Hansel & Gretel Revisited
By Elayne R., So. Plainfield, NJ
Once upon a time A lifetime, a millennium, a fortnight ago In an age when life was simple And stepmothers were invariably evil, The business of living continued With small pauses to fill in the Oversimplified moral at The end of an impossibly unreal story That even a fairy would be loath to admit ownership of.
Such is the epic of Hansel and Gretel. A terrible economic downturn had occurred in the forest, (A mere depression, nothing a few tax cuts couldn't fix) And there was not enough food to go around. So Hansel and Gretel's stepmother convinced their father - A loving, caring, hungry man - To lead his offspring deep into the woods And abandon them there. It was a win-win situation for everyone Except maybe Hansel and Gretel.
So the close family unit set off into the deep green yonder. Scheming Hansel, however, had overheard his parents'
diabolical plan (Kids in those days were always eavesdropping) And dropped bread crumbs along the path (After all, he was only a child, not Einstein.) That would lead them back home. Unfortunately, after spending the night Beside the fire their father had so benevolently built them
before leaving his two children all alone in the wild forest, Hansel and Gretel discovered that the crumbs were gone.
After wandering through the woods With no shoes and empty stomachs Hansel and Gretel came across a Quaint little house that smelled of good things to eat. Ignoring the electric fences (a sure sign of trouble), The children trespassed on the property, Where they met the proprietor, A little old lady, who seemed kindly But had an evil core lurking beneath Her wrinkled façade.
Hansel and Gretel should have heard The sinister music in the background. But they couldn't hear it over the Barney theme song
running through their heads, And besides, they smelled cookies and cakes. They couldn't have known the senior citizen's Evil plan. So Hansel and Gretel followed her into the little house Where they gorged themselves on treats Like cows at a feed-lot. After the old lady shoved Hansel into a stable It suddenly became clear that Hansel and Gretel weren't Out of the woods (literally or figuratively) yet. The silver-haired criminal began to fatten Hansel up To serve as a special meal at her bridge club meeting next week. As Hansel's body-fat index continued to rise The old lady became increasingly eager To indulge herself in a sumptuous meal. (Her measly Social Security check did not allow her
to do it often.)
Finally the day arrived. The oven was pre-heated, the bridge tables were out, and Hansel was sufficiently plump. In a last act of revenge to all of the young people who had Mocked her purple jogging suits and Tailgated her Buick when she drove 20 in a 35 zone, The old lady told Gretel to get inside the oven. Gretel was smarter than that, however, and With the proper degree of humility and reverence that should be adopted when speaking to one's elders, She asked her captor to illustrate exactly how
one steps into an oven. (She should have read Sylvia Plath.) The old lady's mind was not what it once was And she fell for Gretel's trick. Grandma Cannibal stepped into the oven, And Gretel quickly shut the door, Trapping the old woman within the flames. Gretel rushed to free her brother from the stable, Where he lay waiting for his execution. The pair went to admire Gretel's handiwork in the house And wonder of wonders, They found a bag of jewels, Allowing them to live a life of luxury together forever.
Fairy tales, like sitcoms Always have a happy ending. But what can be learned from Hansel and Gretel's tale of woe? The answer is twofold: Beware of old people (They vote down school budgets and eat young people.) And in the off-chance you're in Gretel's situation And have just shoved an old lady into an oven, Check underneath the mattress. That's where they hide the valuables.
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