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"The Story of the Three Bears" (sometimes known as "The Three Bears", "Goldilocks and the Three Bears" or, simply, "Goldilocks") is a fairy tale first recorded in narrative form by British author and poet Robert Southey, and first published anonymously in a volume of his writings in 1837. The same year, British writer George Nicol published a version in rhyme based upon Southey's prose tale, with Southey approving the attempt to give the story more exposure. Both versions tell of three bears and an old woman who trespasses upon their property.

"The Story of the Three Bears" was in circulation before the publication of Southey's version. In 1831, for example, Eleanor Mure fashioned a handmade booklet about the three bears for her nephew's birthday, and, in 1813, Southey was telling the story to friends. In 1894, "Scrapefoot", a tale with a fox as antagonist that bears striking similarities to Southey's story, was uncovered by the folklorist Joseph Jacobs and may predate Southey's version in the oral tradition. Southey possibly heard "Scrapefoot", and confused its "vixen" with a synonym for an unpleasant, malicious old woman. Some maintain however that the story as well as the old woman originated with Southey.[1]

"The Story of the Three Bears" experienced two significant changes during its early publication history. Southey's intrusive old woman became an intrusive little girl in 1849, who was given various names referring to her hair until Goldilocks was settled upon in the early 20th century. Southey's three bachelor bears evolved into Father, Mother, and Baby Bear over the course of several years. What was originally a fearsome oral tale became a cozy family story with only a hint of menace. The story has elicited various interpretations and has been adapted to film, opera, and other media. "The Story of the Three Bears" is one of the most popular fairy tales in the English language.[2]



Plot

In Southey's tale, three anthropomorphic bears – "a Little, Small, Wee Bear, a Middle-sized Bear, and a Great, Huge Bear" – live together in a house in the woods. Southey describes them as very good-natured, trusting, harmless, tidy, and hospitable. Each of these "bachelor" bears has his own porridge bowl, chair, and bed. One day they take a walk in the woods while their porridge cools. An old woman (who is described at various points in the story as impudent, bad, foul-mouthed, ugly, dirty and a vagrant deserving of a stint in the House of Correction) discovers the bears' dwelling. She looks through a window, peeps through the keyhole, and lifts the latch. Assured that no one is home, she walks in. The old woman eats the Wee Bear's porridge, then settles into his chair and breaks it. Prowling about, she finds the bears' beds and falls asleep in Wee Bear's bed. The climax of the tale is reached when the bears return. Wee Bear finds the old woman in his bed and cries, "Somebody has been lying in my bed, – and here she is!" The old woman starts up, jumps from the window, and runs away never to be seen again.
Origins
Robert Southey

In 1837 Robert Southey published "The Story of the Three Bears" in a collection of essays and miscellanea called The Doctor.[1] The tale was not an original creation by Southey,[3] but was a retelling of a story that had long been in circulation.[4] Southey had been telling the story to others as early as September 1813, and in 1831 Eleanor Mure versified the tale and presented it to her nephew Horace Broke as a birthday gift.[3]

Southey and Mure differ in details. Southey's bears have porridge but Mure's have milk;[3] Southey's old woman has no motive for entering the house but Mure's old woman is piqued when her courtesy visit is rebuffed;[5] Southey's old woman runs away when discovered, but Mure's old woman is impaled on the steeple of St Paul's Cathedral.[6]

Southey probably learned the tale as a child from his uncle William Tyler. Tyler may have told a version with a vixen (fox) as intruder, and Southey later confused vixen with a common appellation for a crafty old woman.[3] P.M. Zall writes in "The Gothic Voice of Father Bear" (1974) that "It was no trick for Southey, a consummate technician, to recreate the improvisational tone of an Uncle William through rhythmical reiteration, artful alliteration ('they walked into the woods, while'), even bardic interpolation ('She could not have been a good, honest Old Woman')".[7] Ultimately, it is uncertain where Southey or his uncle learned the tale.

The same year Southey's tale was published, the story was versified by George Nicol who acknowledged the anonymous author of The Doctor as "the great, original concocter" of the tale.[3][8] Southey was delighted with Nicol's effort to bring more exposure to the tale, concerned children might overlook it in The Doctor.[9] Nicol's version was illustrated with engravings by B. Hart (after "C.J."), and was reissued in 1848 with Southey identified as the story's author.[10]
"Scrapefoot" illustration by John D. Batten

Folklorists Iona and Peter Opie point out in The Classic Fairy Tales (1999) that the tale has a "partial analogue" in "Snow White": the lost princess enters the dwarves' house, tastes their food, and falls asleep in one of their beds. In a manner similar to the three bears, the dwarves cry, "Who's been sitting on my stool?", "Who's been eating off my plate?", and "Who's been lying in my bed?". The Opies also point to similarities in a Norwegian tale about a princess who takes refuge in a cave inhabited by three Russian princes dressed in bearskins. She eats their food and hides under a bed.[11]

In 1865 Charles Dickens referenced a similar tale in Our Mutual Friend, but there the house belongs to hobgoblins rather than bears. Dickens' reference however suggests a yet to be discovered analogue or source.[12] Hunting rituals and ceremonies have been suggested and dismissed as possible origins.[13][14]

In 1894, the illustrator John D. Batten reported a variant of the tale at least 40 years old. In this version, the three bears live in a castle in the woods and are visited by a fox called Scrapefoot who drinks their milk, sits in their chairs, and rests in their beds.[3] This version belongs to the early Fox and Bear tale-cycle.[15]
Later variations: Goldilocks

Twelve years after the publication of Southey's tale, Joseph Cundall transformed the antagonist from an ugly old woman to a pretty little girl in his Treasury of Pleasure Books for Young Children. He explained his reasons for doing so in a dedicatory letter to his children, dated November 1849, which was inserted at the beginning of the book:

    The "Story of the Three Bears" is a very old Nursery Tale, but it was never so well told as by the great poet Southey, whose version I have (with permission) given you, only I have made the intruder a little girl instead of an old woman. This I did because I found that the tale is better known with Silver-Hair, and because there are so many other stories of old women.[11]

Illustration from Childhood's Favorites and Fairy Stories

Once the little girl entered the tale, she remained – suggesting children prefer an attractive child in the story rather than an ugly old woman.[9] The juvenile antagonist saw a succession of names:[16] Silver Hair in the pantomime Harlequin and The Three Bears; or, Little Silver Hair and the Fairies by J.B. Buckstone (1853); Silver-Locks in Aunt Mavor's Nursery Tales (1858); Silverhair in George MacDonald's "The Golden Key" (1867); Golden Hair in Aunt Friendly's Nursery Book (ca. 1868);[11] Silver-Hair and Goldenlocks at various times; Little Golden-Hair (1889);[15] and finally Goldilocks in Old Nursery Stories and Rhymes (1904).[11] Tatar credits Flora Annie Steel with naming the child (1918).[1]

Goldilocks's fate varies in the many retellings: in some versions, she runs into the forest, in some she is almost eaten by the bears but her mother rescues her, in some she vows to be a good child, and in some she returns home. Whatever her fate, Goldilocks fares better than Southey's vagrant old woman who, in his opinion, deserved a stint in the House of Correction, and far better than Miss Mure's old woman who is impaled upon St. Paul's church-yard steeple.[17]
three bears overlook a bed as a scared girl leaps from the bed
Goldilocks caught in Baby Bear's bed – by Brooke

Southey's all-male ursine trio has not been left untouched over the years. The group was re-cast as Father, Mother, and Baby Bear, but the date of this change is disputed. Tatar indicates it occurred by 1852,[17] while Katherine Briggs suggests the event occurred in 1878 with Mother Goose's Fairy Tales published by Routledge.[15][16] With the publication of the tale by "Aunt Fanny" in 1852, the bears became a family in the illustrations to the tale but remained three bachelor bears in the text.

In Dulcken's version of 1858, the two larger bears are brother and sister, and friends to the little bear. This arrangement represents the evolution of the ursine trio from the traditional three male bears to a family of father, mother, and child.[18] In a publication ca. 1860, the bears have become a family at last in both text and illustrations: "the old papa Bear, the mamma Bear, and the little boy Bear".[19] In a Routledge publication c 1867, Great Papa is called Rough Bruin, Mrs. Bruin is Mammy Muff, and their "little funny brown Bear" is called Tiny. Inexplicably, the illustrations depict the three as male bears.[20]

In publications subsequent to Aunt Fanny's of 1852, Victorian nicety required editors to routinely and silently alter Southey's "[T]here she sate till the bottom of the chair came out, and down came her's, plump upon the ground" to read "and down she came", omitting any reference to the human bottom. The cumulative effect of the several changes to the tale since its original publication was to transform a fearsome oral tale into a cozy family story with an unrealized hint of menace.[16]
Interpretations

Maria Tatar in The Annotated Classic Fairy Tales (2002) notes that Southey's tale is sometimes viewed as a cautionary tale that imparts a lesson about the hazards of wandering off and exploring unknown territory. Like "The Tale of the Three Little Pigs", the story uses repetitive formulas to engage the child's attention and to reinforce the point about safety and shelter.[17] Tatar points out that the tale is typically framed today as a discovery of what is "just right", but for earlier generations, it was a tale about an intruder who could not control herself when encountering the possessions of others.[21]
Illustration by John Batten, 1890

In The Uses of Enchantment (1976), the child psychologist Bruno Bettelheim describes Goldilocks as "poor, beautiful, and charming", and notes that the story does not describe her positively except for her hair.[22] Bettelheim mainly discussed the tale in terms of Goldilock's struggle to move past Oedipal issues to confront adolescent identity problems.[23]

In Bettelheim's view, the tale fails to encourage children "to pursue the hard labor of solving, one at a time, the problems which growing up presents", and does not end as fairy tales should with the "promise of future happiness awaiting those who have mastered their Oedipal situation as a child". He believes the tale is an escapist one that thwarts the child reading it from gaining emotional maturity.

Tatar criticizes Bettelheim's views: "[His] reading is perhaps too invested in instrumentalizing fairy tales, that is, in turning them into vehicles that convey messages and set forth behavioral models for the child. While the story may not solve oedipal issues or sibling rivalry as Bettelheim believes "Cinderella" does, it suggests the importance of respecting property and the consequences of just 'trying out' things that do not belong to you."[17]

Elms suggests Bettelheim may have missed the anal aspect of the tale that would make it helpful to the child's personality development.[22] In Handbook of Psychobiography Elms describes Southey's tale not as one of Bettelheimian post-Oedipal ego development but as one of Freudian pre-Oedipal anality.[23] He believes the story appeals chiefly to preschoolers who are engaged in "cleanliness training, maintaining environmental and behavioral order, and distress about disruption of order". His own experience and his observation of others lead him to believe children align themselves with the tidy, organized ursine protagonists rather than the unruly, delinquent human antagonist. In Elms's view, the anality of "The Story of the Three Bears" can be traced directly to Robert Southey's fastidious, dirt-obsessed aunt who raised him and passed her obsession to him in a milder form.[23]
Literary elements

The story makes extensive use of the literary rule of three, featuring three chairs, three bowls of porridge, three beds, and the three title characters who live in the house. There are also three sequences of the bears discovering in turn that someone has been eating from their porridge, sitting in their chairs, and finally, lying in their beds, at which point is the climax of Goldilocks being discovered. This follows three earlier sequences of Goldilocks trying the bowls of porridge, chairs, and beds successively, each time finding the third "just right". Author Christopher Booker characterizes this as the "dialectical three", where "the first is wrong in one way, the second in another or opposite way, and only the third, in the middle, is just right." Booker continues "This idea that the way forward lies in finding an exact middle path between opposites is of extraordinary importance in storytelling".[24]

The Goldilocks principle describes a situation which is just right in a manner akin to that portrayed in the tale. The concept exists not only in literature but also in astronomy and economics. A Goldilocks planet is neither too close to nor too far from a star to rule out life, whereas a Goldilocks economy is one that sustains moderate growth and low inflation, which is seen to allow a market-friendly monetary policy.
Modern uses and adaptations
Film and television

Walt Disney and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer released animated adaptations of the tale in 1922 and 1939 respectively.[25][26] Coronet Films released a short live action film in 1958 that starred live bears and a child.[27] Faerie Tale Theatre telecast an adaptation in 1984 that starred Tatum O'Neal.

A modern take is featured in the Grimm television series episode Bears Will Be Bears. In it, Goldilocks is re-imagined as a girl in her 20s. She breaks into a family's home with her boyfriend, eating their food and having sex in their bed. When the family returns, they are attacked and she gets away. The boyfriend is captured. The bears are re-imagined as bear-like creatures (Jägerbär) that are disguised as humans.

In the Merrie Melodies cartoon Bugs Bunny and the Three Bears (1944), the bears are heckled by Bugs Bunny instead of Goldilocks. The Looney Tunes version of the Three Bears—bullying Pa, deadpan Ma, and oafish "Junyer"—would later star by themselves in other Warner cartoons.

A later Warner cartoon, Goldimouse and the Three Cats (1960), shows Sylvester the Cat and his family being invaded by "Goldimouse". Sylvester tries to catch the playful rodent for his "spoiled brat" son Sylvester Jr, but fails miserably every time. The studio also produced The Bear's Tale (1940), a parody in which Goldilocks inadvertently knocks on Little Red Riding Hood's door, only to be told by the Big Bad Wolf where the bears' house really is. Later, "Goldie" gets a phone call from Red Riding Hood, warning her about both the wolf and the bears.

In Rooster Teeth Productions RWBY, Yang Xiao Long (played by Barbara Dunkelman) is a yellow-haired girl who wields twin shotgun gauntlets called Ember Celica.[28] Yang's mannerism is carefree, reckless and a "rule-breaker", and she likes teddy bears. She is an allusion to Goldilocks of The Story of the Three Bears, which is reflected in her name, translated from Chinese as "gold(en) sun light".[29]

On the television show The Simpsons, in the episode Treehouse of Horror XI, the characters Bart and Lisa stumble upon a different version of the story when they unknowingly enter the Three Bears' house. They quickly leave once they realize where they are and the bears return home. Bart puts a chair on the door and doorknob to bar them from following them out, but this inadvertently traps Goldilocks (whom neither Bart nor Lisa knew was already in the house asleep) inside. This prevents her attempt to escape the bears, who fatally maul and eat her. The last trace seen of Goldilocks is a pool her blood trickling from underneath the bears' front door.
Theatre

Kurt Schwertsik's 35-minute opera Roald Dahl's Goldilocks premiered in 1997 at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall. The opera's setting is the Forest Assizes where Baby Bear stands accused of assaulting Miss Goldie Locks. The tables are turned when the defense limns the trauma suffered by the bears at the hands of that "brazen little crook", Goldilocks.[30]
Song

Bobby Troup wrote a jazz-style song "The Three Bears" in 1946, re-telling the story and using some jive talk.
Other

Goldilocks is a nickname for the fictional character Captain Jack Aubrey in Patrick O'Brien's Master & Commander books due to his long gold hair.
Notes

    Tatar 2002, p. 245
    Elms 1977, p. 257
    Opie 1992, p. 199
    Dorson 2001, p. 94
    Ober 1981, pp. 2,10
    Opie 1992, pp. 199–200
    Quoted in: Ober 1981, p. ix
    Ober 1981, p. 47
    Curry 1921, p. 65
    Ober 1981, p. 48
    Opie 1992, p. 200
    Ober 1981, p. xii
    Ober 1981, p. x
    Elms 1977, p. 259
    Briggs 2002, pp. 128–129
    Seal 2001, p. 91
    Tatar 2002, p. 246
    Ober 1981, p. 142
    Ober 1981, p. 178
    Ober 1981, p. 190
    Tatar 2002, p. 251
    Elms 1977, p. 264
    Schultz 2005, p. 93
    Booker 2005, pp. 229–32
    Disney
    MGM
    Coronet
    Webb, Charles (1 June 2013). "EXCLUSIVE: Rooster Teeth's 'RWBY' Yellow Trailer". MTV.com. Retrieved 10 June 2013.
    Rush, Amanda (2013-07-12). "FEATURE: Inside Rooster Teeth's "RWBY"". Crunchyroll. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
    Roald Dahl's Goldilocks

References

    The Seven Basic Plots. Booker, Christopher (2005). "The Rule of Three". The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8264-5209-4.
    Briggs, Katherine Mary (2002) [1977]. British Folk Tales and Legends. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-28602-6.
    "Coronet: Goldilocks and the Three Bears". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2009-02-21.
    Curry, Charles Madison (1921). Children's Literature. Rand McNally & Company.
    "Disney: Goldilocks and the Three Bears". The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts. Retrieved 2009-02-21.
    Dorson, Richard Mercer (2001) [1968]. The British Folklorists. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-415-20426-7.
    Elms, Alan C. (July–September 1977). ""The Three Bears": Four Interpretations". The Journal of American Folklore 90 (357).
    "MGM: Goldilocks and the Three Bears". Retrieved 2010-11-12.
    Ober, Warren U. (1981). The Story of the Three Bears. Scholars Facsimiles & Reprints. ISBN 0-8201-1362-X.
    Opie, Iona; Opie, Peter (1992) [1974]. The Classic Fairy Tales. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-211559-6.
    "Roald Dahl's Goldilocks (1997)". Retrieved 2009-01-03.
    Schultz, William Todd (2005). Handbook of Psychobiography. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-516827-5.
    Seal, Graham (2001). Encyclopedia of Folk Heroes. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-57607-216-9.
    Tatar, Maria (2002). The Annotated Classic Fairy Tales. W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-05163-3.

External links
    Wikisource has original text related to this article:
The Story of the Three Bears
    Wikisource has original text related to this article:
Scrapefoot
    Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Three Bears.

    "The Three Bears" by Robert Southey – later version with "Silver-hair", a "little girl"
    "The Three Bears" illustrated in The Colorful Story Book of 1941
    "The Story of the Three Bears", versified by George Nicol, 2nd edition, 1839
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