Folklorist
D. L. Ashliman has pointed out other versions of a Golden Fowl theme:
The Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs (
Aesop); The Golden Mallard (from the
Jataka stories of the Buddha's former births); the
Huma bird (Persia).
Modern interpretations A musical version of
The Golden Goose, written by Dieter Stegmann and Alexander S. Bermange was presented at the Amphitheater Park Schloss Philippsruhe,
Hanau, Germany as part of the Brothers Grimm Festival in 2006. It was also featured as an episode of the PC game ''
American McGee's Grimm'' where the goose is 10 times its size and its victims have their bodies completely stuck to the goose rather than falling in a conga line as in the story.
The Jataka The Buddha (Bodhisatta) was born, grew up, and got married. During his life, he was a member of the Hindu caste group of hereditary
priests and
scholars. He also had three daughters named Nanda, Nandavati, and Sundarinanda. When he died, he was reincarnated as a golden
goose with golden feathers, and after discovering his wife and daughters were being taken care of by others, he decided to give them some of his feathers; he hoped the feathers would help them live comfortably. Over time, he brought them more feathers to sell, and they were living in a continuous state of comfort and peace; until one day, when his wife became greedy and decided to formulate a plan to steal all of his feathers for money. His daughters did not like the idea of stealing his feathers, so they did not agree to the idea. Alas, the next time the golden goose came back, his wife plucked all of his feathers. When she did this, the feathers immediately changed from golden feathers to white
crane feathers. The wife waited for the golden feathers to grow back, but they never did; they grew back white, and the goose flew away, never to return again. == Classification ==