The Sharp Grey Sheep
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The Sharp Grey Sheep or The Sharp-Horned Grey Sheep is a Scottish fairy tale collected by John Francis Campbell in Popular Tales of the West Highlands, listing his informant as John Dewar, labourer, from Glendaruail, Cowal.
It is Aarne-Thompson type 510A.
[edit] Synopsis
A queen died, and the king remarried. The stepmother was cruel to the princess and sent her to watch the sheep, but a sharp (horned) grey sheep helped her. The stepmother, knowing she was not getting enough food from her, went to a henwife, and the henwife set her daughter to spy. The princess told the henwife's daughter to set her head on her knee, and she would dress her hair; the henwife's daughter slept, and the sheep came to help her. The henwife's daughter had an eye on the back of her head that was not asleep; she watched through it and told her mother.
The sheep told the princess to gather her bones and hooves in the hide and it would come back; the princess did, but she forgot the little hooves, so the sheep was lame, but it still kept her in meat.
A prince saw her and asked after her. The henwife's daughter saw it, and the henwife warned the queen. The queen brought back her stepdaughter to work about the house and sent out her own daughter to tend the sheep.
One day, when the stepdaughter walked outside, the prince gave her a pair of golden boots. He wanted to see her at the sermon. Her stepmother would not let her go, so she went after, and sat where the prince could see her, and left before her stepmother could see her there. The third time, she lost her shoe in the mud, and the prince declared that he would marry whoever the shoe fit.
The queen got her daughter's foot to fit by cutting of her toes, but a bird pointed out the blood to the prince. The prince went back, found the princess, and married her.