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- 1872
- FAIRY TALES OF HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
- UNDER THE WILLOW-TREE
- by Hans Christian Andersen
-
- THE region round the little town of Kjoge is very bleak and
- cold. The town lies on the sea shore, which is always beautiful; but
- here it might be more beautiful than it is, for on every side the
- fields are flat, and it is a long way to the forest. But when
- persons reside in a place and get used to it, they can always find
- something beautiful in it,- something for which they long, even in the
- most charming spot in the world which is not home. It must be owned
- that there are in the outskirts of the town some humble gardens on the
- banks of a little stream that runs on towards the sea, and in summer
- these gardens look very pretty. Such indeed was the opinion of two
- little children, whose parents were neighbors, and who played in these
- gardens, and forced their way from one garden to the other through the
- gooseberry-bushes that divided them. In one of the gardens grew an
- elder-tree, and in the other an old willow, under which the children
- were very fond of playing. They had permission to do so, although
- the tree stood close by the stream, and they might easily have
- fallen into the water; but the eye of God watches over the little
- ones, otherwise they would never be safe. At the same time, these
- children were very careful not to go too near the water; indeed, the
- boy was so afraid of it, that in the summer, while the other
- children were splashing about in the sea, nothing could entice him
- to join them. They jeered and laughed at him, and he was obliged to
- bear it all as patiently as he could. Once the neighbor's little girl,
- Joanna, dreamed that she was sailing in a boat, and the boy- Knud
- was his name- waded out in the water to join her, and the water came
- up to his neck, and at last closed over his head, and in a moment he
- had disappeared. When little Knud heard this dream, it seemed as if he
- could not bear the mocking and jeering again; how could he dare to
- go into the water now, after Joanna's dream! He never would do it, for
- this dream always satisfied him. The parents of these children, who
- were poor, often sat together while Knud and Joanna played in the
- gardens or in the road. Along this road- a row of willow-trees had
- been planted to separate it from a ditch on one side of it. They
- were not very handsome trees, for the tops had been cut off;
- however, they were intended for use, and not for show. The old
- willow-tree in the garden was much handsomer, and therefore the
- children were very fond of sitting under it. The town had a large
- market-place; and at the fair-time there would be whole rows, like
- streets, of tents and booths containing silks and ribbons, and toys
- and cakes, and everything that could be wished for. There were
- crowds of people, and sometimes the weather would be rainy, and splash
- with moisture the woollen jackets of the peasants; but it did not
- destroy the beautiful fragrance of the honey-cakes and gingerbread
- with which one booth was filled; and the best of it was, that the
- man who sold these cakes always lodged during the fair-time with
- little Knud's parents. So every now and then he had a present of
- gingerbread, and of course Joanna always had a share. And, more
- delightful still, the gingerbread seller knew all sorts of things to
- tell and could even relate stories about his own gingerbread. So one
- evening he told them a story that made such a deep impression on the
- children that they never forgot it; and therefore I think we may as
- well hear it too, for it is not very long.
- "Once upon a time," said he, "there lay on my counter two
- gingerbread cakes, one in the shape of a man wearing a hat, the
- other of a maiden without a bonnet. Their faces were on the side
- that was uppermost, for on the other side they looked very
- different. Most people have a best side to their characters, which
- they take care to show to the world. On the left, just where the heart
- is, the gingerbread man had an almond stuck in to represent it, but
- the maiden was honey cake all over. They were placed on the counter as
- samples, and after lying there a long time they at last fell in love
- with each other; but neither of them spoke of it to the other, as they
- should have done if they expected anything to follow. 'He is a man, he
- ought to speak the first word,' thought the gingerbread maiden; but
- she felt quite happy- she was sure that her love was returned. But his
- thoughts were far more ambitious, as the thoughts of a man often
- are. He dreamed that he was a real street boy, that he possessed
- four real pennies, and that he had bought the gingerbread lady, and
- ate her up. And so they lay on the counter for days and weeks, till
- they grew hard and dry; but the thoughts of the maiden became ever
- more tender and womanly. 'Ah well, it is enough for me that I have
- been able to live on the same counter with him,' said she one day;
- when suddenly, 'crack,' and she broke in two. 'Ah,' said the
- gingerbread man to himself, 'if she had only known of my love, she
- would have kept together a little longer.' And here they both are, and
- that is their history," said the cake man. "You think the history of
- their lives and their silent love, which never came to anything,
- very remarkable; and there they are for you." So saying, he gave
- Joanna the gingerbread man, who was still quite whole- and to Knud the
- broken maiden; but the children had been so much impressed by the
- story, that they had not the heart to eat the lovers up.
- The next day they went into the churchyard, and took the two
- cake figures with them, and sat down under the church wall, which
- was covered with luxuriant ivy in summer and winter, and looked as
- if hung with rich tapestry. They stuck up the two gingerbread
- figures in the sunshine among the green leaves, and then told the
- story, and all about the silent love which came to nothing, to a group
- of children. They called it, "love," because the story was so
- lovely, and the other children had the same opinion. But when they
- turned to look at the gingerbread pair, the broken maiden was gone!
- A great boy, out of wickedness, had eaten her up. At first the
- children cried about it; but afterwards, thinking very probably that
- the poor lover ought not to be left alone in the world, they ate him
- up too: but they never forgot the story.
- The two children still continued to play together by the
- elder-tree, and under the willow; and the little maiden sang beautiful
- songs, with a voice that was as clear as a bell. Knud, on the
- contrary, had not a note of music in him, but knew the words of the
- songs, and that of course is something. The people of Kjoge, and
- even the rich wife of the man who kept the fancy shop, would stand and
- listen while Joanna was singing, and say, "She has really a very sweet
- voice."
- Those were happy days; but they could not last forever. The
- neighbors were separated, the mother of the little girl was dead,
- and her father had thoughts of marrying again and of residing in the
- capital, where he had been promised a very lucrative appointment as
- messenger. The neighbors parted with tears, the children wept sadly;
- but their parents promised that they should write to each other at
- least once a year.
- After this, Knud was bound apprentice to a shoemaker; he was
- growing a great boy, and could not be allowed to run wild any
- longer. Besides, he was going to be confirmed. Ah, how happy he
- would have been on that festal day in Copenhagen with little Joanna;
- but he still remained at Kjoge, and had never seen the great city,
- though the town is not five miles from it. But far across the bay,
- when the sky was clear, the towers of Copenhagen could be seen; and on
- the day of his confirmation he saw distinctly the golden cross on
- the principal church glittering in the sun. How often his thoughts
- were with Joanna! but did she think of him? Yes. About Christmas
- came a letter from her father to Knud's parents, which stated that
- they were going on very well in Copenhagen, and mentioning
- particularly that Joanna's beautiful voice was likely to bring her a
- brilliant fortune in the future. She was engaged to sing at a concert,
- and she had already earned money by singing, out of which she sent her
- dear neighbors at Kjoge a whole dollar, for them to make merry on
- Christmas eve, and they were to drink her health. She had herself
- added this in a postscript, and in the same postscript she wrote,
- "Kind regards to Knud."
- The good neighbors wept, although the news was so pleasant; but
- they wept tears of joy. Knud's thoughts had been daily with Joanna,
- and now he knew that she also had thought of him; and the nearer the
- time came for his apprenticeship to end, the clearer did it appear
- to him that he loved Joanna, and that she must be his wife; and a
- smile came on his lips at the thought, and at one time he drew the
- thread so fast as he worked, and pressed his foot so hard against
- the knee strap, that he ran the awl into his finger; but what did he
- care for that? He was determined not to play the dumb lover as both
- the gingerbread cakes had done; the story was a good lesson to him.
- At length he become a journeyman; and then, for the first time, he
- prepared for a journey to Copenhagen, with his knapsack packed and
- ready. A master was expecting him there, and he thought of Joanna, and
- how glad she would be to see him. She was now seventeen, and he
- nineteen years old. He wanted to buy a gold ring for her in Kjoge, but
- then he recollected how far more beautiful such things would be in
- Copenhagen. So he took leave of his parents, and on a rainy day,
- late in the autumn, wandered forth on foot from the town of his birth.
- The leaves were falling from the trees; and, by the time he arrived at
- his new master's in the great metropolis, he was wet through. On the
- following Sunday he intended to pay his first visit to Joanna's
- father. When the day came, the new journeyman's clothes were brought
- out, and a new hat, which he had brought in Kjoge. The hat became
- him very well, for hitherto he had only worn a cap. He found the house
- that he sought easily, but had to mount so many stairs that he
- became quite giddy; it surprised him to find how people lived over one
- another in this dreadful town.
- On entering a room in which everything denoted prosperity,
- Joanna's father received him very kindly. The new wife was a
- stranger to him, but she shook hands with him, and offered him coffee.
- "Joanna will be very glad to see you," said her father. "You
- have grown quite a nice young man, you shall see her presently; she is
- a good child, and is the joy of my heart, and, please God, she will
- continue to be so; she has her own room now, and pays us rent for it."
- And the father knocked quite politely at a door, as if he were a
- stranger, and then they both went in. How pretty everything was in
- that room! a more beautiful apartment could not be found in the
- whole town of Kjoge; the queen herself could scarcely be better
- accommodated. There were carpets, and rugs, and window curtains
- hanging to the ground. Pictures and flowers were scattered about.
- There was a velvet chair, and a looking-glass against the wall, into
- which a person might be in danger of stepping, for it was as large
- as a door. All this Knud saw at a glance, and yet, in truth, he saw
- nothing but Joanna. She was quite grown up, and very different from
- what Knud had fancied her, and a great deal more beautiful. In all
- Kjoge there was not a girl like her; and how graceful she looked,
- although her glance at first was odd, and not familiar; but for a
- moment only, then she rushed towards him as if she would have kissed
- him; she did not, however, although she was very near it. Yes, she
- really was joyful at seeing the friend of her childhood once more, and
- the tears even stood in her eyes. Then she asked so many questions
- about Knud's parents, and everything, even to the elder-tree and the
- willow, which she called "elder-mother and willow-father," as if
- they had been human beings; and so, indeed, they might be, quite as
- much as the gingerbread cakes. Then she talked about them, and the
- story of their silent love, and how they lay on the counter together
- and split in two; and then she laughed heartily; but the blood
- rushed into Knud's cheeks, and his heart beat quickly. Joanna was
- not proud at all; he noticed that through her he was invited by her
- parents to remain the whole evening with them, and she poured out
- the tea and gave him a cup herself; and afterwards she took a book and
- read aloud to them, and it seemed to Knud as if the story was all
- about himself and his love, for it agreed so well with his own
- thoughts. And then she sang a simple song, which, through her singing,
- became a true story, and as if she poured forth the feelings of her
- own heart.
- "Oh," he thought, "she knows I am fond of her." The tears he could
- not restrain rolled down his cheeks, and he was unable to utter a
- single word; it seemed as if he had been struck dumb.
- When he left, she pressed his hand, and said, "You have a kind
- heart, Knud: remain always as you are now." What an evening of
- happiness this had been; to sleep after it was impossible, and Knud
- did not sleep.
- At parting, Joanna's father had said, "Now, you won't quite forget
- us; you must not let the whole winter go by without paying us
- another visit;" so that Knud felt himself free to go again the
- following Sunday evening, and so he did. But every evening after
- working hours- and they worked by candle-light then- he walked out
- into the town, and through the street in which Joanna lived, to look
- up at her window. It was almost always lighted up; and one evening
- he saw the shadow of her face quite plainly on the window blind;
- that was a glorious evening for him. His master's wife did not like
- his always going out in the evening, idling, wasting time, as she
- called it, and she shook her head.
- But his master only smiled, and said, "He is a young man, my dear,
- you know."
- "On Sunday I shall see her," said Knud to himself, "and I will
- tell her that I love her with my whole heart and soul, and that she
- must be my little wife. I know I am now only a poor journeyman
- shoemaker, but I will work and strive, and become a master in time.
- Yes, I will speak to her; nothing comes from silent love. I learnt
- that from the gingerbread-cake story."
- Sunday came, but when Knud arrived, they were all unfortunately
- invited out to spend the evening, and were obliged to tell him so.
- Joanna pressed his hand, and said, "Have you ever been to the
- theatre? you must go once; I sing there on Wednesday, and if you
- have time on that day, I will send you a ticket; my father knows where
- your master lives." How kind this was of her! And on Wednesday,
- about noon, Knud received a sealed packet with no address, but the
- ticket was inside; and in the evening Knud went, for the first time in
- his life, to a theatre. And what did he see? He saw Joanna, and how
- beautiful and charming she looked! He certainly saw her being
- married to a stranger, but that was all in the play, and only a
- pretence; Knud well knew that. She could never have the heart, he
- thought, to send him a ticket to go and see it, if it had been real.
- So he looked on, and when all the people applauded and clapped their
- hands, he shouted "hurrah." He could see that even the king smiled
- at Joanna, and seemed delighted with her singing. How small Knud felt;
- but then he loved her so dearly, and thought she loved him, and the
- man must speak the first word, as the gingerbread maiden had
- thought. Ah, how much there was for him in that childish story. As
- soon as Sunday arrived, he went again, and felt as if he were about to
- enter on holy ground. Joanna was alone to welcome him, nothing could
- be more fortunate.
- "I am so glad you are come," she said. I was thinking of sending
- my father for you, but I had a presentiment that you would be here
- this evening. The fact is, I wanted to tell you that I am going to
- France. I shall start on Friday. It is necessary for me to go there,
- if I wish to become a first-rate performer."
- Poor Knud! it seemed to him as if the whole room was whirling
- round with him. His courage failed, and he felt as if his heart
- would burst. He kept down the tears, but it was easy to see how
- sorrowful he was.
- "You honest, faithful soul," she exclaimed; and the words loosened
- Knud's tongue, and he told her how truly he had loved her, and that
- she must be his wife; and as he said this, he saw Joanna change color,
- and turn pale. She let his hand fall, and said, earnestly and
- mournfully, "Knud, do not make yourself and me unhappy. I will
- always be a good sister to you, one in whom you can trust; but I can
- never be anything more." And she drew her white hand over his
- burning forehead, and said, "God gives strength to bear a great
- deal, if we only strive ourselves to endure."
- At this moment her stepmother came into the room, and Joanna
- said quickly, "Knud is so unhappy, because I am going away;" and it
- appeared as if they had only been talking of her journey. "Come, be
- a man" she added, placing her hand on his shoulder; "you are still a
- child, and you must be good and reasonable, as you were when we were
- both children, and played together under the willow-tree."
- Knud listened, but he felt as if the world had slid out of its
- course. His thoughts were like a loose thread fluttering to and fro in
- the wind. He stayed, although he could not tell whether she had
- asked him to do so. But she was kind and gentle to him; she poured out
- his tea, and sang to him; but the song had not the old tone in it,
- although it was wonderfully beautiful, and made his heart feel ready
- to burst. And then he rose to go. He did not offer his hand, but she
- seized it, and said-
- "Will you not shake hands with your sister at parting, my old
- playfellow?" and she smiled through the tears that were rolling down
- her cheeks. Again she repeated the word "brother," which was a great
- consolation certainly; and thus they parted.
- She sailed to France, and Knud wandered about the muddy streets of
- Copenhagen. The other journeymen in the shop asked him why he looked
- so gloomy, and wanted him to go and amuse himself with them, as he was
- still a young man. So he went with them to a dancing-room. He saw many
- handsome girls there, but none like Joanna; and here, where he thought
- to forget her, she was more life-like before his mind than ever.
- "God gives us strength to bear much, if we try to do our best," she
- had said; and as he thought of this, a devout feeling came into his
- mind, and he folded his hands. Then, as the violins played and the
- girls danced round the room, he started; for it seemed to him as if he
- were in a place where he ought not to have brought Joanna, for she was
- here with him in his heart; and so he went out at once. As he went
- through the streets at a quick pace, he passed the house where she
- used to live; it was all dark, empty, and lonely. But the world went
- on its course, and Knud was obliged to go on too.
- Winter came; the water was frozen, and everything seemed buried in
- a cold grave. But when spring returned, and the first steamer prepared
- to sail, Knud was seized with a longing to wander forth into the
- world, but not to France. So he packed his knapsack, and travelled
- through Germany, going from town to town, but finding neither rest
- or peace. It was not till he arrived at the glorious old town of
- Nuremberg that he gained the mastery over himself, and rested his
- weary feet; and here he remained.
- Nuremberg is a wonderful old city, and looks as if it had been cut
- out of an old picture-book. The streets seem to have arranged
- themselves according to their own fancy, and as if the houses objected
- to stand in rows or rank and file. Gables, with little towers,
- ornamented columns, and statues, can be seen even to the city gate;
- and from the singular-shaped roofs, waterspouts, formed like
- dragons, or long lean dogs, extend far across to the middle of the
- street. Here, in the market-place, stood Knud, with his knapsack on
- his back, close to one of the old fountains which are so beautifully
- adorned with figures, scriptural and historical, and which spring up
- between the sparkling jets of water. A pretty servant-maid was just
- filling her pails, and she gave Knud a refreshing draught; she had a
- handful of roses, and she gave him one, which appeared to him like a
- good omen for the future. From a neighboring church came the sounds of
- music, and the familiar tones reminded him of the organ at home at
- Kjoge; so he passed into the great cathedral. The sunshine streamed
- through the painted glass windows, and between two lofty slender
- pillars. His thoughts became prayerful, and calm peace rested on his
- soul. He next sought and found a good master in Nuremberg, with whom
- he stayed and learnt the German language.
- The old moat round the town had been converted into a number of
- little kitchen gardens; but the high walls, with their heavy-looking
- towers, are still standing. Inside these walls the ropemaker twisted
- his ropes along a walk built like a gallery, and in the cracks and
- crevices of the walls elderbushes grow and stretch their green
- boughs over the small houses which stand below. In one of these houses
- lived the master for whom Knud worked; and over the little garret
- window where he sat, the elder-tree waved its branches. Here he
- dwelt through one summer and winter, but when spring came again, he
- could endure it no longer. The elder was in blossom, and its fragrance
- was so homelike, that he fancied himself back again in the gardens
- of Kjoge. So Knud left his master, and went to work for another who
- lived farther in the town, where no elder grew. His workshop was quite
- close to one of the old stone bridges, near to a water-mill, round
- which the roaring stream rushed and foamed always, yet restrained by
- the neighboring houses, whose old, decayed balconies hung over, and
- seemed ready to fall into the water. Here grew no elder; here was
- not even a flower-pot, with its little green plant; but just
- opposite the workshop stood a great willow-tree, which seemed to
- hold fast to the house for fear of being carried away by the water. It
- stretched its branches over the stream just as those of the
- willow-tree in the garden at Kjoge had spread over the river. Yes,
- he had indeed gone from elder-mother to willow-father. There was a
- something about the tree here, especially in the moonlight nights,
- that went direct to his heart; yet it was not in reality the
- moonlight, but the old tree itself. However, he could not endure it:
- and why? Ask the willow, ask the blossoming elder! At all events, he
- bade farewell to Nuremberg and journeyed onwards. He never spoke of
- Joanna to any one; his sorrow was hidden in his heart. The old
- childish story of the two cakes had a deep meaning for him. He
- understood now why the gingerbread man had a bitter almond in his left
- side; his was the feeling of bitterness, and Joanna, so mild and
- friendly, was represented by the honeycake maiden. As he thought
- upon all this, the strap of his knapsack pressed across his chest so
- that he could hardly breathe; he loosened it, but gained no relief. He
- saw but half the world around him; the other half he carried with
- him in his inward thoughts; and this is the condition in which he left
- Nuremberg. Not till he caught sight of the lofty mountains did the
- world appear more free to him; his thoughts were attracted to outer
- objects, and tears came into his eyes. The Alps appeared to him like
- the wings of earth folded together; unfolded, they would display the
- variegated pictures of dark woods, foaming waters, spreading clouds,
- and masses of snow. "At the last day," thought he, "the earth will
- unfold its great wings, and soar upwards to the skies, there to
- burst like a soap-bubble in the radiant glance of the Deity. Oh,"
- sighed he, "that the last day were come!"
- Silently he wandered on through the country of the Alps, which
- seemed to him like a fruit garden, covered with soft turf. From the
- wooden balconies of the houses the young lacemakers nodded as he
- passed. The summits of the mountains glowed in the red evening sunset,
- and the green lakes beneath the dark trees reflected the glow. Then he
- thought of the sea coast by the bay Kjoge, with a longing in his heart
- that was, however, without pain. There, where the Rhine rolls onward
- like a great billow, and dissolves itself into snowflakes, where
- glistening clouds are ever changing as if here was the place of
- their creation, while the rainbow flutters about them like a
- many-colored ribbon, there did Knud think of the water-mill at
- Kjoge, with its rushing, foaming waters. Gladly would he have remained
- in the quiet Rhenish town, but there were too many elders and
- willow-trees.
- So he travelled onwards, over a grand, lofty chain of mountains,
- over rugged,- rocky precipices, and along roads that hung on the
- mountain's side like a swallow's nest. The waters foamed in the depths
- below him. The clouds lay beneath him. He wandered on, treading upon
- Alpine roses, thistles, and snow, with the summer sun shining upon
- him, till at length he bid farewell to the lands of the north. Then he
- passed on under the shade of blooming chestnut-trees, through
- vineyards, and fields of Indian corn, till conscious that the
- mountains were as a wall between him and his early recollections;
- and he wished it to be so.
- Before him lay a large and splendid city, called Milan, and here
- he found a German master who engaged him as a workman. The master
- and his wife, in whose workshop he was employed, were an old, pious
- couple; and the two old people became quite fond of the quiet
- journeyman, who spoke but little, but worked more, and led a pious,
- Christian life; and even to himself it seemed as if God had removed
- the heavy burden from his heart. His greatest pleasure was to climb,
- now and then, to the roof of the noble church, which was built of
- white marble. The pointed towers, the decorated and open cloisters,
- the stately columns, the white statues which smiled upon him from
- every corner and porch and arch,- all, even the church itself,
- seemed to him to have been formed from the snow of his native land.
- Above him was the blue sky; below him, the city and the wide-spreading
- plains of Lombardy; and towards the north, the lofty mountains,
- covered with perpetual snow. And then he thought of the church of
- Kjoge, with its red, ivy-clad walls, but he had no longing to go
- there; here, beyond the mountains, he would die and be buried.
- Three years had passed away since he left his home; one year of
- that time he had dwelt at Milan.
- One day his master took him into the town; not to the circus in
- which riders performed, but to the opera, a large building, itself a
- sight well worth seeing. The seven tiers of boxes, which reached
- from the ground to a dizzy height, near the ceiling, were hung with
- rich, silken curtains; and in them were seated elegantly-dressed
- ladies, with bouquets of flowers in their hands. The gentlemen were
- also in full dress, and many of them wore decorations of gold and
- silver. The place was so brilliantly lighted that it seemed like
- sunshine, and glorious music rolled through the building. Everything
- looked more beautiful than in the theatre at Copenhagen, but then
- Joanna had been there, and- could it be? Yes- it was like magic,-
- she was here also: for, when the curtain rose, there stood Joanna,
- dressed in silk and gold, and with a golden crown upon her head. She
- sang, he thought, as only an angel could sing; and then she stepped
- forward to the front and smiled, as only Joanna could smile, and
- looked directly at Knud. Poor Knud! he seized his master's hand, and
- cried out loud, "Joanna," but no one heard him, excepting his
- master, for the music sounded above everything.
- "Yes, yes, it is Joanna," said his master; and he drew forth a
- printed bill, and pointed to her name, which was there in full. Then
- it was not a dream. All the audience applauded her, and threw
- wreaths of flowers at her; and every time she went away they called
- for her again, so that she was always coming and going. In the
- street the people crowded round her carriage, and drew it away
- themselves without the horses. Knud was in the foremost row, and
- shouted as joyously as the rest; and when the carriage stopped
- before a brilliantly lighted house, Knud placed himself close to the
- door of her carriage. It flew open, and she stepped out; the light
- fell upon her dear face, and he could see that she smiled as she
- thanked them, and appeared quite overcome. Knud looked straight in her
- face, and she looked at him, but she did not recognize him. A man,
- with a glittering star on his breast, gave her his arm, and people
- said the two were engaged to be married. Then Knud went home and
- packed up his knapsack; he felt he must return to the home of his
- childhood, to the elder-tree and the willow. "Ah, under that
- willow-tree!" A man may live a whole life in one single hour.
- The old couple begged him to remain, but words were useless. In
- vain they reminded him that winter was coming, and that the snow had
- already fallen on the mountains. He said he could easily follow the
- track of the closely-moving carriages, for which a path must be kept
- clear, and with nothing but his knapsack on his back, and leaning on
- his stick, he could step along briskly. So he turned his steps to
- the mountains, ascended one side and descended the other, still
- going northward till his strength began to fail, and not a house or
- village could be seen. The stars shone in the sky above him, and
- down in the valley lights glittered like stars, as if another sky were
- beneath him; but his head was dizzy and his feet stumbled, and he felt
- ill. The lights in the valley grew brighter and brighter, and more
- numerous, and he could see them moving to and fro, and then he
- understood that there must be a village in the distance; so he exerted
- his failing strength to reach it, and at length obtained shelter in
- a humble lodging. He remained there that night and the whole of the
- following day, for his body required rest and refreshment, and in
- the valley there was rain and a thaw. But early in the morning of
- the third day, a man came with an organ and played one of the melodies
- of home; and after that Knud could remain there no longer, so he
- started again on his journey toward the north. He travelled for many
- days with hasty steps, as if he were trying to reach home before all
- whom he remembered should die; but he spoke to no one of this longing.
- No one would have believed or understood this sorrow of his heart, the
- deepest that can be felt by human nature. Such grief is not for the
- world; it is not entertaining even to friends, and poor Knud had no
- friends; he was a stranger, wandering through strange lands to his
- home in the north.
- He was walking one evening through the public roads, the country
- around him was flatter, with fields and meadows, the air had a
- frosty feeling. A willow-tree grew by the roadside, everything
- reminded him of home. He felt very tired; so he sat down under the
- tree, and very soon began to nod, then his eyes closed in sleep. Yet
- still he seemed conscious that the willow-tree was stretching its
- branches over him; in his dreaming state the tree appeared like a
- strong, old man- the "willow-father" himself, who had taken his
- tired son up in his arms to carry him back to the land of home, to the
- garden of his childhood, on the bleak open shores of Kjoge. And then
- he dreamed that it was really the willow-tree itself from Kjoge, which
- had travelled out in the world to seek him, and now had found him
- and carried him back into the little garden on the banks of the
- streamlet; and there stood Joanna, in all her splendor, with the
- golden crown on her head, as he had last seen her, to welcome him
- back. And then there appeared before him two remarkable shapes,
- which looked much more like human beings than when he had seen them in
- his childhood; they were changed, but he remembered that they were the
- two gingerbread cakes, the man and the woman, who had shown their best
- sides to the world and looked so good.
- "We thank you," they said to Knud, "for you have loosened our
- tongues; we have learnt from you that thoughts should be spoken
- freely, or nothing will come of them; and now something has come of
- our thoughts, for we are engaged to be married." Then they walked
- away, hand-in-hand, through the streets of Kjoge, looking very
- respectable on the best side, which they were quite right to show.
- They turned their steps to the church, and Knud and Joanna followed
- them, also walking hand-in-hand; there stood the church, as of old,
- with its red walls, on which the green ivy grew.
- The great church door flew open wide, and as they walked up the
- broad aisle, soft tones of music sounded from the organ. "Our master
- first," said the gingerbread pair, making room for Knud and Joanna. As
- they knelt at the altar, Joanna bent her head over him, and cold,
- icy tears fell on his face from her eyes. They were indeed tears of
- ice, for her heart was melting towards him through his strong love,
- and as her tears fell on his burning cheeks he awoke. He was still
- sitting under the willow-tree in a strange land, on a cold winter
- evening, with snow and hail falling from the clouds, and beating
- upon his face.
- "That was the most delightful hour of my life," said he, "although
- it was only a dream. Oh, let me dream again." Then he closed his
- eyes once more, and slept and dreamed.
- Towards morning there was a great fall of snow; the wind drifted
- it over him, but he still slept on. The villagers came forth to go
- to church; by the roadside they found a workman seated, but he was
- dead! frozen to death under a willow-tree.
-
-
- THE END
-