there at a table in the corner sat a rich man counting money. The one with the thief’s hand walked round about him, made a few jerky movements with his arm, and at last when the stranger turned away, snatched at the pile of money, and took a handful from it. One of them saw this, and said: “Comrade, what are you about? You must not steal—shame on you!” “Eh,” said he, “but what can I do? My hand twitches, and I am forced to snatch things whether I will or not.”
After this, they lay down to sleep, and while they were lying there it was so dark that no one could see his own hand. All at once the one with the cat’s eyes awoke, aroused the others, and said: “Brothers, just look up, do you see the white mice running about there?” The two sat up, but could see nothing. Then said he: “Things are not right with us, we have not got back again what is ours. We must return to the innkeeper, he has deceived us.” So they went back the next morning, and told the host they had not received what was their own; that the first had a thief’s hand, the second cat’s eyes, and the third a pig’s heart. The innkeeper said that the girl must be to blame for that, and was going to call her, but when she had seen the three coming, she had run out by the backdoor, and not