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- 1872
- FAIRY TALES OF HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
- THE GIRL WHO TROD ON THE LOAF
- by Hans Christian Andersen
-
- THERE was once a girl who trod on a loaf to avoid soiling her
- shoes, and the misfortunes that happened to her in consequence are
- well known. Her name was Inge; she was a poor child, but proud and
- presuming, and with a bad and cruel disposition. When quite a little
- child she would delight in catching flies, and tearing off their
- wings, so as to make creeping things of them. When older, she would
- take cockchafers and beetles, and stick pins through them. Then she
- pushed a green leaf, or a little scrap of paper towards their feet,
- and when the poor creatures would seize it and hold it fast, and
- turn over and over in their struggles to get free from the pin, she
- would say, "The cockchafer is reading; see how he turns over the
- leaf." She grew worse instead of better with years, and,
- unfortunately, she was pretty, which caused her to be excused, when
- she should have been sharply reproved.
- "Your headstrong will requires severity to conquer it," her mother
- often said to her. "As a little child you used to trample on my apron,
- but one day I fear you will trample on my heart." And, alas! this fear
- was realized.
- Inge was taken to the house of some rich people, who lived at a
- distance, and who treated her as their own child, and dressed her so
- fine that her pride and arrogance increased.
- When she had been there about a year, her patroness said to her,
- "You ought to go, for once, and see your parents, Inge."
- So Inge started to go and visit her parents; but she only wanted
- to show herself in her native place, that the people might see how
- fine she was. She reached the entrance of the village, and saw the
- young laboring men and maidens standing together chatting, and her own
- mother amongst them. Inge's mother was sitting on a stone to rest,
- with a fagot of sticks lying before her, which she had picked up in
- the wood. Then Inge turned back; she who was so finely dressed she
- felt ashamed of her mother, a poorly clad woman, who picked up wood in
- the forest. She did not turn back out of pity for her mother's
- poverty, but from pride.
- Another half-year went by, and her mistress said, "you ought to go
- home again, and visit your parents, Inge, and I will give you a
- large wheaten loaf to take to them, they will be glad to see you, I am
- sure."
- So Inge put on her best clothes, and her new shoes, drew her dress
- up around her, and set out, stepping very carefully, that she might be
- clean and neat about the feet, and there was nothing wrong in doing
- so. But when she came to the place where the footpath led across the
- moor, she found small pools of water, and a great deal of mud, so
- she threw the loaf into the mud, and trod upon it, that she might pass
- without wetting her feet. But as she stood with one foot on the loaf
- and the other lifted up to step forward, the loaf began to sink
- under her, lower and lower, till she disappeared altogether, and
- only a few bubbles on the surface of the muddy pool remained to show
- where she had sunk. And this is the story.
- But where did Inge go? She sank into the ground, and went down
- to the Marsh Woman, who is always brewing there.
- The Marsh Woman is related to the elf maidens, who are well-known,
- for songs are sung and pictures painted about them. But of the Marsh
- Woman nothing is known, excepting that when a mist arises from the
- meadows, in summer time, it is because she is brewing beneath them. To
- the Marsh Woman's brewery Inge sunk down to a place which no one can
- endure for long. A heap of mud is a palace compared with the Marsh
- Woman's brewery; and as Inge fell she shuddered in every limb, and
- soon became cold and stiff as marble. Her foot was still fastened to
- the loaf, which bowed her down as a golden ear of corn bends the stem.
- An evil spirit soon took possession of Inge, and carried her to
- a still worse place, in which she saw crowds of unhappy people,
- waiting in a state of agony for the gates of mercy to be opened to
- them, and in every heart was a miserable and eternal feeling of
- unrest. It would take too much time to describe the various tortures
- these people suffered, but Inge's punishment consisted in standing
- there as a statue, with her foot fastened to the loaf. She could
- move her eyes about, and see all the misery around her, but she
- could not turn her head; and when she saw the people looking at her
- she thought they were admiring her pretty face and fine clothes, for
- she was still vain and proud. But she had forgotten how soiled her
- clothes had become while in the Marsh Woman's brewery, and that they
- were covered with mud; a snake had also fastened itself in her hair,
- and hung down her back, while from each fold in her dress a great toad
- peeped out and croaked like an asthmatic poodle. Worse than all was
- the terrible hunger that tormented her, and she could not stoop to
- break off a piece of the loaf on which she stood. No; her back was too
- stiff, and her whole body like a pillar of stone. And then came
- creeping over her face and eyes flies without wings; she winked and
- blinked, but they could not fly away, for their wings had been
- pulled off; this, added to the hunger she felt, was horrible torture.
- "If this lasts much longer," she said, "I shall not be able to
- bear it." But it did last, and she had to bear it, without being
- able to help herself.
- A tear, followed by many scalding tears, fell upon her head, and
- rolled over her face and neck, down to the loaf on which she stood.
- Who could be weeping for Inge? She had a mother in the world still,
- and the tears of sorrow which a mother sheds for her child will always
- find their way to the child's heart, but they often increase the
- torment instead of being a relief. And Inge could hear all that was
- said about her in the world she had left, and every one seemed cruel
- to her. The sin she had committed in treading on the loaf was known on
- earth, for she had been seen by the cowherd from the hill, when she
- was crossing the marsh and had disappeared.
- When her mother wept and exclaimed, "Ah, Inge! what grief thou
- hast caused thy mother" she would say, "Oh that I had never been born!
- My mother's tears are useless now."
- And then the words of the kind people who had adopted her came
- to her ears, when they said, "Inge was a sinful girl, who did not
- value the gifts of God, but trampled them under her feet."
- "Ah," thought Inge, "they should have punished me, and driven
- all my naughty tempers out of me."
- A song was made about "The girl who trod on a loaf to keep her
- shoes from being soiled," and this song was sung everywhere. The story
- of her sin was also told to the little children, and they called her
- "wicked Inge," and said she was so naughty that she ought to be
- punished. Inge heard all this, and her heart became hardened and
- full of bitterness.
- But one day, while hunger and grief were gnawing in her hollow
- frame, she heard a little, innocent child, while listening to the tale
- of the vain, haughty Inge, burst into tears and exclaim, "But will she
- never come up again?"
- And she heard the reply, "No, she will never come up again."
- "But if she were to say she was sorry, and ask pardon, and promise
- never to do so again?" asked the little one.
- "Yes, then she might come; but she will not beg pardon," was the
- answer.
- "Oh, I wish she would!" said the child, who was quite unhappy
- about it. "I should be so glad. I would give up my doll and all my
- playthings, if she could only come here again. Poor Inge! it is so
- dreadful for her."
- These pitying words penetrated to Inge's inmost heart, and
- seemed to do her good. It was the first time any one had said, "Poor
- Inge!" without saying something about her faults. A little innocent
- child was weeping, and praying for mercy for her. It made her feel
- quite strange, and she would gladly have wept herself, and it added to
- her torment to find she could not do so. And while she thus suffered
- in a place where nothing changed, years passed away on earth, and
- she heard her name less frequently mentioned. But one day a sigh
- reached her ear, and the words, "Inge! Inge! what a grief thou hast
- been to me! I said it would be so." It was the last sigh of her
- dying mother.
- After this, Inge heard her kind mistress say, "Ah, poor Inge!
- shall I ever see thee again? Perhaps I may, for we know not what may
- happen in the future." But Inge knew right well that her mistress
- would never come to that dreadful place.
- Time-passed- a long bitter time- then Inge heard her name
- pronounced once more, and saw what seemed two bright stars shining
- above her. They were two gentle eyes closing on earth. Many years
- had passed since the little girl had lamented and wept about "poor
- Inge." That child was now an old woman, whom God was taking to
- Himself. In the last hour of existence the events of a whole life
- often appear before us; and this hour the old woman remembered how,
- when a child, she had shed tears over the story of Inge, and she
- prayed for her now. As the eyes of the old woman closed to earth,
- the eyes of the soul opened upon the hidden things of eternity, and
- then she, in whose last thoughts Inge had been so vividly present, saw
- how deeply the poor girl had sunk. She burst into tears at the
- sight, and in heaven, as she had done when a little child on earth,
- she wept and prayed for poor Inge. Her tears and her prayers echoed
- through the dark void that surrounded the tormented captive soul,
- and the unexpected mercy was obtained for it through an angel's tears.
- As in thought Inge seemed to act over again every sin she had
- committed on earth, she trembled, and tears she had never yet been
- able to weep rushed to her eyes. It seemed impossible that the gates
- of mercy could ever be opened to her; but while she acknowledged
- this in deep penitence, a beam of radiant light shot suddenly into the
- depths upon her. More powerful than the sunbeam that dissolves the man
- of snow which the children have raised, more quickly than the
- snowflake melts and becomes a drop of water on the warm lips of a
- child, was the stony form of Inge changed, and as a little bird she
- soared, with the speed of lightning, upward to the world of mortals. A
- bird that felt timid and shy to all things around it, that seemed to
- shrink with shame from meeting any living creature, and hurriedly
- sought to conceal itself in a dark corner of an old ruined wall; there
- it sat cowering and unable to utter a sound, for it was voiceless. Yet
- how quickly the little bird discovered the beauty of everything around
- it. The sweet, fresh air; the soft radiance of the moon, as its
- light spread over the earth; the fragrance which exhaled from bush and
- tree, made it feel happy as it sat there clothed in its fresh,
- bright plumage. All creation seemed to speak of beneficence and
- love. The bird wanted to give utterance to thoughts that stirred in
- his breast, as the cuckoo and the nightingale in the spring, but it
- could not. Yet in heaven can be heard the song of praise, even from
- a worm; and the notes trembling in the breast of the bird were as
- audible to Heaven even as the psalms of David before they had
- fashioned themselves into words and song.
- Christmas-time drew near, and a peasant who dwelt close by the old
- wall stuck up a pole with some ears of corn fastened to the top,
- that the birds of heaven might have feast, and rejoice in the happy,
- blessed time. And on Christmas morning the sun arose and shone upon
- the ears of corn, which were quickly surrounded by a number of
- twittering birds. Then, from a hole in the wall, gushed forth in
- song the swelling thoughts of the bird as he issued from his hiding
- place to perform his first good deed on earth,- and in heaven it was
- well known who that bird was.
- The winter was very hard; the ponds were covered with ice, and
- there was very little food for either the beasts of the field or the
- birds of the air. Our little bird flew away into the public roads, and
- found here and there, in the ruts of the sledges, a grain of corn, and
- at the halting places some crumbs. Of these he ate only a few, but
- he called around him the other birds and the hungry sparrows, that
- they too might have food. He flew into the towns, and looked about,
- and wherever a kind hand had strewed bread on the window-sill for
- the birds, he only ate a single crumb himself, and gave all the rest
- to the rest of the other birds. In the course of the winter the bird
- had in this way collected many crumbs and given them to other birds,
- till they equalled the weight of the loaf on which Inge had trod to
- keep her shoes clean; and when the last bread-crumb had been found and
- given, the gray wings of the bird became white, and spread
- themselves out for flight.
- "See, yonder is a sea-gull!" cried the children, when they saw the
- white bird, as it dived into the sea, and rose again into the clear
- sunlight, white and glittering. But no one could tell whither it
- went then although some declared it flew straight to the sun.
-
-
- THE END
-