A princess sets out to claim her future—and loses her name along the way.
In The Goose-Girl, a young royal bride is betrayed during her journey to marriage, stripped of her identity, and forced into silence while another takes her place. Reduced from princess to servant, she tends geese in the fields beneath the castle that should have been her home, enduring humiliation with patience and grace.
Yet truth has a way of lingering. A loyal horse remembers. The wind listens. And quiet dignity, though overlooked, is never erased.
One of the most haunting and emotionally rich fairy tales collected by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, The Goose-Girl is a story of stolen identity, inner strength, and justice that arrives not through force—but through witness, time, and truth revealed.
Narrated with warmth and restraint by T. E. Gabbidon, this timeless tale unfolds as a lyrical meditation on endurance, loyalty, and the quiet power of remaining true to oneself when the world refuses to see you.











