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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Rudy and Babette, by Hans Christian Andersen
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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-
-
-Title: Rudy and Babette
- Or, Capture of The Eagle's Nest
-
-Author: Hans Christian Andersen
-
-Illustrator: Helen Stratton
-
-Release Date: July 20, 2012 [EBook #40283]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUDY AND BABETTE ***
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-Produced by Bruce Albrecht, Matthew Wheaton and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40283 ***
RUDY AND BABETTE
@@ -4129,359 +4094,4 @@ Archaic and inconsistent spelling and punctuation retained.
End of Project Gutenberg's Rudy and Babette, by Hans Christian Andersen
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40283 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Rudy and Babette, by Hans Christian Andersen
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Rudy and Babette
- Or, Capture of The Eagle's Nest
-
-Author: Hans Christian Andersen
-
-Illustrator: Helen Stratton
-
-Release Date: July 20, 2012 [EBook #40283]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUDY AND BABETTE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Bruce Albrecht, Matthew Wheaton and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- RUDY AND BABETTE
-
- _Or, The Capture of the Eagle's Nest_
-
- By HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
-
-
- WITH TWENTY ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- By HELEN STRATTON
-
-
- A. L. BURT COMPANY,
-
- PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I. LITTLE RUDY
- CHAPTER II. GOING TO THE NEW HOME
- CHAPTER III. UNCLE
- CHAPTER IV. BABETTE
- CHAPTER V. THE RETURN HOME
- CHAPTER VI. A VISIT TO THE MILL
- CHAPTER VII. THE EAGLE'S NEST
- CHAPTER VIII. I HOLD FAST TO BABETTE
- CHAPTER IX. THE ICE-MAIDEN
- CHAPTER X. THE GODMOTHER
- CHAPTER XII. THE POWERS OF EVIL
- CHAPTER XIII. IN THE MILLER'S HOUSE
- CHAPTER XIV. VISIONS IN THE NIGHT
- CHAPTER XV. CONCLUSION
- THE FELLOW-TRAVELER
- THE OLD BACHELOR'S NIGHTCAP
- THE GARDEN OF PARADISE
-
-
-
-
-RUDY AND BABETTE;
-
-OR,
-
-THE CAPTURE OF THE EAGLE'S NEST.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-LITTLE RUDY.
-
-
-Let us now go to Switzerland, and see its wonderful mountains, whose
-steep, rocky sides are covered with trees. We will climb up to the
-fields of snow, and then make our way down to the grassy valleys, with
-their countless streams and rivulets, impetuously rushing to lose
-themselves in the sea. The sunshine is hot in the narrow valley; the
-snow becomes firm and solid, and in the course of time it either
-descends as an avalanche, or creeps along as a glacier. There are two
-of these glaciers in the valleys below the Schreckhorn and the
-Wetterhorn, near the long village of Grindelwald. They are a
-remarkable sight, and therefore many travelers from all countries come
-in the summer to visit them: they come over the high mountains covered
-with snow, they traverse the deep valleys; and to do this they must
-climb, hour after hour, leaving the valley far beneath them, till they
-see it as if they were in an air-balloon. The clouds hang above them
-like thick mists over the mountains, and the sun's rays make their way
-through the openings between the clouds to where the brown houses lie
-spread, lighting up some chance spot with a vivid green. Below, the
-stream foams and blusters; but above it murmurs and ripples, and looks
-like a band of silver hanging down the side of the rock.
-
-On either side of the path up the mountain lie wooden houses. Each
-house has its little plot of potatoes; and this they all require, for
-there are many children, and they all have good appetites. The
-children come out to meet every stranger, whether walking or riding,
-and ask him to buy their carved wooden châlets, made like the houses
-they live in. Be it fine or be it wet, the children try to sell their
-carvings.
-
-About twenty years since you might have seen one little boy standing
-apart from the others, but evidently very desirous to dispose of his
-wares. He looked grave and sad, and held his little tray tightly with
-both hands as if he was afraid of losing it. This serious look and his
-small size caused him to be much noticed by travelers, who often
-called him and purchased many of his toys, though he did not know why
-he was so favored. His grandfather lived two miles off among the
-mountains, where he did his carving. He had a cabinet full of the
-things he had made. There were nut-crackers, knives and forks, boxes
-carved with leaves and chamois, and many toys for children; but little
-Rudy cared for nothing so much as for an old gun, hanging from a
-rafter in the ceiling, for his grandfather had told him it should be
-his own when he was big enough to know how to use it.
-
-Though the boy was little, he was set in charge of the goats; and Rudy
-could climb as high as any of his flock, and was fond of climbing tall
-trees after birds' nests. He was brave and high-spirited, but he never
-smiled except when he watched the foaming cataract, or heard the
-thundering roar of an avalanche. He never joined in the children's
-games, and only met them when his grandfather sent him to sell his
-carvings; and this employment Rudy did not much like. He would rather
-wander alone amongst the mountains, or sit by his grandfather while he
-told him stories of former ages, or of the people who lived at
-Meiningen, from whence he had come. He told him they had not always
-lived there, but had come from a distant northern country called
-Sweden. Rudy took great pride in this knowledge; but he also learnt
-much from his four-footed friends. He had a large dog, named Ajola,
-who had been his father's; and he had also a tom-cat who was his
-particular friend, for it was from him he had learnt how to climb.
-
-"Come with me on the roof," the cat said to him; for when children
-have not learnt to talk, they can understand the speech of birds and
-animals quite as well as that of their father and mother; but that is
-only while they are very little, and their grandfather's stick seems
-as good as a live horse, with head, legs, and tail. Some children lose
-this later than others, and we call them backward. People say such
-funny things!
-
-"Come with me, little Rudy, on the roof," was one of the first things
-the cat had said which Rudy had understood: "it is all imagination
-about falling; you don't fall if you are not afraid. Come; put one of
-your paws so, and the other so! Feel for yourself with your fore-paws!
-Use your eyes and be active; and if there's a crevice, just spring and
-take firm hold, as I do!"
-
-Rudy did as he was told, and you might often have seen him sitting
-beside the cat on the top of the roof; afterwards they climbed
-together to the tops of the trees, and Rudy even found his way to the
-rocky ledges which were quite out of the cat's reach.
-
-"Higher! higher!" said the trees and the bushes; "see how we can
-climb. We stretch upwards, and take firm hold of the highest and
-narrowest ledges of the rocks."
-
-So Rudy found his way to the very top of the mountain, and often got
-up there before sunrise; for he enjoyed the pure invigorating air,
-fresh from the hands of the Creator, which men say combines the
-delicate perfume of the mountain herbs with the sweet scent of the
-wild thyme and the mint found in the valley. The grosser part of it is
-taken up by the clouds, and as they are carried by the winds, the
-lofty trees catch the fragrance and make the air pure and fresh. And
-so Rudy loved the morning air.
-
-The happy sunbeams kissed his cheek, and Giddiness, who was always
-near, was afraid to touch him; the swallows, who had built seven
-little nests under his grandfather's eaves, circled about him and his
-goats, singing: "We and you! and you and we!" They reminded him of his
-home, his grandfather, and of the fowls; but although the fowls lived
-with them in the same house, Rudy had never made friends with them.
-
-Although he was such a little boy, he had already traveled a
-considerable distance. His birthplace was in the canton of Vallais,
-whence he had been brought over the mountains to where he now lived.
-He had even made his way on foot to the Staubbach, which descends
-through the air gleaming like silver below the snow-clad mountain
-called the Jungfrau. He had also been to the great glacier at
-Grindelwald; but that was a sad story. His mother lost her life at
-that spot; and Rudy's grandfather said that it was there he had lost
-his happy spirits. Before he was a twelvemonth old his mother used to
-say that he laughed more than he cried, but since he had been rescued
-from the crevasse in the ice, a different spirit seemed to have
-possession of him. His grandfather would not talk of it, but every one
-in that district knew the story.
-
-Rudy's father had been a postilion. The large dog, which was now lying
-in the grandfather's room, was his constant companion when traveling
-over the Simplon on his way to the Lake of Geneva. Some of his
-relations lived in the valley of the Rhone, in the canton of Vallais.
-His uncle was a successful chamois-hunter and an experienced guide.
-When Rudy was only a twelvemonth old his father died, and his mother
-now wished to return to her own relations in the Bernese Oberland. Her
-father lived not many miles from Grindelwald; he was able to maintain
-himself by wood-carving. So she started on her journey in the month of
-June, with her child in her arms, and in the company of two
-chamois-hunters, over the Gemmi towards Grindelwald. They had
-accomplished the greater part of their journey, had passed the highest
-ridge and reached the snow-field, and were now come in sight of the
-valley where her home was, with its well-remembered wooden houses, but
-still had to cross one great glacier. It was covered with recent snow,
-which hid a crevasse which was much deeper than the height of a man,
-although it did not extend to where the water rushed below the
-glacier. The mother, while carrying her baby, slipped, fell into
-the cleft, and disappeared from sight. She did not utter a sound, but
-they could hear the child crying. It was more than an hour before they
-could fetch ropes and poles from the nearest house, and recover what
-seemed to be two corpses from the cleft in the ice. They tried every
-possible means, and succeeded in restoring the child, but not his
-mother, to life; so the old man had his daughter's son brought into
-his home, a little orphan, the boy who used to laugh more than he
-cried; but he seemed to be entirely changed, and this change was made
-down in the crevasse, in the cold world of ice, where, as the Swiss
-peasants think, lost souls are imprisoned until Doomsday.
-
-[Illustration: She started on her journey, with her child in her arms,
-and in company of two chamois-hunters.]
-
-The immense glacier looks like the waves of the sea frozen into ice,
-the great greenish blocks heaped together, while the cold stream of
-melted ice rushes below towards the valley, and huge caverns and
-immense crevasses stretch far away beneath it. It is like a palace of
-glass, and is the abode of the Ice-Maiden, the Queen of the Glaciers.
-She, the fatal, the overwhelming one, is in part a spirit of the air,
-though she also rules over the river; therefore she can rise to the
-topmost peak of the snow mountain, where the adventurous climbers have
-to cut every step in the ice before they can place their feet; she can
-float on the smallest branch down the torrent, and leap from block to
-block with her white hair and her pale blue robe flying about her, and
-resembling the water in the beautiful Swiss lakes.
-
-"I have the power to crush and to seize!" she cries. "They have robbed
-me of a lovely boy whom I have kissed, but have not killed. He now
-lives among men: he keeps his goats amid the hills, he ever climbs
-higher and higher away from his fellows, but not away from me. He
-belongs to me, and I will again have him!"
-
-So she charged Giddiness to seize him for her, for the Ice-Maiden
-dared not venture among the woods in the hot summer time; and
-Giddiness and his brethren--for there are many of them--mounted up to
-the Ice-Maiden, and she selected the strongest of them for her
-purpose. They sit on the edge of the staircase, and on the rails at
-the top of the tower; they scamper like squirrels on the ridge of the
-rock, they leap from the rails and the footpath, and tread the air
-like a swimmer treading water, to tempt their victims after them and
-dash them into the abyss. Both Giddiness and the Ice-Maiden seize a
-man as an octopus seizes all within its reach. And now Giddiness had
-been charged to seize little Rudy.
-
-"I seize him!" said Giddiness; "I cannot. The miserable cat has taught
-him all her tricks. The boy possesses a power which keeps me from him;
-I cannot seize him even when he hangs by a branch above the precipice.
-I should be delighted to tickle his feet, or pitch him headlong
-through the air; but I cannot!"
-
-"We will succeed between us," said the Ice-Maiden. "Thou or I! I! I!"
-
-"No, no!" an unseen voice replied, sounding like distant church bells;
-the joyful singing of good spirits--the Daughters of the Sun. These
-float above the mountain every evening; they expand their rosy wings
-which glow more and more like fire as the sun nears to setting over
-the snowy peaks. People call it the "Alpine glow." And after sunset
-they withdraw into the snow and rest there until sunrise, when they
-again show themselves. They love flowers, and butterflies and human
-beings; and they were particularly fond of Rudy.
-
-"You shall never catch him--you shall never have him," said they.
-
-"I have captured bigger and stronger boys than he," said the
-Ice-Maiden.
-
-The Daughters of the Sun now sang a song of a traveler whose cloak was
-carried away by the storm: "The storm took the cloak but not the man.
-You can grasp at him, but not hold him, ye strong ones. He is
-stronger, he is more spiritual than we are! He will ascend above the
-sun, our mother! He has the power to bind the winds and the waves, and
-make them serve him and do his bidding. If you unloose the weight that
-holds him down, you will set him free to rise yet higher."
-
-Thus ran the chorus which sounded like distant church bells.
-
-Each morning the sunbeams shone through the little window of the
-grandfather's house and lighted on the silent boy. The Daughters of
-the Sun kissed him, and tried to thaw the cold kisses which the Queen
-of the Glaciers had given him, while he was in the arms of his dead
-mother, in the deep crevasse, whence he had been so wonderfully
-rescued.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-GOING TO THE NEW HOME.
-
-
-Rudy was now a boy of eight. His uncle, who lived in the Rhone valley
-at the other side of the mountains, wished him to come to him, and
-learn how to make his way in the world; his grandfather approved of
-this, and let him go.
-
-Rudy therefore said good-by. He had to take leave of others beside his
-grandfather; and the first of these was his old dog, Ajola.
-
-"When your father was postilion, I was his post-dog," said Ajola. "We
-traveled backwards and forwards together; and I know some dogs at the
-other side of the mountains and some of the people. I was never a
-chatterer, but now that we are not likely to have many more chances of
-talking, I want to tell you a few things, I will tell you something I
-have had in my head and thought over for a long time. I can't make it
-out, and you won't make it out; but that doesn't matter. At least I
-can see that things are not fairly divided in this world, whether for
-dogs or for men. Only a few are privileged to sit in a lady's lap and
-have milk to drink. I've never been used to it myself, but I've seen a
-little lap-dog riding in the coach, and occupying the place of a
-passenger. The lady to whom it belonged, or who belonged to it, took a
-bottle of milk with her for the dog to drink; and she offered him
-sweets, but he sniffed at them and refused them, so she ate them
-herself. I had to run in the mud beside the coach, and was very
-hungry, thinking all the time that this couldn't be right; but they
-say that there are a great many things that aren't right. Would you
-like to sit in a lady's lap and ride in a carriage? I wish you could.
-But you can't arrange that for yourself. I never could, bark and howl
-as I might!"
-
-This is what Ajola said; and Rudy put his arms round him, and kissed
-his cold, wet nose. Then he took up the cat, but puss tried to get
-away, and said,--
-
-"You're too strong! and I don't want to scratch you. Climb over the
-mountains, as I taught you. Don't fancy you can fall, and then you
-will always keep firm hold." As he said this, the cat ran away; for he
-did not wish Rudy to see that he was crying.
-
-The fowls strutted about the room. One of them had lost its tail
-feathers. A tourist, who imagined he was a sportsman, had shot its
-tail off, as he thought it was a wild bird.
-
-"Rudy is going away over the mountains," said one of the fowls.
-
-The other one replied, "He's in too great a hurry; I don't want to say
-good-by." And then they both made off.
-
-He then said good-by to the goats; they bleated "Med! med! may!" and
-that made him feel sad.
-
-Two neighboring guides, who wanted to cross the mountains to beyond
-the Gemmi took Rudy with them, going on foot. It was a fatiguing walk
-for such a little boy; but he was strong, and never feared anything.
-
-The swallows flew part of the way with them. "We and you! and you and
-we!" they sang. Their route lay across the roaring Lütschine, which
-flows in many little streams from the Grindel glacier, and some fallen
-trees served for a bridge. When they gained the forest at the other
-side, they began to mount the slope where the glacier had quitted the
-mountain, and then they had to climb over or make their way round the
-blocks of ice on the glacier. Rudy sometimes was obliged to crawl
-instead of walking; but his eyes sparkled with pleasure, and he
-planted his feet so firmly that you would think he wanted to leave the
-mark of his spiked shoes behind him at every step. The dark earth
-which the mountain torrent had scattered over the glacier made it look
-almost black, but still you could catch sight of the bluish-green ice.
-They had to skirt the countless little pools which lay amongst the
-huge blocks of ice; and sometimes they passed by a great stone that
-had rested at the edge of a cleft, and then the stone would be upset,
-and crash down into the crevasse, and the echoes would reverberate
-from all the deep clefts in the glacier.
-
-So they went on climbing. The mighty glacier seemed like a great river
-frozen into ice, hemmed in by the steep rocks. Rudy remembered what he
-had been told, of how he and his mother had been pulled up out of one
-of those, deep, cold crevasses; but he soon thought no more of it, and
-it seemed no more than many other stories which he had been told.
-Occasionally, when the men thought the path too rough for the boy,
-they offered him a hand; but he was not easily tired, and stood on the
-ice as securely as a chamois. Now they got on rock, and clambered over
-the rough stones; then they would have to walk through the pine-trees,
-or over pasture-lands, whilst the landscape was constantly changing.
-Around them were the great snow mountains--the Jungfrau, the Mönch and
-the Eiger. Every child knew their names, and, of course, Rudy knew
-them. Rudy had never before been up so high; he had never walked over
-the wide snow-fields: like the ocean with its waves immovable, the
-wind now and again blowing off some of the snow as if it were the foam
-of the sea. The glaciers meet here as if they were joining hands; each
-forms one of the palaces of the Ice-Maiden, whose power and aim is to
-capture and overwhelm. The sunshine was hot, the snow was brilliantly
-white, and seemed to sparkle as if covered with diamonds. Countless
-insects, most of them butterflies or bees, were lying dead on the
-snow; they had gone up too high, or been carried by the wind, and had
-been frozen to death. A threatening cloud hung over the Wetterhorn,
-looking like a bundle of black wool; it hung down, heavy with its own
-weight, ready to burst with the resistless force of a whirlwind. The
-recollection of this whole journey--the encamping for the night, at
-such a height, the walk in the dark, the deep clefts in the rock, worn
-away by the force of water during countless years--all this was fixed
-in Rudy's memory.
-
-An empty stone hut beyond the _mer de glace_ gave them shelter for the
-night. Here they found pine branches for fuel, and they quickly made
-a fire and arranged the bed as comfortably as they could. They then
-seated themselves about the fire, lighted their pipes, and drank the
-hot drink which they had prepared. They gave Rudy some of their
-supper, and then began to tell tales and legends of the spirits of the
-Alps; of the mighty serpents that lay coiled in the lakes; of the
-spirits who were reported to have carried men in their sleep to the
-marvelous floating city, Venice; of the mysterious shepherd, who
-tended his black sheep on the mountain pastures, and how no one had
-seen him, although many had heard the tones of his bell and the
-bleating of his flock. Rudy listened to all this, though he was not
-frightened, as he did not know what fear was; and as he was listening
-he thought he heard the weird bleating; it grew more and more distinct
-till the men heard it too, and left off talking to listen, and told
-Rudy to keep awake.
-
-This was the Föhn, the blast, the terrible tempest, which sweeps down
-from the mountains upon the valleys, rending the trees as if they
-were reeds, and sweeping away the houses by a flood as easily as one
-moves chessmen.
-
-[Illustration: They then seated themselves about the fire, and began
-to tell tales of the spirits of the Alps.]
-
-After a time they said to Rudy that it was all over, and he might go
-to sleep; and he was so tired with his long tramp that he obeyed at
-once.
-
-When day broke, they pushed forward. The sun now shone for Rudy on new
-mountains, new glaciers, and snow-fields. They were now in the canton
-of Vallais, and had crossed the range which could be seen from
-Grindelwald, but were yet far from his new home. Other ravines, other
-pastures, woods, and mountain-paths now came into sight, other houses,
-and other people; but they were strange and deformed-looking beings,
-with pale faces, and huge wens hanging from their necks. They were
-_crétins_, feebly moving about, and looking listlessly at Rudy and his
-companions--the women were particularly repulsive to look at. Should
-he find such people in his new home?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-UNCLE.
-
-
-Rudy had now come to his uncle's house, and found to his relief that
-the people were like those he had been used to. There was only one
-_crétin_, a poor silly boy--one of those who rove from one house to
-another in the canton of Vallais, staying a month or two in each
-house, and the unfortunate Saperli was there when Rudy came.
-
-Uncle was a great hunter, and also knew the cooper's trade. His wife
-was a lively little person, and almost looked like a bird; her eyes
-were like those of an eagle, and her long neck was quite downy.
-
-Rudy found everything new to him--dress, habits and customs, and
-language, though he would soon get used to that. They seemed more
-comfortably off than in his grandfather's house. The rooms were large,
-and the walls were decorated with chamois' horns and polished guns,
-and there was a picture of the Virgin over the door; fresh Alpine
-roses and a burning lamp stood before it.
-
-Uncle was, as I have said, one of the most successful chamois-hunters
-in the neighborhood, and also one of the best guides. Rudy soon became
-the pet of the household. They had one pet already, an old hound,
-blind and deaf; he was no longer able to go out hunting, but they took
-care of him in return for his former services. Rudy patted the dog,
-and wished to make friends; but he did not care to make friends with
-strangers, though Rudy was not long a stranger there.
-
-"We live very well here in the canton of Vallais," said uncle; "we
-have chamois, who are not so easily killed as the steinbock, but we
-get on better than in the old days. It is all very well to praise
-former times, but we are better off now. An opening has been made, and
-the air blows through our secluded vale. We always get something
-better when the old thing is done with," said he; for uncle had much
-to say, and would tell tales of his childhood, and of the days when
-his father was vigorous, when Vallais was, as he said, a closed bag,
-full of sick folk and unfortunate _crétins_; "but the French soldiers
-came, and they were the right sort of doctors, for they killed both
-the disease and the persons who had it. The French knew all about
-fighting; they struck their blows in many ways, and their maidens
-could strike too!" and here uncle nodded at his wife, who was a
-Frenchwoman. "The French struck at our stones in fine style! They
-struck the Simplon road through the rocks; they struck the road, so
-that I may say to a child of three years old, 'Go to Italy, keep right
-on the highway!' and the child will find himself in Italy if he only
-keeps right on the road!" and then uncle sang a French song, "Hurrah
-for Napoleon Buonaparte!"
-
-[Illustration: His uncle would tell tales of his childhood.]
-
-Rudy now heard for the first time of France, and of Lyons, a great
-town on the river Rhone, where his uncle had been.
-
-In a few years Rudy was to become an active chamois-hunter. His uncle
-said he was capable of it; he therefore taught him to handle a gun and
-to shoot. In the hunting season he took him to the mountains, and made
-him drink the warm blood from the chamois, which keeps a hunter from
-giddiness. He taught him to know the seasons when avalanches would
-roll down the mountain sides, at midday or in the afternoon, according
-to whether the sun had been strong on the places. He taught him to
-watch how the chamois sprang, and notice how his feet fell that he
-might stand firm; and that where he could obtain no foothold he must
-catch hold with his elbows, grasp with his muscles, and hold with his
-thighs and knees--that he might even hold with his neck if necessary.
-The chamois were very wary,--they would send one to look out; but the
-hunter must be still more wary,--put them off the scent. He had known
-them so stupid that if he hung his coat and hat on an alpenstock, the
-chamois took the coat for a man. Uncle played his trick one day when
-he and Rudy were out hunting.
-
-The mountain paths were narrow; they were often a mere cornice or
-ledge projecting over a giddy precipice. The snow was half melted, and
-the rock crumbled beneath the feet; so the uncle laid himself down at
-full length and crept along. Each stone, as it broke off, fell,
-striking and rolling from ledge to ledge till it was out of sight.
-Rudy stood about a hundred paces from his uncle on a projecting rock,
-and from this point he saw a great bearded vulture swooping over his
-uncle, whom it seemed to be about to strike over the precipice with
-its wings, to make him its prey. Uncle had his eye on the chamois,
-which he could see with its kid on the other side of the ravine; Rudy
-kept his eye on the bird, knew what it would do, and had his hands on
-his gun ready to fire; the chamois suddenly sprang up, uncle fired,
-the animal fell dead, the kid made off as if it was used to dangers.
-At the sound of the gun the bird flew away, and uncle knew nothing of
-his danger until told of it by Rudy.
-
-[Illustration: "Hold fast, Rudy!" shouted his uncle, and Rudy clung to
-the tree.]
-
-As they were going home in the best of humors, uncle whistling one of
-his songs, they suddenly heard a strange noise not far off; they
-looked round them, and saw that the snow on the side of the mountain
-was all in motion. It waved up and down, broke into pieces, and came
-down with a roar like thunder. It was an avalanche, not over Rudy and
-uncle, but near, too near, to them.
-
-"Hold fast, Rudy!" he shouted; "fast, with all your power!"
-
-And Rudy clung to the stem of a tree; uncle climbed above him up to
-the branches and held fast, while the avalanche rolled past at a
-distance of a few yards; but the rush of air broke the trees and
-bushes all around like reeds, and cast the fragments down, and left
-Rudy pressed to the earth. The tree-stem to which he had held was
-broken, and the top flung to a distance; there, among the broken
-branches, lay uncle, his head crushed; his hand was still warm, but
-you would not know his face. Rudy stood pale and trembling; it was the
-first shock in his life, the first time he had felt horror.
-
-It was late when he brought the tidings of death to what was now a
-sorrowful home. The wife was speechless and tearless until they
-brought the body home, then her grief broke forth. The unfortunate
-_crétin_ hid himself in his bed, nor did they see him all the next
-day; but in the evening he came to Rudy.
-
-"Write a letter for me! Saperli cannot write! Saperli can go with the
-letter to the post!"
-
-"A letter from thee?" exclaimed Rudy. "And to whom?"
-
-"To the Lord Christ!"
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-And the half-idiot, as they called the _crétin_, cast a pathetic
-glance at Rudy, folded his hands, and said solemnly and slowly:
-
-"Jesus Christ! Saperli wishes to send a letter to ask Him that Saperli
-may lie dead, and not the man in this house."
-
-And Rudy took him by the hand. "That letter would not go there! that
-letter would not bring him back."
-
-But it was impossible for Rudy to make him understand.
-
-"Now thou art the support of the house," said the widow, and Rudy
-became so.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-BABETTE.
-
-
-Who is the best shot in the canton of Vallais? Even the chamois knew.
-"Take care of Rudy's shooting!" they said. "Who is the handsomest
-huntsman?" "Rudy is!" said the maidens, but they did not say, "Take
-care of Rudy's shooting!" nor did their serious mothers say so either;
-he nodded to them as lightly as he did to a young girl; for he was
-brave and joyous, his cheeks were brown, his teeth sound and white,
-and his eyes coal-black and sparkling; he was a handsome fellow, and
-not more than twenty. The ice-cold water did not hurt him in swimming;
-he swam like a fish, could climb better than any other man, could hold
-fast like a snail to the walls of rock, for his muscles and sinews
-were good; and you saw when he leapt that he had taken lessons from
-the cat and from the chamois. Rudy was the surest guide to depend
-on, and might have made his fortune in that way; his uncle had also
-taught him coopering, but he gave little thought to that, for his
-pleasure and delight was in shooting the chamois; and in this way he
-earned money. Rudy was a good match, as they say, if he did not look
-above his own position. And he was a dancer among dancers, so that the
-maidens dreamt of him, and some of them even thought of him when
-waking.
-
-[Illustration: "Rudy gave me a kiss at the dance!" said Annette to her
-dearest friend.]
-
-"He gave me a kiss at the dance!" said Annette, the schoolmaster's
-daughter, to her dearest friend; but she ought not to have said that
-even to her dearest friend. Such a secret is not easy to keep: it is
-like sand in a bag full of holes, it will run out; and they all soon
-knew that Rudy had given her a kiss at the dance, though he had not
-kissed the one that he wanted to kiss.
-
-"Just watch him!" said an old huntsman; "he has kissed Annette; he has
-begun with A and he will kiss all through the alphabet."
-
-A kiss at the dance was all that the gossips could say against Rudy so
-far; but although he had kissed Annette, she was not the flower of his
-heart.
-
-Down at Bex, among the great walnut-trees, close to a little rapid
-mountain stream, there lived a rich miller; his dwelling-house was a
-big building of three floors, with small turrets, roofed with shingle
-and ornamented with metal plates which shone in the rays of the sun or
-the moon; the biggest turret had for a weather-cock a glittering arrow
-which had transfixed an apple, in memory of Tell's marksmanship. The
-mill appeared fine and prosperous, and one could both sketch and
-describe it, but one could not sketch or describe the miller's
-daughter; at least, Rudy says one could not, and yet he had her image
-in his heart. Her eyes had so beamed upon him that they had quite
-kindled a flame; this had come quite suddenly, as other fires come,
-and the strangest thing was, that the miller's daughter, the charming
-Babette, had no thought of it, as she and Rudy had never spoken to
-each other.
-
-The miller was rich, and his riches made Babette hard to approach;
-"But nothing is so high," said Rudy to himself, "that a man can't get
-up to it; a man must climb, and he need not fall, nor lose faith in
-himself." This lesson he had learnt at home.
-
-It happened one day that Rudy had business at Bex, and it was quite a
-journey, for the railway did not then go there. From the Rhone
-glacier, at the foot of the Simplon, between many and various
-mountain-heights, stretches the broad valley of the Rhone, whose flood
-often overflows its banks, overwhelming everything. Between the towns
-of Sion and St. Maurice the valley bends in the shape of an elbow, and
-below St. Maurice it is so narrow that it hardly allows room for more
-than the river itself and a narrow road. An old tower stands here on
-the mountain side, as a sentry to mark the boundary of the canton of
-Vallais, opposite the stone bridge by the toll-house; and here begins
-the canton Vaud, not far from the town of Bex. As you advance you
-notice the increase of fertility, you seem to have come into a garden
-of chestnuts and walnut-trees; here and there are cypresses and
-pomegranates in flower; there is a southern warmth, as if you had come
-into Italy.
-
-Rudy arrived at Bex, finished his business, and looked about him; but
-never a lad from the mill, not to mention Babette, could he see. This
-was not what he wished.
-
-It was now towards evening; the air was full of the scent of the wild
-thyme and of the flowers of the limes; a shining veil seemed to hang
-over the wooded mountains, with a stillness, not of sleep, nor of
-death, but rather as if nature were holding its breath, in order to
-have its likeness photographed on the blue vault of heaven. Here and
-there between the trees, and across the green fields stood poles, to
-support the telegraph wires already carried through that tranquil
-valley; by one of these leaned an object, so still that it might have
-been mistaken for a tree-stump, but it was Rudy, who was as still and
-quiet as everything about him; he was not asleep, and he certainly was
-not dead. But thoughts were rushing through his brain, thoughts
-mighty and overwhelming, which were to mold his future.
-
-His eyes were directed to one point amidst the leaves, one light in
-the miller's parlor where Babette lived. So still was Rudy standing,
-that you might believe he was taking aim at a chamois, for the chamois
-will sometimes stand for an instant as if a part of the rock, and then
-suddenly, startled by the rolling of a stone, will spring away; and so
-it was with Rudy--a sudden thought startled him.
-
-"Never give up!" he cried. "Call at the mill! Good evening to the
-miller, good day to Babette. A man doesn't fall when he doesn't think
-about it; Babette must see me at some time if I am ever to be her
-husband."
-
-Rudy laughed, for he was of good cheer, and he went to the mill; he
-knew well enough what he wished for--he wished for Babette.
-
-The river, with its yellowish water, rushed along, and the willows and
-limes overhung its banks; Rudy went up the path, and as it says in the
-old children's song:
-
- "to the miller's house,
- But found no one at home
- Except little Puss!"
-
-The parlor cat stood on the steps, put up his back, and said "Miou!"
-but Rudy had no thought for that speech; he knocked at the door; no
-one heard, no one opened it. "Miou!" said the cat. If Rudy had been
-little, he would have understood animals' language, and known that the
-cat said: "There's no one at home!" So he went over to the mill to
-ask, and there he got the information. The master had gone on a
-journey, as far as the town of Interlaken "_inter lacus_, between
-the lakes," as the schoolmaster, Annette's father, had explained it in
-a lesson. The miller was far away, and Babette with him; there was a
-grand shooting competition--it began to-morrow, and went on for eight
-days. Switzers from all the German cantons would be there.
-
-Unlucky Rudy, you might say, this was not a fortunate time to come to
-Bex; so he turned and marched above St. Maurice and Sion to his own
-valley and his own mountains; but he was not disheartened. The sun
-rose next morning, but his spirits were already high, for they had
-never set.
-
-[Illustration: The cat stood on the steps, put up his back and said,
-"Miou!" as Rudy knocked at the door.]
-
-"Babette is at Interlaken, many days' journey from hence," he said to
-himself. "It is a long way there if one goes by the high road, but it
-is not so far if you strike across the mountains, as I have often done
-in chamois-hunting. There is my old home, where I lived when little
-with my grandfather; and the shooting-match is at Interlaken! I will
-be the best of them; and I will be with Babette, when I have made
-acquaintance with her."
-
-With his light knapsack, containing his Sunday suit and his gun and
-game-bag, Rudy went up the mountain by the short way, which was,
-however, pretty long; but the shooting-match only began that day and
-was to last over a week, and all that time, he was told, the miller
-and Babette would spend with their relations at Interlaken. So Rudy
-crossed the Gemmi, meaning to come down near Grindelwald.
-
-Healthy and joyful, he stepped along, up in the fresh, the light, the
-invigorating mountain air. The valley sank deeper, the horizon opened
-wider; here was a snow-peak, and there another, and soon he could see
-the whole shining range of the Alps. Rudy knew every snow-mountain,
-and he made straight for the Schreckhorn, which raised its
-white-sprinkled, stony fingers high into the blue air.
-
-At length he crossed the highest ridge. The pastures stretched down
-towards his own valley; the air was light, and he felt merry; mountain
-and valley smiled with abundance of flowers and verdure; his heart was
-full of thoughts of youth: one should never become old, one need never
-die; to live, to conquer, to be happy! free as a bird--and he felt
-like a bird. And the swallows flew by him, and sang, as they used to
-do in his childhood: "We and you, and you and we!" All was soaring and
-rejoicing.
-
-Below lay the velvety green meadow, sprinkled with brown châlets, and
-the Lütschine humming and rushing. He saw the glacier, with its
-bottle-green edges covered with earth-soiled snow; he saw the deep
-fissures, and the upper and the lower glacier. The sound of the
-church bells came to him, as if they were ringing to welcome him home;
-his heart beat more strongly, and swelled so that Babette was
-forgotten for a moment, so large was his heart and so full of
-memories!
-
-He again went along the way where he had stood as a little urchin with
-the other children, and sold the carved châlets. He saw among the
-pines his grandfather's house, but strangers now lived in it. Children
-came along the path to sell things, and one of them offered him an
-Alpine rose; Rudy took it as a good omen, and he thought of Babette.
-He soon crossed the bridge where the two Lütschine unite; the trees
-here grew thicker, and the walnuts gave a refreshing shade. He now saw
-the flag waving, the white cross on a red background, the flag of the
-Switzers and the Danes; and now he had reached Interlaken.
-
-This, Rudy thought, was certainly a splendid town. It was a Swiss town
-in Sunday dress; not like other places, crowded with heavy stone
-houses, ponderous, strange, and stately. No! here it seemed as if the
-châlets had come down from the mountains into the green valley, close
-by the clear, rapid stream, and had arranged themselves in a row, a
-little in and out, to make a street. And the prettiest of all the
-streets--yes, that it certainly was!--had sprung up since Rudy was
-here, when he was little. It seemed to have been built of all the
-charming châlets which his grandfather had carved and stored in the
-cabinet at home, and they had grown up here by some power like the
-old, oldest chestnut-trees. Each house was a hotel, with carved
-woodwork on the windows and doors, and a projecting roof, and was
-elegantly built; and in front of the house was a flower-garden,
-between it and the broad, macadamized road; all the houses stood on
-one side of the road, so as not to hide the fresh green meadows, where
-the cows wandered about with bells like those in the high Alpine
-pastures. It seemed to be in the midst of lofty mountains, which had
-drawn apart in one direction to allow the snow-clad peak of the
-Jungfrau to be seen, most lovely of all the Swiss mountains.
-
-There were a great many well-dressed visitors from foreign countries
-as well as many Switzers from the different cantons. Each competitor
-had his number in a garland on his hat. Singing and playing on all
-kinds of instruments were to be heard everywhere, mingled with cries
-and shouts. Mottoes were put up on the houses and bridges, flags and
-pennons floated in the breeze; the crack of the rifles was frequently
-heard, and Rudy thought this the sweetest sound of all; indeed, in the
-excitement of the moment he quite forgot Babette, although he had come
-on purpose to meet her.
-
-The marksmen now went in the direction of the target. Rudy went with
-them, and was the best shot of them all--he hit the bull's-eye every
-time.
-
-"Who is that young stranger who shoots so well?" the onlookers asked
-each other. "He talks French as they do in canton Vallais. But he also
-speaks German very well," others replied.
-
-"They say he was brought up near Grindelwald," one of the competitors
-remarked.
-
-There was life in the fellow, his eyes shone, his arm was steady, and
-for that reason he never failed in hitting the mark. Courage comes
-with success, but Rudy had a store of natural courage. Admiring
-friends soon gathered around him, and complimented him on his success;
-he altogether forgot Babette. Then some one laid his hand on his
-shoulder, and spoke to him in French.
-
-"You belong to the canton of Vallais?"
-
-Rudy turned, and saw a burly individual with a rosy, good-humored
-face. It was the wealthy miller from Bex; his stout form almost
-concealed the pretty, slim Babette, but she looked at Rudy with her
-sparkling, dark eyes. The miller was glad that a rifleman from his own
-canton should prove the best shot, and should have won universal
-applause. Rudy was certainly in luck, for although he had forgotten
-his principal object in coming, she had now come forward to him.
-
-When neighbors meet one another at a distance from home they generally
-get to talking, and make each other's acquaintance. Because Rudy was
-a good shot he had become a leader at the rifle competition, just as
-much as the miller was at Bex, because of his wealth and his good
-business; so they clasped each other by the hand for the first time;
-Babette also offered her hand to Rudy who squeezed it, and looked at
-her so earnestly that she quite blushed.
-
-The miller spoke of their long journey, and how many large towns they
-had come through; and it certainly seemed to have been a very long
-journey, as they had traveled by the steamboat, and also by rail and
-by post-chaise.
-
-"I came the nearest way," said Rudy. "I walked over the mountains; no
-road is too high for a man to come over it."
-
-"And break your neck," said the miller. "You look just the man to
-break his neck one day, you look so headstrong."
-
-"A man doesn't fall if he doesn't think about it," replied Rudy.
-
-The miller's relatives in Interlaken, with whom he and Babette were
-staying, asked Rudy to visit them, as he was from the same canton.
-This was a chance for Rudy; fortune favored him, as she always does
-favor those who endeavor to succeed by their own energy, and remember
-that "Providence gives us nuts, but we have to crack them for
-ourselves."
-
-Rudy was welcomed by the miller's relatives as if he had belonged to
-the family, and they drank to the health of the best shot, and Babette
-clinked her glass with the others, and Rudy thanked them for the
-toast.
-
-In the evening they went for a stroll on the road by the big hotels
-beneath the old walnut-trees, and there was such a throng, and the
-people pushed so that Rudy was able to offer his arm to Babette. He
-said he was glad to have met the people from Vaud. The cantons of Vaud
-and Vallais were very good neighbors. He seemed so thoroughly pleased
-that Babette could not resist the inclination to press his hand. They
-walked together just like old acquaintances, and she was very amusing.
-Rudy was delighted with her naive remarks on the peculiarities in the
-dress and behavior of the foreign ladies; and yet she did not wish to
-make fun of them, for she knew that many of them were amiable and
-worthy people--indeed, her own godmother was an English lady. She had
-been living in Bex eighteen years ago, when Babette was christened,
-and she had given her the valuable brooch she was now wearing. Her
-godmother had twice written to her, and Babette was now hoping to see
-her and her daughters in Interlaken.
-
-"They were two old maids, almost thirty!" said Babette; but you must
-remember that she was only eighteen.
-
-Her little tongue was never still for an instant, and all that Babette
-had to say was intensely interesting to Rudy; and he told her all
-about himself--that he had frequently been to Bex, and knew the mill
-well, and that he had often seen her, though he did not suppose she
-had ever noticed him; and how he had called at the mill, hoping to see
-her, and found that her father and she were away from home, a long way
-from home, indeed, but not so far that he could not get over the
-barrier which divided them.
-
-He told her a great deal more than this. He told her that he was very
-fond of her, and that he had come here on purpose to see her, and not
-for the rifle competition.
-
-Babette was very quiet when he told her this; she thought he set too
-high a value on her.
-
-While they continued rambling, the sun set behind the mighty wall of
-rock; the Jungfrau stood out in all its beauty and magnificence, with
-the green of the tree-clad slopes on either side of it. All stood
-still to admire the gorgeous spectacle, and both Rudy and Babette were
-happy in watching it.
-
-"There is no place more lovely than this!" said Babette.
-
-"No, indeed!" exclaimed Rudy, and then he looked at Babette.
-
-"I must go home to-morrow," he said, after a short silence.
-
-"You must come to see us at Bex," Babette whispered to him; "my father
-will be pleased."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE RETURN HOME.
-
-
-Oh what a load Rudy had to carry home with him over the mountains the
-next day! He had won three silver cups, two rifles, and a silver
-coffee-pot; this would be of use to him when he began housekeeping.
-But that was not the heaviest thing; there was something heavier and
-stronger which he carried with him--or which carried him--on that
-return journey over the mountains. The weather was wild, dull, heavy,
-and wet; dense clouds covered the mountain tops like a thick veil,
-quite hiding the snowy peaks. From the valleys he heard the sound of
-the woodman's ax, and huge trunks of trees rolled down the steep
-mountain sides; they seemed only like small sticks, but they were big
-enough for masts. The Lütschine rushed along with its continual hum,
-the wind shrieked, and the clouds hurried across the sky. Then Rudy
-discovered that a young maid was walking at his side; he had not seen
-her until she was quite near. She also was about to climb over the
-mountain. The girl's eyes had a strange power; you could not help
-looking at them, and they were wonderful eyes, very clear, and
-deep--oh, so deep!
-
-"Have you a sweetheart?" said Rudy, for that was all he could think
-of.
-
-"No, I have not," laughingly replied the maiden; but she did not look
-as if she spoke the truth. "Don't go round all that way," she then
-said. "You must bear more to the left; that is the shortest way."
-
-"Yes, and tumble down a crevasse!" said Rudy. "You're a fine one to be
-a guide if you don't know better than that!"
-
-"I know the way," she replied, "and my thoughts have not gone astray.
-Yours are below, in the valley, but here, on high, you should be
-thinking of the Ice-Maiden; people say that she does not love men."
-
-"I fear her not!" exclaimed Rudy. "She had to yield me up when I was a
-baby, and I am not going to yield myself up to her now that I am a
-man."
-
-It grew darker, and the rain poured down; then came the snow,
-dazzling and bewildering.
-
-"Take my hand," said the maiden, "I will help you;" and she touched
-him with her ice-cold fingers.
-
-[Illustration: "Have you a sweetheart?" said Rudy.]
-
-"You needn't help me!" returned Rudy; "I don't need a girl to teach me
-to climb!" and he hurried on, leaving her behind. The snow came down
-all around him, the wind shrieked, and he heard strange sounds of
-laughing and singing behind him. He believed she was one of the
-spirits in the Ice-Maiden's train, of whom he had heard tales when he
-spent the night up in the mountains as a boy.
-
-The snow ceased to fall, and he was now above the clouds. He looked
-behind him, but saw nobody; yet he heard a strange singing and
-yodeling that he did not like, as it did not sound human.
-
-When Rudy was quite at the highest ridge, from which the way tended
-downwards towards the Rhone valley, he saw above Chamonix, in a patch
-of blue sky, two bright stars shining and twinkling; they reminded him
-of Babette, and of his own good fortune, and the thought made him feel
-quite warm.
-
-[Illustration: Rudy believed she was one of the spirits in the
-Ice-Maiden's train.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-A VISIT TO THE MILL.
-
-
-"What splendid things you have brought back with you!" cried his old
-foster-mother; and her eagle eyes sparkled, and her lean neck waved
-backwards and forwards more than ever. "You are lucky, Rudy! Let me
-kiss you, my dear boy!"
-
-And Rudy submitted to be kissed; but he looked as if he regarded it as
-a thing which had to be put up with. "What a handsome fellow you are
-getting, Rudy!" said the old woman.
-
-"Don't talk such nonsense," Rudy replied, laughing; but nevertheless
-he liked to hear it.
-
-"I say it again," said the old woman. "You are very lucky!"
-
-"Perhaps you may be right," he rejoined, for he was thinking of
-Babette.
-
-He had never before been so anxious to go down the valley.
-
-"They must have gone home," he said to himself. "They were to have
-been back two days ago. I must go to Bex."
-
-So Rudy went to Bex, and found his friends at home at the mill. They
-received him kindly, and had brought a message for him from the family
-at Interlaken. Babette did not speak much; she was very quiet, but her
-eyes spoke volumes, and that satisfied Rudy. Even the miller, who had
-always led the conversation, and who had always had his remarks and
-jokes laughed at on account of his wealth, seemed to delight in
-hearing of all Rudy's adventures in his hunting; and Rudy described
-the difficulties and perils which the chamois-hunters have to face
-among the mountains--how they must cling to, or creep over, the narrow
-ledges of snow which are frozen on to the mountain sides, and make
-their way over the snow bridges which span deep chasms in the rocks.
-And Rudy's eyes sparkled as he was relating these hunting adventures,
-the intelligence and activity of the chamois, and the dangers of the
-tempest and the avalanche. He perceived as he went on that the miller
-grew increasingly interested in his wild life, and that the old man
-paid especial attention to his account of the bearded vulture and the
-royal eagle.
-
-Among other things, he happened to mention that, at no great distance,
-in the canton of Vallais, an eagle had built its nest most ingeniously
-under a steep projecting rock, and that the nest contained a young one
-which nobody could capture. Rudy said that an Englishman had offered
-him a handful of gold the other day if he could take him the eaglet
-alive; "but there is a limit to everything," said he. "That eaglet
-cannot be taken; it would be foolhardy to try."
-
-But the wine assisted the flow of conversation; and Rudy thought the
-evening all too short, though he did not start on his return journey
-until past midnight, the first time he visited the mill.
-
-Lights were still to be seen at the windows of the mill; and the
-parlor cat came out at an opening in the roof, and met the kitchen cat
-on the gutter.
-
-"Have you heard the news at the mill?" said the parlor cat. "There's
-love-making going on in the house! The father doesn't know of it. Rudy
-and Babette have been treading on each other's paws all the evening
-under the table. They trod on me more than once, but I kept quiet,
-lest it should be noticed."
-
-"I would have mewed," replied the kitchen cat.
-
-"Kitchen behavior will not suit the parlor," said the parlor cat; "but
-I should like to know what the miller will say when he hears of the
-love-making."
-
-What will the miller say, indeed? Rudy, also, wanted to know that; and
-he would not wait very long without finding it out. So a few days
-later, when the omnibus rolled over the Rhone bridge between Vallais
-and Vaud, Rudy was in it, in his usual high spirits, happy in the
-expectation of a favorable answer to the question he intended to ask
-that same evening.
-
-In the evening, when the omnibus was returning Rudy was again inside;
-but the parlor cat had great news to tell.
-
-"Do you know it, you from the kitchen? The miller knows everything.
-That was a fine end to the expedition! Rudy came here towards the
-evening, and he and Babette had much to whisper about; they stood in
-the passage which leads to the miller's room. I lay at their feet, but
-they had neither eyes nor thoughts for me. 'I am going straight in to
-your father!' said Rudy; 'that is the fair thing.' 'Shall I accompany
-you?' said Babette; 'it will encourage you.' 'I have sufficient
-courage!' said Rudy, 'but if you go too, he must look kindly on us,
-whether he will or no!' And they both went in. Rudy trod violently on
-my tail. Rudy is very clumsy! I mewed, but neither he nor Babette had
-ears to hear me. They opened the door, and they both went in, I in
-front; but I sprang up on the back of a chair, for I could not tell
-how Rudy would kick. But the miller kicked! and it was a good kick!
-out of the door, and into the mountains to the chamois! Rudy may aim
-at them, and not at our little Babette."
-
-"But what did they talk about?" asked the kitchen cat.
-
-"Talk?---- They talked of everything that people say when they go
-a-wooing: 'I am fond of her, and she is fond of me! and when there is
-milk in the pail for one, there is also milk in the pail for two!'
-'But she sits too high for you!' said the miller; 'she sits on grits,
-on golden grits; you can't reach her!' 'Nothing sits so high that a
-man can't reach it, if he will!' said Rudy; for he was very pert. 'But
-you can't reach the eaglet--you said so yourself! Babette sits
-higher!' 'I will take them both!' said Rudy. 'Yes, I will give her to
-you, when you give me the eaglet alive!' said the miller, and laughed
-till the tears stood in his eyes; 'but now I thank you for your
-visits, Rudy; come again in the morning, and you will find no one at
-home! Farewell, Rudy!' And Babette also said farewell, as miserable as
-a little kitten that can't see its mother. 'An honest man's word is as
-good as his bond!' said Rudy. 'Don't cry, Babette; I shall bring the
-eaglet!' 'You will break your neck, I hope!' said the miller, 'and so
-put an end to your race!' I call _that_ a kick! Now Rudy is off, and
-Babette sits and cries, but the miller sings German songs that he
-has learnt on his journey! I won't grieve over that now; it can't be
-helped!"
-
-"But yet there is still some hope for him," said the kitchen cat.
-
-[Illustration: "You are lucky, Rudy!" said his foster-mother; "let me
-kiss you, my dear boy!"]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE EAGLE'S NEST.
-
-
-From the mountain path sounds the yodeling, merry and strong, telling
-of good spirits and dauntless courage; it is Rudy--he is going to see
-his friend Vesinaud.
-
-"You will help me! we will take Ragli with us. I must capture the
-eaglet up the face of the mountain!"
-
-"Won't you take the spots of the moon first; that is as easy!" said
-Vesinaud. "You are in good spirits!"
-
-"Yes, for I am thinking of getting married! But now, to be in earnest,
-I will tell you what I am intending!"
-
-And soon Vesinaud and Ragli knew what Rudy wished.
-
-"You are a daring lad!" said they. "You will not get there! You will
-break your neck!"
-
-"A man does not fall down when he does not think of it!" said Rudy.
-
-At midnight they set off with poles, ladders, and ropes; the way was
-through thickets and bushes, and over rolling stones, always up, up in
-the gloomy night. The water rushed below; the water murmured above,
-heavy clouds drove through the air. When the hunters reached the
-precipitous face of the mountain it was still darker, the rocky walls
-were almost met, and the sky could only be seen high up in a small
-cleft. Close by, under them, was the deep abyss with its rushing
-waters. All three sat quite still, waiting for daybreak, when the
-eagle would fly out; for they must first shoot it before they could
-think of taking the young one. Rudy sat down, as still as if he were a
-piece of the stone he sat on. He had his gun in his hand ready to
-shoot; his eyes were fixed on the topmost cleft, where, under a
-projecting ledge, the eagle's nest was concealed.
-
-After waiting long, the hunters heard high above them a cracking,
-rushing sound; and suddenly they saw a great, hovering object. Two
-gun-barrels were pointed as the great black figure of the eagle flew
-out of its nest. One shot was heard; for a moment the bird moved its
-outstretched wings, and then slowly fell, as if with its greatness and
-the extension of its wings it would fill the whole of the chasm, and
-carry the hunters with it in its fall. The eagle sank into the depths;
-and brushing against the branches of trees and bushes, broke them as
-it fell.
-
-And now the hunters began work. They tied three of the longest ladders
-together, setting them up from the last secure foothold at the side of
-the precipice. But the ladders did not quite reach; the nest was
-higher up, hidden safe below the projecting rock, where it was as
-smooth as a wall. After some deliberation they decided to tie two
-ladders together, and lower them into the cleft from above, and join
-them to the three which had been set up from below. With great trouble
-they drew up the two ladders and secured the rope; they were then
-suspended over the projecting rock, and hung swinging over the abyss,
-and Rudy took his place on the lowest rung. It was an ice-cold
-morning, and vapors rose from the black chasm. Rudy sat out there as a
-fly sits on a waving straw which some bird has taken to the top of
-some high factory-chimney; but the fly can fly away if the straw gets
-loose, while Rudy can only break his neck. The wind whispered about
-him, and below, in the abyss, rushed the hurrying water from the
-melting glacier, the Ice-Maiden's palace.
-
-When Rudy began to climb, the ladders trembled and swung like a
-spider's web; but when he reached the fourth ladder he found it
-secure, for the lashing had been well done. The topmost ladder was
-flattened against the rock, yet it swung ominously with Rudy's weight.
-And now came the most dangerous part of the climb. But Rudy knew this,
-for the cat had taught him; he did not think about Giddiness, which
-hovered in the air behind him, and stretched its octopus-like arms
-towards him. Now he stood on the highest rung of the ladder, and found
-that after all it did not reach high enough for him to see into the
-nest; he could only reach up to it with his hands. He tested the
-firmness of the thick plaited boughs that supported the lower part of
-the nest, and when he found a thick and firm bough, he pulled himself
-up by it till he got his head and chest over the nest. But there
-poured upon him an overpowering smell of carrion; putrefying lambs,
-chamois, and birds lay here torn to pieces. Giddiness, which was not
-able to reach him, puffed the poisonous exhalation into his face, to
-confuse him, and below, in the black gaping depth, over the hurrying
-water, sat the Ice-Maiden herself, with her long greenish hair,
-staring with deathly eyes like two gun-barrels, and saying to herself,
-"Now I shall capture you!"
-
-[Illustration: It was captured alive.]
-
-In a corner of the nest he saw a large and powerful eaglet, which
-could not yet fly. Rudy fastened his eyes on it, held himself with
-all the force of one hand, and cast, with the other hand, a noose over
-the young bird. Thus, with its legs entangled in the line, it was
-captured alive. Rudy threw the noose with the bird in it over his
-shoulder, so that it hung a good way below him, and by the help of a
-rope he made himself fast till his toes reached the highest rung of
-the ladder.
-
-"Hold fast! don't believe you will fall, and you won't fall!" this was
-his old lesson, and he stuck to it; he held fast, he scrambled, he was
-certain he should not fall, and he did not fall.
-
-And now was heard a yodel, so vigorous and joyful. Rudy stood on the
-firm rock with his eaglet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-"I HOLD FAST TO BABETTE."
-
-
-"Here is what you demanded!" said Rudy, entering the miller's house at
-Bex; and, setting on the floor a large basket, he took off the cloth,
-and there glared from it two yellow, black-rimmed eyes, so sparkling,
-so wild, that they seemed to burn and devour everything they saw; the
-short, strong beak gaped, ready to bite, the neck was red and downy.
-
-"The eaglet!" shouted the miller. Babette gave one scream, and sprang
-aside, but she could not turn her eyes away from Rudy or the eaglet.
-
-"You are not to be frightened!" said the miller.
-
-"And you always keep your word!" said Rudy; "each has his own
-characteristic!"
-
-"But how is it you did not break your neck?" inquired the miller.
-
-"Because I held fast!" answered Rudy, "and that I do still! I hold
-fast to Babette!"
-
-"First see that you have her!" said the miller with a laugh; and that
-was a good sign, Babette knew.
-
-"Let us get the eaglet out of the basket; it looks dangerous. How it
-stares! How did you catch it?"
-
-And Rudy had to tell them, and the miller stared, opening his eyes
-wider and wider.
-
-"With your boldness and luck you can maintain three wives!" said the
-miller.
-
-"Thank you! thank you!" cried Rudy.
-
-"Yes; still you have not got Babette!" said the miller, and jestingly
-slapped the young hunter on the shoulder.
-
-"Have you heard the news in the mill?" said the parlor cat to the
-kitchen cat. "Rudy has brought us the eaglet, and will take Babette in
-exchange. They have kissed each other and let father see it! That is
-as good as an engagement. The old man didn't kick; he drew in his
-claws, and took his nap after dinner, and let the two sit and wag
-their tails. They have so much to say, they won't be finished before
-Christmas."
-
-Nor had they finished before Christmas. The wind scattered the brown
-leaves, the snow drifted in the valley and on the high mountains. The
-Ice-Maiden sat in her noble palace, which grows in the winter; the
-rocky walls were coated with ice, there were icicles ponderous as
-elephants where in the summer the mountain-torrent poured its watery
-deluge; ice-garlands of fantastic ice-crystals glittered on the
-snow-powdered fir-trees. The Ice-Maiden rode on the whistling wind
-across the deepest valleys. The snow carpet was spread quite down to
-Bex, and she could come there and see Rudy within doors, more than he
-was accustomed to, for he sat with Babette. The marriage was to take
-place towards the summer; he often had a ringing in his ears, so
-frequently did his friends talk of it. There was summer, glowing with
-the most beautiful Alpine roses, the merry, laughing Babette,
-beautiful as spring, the spring that makes all the birds sing of
-summer and of weddings.
-
-[Illustration: Rudy and Babette.]
-
-"How can those two sit and hang over each other?" said the parlor cat.
-"I am now quite tired of their mewing!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE ICE-MAIDEN.
-
-
-The walnuts and chestnut-trees, all hung with the green garlands of
-spring, spread from the bridge at St. Maurice to the margin of the
-Lake of Geneva along the Rhone, which with violent speed rushes from
-its source under the green glacier--the ice palace, where the
-Ice-Maiden lives, whence she flies on the wind to the highest
-snow-field, and there, in the strong sunlight, stretches herself on
-her drifting bed. And as she sits there she looks with far-seeing
-glance into the deepest valleys, where men, like ants on a sunlit
-stone, busily move about.
-
-"Powerful Spirits, as the Children of the Sun call you!" said the
-Ice-Maiden, "you are creeping things! with a rolling snowball both you
-and your houses and towns are crushed and effaced!" And she raised her
-proud head higher, and looked about her and deep down with deathly
-eyes. But from the valley was heard a rumbling, blasting of the rocks;
-men were at work; roads and tunnels were being made for railways.
-
-"They play like moles!" said she; "they are digging passages,
-therefore I hear sounds like musket-shots. When I move my castle the
-sound is louder than the rolling of thunder."
-
-From the valley arose a smoke, which moved onward like a flickering
-veil; it was the flying plume from a locomotive, which was drawing a
-train on the recently opened railway, the winding serpent, whose
-joints are the carriages.
-
-"They play at masters down below, the Powerful Spirits!" said the
-Ice-Maiden. "Yet the powers of nature are mightier!" and she laughed
-and sang, and the valleys resounded.
-
-"Now there is an avalanche rolling!" said the men below.
-
-But the Children of the Sun sang yet higher of human ideas, the
-powerful means which subdue the sea, remove mountains, fill up
-valleys; human ideas, they are the lords of the powers of nature. At
-the same moment there came over the snow-field, where the Ice-Maiden
-sat, a party of mountain climbers; they had bound themselves to one
-another with cords for greater security on the smooth plain of ice,
-near the deep precipices.
-
-"Creeping things!" said she. "You the lords of nature!" and she turned
-herself away from them and looked mockingly down into the deep valley,
-where the railway train was rushing past.
-
-"There they sit, these _thinkers!_ they sit in their power! I see them
-all! One sits proud as a king, alone! there they sit in a cluster!
-there half of them are asleep! and when the steam dragon stops they
-get out, and go their way. The thinkers go out into the world!" And
-she laughed.
-
-"There is an avalanche rolling again!" said those down below in the
-valley.
-
-"It will not reach us!" said two people behind the steam dragon; "two
-souls with one thought," as they say. It was Rudy and Babette; the
-miller also was with them.
-
-"As luggage!" said he. "I am with them as something necessary!"
-
-"There sit those two!" said the Ice-Maiden.
-
-"Many chamois have I crushed, millions of Alpine roses have I snapped
-and broken, not leaving the roots! I will blot them out! Thinkers!
-Powerful Spirits!" And she laughed.
-
-"There's an avalanche rolling again!" said those down below in the
-valley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE GODMOTHER.
-
-
-At Montreux, one of the nearest towns which, with Clarens, Vernex, and
-Glion, form a garland at the northeastern end of the Lake of Geneva,
-lived Babette's godmother, an English lady of position, with her
-daughters and a young relative; they had recently arrived, but the
-miller had already paid them a visit, told them of Babette's
-engagement, and of Rudy and the eaglet, and of his visit to
-Interlaken--in short, the whole history--and they had been highly
-delighted and pleased with Rudy and Babette, and with the miller; and
-at last made them all three come, and so they came--Babette must see
-her godmother, the godmother see Babette.
-
-Near the little town of Villeneuve, at the end of the Lake of Geneva,
-lay the steamboat which in its half-hour's journey to Vernex lies
-under Montreux. This is a shore which poets have praised; here, under
-the walnut-trees, on the deep blue-green lake, sat Byron, and wrote
-his melodious lines on the prisoner in the Castle of Chillon. Yonder,
-where Clarens is reflected with its weeping willows in the lake,
-wandered Rousseau, dreaming of Heloïse. The river Rhone glides forth
-under the high, snow-capped mountains of Savoy; here lies, not far
-from its outlet in the lake, a little island--indeed, it is so small
-that from the shore it seems to be a boat out there; it is a rock
-which, more than a hundred years ago, a lady had surrounded with a
-stone wall, covered with soil, and planted with three acacia-trees,
-which now overshadow the whole island. Babette was quite enraptured
-with the little spot--it was to her the most charming in the whole
-voyage; she thought they ought to stay there, for it was a most
-delightful place. But the steamboat passed by it, and stopped, as it
-always did, at Vernex.
-
-The little company wandered hence between the white, sunlit walls
-which enclosed the vineyards about the little mountain town of
-Montreux, where fig-trees cast a shade in front of the peasants'
-cottages, and laurels and cypresses grow in the gardens. Half-way up
-stood the boarding-house where the godmother was living.
-
-They were very cordially received. The godmother was a tall, kind lady
-with a round, smiling face; as a child she must have been like one of
-Raphael's angel heads, but now she was an old angel head, as her
-silvery hair was quite curly. The daughters were handsome,
-delicate-looking, tall and slim. The young cousin, who was with them,
-was entirely dressed in white from top to toe, with yellow hair and
-whiskers, of which he had so much that it might have been divided
-between three gentlemen, and he at once paid great attention to little
-Babette.
-
-Handsomely bound books, pieces of music, and drawings were spread over
-the large table, the balcony doors stood open overlooking the
-beautiful, extensive lake, which was so bright and still that the
-mountains of Savoy, with the country towns, woods, and snowy tops,
-were all reflected in it.
-
-Rudy, who was always bold, lively, and confident, felt himself out of
-his element, as they say; and he moved about as if he were walking on
-peas on a smooth floor. How slowly the hours passed! as if on the
-treadmill. And now they went for a walk, and it was just as tedious;
-Rudy might have taken two steps forward and then one back, and still
-kept pace with the others. They walked down to Chillon, the old gloomy
-castle on the rock, to see the instruments of torture, and
-death-chambers, the rusty chains on the rocky walls, the stony bed for
-those sentenced to death, the trap-doors through which the unfortunate
-beings were precipitated downwards and impaled on the iron spikes
-amidst the surf. They called it delightful to see all this. It was a
-place of execution, elevated by Byron's song into the world of poetry.
-Rudy felt it altogether the scene of executions; he leaned against the
-great stone window-frames and looked into that deep, bluish-green
-water, and over to the little solitary island with the three acacias;
-he wished himself there, and away from the whole chattering party; but
-Babette felt herself particularly cheerful. She said she had been
-unusually entertained; she found the cousin perfect.
-
-"Yes, a perfect chatterbox!" said Rudy; and it was the first time that
-Rudy said anything which displeased her. The Englishman had presented
-her with a little book as a memento of Chillon; it was a French
-version of Byron's poem, _The Prisoner of Chillon_, which Babette
-could read.
-
-"The book may be good enough," said Rudy, "but I don't care for the
-much-combed fellow who gave it you."
-
-"He seemed to me like a meal-sack without any meal!" said the miller,
-laughing at his own wit. Rudy also laughed, and said that it was very
-well put.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE COUSIN.
-
-
-A few days later, when Rudy came to call at the mill, he found the
-young Englishman there. Babette was just offering him some boiled
-trout, which she herself must have garnished with parsley, it looked
-so dainty. That was quite unnecessary. What business had the
-Englishman here? What did he come for? To enjoy refreshments from the
-hands of Babette? Rudy was jealous, and that amused Babette; it
-gratified her to get a glimpse of all sides of his disposition, both
-strong and weak. Love was as yet but play to her, and she played with
-Rudy's whole heart; and though, as one may say, he was her happiness,
-the chief thought of her life, the best and grandest in the world;
-yes--but the more gloomy did he look, so much the more did her eyes
-laugh; she could almost have kissed the blond Englishman with the
-yellow whiskers, if by that means she could succeed in sending Rudy
-fuming away, for by that she would know how she was beloved by him.
-But this was not right or prudent of little Babette, only she was no
-more than nineteen. She did not think much of it; she thought still
-less how she could explain her conduct, which was more free and easy
-with the young Englishman than was suitable for the miller's modest
-and recently betrothed daughter.
-
-The mill was situated where the highroad from Bex runs under the
-snow-covered peak which, the country people call the Diablerets, not
-far from a rapid, grayish-white mountain stream, like foaming
-soap-suds. This did not drive the mill; it was driven by a lesser
-stream, which was precipitated from the rock on the other side of the
-river, and was dammed up by a stone wall so as to increase its force
-and headway, and carried into a closed wooden basin by a broad channel
-away over the rapid river. This channel was so abundantly supplied
-with water that it overflowed, and made a wet, slippery path for those
-who used it as a short cut to the mill. The idea occurred to the young
-Englishman to use it, and dressed in white, like a working miller, he
-clambered over in the evening, guided by the light shining from
-Babette's room. But he had not learnt to climb, and nearly went
-head-foremost into the stream, but escaped with wet sleeves and
-bespattered trousers. Muddy and dirty he came below Babette's windows,
-clambered up into the old lime-tree and imitated the call of an owl,
-for he could not sing like any other bird. Babette heard it, and
-peeped through her thin curtains; but when she saw the white man, and
-easily guessed who it was, her little heart beat with fright and with
-resentment. She hastily put out her light, saw that all the
-window-bolts were fastened, and left him to hoot.
-
-[Illustration: "Babette peeped through the curtains."]
-
-It would be terrible if Rudy were now in the mill, but Rudy was not in
-the mill; no, what was much worse, he was just below it. There was
-high talk, angry words; there would be fighting, perhaps murder.
-
-Babette opened her window in alarm, called Rudy's name, and told him
-to go away.
-
-"You will not let me stay!" he shouted; "then it is an appointment!
-You are expecting good friends, better than me! Shame on you,
-Babette!"
-
-"You are detestable!" said Babette; "I hate you!" and now she was
-crying. "Go! go!"
-
-"I have not deserved this treatment!" said he, and he went; his cheeks
-were like fire, his heart was like fire.
-
-Babette flung herself on her bed, and wept.
-
-"I love you so much, Rudy! and you can believe that of me!"
-
-And she was angry, very angry, and that did her good, for otherwise
-she would have been deeply grieved; now she could fall asleep and
-sleep the invigorating sleep of youth.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE POWERS OF EVIL.
-
-
-Rudy left Bex, and took the homeward path up the mountains, in the
-fresh, cooling air, the domain of the Ice-Maiden. The thick foliage of
-the trees deep below him looked as if they were potato plants; the
-firs and the bushes appeared even less, the Alpine roses bloomed near
-the snow, which lay in separate patches as if it were linen put out to
-bleach. There was a single blue gentian, and he crushed it with the
-butt-end of his gun.
-
-Higher up he saw two chamois. Rudy's eyes sparkled, his thoughts took
-a new flight; but he was not near enough to them for him to shoot with
-confidence; so he climbed higher, where only coarse grass grew among
-the blocks of stone; the chamois went placidly along the snow-fields.
-Rudy hurried on eagerly, surrounded by misty clouds, and on a sudden
-he stood in front of a precipitous rocky wall, and the rain began to
-fall in torrents.
-
-He felt a parching thirst, his head was hot, but his limbs were cold.
-He seized his hunting-flask, but it was empty; he had not thought of
-it when he rushed up the mountain. He had never been ill, but now he
-had a presentiment of it; he was tired, he felt a desire to throw
-himself down and go to sleep, but everything was streaming with water.
-Strange objects vibrated before his eyes, but he saw on a sudden, what
-he had never seen there before, a newly-built low house, leaning
-against the rock, and at the door stood a young maiden. He thought it
-was the schoolmaster's Annette, whom he once had kissed at a dance,
-but it was not Annette, and yet he had seen her before, perhaps near
-Grindelwald, that night when he went home from the shooting match at
-Interlaken.
-
-"Where do you come from?" he demanded.
-
-"I am at home!" said she. "I am watching my flock."
-
-"Your flock! Where do they graze? Here are only snow and rocks!"
-
-"You are very clever!" said she with a laugh. "Here behind us, lower
-down, is a beautiful meadow! that is where my goats go. I take good
-care of them! I don't lose one; what is mine remains mine!"
-
-[Illustration: She came out with a bowl of wine and gave it to Rudy to
-drink.]
-
-"You are brave!" said Rudy.
-
-"You also!" replied she.
-
-"Have you any milk? Pray give me some, for I am intolerably thirsty!"
-
-"I have something better than milk!" said she, "that you shall have!
-Yesterday some travelers came here with their guide; they forgot half
-a bottle of wine, such as you have never tasted; they will not fetch
-it, and I don't drink it, so you can have it."
-
-And she came out with the wine, poured it into a wooden bowl, and gave
-it to Rudy.
-
-"That is good!" said he. "I have never tasted any wine so warming and
-fiery!" and his eyes sparkled, and there came an animation, a glow
-into him, as if all sorrow and depression had evaporated; and the
-gushing, fresh human nature coursed through his veins.
-
-"But this is surely the schoolmaster's Annette!" he exclaimed. "Give
-me a kiss!"
-
-"Then give me the pretty ring you have on your finger!"
-
-"My engagement ring?"
-
-"Exactly so!" said the girl; and she poured wine into the bowl, and
-held it to his lips, and he drank it. The joy of living was in his
-blood, he felt as if all the world belonged to him, and why should he
-worry? Everything is for us to enjoy and to make us happy! The stream
-of life is a stream of joy; to ride on it, to let ourselves float on
-its surface, that is felicity! He looked at the young girl: it was
-Annette, and still it was not Annette; even less was it the goblin
-phantom, as he had called her, he met near Grindelwald. The girl here
-on the mountain was fresh as the new-fallen snow, blooming as an
-Alpine rose, and nimble as a kid, but still formed out of Adam's ribs,
-as human as Rudy. And he put his arms around her, and gazed into her
-wonderfully clear eyes. It was only for a second, and in this--who can
-explain it? was it the spirit of life or of death that filled
-him?--was he raised on high, or did he sink down into the deep,
-murderous abyss of ice, deeper, ever deeper? He saw the walls of ice
-like blue-green glass; endless crevasses gaped around him, and water
-dripped sounding like chimes, and gleaming like pearls in bluish-white
-flames. The Ice-Maiden gave him a kiss, and it chilled him through his
-backbone and into his brain. He gave one cry of pain, dragged himself
-away, stumbled and fell, and it was night before his eyes. The powers
-of evil had played their game.
-
-[Illustration: "The Ice-maiden gave him a kiss."]
-
-When he reopened his eyes the Alpine maiden was gone, as was also the
-sheltering cottage. Water drove down the bare rocky wall, the snow lay
-all round him; Rudy shivered with cold, he was soaked to the skin, and
-his ring was gone, his engagement ring which Babette had given him.
-His gun lay by him in the snow; he took it up and wished to discharge
-it, but it missed fire. Watery clouds lay like solid masses of snow in
-the crevasse; Giddiness sat there and lured on her helpless prey, and
-under her there was a sound in the deep crevasse as if a huge rock
-were falling, crushing and sweeping away everything that would stop it
-in its fall.
-
-But in the mill Babette sat weeping. Rudy had not been near her for
-six days--he who was in the wrong, he who ought to ask her
-forgiveness, because she loved him with her whole heart.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-IN THE MILLER'S HOUSE.
-
-
-"What horrid nonsense it is with these human beings!" said the parlor
-cat to the kitchen cat. "Now it is broken off again with Babette and
-Rudy. She is crying, and he does not think any more of her."
-
-"I can't endure that," said the kitchen cat.
-
-"No more can I," said the parlor cat, "but I won't grieve over it!
-Babette may now be the beloved of the red whiskers! but he has not
-been here since he wished to get on the roof."
-
-The powers of evil have their game, both without us and within us.
-This Rudy had discovered and thought over. What was it that had taken
-place about him and in him on the top of the mountain? Was it a
-vision, or a feverish dream? Never before had he known fever or
-illness. He had made an examination of his own heart when he judged
-Babette. Could he confess to Babette the thoughts which assailed him
-in the hour of temptation? He had lost her ring, and it was exactly in
-that loss that she had regained him. Would she confess to him? It
-seemed as if his heart would burst asunder when he thought of her;
-there arose within him so many memories; he seemed really to see her,
-laughing like a merry child. Many an affectionate word she had spoken
-in the abundance of her heart came like a gleam of sunshine into his
-breast, and soon it was all sunshine therein for Babette.
-
-She might be able to confess to him, and she ought to do so.
-
-He went to the mill, and confessed, beginning with a kiss, and ending
-in the admission that he was the offender. It was a great offense in
-him that he could distrust Babette's fidelity; it was almost
-unpardonable! Such distrust, such impetuosity might bring them both to
-grief. Yes, indeed! and therefore Babette lectured him, and she was
-pleased with herself, and it suited her so well. But in one thing Rudy
-was right--godmother's relation was a chatterbox! She wished to burn
-the book which he had given her, and not have the least thing in her
-possession that could remind her of him.
-
-"Now that's all over!" said the parlor cat. "Rudy is here again, they
-understand each other, and that is the greatest good fortune, they
-say."
-
-"I heard in the night," said the kitchen cat, "the rats say the
-greatest good fortune is to eat tallow-candles and to have quite
-enough rancid bacon. Now, which shall I believe--rats, or a pair of
-lovers?"
-
-"Neither of them!" said the parlor cat. "That is always safest."
-
-The greatest good fortune for Rudy and Babette was close at hand; the
-wedding day--the most beautiful day, as they called it.
-
-But the marriage was not to take place at the church at Bex, or in the
-miller's house; the godmother wished the wedding to be held at her
-house, and that they should be married in the pretty little church at
-Montreux. The miller stuck to it that this request should be complied
-with; he alone was aware what the godmother intended to give the
-bride for a wedding present, and considered they ought to make so
-slight a concession. The day was fixed. On the previous evening they
-were to journey to Villeneuve, and to proceed in the early morning to
-Montreux by boat, that the godmother's daughters might deck the bride.
-
-"There will be a feast here the day after the wedding," said the
-parlor cat. "Otherwise I would not give one mew for the lot."
-
-"There _will_ be a feast!" said the kitchen cat; "ducks and pigeons
-are killed, and a whole deer hangs on the wall. It makes my mouth
-water to look at it! In the morning they start on their journey."
-
-Yes, in the morning! This evening Rudy and Babette sat together, as
-betrothed, for the last time at the mill.
-
-Out of doors was the Alpine glow, the evening bells chimed, the
-daughters of the sunbeams sang: "May the best thing happen!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-VISIONS IN THE NIGHT.
-
-
-The sun was set, the clouds came down in the Rhone valley between the
-high mountains, the wind blew from the south, a wind from Africa, but,
-over the high Alps, a tempest, rending the clouds asunder, and, when
-the wind had swept by, for one instant it was quite still; the torn
-clouds hung in fantastic shapes among the tree-clad mountains, and
-over the rushing Rhone; they hung in shapes like antediluvian
-monsters, like eagles hovering in the air and like frogs leaping in a
-pool; they came down over the rapid stream, they sailed over it
-although they sailed in the air. The river bore on its surface a
-pine-tree torn up by the roots, watery eddies flowed before it; that
-was Giddiness--there were more than one--moving in a circle on the
-onward-rushing stream. The moon shone on the snow-covered mountain
-tops, on the black woods and the strange white clouds, visions of
-night, spirits of the powers of nature; the mountain peasants saw
-them through the windows, they sailed below in crowds before the
-Ice-Maiden who came from her glacier palace, and sat on her
-frail-craft, the uprooted pine-tree, carrying the glacier water with
-her down the stream to the open lake.
-
-"The wedding guests are coming!" That was what whistled and sang in
-the air and the water.
-
-There were visions without and visions within. Babette dreamed a
-strange dream.
-
-It appeared to her as if she was married to Rudy, and that many years
-had passed. He was now hunting chamois, but she was at home, and there
-sat with her the young Englishman with the yellow whiskers. His
-glances were warm, his words had a power of witchcraft; he held out
-his hands to her, and she was obliged to follow him. They left her
-home and went down the mountain, ever down, and it seemed to Babette
-as if there lay a burden on her heart, which was always growing
-heavier. It was a sin against Rudy, a sin against God. And then on a
-sudden she was standing deserted; her clothes were torn by the
-thorns, her hair was gray. She looked up in her grief, and on the edge
-of a cliff she saw Rudy. She held out her arms towards him, but did
-not venture to call or pray. Nor would it have helped her, for she
-quickly saw that it was not he, but only his hunting-jacket and hat,
-which were hanging on his alpenstock, as hunters set them to deceive
-the chamois. And in the depth of her affliction Babette wailed out:
-"Oh, that I had died on the day I was married, the day of my greatest
-happiness! that would have been a happy life! that would have been the
-best thing that could happen for me and Rudy! None knows his future!"
-and in her impious grief she precipitated herself into a deep chasm in
-the rocks. The spell was broken, and with a cry she awoke.
-
-The dream had vanished, but she knew that she had dreamed something
-dreadful, and that she had dreamed of the young Englishman, whom she
-had not seen or thought of for several months. Was he in Montreux? Was
-she about to see him at the wedding? Her pretty lips tightened at the
-thought, and she knit her brows. But soon there came a smile, and her
-eyes gleamed; the sun was shining so beautifully outside, and the
-morning was that of her wedding with Rudy.
-
-He was already in the parlor when she came down, and soon they were
-away to Villeneuve. They were a very happy couple; and the miller with
-them laughed and beamed in the highest spirits; he was a good father
-and an upright man.
-
-"Now we are the masters at home!" said the parlor cat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-
-It was not yet evening when the three happy people reached Villeneuve,
-and sat down to their repast. After dinner the miller sat in an
-easy-chair with his pipe, and took a little nap. The young couple went
-arm in arm out of the town, then by the carriage road under the rocks
-so thick with bushes, skirting the deep bluish-green lake. The gloomy
-Chillon reflected its gray walls and massive towers in the clear
-water; the little island with the three acacia trees lay still nearer,
-appearing like a bouquet in the lake.
-
-"It must be delightful out there!" said Babette; she had still the
-strongest inclination to go there, and that wish could be immediately
-fulfilled; there lay a boat by the bank, the line that held it was
-easy to unfasten. They could not see any one from whom to ask
-permission, and so they took the boat, for Rudy could row well.
-
-The oars caught hold of the water like the fins of a fish, the water
-that is so pliable and yet so strong, that is all a back to bear, all
-a mouth to devour, mildly smiling, softness itself, and yet
-overwhelming and strong to rend asunder. The water foamed in the wake
-of the boat, in which in a few minutes the couple had gained the
-island, where they landed. There was not more than room enough on it
-for two to dance.
-
-Rudy turned Babette round two or three times, and then, hand in hand,
-they seated themselves on the little bench beneath the overhanging
-acacias, and gazed into each other's eyes, while all around them was
-illuminated in the splendor of the setting sun. The pine forests on
-the mountains put on a lilac hue like heather when in flower, and
-where the trees ceased and the bare rock came into view it glowed as
-if the mountain was transparent; the clouds in the heavens were
-lighted up as if with red fire, the whole lake was like a fresh,
-blushing rose-leaf. Already, as the shadows lifted themselves up to the
-snow-clad hills of Savoy, they became bluish, but the topmost peaks
-shone as if of red lava, and for one moment looked as if these glowing
-masses had raised themselves from the bowels of the earth and were not
-yet extinguished. That was an Alpine glow, such as Rudy and Babette
-could never hope to see the equal of. The snow-covered Dent du Midi
-had a splendor like the face of the full moon when it is rising.
-
-"So much beauty! so much happiness!" they both said.
-
-"The earth has no more to give me!" said Rudy. "An evening hour like
-this is a whole lifetime! How often have I felt my good fortune as I
-feel it now, and thought, 'If all were now ended, how fortunately I
-should have lived! How blessed is this world!' and the day ended; but
-a new one began again, and it seemed to me that it was fairer still!
-Heaven is infinitely good, Babette!"
-
-"I am so happy!" said she.
-
-"Earth has nothing more to give me!" exclaimed Rudy.
-
-And the evening bells chimed from the mountains of Savoy, from the
-mountains of Switzerland; the dark blue Jura lifted itself towards the
-west in a golden luster.
-
-"God give thee what is grandest and best!" exclaimed Babette.
-
-"That He will!" said Rudy. "To-morrow I shall have it! to-morrow thou
-wilt be mine! my own little, charming wife!"
-
-"The boat!" cried Babette at that moment.
-
-The boat, which was to take them back, had broken loose and drifted
-from the island.
-
-"I will fetch it!" said Rudy, throwing off his coat; and he pulled off
-his boots, sprang into the lake, and took rapid strokes towards the
-boat.
-
-Cold and deep was the clear, bluish-green water from the mountain
-glacier. Rudy looked down below, only one single glance--and he
-thought he saw a golden ring rolling, and gleaming, and playing--he
-thought of his lost betrothal ring, and the ring became larger, and
-expanded into a sparkling circle, and in that shone the clear glacier;
-interminable deep crevasses yawned around him, and the dripping water
-sounded like a carillon of bells and gleamed with bluish flames; in an
-instant he saw what we have to tell in so many words. Young huntsmen
-and young maidens, men and women, once swallowed up in the crevasses
-of the glacier, stood here alive, with open eyes and smiling mouth,
-and deep under them came the sound of church bells from submerged
-towns; a congregation knelt under the church arches, pieces of ice
-formed the organ-pipes, mountain torrents played on it. The Ice-Maiden
-sat on the clear, transparent floor; she raised herself up towards
-Rudy, kissed his feet, and there ran a deadly coldness through his
-limbs, an electric shock--ice and fire! one does not know the
-difference at the first touch.
-
-"Mine! mine!" sounded about him and in him. "I kissed thee when thou
-wast little! I kissed thee on the mouth! now I kiss thee on the toe
-and on the heel--thou art mine altogether!"
-
-And he was lost in the clear blue water.
-
-All was still; the church bells ceased to ring, the last notes died
-away with the splendor on the red clouds. "Mine thou art!" sounded
-again in the depths; "Mine thou art!" sounded in the heights, from the
-Infinite.
-
-The icy kiss of Death overcame that which was corruptible; the prelude
-was over before the drama of life could begin, the discord resolved
-into harmony.
-
-It is beautiful to fly from love to Love, from earth into the Heaven.
-
-Do you call that a sad story?
-
-Unfortunate Babette! It was a fearful time for her! the boat drifted
-farther and farther away. No one on shore knew that the bridal pair
-were on the little island. Night drew on; the clouds descended and it
-became dark. She stood there alone, despairing, weeping. A furious
-storm broke over her; lightning illuminated the mountains of Jura,
-Switzerland, and Savoy, and thunder rolled continuously. The
-lightning was almost as bright as the sun; one could see each single
-vine as at midday, and then immediately everything would be shrouded
-in the thickest darkness. The flashes formed knots, rings, zig-zags;
-they struck round about the lake, they shone from all sides, while the
-peals were increased by the echoes. On the land people drew the boats
-higher up the banks; every living thing sought shelter, and the rain
-poured down in torrents.
-
-"Wherever are Rudy and Babette in this furious storm?" said the
-miller.
-
-Babette sat with clasped hands, with her head in her lap speechless
-with grief.
-
-"In that deep water!" she said within herself. "He is deep down, as
-under the glacier!"
-
-And she remembered what Rudy had told her of his mother's death, of
-his own rescue, and how he had been brought up as one dead out of the
-crevasse in the glacier. "The Ice-Maiden has him again!"
-
-And the lightning flashed as blinding as a ray of the sun on the white
-snow. Babette started; the lake lifted itself at that instant, like a
-shining glacier; the Ice-Maiden stood there, majestic, pale blue,
-shining, and at her feet lay Rudy's corpse. "Mine!" said she; and
-round about was again darkness and gloom, and rushing water.
-
-"Cruel!" moaned Babette. "Why then should he die, when the happy day
-was come! O God! enlighten my understanding! shine into my heart! I
-cannot understand Thy ways, but I bow to Thy power and wisdom!"
-
-And God shone into her heart. A flash of thought, a ray of light, her
-dream of last night, as if it were real, seemed to shine through her;
-she called to mind the words which she had spoken: she had wished for
-_the best thing_ for herself and Rudy.
-
-"Woe is me! was that the seed of sin in my heart? was my dream a future
-life, whose string must be snapped for my salvation? Miserable me!"
-
-She sat wailing in the gloomy, dark night. In the deep stillness she
-thought that Rudy's words sounded again, the last he had uttered:
-"Earth has nothing more to give me!" They had been said in the
-abundance of happiness, they came back to her in the depth of her
-grief.
-
-[Illustration: The Ice-Maiden stood there, majestic, pale blue,
-shining, and at her feet lay Rudy.]
-
-A couple of years have elapsed. The lake smiles, the banks smile; the
-vines put forth swelling grapes; steamboats with waving flags hurry
-past, pleasure-boats with both their sails set fly like white
-butterflies over the expanse of water; the railway above Chillon has
-been opened, and leads deep into the Rhone valley. At every station
-visitors get out, they come with their red guide-books and read to
-themselves what remarkable things they have to see. They visit
-Chillon, they see from thence in the lake the little island with the
-three acacias, and read in the book of a bridal pair who, in the year
-1856, sailed thither one evening, of the bridegroom's death and: "next
-morning the bride's despairing cry was first heard on the shore."
-
-But the guide-books make no mention of Babette's quiet life with her
-father, not in the mill--strangers live there--but in the pretty
-house near the railway station, where from the windows she often looks
-out in the afternoon over the chestnut trees to the snow mountains
-where Rudy used to disport himself; she sees in the evenings the
-Alpine glow, the Children of the Sun encamping above and repeating the
-song of the traveler whose mantle the whirlwind carried away; it took
-the covering, but not the man himself.
-
-There is a rosy luster on the snow of the mountains, there is a rosy
-luster in every heart where the thought is: "God lets that which is
-best come to pass!" but that is not always revealed to us as it was to
-Babette in her dream.
-
-
-
-
-THE FELLOW-TRAVELER.
-
-
-Poor Johannes was sorely afflicted, for his father was ill, past all
-hope of recovery. Besides their two selves, not a soul was present in
-the little room. The lamp on the table was flickering, and it was late
-at night.
-
-"You have been a good son, Johannes," said the sick father, "and God
-will, no doubt, help you on in the world." And he gazed at him with
-mild and thoughtful eyes, fetched a deep sigh, and then died--though
-he only looked as if he had gone to sleep. But Johannes wept; for now
-he had nobody in the wide world--neither father, mother, sister, nor
-brother. Poor Johannes! He knelt down beside the bed, kissed his dead
-father's hand, and shed many, many bitter tears! But at length his
-eyes closed, and he fell asleep against the hard bedpost.
-
-He had then a strange dream. He thought the sun and moon came down to
-him, and he saw his father again in full health and freshness, and
-heard him laugh as he used to do when he was pleased. A pretty girl,
-with a gold crown on her long, shining hair, presented her hand to
-him; and his father said: "Look what a bride you have won. She is the
-loveliest maid upon earth." He then woke, and all these fine things
-vanished; his father lay dead and cold in his bed, and nobody was near
-them. Poor Johannes!
-
-In the following week, the dead man was buried. The son followed close
-behind the coffin, for he was never again to behold the father who had
-loved him so dearly. He heard them fling the earth down upon the
-coffin, and still saw a little corner of it left; but, at the next
-shovelful, even that disappeared. Then he felt as though his heart
-would break, so afflicted was he. They sang a psalm round the grave,
-and it sounded so beautiful that it brought tears into Johannes' eyes.
-He wept, and felt relieved. The sun shone down gloriously on the green
-trees, just as if it meant to say: "You must not be so mournful,
-Johannes. Look how beautifully blue the sky is yonder! Your father is
-up above, and is begging of the All-merciful that you may thrive at
-all times!"
-
-"I will always be good," said Johannes, "then I shall join my father
-in heaven; and what joy it will be to meet him again! How much I shall
-have to tell him, and how much he will have to teach me about the
-delights of heaven, just as he used to teach me here on earth. Oh,
-what joy that will be!"
-
-He fancied it all so plainly that he smiled, while the tears still ran
-down his cheeks. The birds in the chestnut trees kept twittering,
-"Twit! twit!" They were gay, although they had been at the funeral;
-but they knew that the dead man was now in heaven, and had wings much
-larger and more beautiful than their own; and that he was happy,
-because he had been good here on earth: and, therefore, they were
-pleased. Johannes saw how they flew from the green trees out into the
-wide world, and then he wished to fly away also. But he first cut out
-a large wooden cross to place on his father's grave; and when he
-brought it thither in the evening, he found the grave decked with
-gravel and flowers. This had been done by strangers, who all esteemed
-the worthy man who had gone to his last home.
-
-Early the next morning, Johannes packed up his little bundle, and put
-into his girdle his whole legacy, consisting of fifty dollars and a
-couple of silver shillings, with which he meant to wander forth into
-the world. But first of all he repaired to his father's grave in the
-churchyard, where he repeated the Lord's Prayer, and then said,
-"Farewell!"
-
-Abroad in the fields through which he passed, all the flowers looked
-fresh and lovely in the warm sunshine. And they nodded in the wind,
-just as if they meant to say: "Welcome to the greenwood! Is it not
-delightful here?" But Johannes turned round to give a last look at the
-old church, in which he was christened as an infant, and where he used
-to go with his father every Sunday to hear the service, and to sing
-his psalm; and in so doing he perceived, in one of the upper loopholes
-of the church tower, the little goblin belonging to it, who stood
-with his little pointed, red cap on his head, shading his countenance
-with his arm, so that the sun might not stream into his eyes. Johannes
-nodded farewell to him; and the little goblin waved his red cap, laid
-his hand on his heart, and then kissed his hand to him, to show that
-he was kindly disposed towards him, and wished him a happy journey.
-
-Johannes now thought of how many beautiful things he should see in the
-wide world, so large and so magnificent as it was; and he went on and
-on much further than he had ever been before. He did not know the
-places through which he passed, nor the people whom he met. He was now
-abroad in a foreign land.
-
-The first night he was obliged to lie on a haycock in the open fields,
-for he had no other bed. But this he thought was so nice a bed that
-the king himself could not be better off. The field, and the haycock,
-with the blue sky above, certainly formed a very pretty bed-chamber.
-The green grass, dotted with little red and white flowers, was the
-carpet; the elder bushes and hedges of wild roses were the nosegays
-that decorated the room; and his washing-basin was the brook, with its
-clear, pure waters, where the reeds were nodding to bid him good night
-and good morning. The moon was a large lamp, high up in the blue
-ceiling, and one that could not set fire to the curtains. Johannes
-might sleep in peace, and he did so, nor did he wake till the sun
-rose, and all the little birds around were singing: "Good morrow! Good
-morrow! Are you not yet up?"
-
-The bells were ringing for church, for it was Sunday. The people were
-going to hear the preacher, and Johannes followed them, sang a psalm,
-and heard the word of God. He felt just as if he were in his own
-parish church, in which he had been christened, and where he sang
-psalms with his father.
-
-In the churchyard were several graves, some of which were overgrown
-with very high grass. And he thought how his father's grave would grow
-to look the same in the end, as he would not be there to weed it and
-deck it. So he fell to work and tore up the grass, and set up the
-wooden crosses that had fallen down, and replaced the wreaths that had
-been blown away by the wind, thinking all the time, "Perhaps some one
-is doing the same for my father's grave, as I am unable to take care
-of it."
-
-Before the church door stood an aged beggar, leaning on a crutch.
-Johannes gave him his silver shillings, and then went forth on his
-way, lighter and happier than he had felt before.
-
-Towards evening there arose a violent storm, which made him hasten to
-find a shelter. Darkness soon came on; but at length he reached a
-small and lonely church that stood on a little hill.
-
-"I will sit down in a corner," said he, as he went in; "I am so tired
-that I need rest." He then sat down, and folded his hands, and said
-his evening prayer; and before he perceived it, he was fast asleep,
-and dreaming, while a thunderstorm was raging abroad.
-
-When he awoke, it was in the middle of the night, but the fearful
-storm was over, and the moon shone in through the window to greet him.
-In the middle of the church stood an open coffin, in which lay the
-body of a man, that was awaiting burial. Johannes was not fearful, for
-he had a good conscience; and, besides, he knew that the dead never
-injure any one. It is only living, wicked men that do any harm. Two
-such bad characters stood beside the dead man that was lying in the
-church awaiting burial, and they wanted to vent their spite, by not
-letting him rest in his coffin, and casting his poor body outside the
-church door.
-
-"Why do you want to do so?" asked Johannes. "It would be very wicked.
-In Christ's name, let him rest in peace!"
-
-"Oh, stuff and nonsense!" said the two hideous men; "he has taken us
-in. He owed us money, and couldn't pay it; and now he is dead into the
-bargain, and we shan't recover a penny! Therefore we will take our
-revenge, and he shall lie outside the church door like a dog."
-
-"I have nothing in the world but fifty dollars," said Johannes, "which
-form my whole patrimony; yet will I willingly give them to you,
-provided you promise truly to leave the dead man in peace. I shall
-manage without the money. I have strong and healthy limbs, and a
-merciful God will assist me in times of need!"
-
-"Of course," said the ugly men, "if you pay his debt, we will neither
-of us lay a finger upon him--that you may depend upon." And hereupon
-they took the money which he gave them, laughed aloud at his simple
-good nature, and went their ways. Then he laid the body carefully back
-into the coffin, folded the dead man's hands, took leave of him and
-continued his way through a large forest, in a contented frame of
-mind.
-
-All around him, wherever the moon shone through the trees, he saw
-numbers of elegant little elves at play. His presence did not disturb
-them, for they knew him to be a good and harmless son of the earth;
-for it is only bad people who are not privileged to see the elves.
-Some of them were not taller than the breadth of one's finger, and
-wore their long yellow hair fastened up with gold combs. They were
-rocking themselves, two by two, on the large dewdrops that sparkled on
-the leaves and the tall grass. Now and then the drop would roll away,
-and down they fell between the long blades, occasioning a deal of
-laughter and merriment amongst the tiny folk. It was a pretty sight.
-Then they sang, and Johannes recognized distinctly all the pretty
-songs he had learned as a little boy. Large speckled spiders, with
-silver crowns upon their heads, were set to build suspension bridges
-and palaces from one hedge to another, which, when spangled by the
-dew, glittered like glass in the moonshine. These frolics continued
-till sunrise, when the little elves crept into the flower-buds and the
-wind took possession of their bridges and palaces, which were tossed
-upon the air as cobwebs.
-
-Johannes had just left the forest, when the full-toned voice of a man
-cried out to him, "Ho there, comrade! whither are you going?"
-
-"Into the wide world," said he. "I have neither father nor mother, and
-am a poor boy; but the Lord will help me in time of need."
-
-"I am likewise going into the wide world," said the stranger. "Shall
-we keep each other company?"
-
-"Willingly," said he; and so they walked on together. They soon felt a
-mutual liking for each other, for both were good; only Johannes soon
-found out that the stranger was much wiser than himself. He had
-traveled throughout nearly the whole world, and could tell of
-everything that existed.
-
-The sun was already high when they sat down under a tree to eat their
-breakfast, just as an old woman was coming up to them. She was very
-aged, and almost bent double, and supported herself on a crutch-stick,
-while she carried on her back a bundle of firewood, which she had
-gathered in the forest. Her apron was tucked up, and Johannes saw
-three large rods of fern and willow twigs peeping out at each end.
-When she was quite close to our travelers, her foot slipped, and she
-fell with a loud scream, for she had broken her leg--poor old woman!
-
-Johannes at once proposed that they should carry the old woman home;
-but the stranger opened his knapsack, and took out a box, saying that
-he had an ointment which would immediately make her leg whole again,
-and so strong that she would be able to walk home by herself, just as
-if the accident had never happened: only he required that she should
-give him in return the three rods she carried in her apron.
-
-"That would be well paid," said the old woman, nodding her head in a
-peculiar manner. She did not like giving up the rods; but, on the
-other hand, it was still more disagreeable to be lying there with a
-broken limb. So she gave him the rods, and the moment he had rubbed
-her leg with the ointment the old dame got up, and walked much better
-than before. Such were the effects of the ointment; and truly it was
-not of a sort to be purchased at the apothecary's.
-
-"What do you want with these rods?" asked Johannes of his
-fellow-traveler.
-
-"They are three very pretty herb-brooms," said he, "and I like them,
-because I am a foolish fellow."
-
-They then went on a good deal further.
-
-"Look how overcast the sky appears!" said Johannes, pointing before
-them. "Those are frightfully heavy clouds."
-
-"No," said his fellow-traveler, "they are not clouds; they are
-mountains--fine, large mountains--at the top of which one may overlook
-the clouds, and breathe fresh air. And delightful it is, believe me,
-to stand there! To-morrow we shall assuredly be far out in the wide
-world."
-
-But they were not so near as they looked, and it took a full day
-before they had reached the mountains, where the black forests were
-towering up to the sky, and where blocks of stone might be found as
-huge as a large town. It seemed a somewhat difficult undertaking to
-cross them; therefore, Johannes and his fellow-traveler turned into an
-inn, in order to rest and gather strength for the next day's
-excursion.
-
-A number of persons were assembled in the tap-room of the inn, where a
-man was exhibiting a puppet-show. He had just set up his little
-theater, and the people were sitting round to see the play. But, right
-in front, a stout butcher had sat himself down in the very best place,
-while a great bulldog by his side--who looked wondrously snappish--sat
-staring like the rest of the audience.
-
-The play now began. It was a very pretty piece, with a king and queen,
-who sat on a splendid throne, with gold crowns on their heads and long
-trains to their robes; for their means allowed them to indulge in such
-luxuries. The prettiest little puppets, with glass eyes and large
-mustaches, stood at all the doors, and opened and shut them, to let in
-fresh air. It was a very agreeable play, and not at all mournful. But,
-just as the queen got up, and passed across the stage, no one knows
-what the huge bulldog took into his head; but, being no longer held by
-the butcher, he jumped right into the theater, and seized the queen by
-the middle of her slender waist, so that it cracked again. It was
-quite shocking to hear.
-
-The poor man who exhibited the show was both frightened and sorry for
-the loss of his queen, for she was the most elegant puppet in his
-stock, and the ugly bulldog had bitten her head off. But when the rest
-of the spectators had retired, the stranger who traveled with Johannes
-said that he would set her to rights, and taking out his box, he
-smeared the puppet with the same ointment that had cured the old
-woman's broken leg. The moment this was done, the puppet was whole
-again, and could even move all her limbs of herself, and no longer
-required to be pulled by wires. The puppet was like a human being,
-except that it could not speak. The showman was vastly delighted, for
-now he had no longer any occasion to hold this puppet, who could dance
-of her own accord, which none of the others could do.
-
-Late at night, when all the folks at the inn had gone to bed, somebody
-was heard to sigh so dreadfully deep, and so frequently, that the
-whole household got up, to see what could be the matter. The showman
-went to his little theater, for it was from thence the sighing
-proceeded. All the wooden puppets were lying in a heap; the king and
-his body-guard it was who were sighing so piteously, and staring with
-their glass eyes, because they wished to be smeared a little like the
-queen, in order that they might move of themselves. The queen knelt
-down and lifted up her pretty crown, saying, "Take this, but do smear
-my husband and my courtiers." The poor showman could not then help
-crying, for he was really sorry for his puppets. He immediately
-promised Johannes' fellow-traveler all the money he might earn on the
-following evening through his puppet-show, if he would only smear four
-or five of his prettiest puppets. But the fellow-traveler said he did
-not require anything but the large sword that he wore at his side, on
-receiving which, he besmeared six puppets, that immediately danced so
-gracefully that all living girls that beheld them were irresistibly
-impelled to dance likewise. The coachman and the cook began dancing,
-then the waiters and the chambermaids, and all the strangers present,
-as well as the shovel and the tongs--only the latter fell down at the
-very first leap. They had indeed, a merry night of it!
-
-Next morning, Johannes started with his fellow-traveler, before any of
-the others were astir, and crossed the large forest of fir-trees, in
-their way up the high mountains. They climbed to such a height that
-the church steeples below looked like little blue berries in the green
-grass, and they could see for miles and miles around, where they had
-never yet been. Johannes had never before seen so much at once of the
-beauties of this lovely world. And then the sun shone so warmly
-through the fresh blue air, and the huntsmen's horns echoed so
-beautifully between the mountains, that tears came into his eyes, and
-he could not forbear exclaiming, "All-merciful God! what a kind Father
-Thou art to us, to have given us all the fine things to be seen in the
-world!"
-
-His fellow-traveler likewise stood with folded hands, and gazed upon
-the forest, and the towns that lay in the bright sunshine. At the same
-moment, they heard a lovely sound above their heads, and on looking
-up, they perceived a large white swan hovering in the air, and singing
-as no bird had ever sung before. But its voice grew weaker and weaker,
-till its head drooped, and it slowly dropped down to their feet, where
-the poor bird lay quite dead.
-
-"Two such beautiful wings," said the fellow-traveler, "so white and so
-large as this bird's, are worth some money; so I will take them with
-me. You see it was well that I obtained a sword." And he cut off the
-two wings of the dead swan at a single blow, and kept them.
-
-They now traveled many miles across the mountains till they at length
-reached a large city containing hundreds of towers, that shone like
-silver in the sunshine. In the midst of the town stood a handsome
-marble palace, roofed with pure red gold, in which dwelt the king.
-
-Johannes and his fellow-traveler did not care to enter the town
-immediately, but went into an inn, situated in the outskirts, in order
-to dress themselves; for they wished to look tidy when they walked
-through the streets. The landlord informed them how good a man the
-king was, and that he never injured anybody; but as to his
-daughter--heaven defend us!--she was a bad princess indeed! Beauty she
-possessed in abundance: nobody was prettier or more elegant than
-herself. But what of that? She was a wicked witch, and was the cause
-of many accomplished princes having lost their lives. She had given
-leave to everybody to woo her. Any one might present himself, be he a
-prince or a beggar; it was all the same to her. Only he must guess
-three things that she had thought of and questioned him about. If he
-succeeded, he was to marry her, and become king over all the land at
-her father's death; but if he could not guess the three things, he was
-then to be hung, or to have his head struck off. Her father the old
-king, was deeply concerned at all this: but he could not forbid her
-being so wicked because he had once declared that he would never
-meddle with her lovers and that she might do as she liked about them.
-Every time a prince came to try his luck at guessing, in order to
-obtain the princess's hand, he was sure to fail, and was, therefore,
-hung or beheaded. He had been warned betimes that it would be safer to
-desist from his suit. The old king was so afflicted at the mourning
-and wretchedness thus occasioned that, for one whole day in the year,
-he and all his soldiers used to kneel and pray that the princess might
-grow good; but she would not. The old women who tippled brandy used to
-color it quite black before they drank it; this was their way of
-mourning, and they could not well do more.
-
-"What a shocking princess!" said Johannes. "She deserves the rod, and
-it would do her good. If I were the old king, she should have been
-thrashed long ago."
-
-They now heard the mob cheering outside the inn. The princess was
-passing, and she was really so beautiful that everybody forgot how
-wicked she was, and therefore hurrahed. Twelve beautiful maidens,
-dressed in white silk clothes and holding golden tulips in their
-hands, rode by her side on coal-black horses. The princess herself was
-mounted on a snow-white steed, with diamond and ruby trappings. Her
-riding-dress was of gold brocade; and the whip she held in her hand
-looked like a sunbeam. The gold crown on her head resembled the little
-stars twinkling in the heavens, while her mantle consisted of
-thousands of splendid butterflies' wings stitched together. Yet, in
-spite of this magnificence, she was herself far more beautiful than
-her clothes.
-
-When Johannes caught sight of her, his face grew as red as a drop of
-blood, and he was struck completely dumb; for the princess exactly
-resembled the beautiful girl with the golden crown, whom he had
-dreamed of the night his father died. He thought her most beautiful,
-and could not help loving her passionately. It could not be possible,
-thought he, that she was a wicked witch, who ordered people to be hung
-or beheaded when they were unable to guess what she asked. "But since
-every one, down to the poorest beggar, is free to woo her," said he,
-"I will repair to the palace, for I cannot resist doing so." Everybody
-advised him not to attempt such a thing, as he must inevitably fail
-like the rest. His fellow-traveler, likewise, warned him to desist;
-but Johannes thought he should succeed. He brushed his shoes and his
-coat, washed his hands and face, combed his pretty flaxen hair, and
-then went alone into the town, and proceeded to the palace.
-
-"Come in," said the old king, when Johannes knocked at the door.
-Johannes opened it, and the old king came forward to meet him in his
-dressing-gown and embroidered slippers; he wore his crown on his
-head, and bore his scepter in one hand and his ball in the other.
-"Wait a bit," said he, putting the ball under his arm, to leave one
-hand free to present to Johannes. But the moment he heard he came as a
-suitor, he began to weep so violently that both ball and scepter fell
-on the floor, and he was fain to wipe his eyes with the skirts of his
-dressing-gown. Poor old king!
-
-"Think not of it," said he, "you will fare as badly as all the others.
-Come, you shall see."
-
-He then led him into the princess's pleasure-garden, and a frightful
-sight was there to behold! From every tree hung three or four kings'
-sons who had wooed the princess, but had been unable to guess her
-riddles. At every breeze that blew, all these skeletons rattled till
-the little birds were frightened, and never dared to come into the
-garden. All the flowers were propped with human bones; and human
-skulls might be seen grinning in flowerpots. It was an odd garden for
-a princess.
-
-"Now, you see," said the old king, "your fate will be just the same as
-that of all the others whose remains you behold. Therefore give up
-the attempt. You really make me quite unhappy, for I take it so to
-heart."
-
-Johannes kissed the good old king's hand, and assured him that all
-would be well; for he was quite enchanted with the lovely princess.
-
-As the princess then rode into the palaceyard, accompanied by all her
-ladies, they went out to greet her. She was marvelously fair to look
-upon, as she presented her hand to Johannes. And he thought a great
-deal more of her than he did before; and felt certain she could not be
-a wicked witch, as everybody said she was. They then went into a room
-where little pages handed them sweetmeats and gingerbread-nuts. But
-the old king was so out of sorts, he could not eat at all. Besides,
-the gingerbread-nuts were too hard for him.
-
-It was agreed that Johannes should return to the palace on the
-following morning, when the judges and the whole council would be
-assembled to see and hear how the guessing was carried on. If he
-succeeded, he was then to return twice more; but there never yet had
-been anybody who had been able to solve any question the first time,
-and in each case his life was forfeited.
-
-Johannes felt no anxiety as to how he should fare. On the contrary, he
-was pleased, and thought only of the beautiful princess; and was quite
-confident that God would help him through his trials. Though how this
-was to be accomplished he knew not, and preferred not troubling
-himself to think about the matter. He capered along on the high-road,
-as he returned to the inn where his fellow-traveler was waiting his
-return.
-
-Johannes could not cease expatiating on the gracious reception he had
-met with from the princess, and on her extreme beauty. He quite longed
-for the morrow, when he was to go to the palace and try his luck at
-guessing.
-
-But his fellow-traveler shook his head mournfully. "I wish you so
-well!" said he. "We might have remained together a good deal longer,
-and now I must lose you! Poor, dear Johannes! I could weep, only I
-will not spoil your joy on the last evening that we may ever spend
-together. We will be merry--right merry! To-morrow, when you are gone,
-I shall be able to weep undisturbed."
-
-All the inhabitants of the town had immediately heard that there was a
-new suitor for the princess's hand, and there prevailed universal
-consternation. The theater was closed; the pastry-cooks put crape
-round their sugar-husbands; and the king and the priests were on their
-knees in the church. This sadness was occasioned by the conviction
-that Johannes could not succeed better than all the other suitors had
-done.
-
-Towards evening Johannes' fellow-traveler prepared a goodly bowl of
-punch, and said: "Now let us be merry, and drink the princess's
-health." But after drinking a couple of glasses, Johannes proved so
-sleepy, that he could not possibly keep his eyes open, and fell fast
-asleep. His fellow-traveler then lifted him gently out of his chair,
-and laid him in bed; and when it was quite dark, he took the two large
-wings he had cut off from the dead swan, and fastened them firmly to
-his own shoulders. He then put into his pocket the largest rod that
-he had obtained from the old woman who fell and broke her leg; and
-opening the window, he flew over the town, straight to the palace,
-where he placed himself in an upper corner of the building right under
-the princess's bed-chamber.
-
-The whole town was perfectly quiet. The clock now struck a quarter to
-twelve, when the window opened, and the princess, wrapped in a flowing
-white mantle, and provided with a pair of black wings, flew over the
-city towards a large mountain. But the fellow-traveler made himself
-invisible; and as he flew behind the princess, he thrashed her with
-his rod till she bled. What a strange flight through the air it was!
-The wind caught her mantle, which swelled out on all sides like the
-large sail of a ship, and the moon shone through it.
-
-"How it does hail, to be sure!" said the princess, at every blow she
-received from the rod; and such weather suited her. At last she
-reached the mountain, and knocked for admittance. Then came a noise
-like a clap of thunder, while the mountain opened, and the princess
-went in. The fellow-traveler followed her, for nobody could see him,
-as he was invisible. They went through a long, wide passage, where the
-walls shone brilliantly from the light of above a thousand glittering
-spiders that were running up and down and illuminating them like fire.
-They next entered a large hall built of silver and gold; red and blue
-flowers as large as sunflowers were beaming from the walls; but nobody
-could pluck them, for the stems were ugly, venomous serpents, and the
-flowers were the flames their jaws kept vomiting forth. The whole
-ceiling was covered with glow-worms and light-blue bats that were
-flapping their thin wings. It looked quite frightful. In the middle of
-the floor stood a throne that was supported by the skeletons of four
-horses, whose harness had been furnished by the red, fiery spiders.
-The throne itself was of milk-white glass, and the cushions were
-little black mice that kept biting each other's tails. Above it was a
-canopy of a deep-red cobweb, dotted with the prettiest little green
-flies that sparkled like precious stones. On the throne sat an old
-magician, with a crown on his ugly head and a scepter in his hand. He
-kissed the princess on her forehead, and placed her beside him on his
-splendid throne, and then the music struck up. Huge black grasshoppers
-played the jew's-harp, while the owl beat a tattoo on its own body,
-having no better drum. It was a ludicrous concert. Little dark-colored
-goblins, with a will-o'-the-wisp in their caps, danced about the room.
-But nobody could see the fellow-traveler, who had placed himself right
-behind the throne, where he could see and hear everything. The
-courtiers, who now came in, were very delicate and genteel. But
-anybody who could see what is what, would quickly perceive what they
-were made of. They were nothing better than broomsticks with cabbages
-for their heads, whom the magician had conjured into life, and whom he
-had tricked out in embroidered clothes. However, they did just as
-well, as they were only wanted for show.
-
-After a little dancing, the princess related to the magician that she
-had a new suitor, and consulted him as to what she should ask him
-next morning when he came to the palace.
-
-"I will tell you what," said the magician; "you must choose something
-easy, and then he'll never hit upon it. Think of one of your shoes.
-He'll never guess that. Then you will have him beheaded, and mind you
-don't forget to bring me his eyes to-morrow night."
-
-The princess bowed, and said she would not forget to bring them. The
-magician then opened the mountain, and she flew back; but the
-fellow-traveler followed her, and struck her so smartly with the rod,
-that she sighed most deeply over such a hail-storm, and hastened all
-she could to reach her bed-chamber through the window. The
-fellow-traveler then returned to the inn, where Johannes was still
-asleep, took off his wings, and went to bed likewise, for he might
-well be tired.
-
-Johannes woke at an early hour next morning. His fellow-traveler got
-up, and told him that he had had a strange dream that night about the
-princess and her shoe, and therefore urged him to ask whether it was
-not her shoe that the princess was thinking about? For this he had
-learned from the magician in the mountain.
-
-"I may as well ask that as anything else," said Johannes. "Perhaps
-your dream may turn out to be the truth, for I trust in God to help me
-through. Still, I will take leave of you, because should I guess
-wrong, I shall never see you again."
-
-They then embraced one another, and Johannes went into the town, and
-walked to the palace. The whole hall was filled with people. The
-judges sat in their armchairs, with their heads propped up by
-eider-down cushions, because they had so much to think about. The old
-king stood wiping his eyes with a white pocket-handkerchief. The
-princess now entered. She looked more beautiful than even the day
-before, and saluted the assembly with charming grace. But she extended
-her hand to Johannes, saying: "Good morning to you."
-
-Johannes was now called upon to guess what she had thought of. Bless
-me! how kindly she did look at him! But no sooner had he pronounced
-the single word "shoe," than she turned as pale as chalk, and trembled
-all over. Still, this did not serve her much, since he had guessed
-correctly.
-
-But, goodness! how pleased the old king was--he cut a caper that was
-quite pleasant to behold! And all present clapped their hands, to
-cheer both him and Johannes, who had been successful in this, his
-first ordeal.
-
-The fellow-traveler was likewise much rejoiced on hearing how matters
-had turned out. But Johannes folded his hands and thanked his God, who
-he felt certain would help him through the two next times. On the
-following day, he was to make a second attempt at guessing.
-
-The evening passed much the same as the foregoing one. When Johannes
-had gone to sleep, his fellow-traveler flew after the princess to the
-mountain, and thrashed her more violently than before, having taken
-two rods with him. Nobody saw him, and he heard all that was said. The
-princess was to think of her glove, and this he repeated to Johannes,
-as if it had been a dream. So that he was able to guess correctly,
-which occasioned great joy amongst the inmates of the palace. The
-whole court cut capers as they had seen the king do the first time.
-But the princess lay on the sofa, and would not speak a word. All now
-depended on whether Johannes could guess right the third time. If he
-succeeded, he was to marry the beautiful princess, and reign over the
-land at the old king's death. But if he guessed wrong, he was to
-forfeit his life, and the magician would have his beautiful blue eyes.
-
-On the preceding evening, Johannes went to bed early, said his
-prayers, and then fell into a quiet sleep. But his fellow-traveler
-tied his wings to his back, and put his sword at his side, and taking
-the three rods with him, flew towards the palace.
-
-It was as dark as pitch, and there was such a storm that the tiles
-were flying off from the roofs of the houses, and the trees in the
-garden, where hung the skeletons, bent like so many reeds beneath the
-wind. It lightened every moment, and the thunder rolled along as
-though it was a single clap that lasted through the whole night. The
-window now opened, and the princess flew out. She was as pale as
-death, but she laughed at the bad weather, and thought it was scarcely
-bad enough. And her white mantle fluttered in the wind like a large
-sail, while the fellow-traveler thrashed her with the three rods till
-her blood flowed, and she could scarcely fly any farther. She managed,
-however, to reach the mountain.
-
-"This is a violent hail-storm," said she; "I was never out in such
-weather before."
-
-"There may be too much of a good thing," observed the magician.
-
-She now told him that Johannes had guessed aright the second time, and
-should he succeed again on the following morning, he would then have
-won, and she would never again be able to come to the mountain, or to
-practise magic arts as she had hitherto done; therefore was she quite
-out of spirits.
-
-"He shall not be able to guess it," said the magician, "for I will
-find out something that he will never hit upon, unless he is a greater
-conjurer than myself. But now let's be merry!" And then he took both
-the princess's hands, and they danced about with all the little
-goblins, wearing will-o'-the-wisp lights, that were in the room. The
-red spiders jumped just as merrily up and down the walls; it looked as
-if the fiery flowers were emitting sparks. The owl beat the drum, the
-crickets whistled, and the black grasshoppers played on the
-jew's-harp. It was a frolicsome ball.
-
-When they had danced enough the princess was obliged to go home, for
-fear of being missed in the palace. The magician said he would
-accompany her, that they might be together a little longer.
-
-They then flew away through the bad weather, while the fellow-traveler
-broke his three rods across their shoulders. The magician had never
-been out in such a hail-storm before. Just on reaching the palace, and
-on bidding the princess farewell, he whispered, "Think of my head."
-But the fellow-traveler heard him, and just as the princess slipped in
-at her bedroom window, and the magician was about to turn round, he
-seized him by the long black beard, and cut off his ugly head at a
-single stroke from his sword, so that the magician had not even time
-to see him. He then threw the body into the sea, to serve as food for
-the fishes; but he merely dipped the head in the waters, and then tied
-it up in his silk handkerchief, and took it to the inn, and went to
-bed.
-
-Next morning he gave the bundle to Johannes, bidding him not open it
-till the princess should ask him what she was thinking of.
-
-There were so many spectators in the large hall of the palace, that
-they stood as thick as radishes tied in a bunch. The council sat on
-their armchairs with the soft cushions, and the old king was dressed
-in new clothes; his golden crown and scepter had been furbished up;
-and the whole scene looked very solemn. But the princess was pale as
-ashes, and wore a coal-black dress, as though she were attending a
-funeral. "What have I thought of?" asked she of Johannes. And he
-immediately opened the silk handkerchief, when he was himself quite
-startled on beholding the ugly magician's head. Everybody shuddered,
-for it was frightful to look at; but the princess sat like a statue,
-and could not speak a word. At length she rose and gave her hand to
-Johannes, for he had guessed aright. She looked neither to the right
-nor the left, but sighed out: "Now you are my master! Our wedding will
-be celebrated this evening."
-
-"So much the better," said the old king, "that's just what I wish."
-All present cried "Hurrah!" The soldiers on parade struck up their
-music in the streets, the bells were set-a-ringing, the pastry-cooks
-took the black crape off their sugar-husbands, and rejoicings were
-held everywhere. Three oxen, stuffed with ducks and chickens, and
-roasted whole, were placed in the middle of the market-place, and
-every one was free to cut a slice; the fountains spouted the most
-delicious wine; and if one bought a penny cracknel at the baker's one
-received six large biscuits as a present--and the biscuits had raisins
-in them!
-
-Towards night the whole town was illuminated, the soldiers fired
-cannons, and the boys let off pop-guns; and there was a deal of
-eating, and drinking, and crushing, and capering at the palace. All
-the fine gentlemen and the beautiful young ladies danced together, and
-one might hear them from afar singing the following song:--
-
- "Here are many maidens fair,
- Who twirl like any spinning-wheel,
- And tread the floor as light as air;
- Still round and round, sweet maiden, reel,
- And dance away the mazes through,
- Until the sole has left your shoe."
-
-But the princess was still a witch, and could not endure Johannes.
-This struck his fellow-traveler, and therefore he gave Johannes three
-feathers out of the swan's wings, and a small phial containing only a
-few drops, and told him to place a large vat full of water in front of
-the princess's bed, and when the princess was about to get into bed,
-he must give her a slight push, so that she should fall into the
-water, into which he must dip her three times, having taken care first
-to shake in the feathers and the contents of the phial. The magic
-spell would then be broken, and she would love him tenderly.
-
-Johannes did all that his fellow-traveler suggested. The princess
-shrieked aloud when he dipped her into the water, and struggled out of
-his hands under the form of a coal-black swan with fiery eyes. The
-second time she rose to the surface the swan had become white, all but
-a black ruff round its neck. Johannes prayed to God, and made the bird
-dive down a third time, when it was suddenly transformed to the most
-beautiful princess. She was far lovelier than before, and thanked him,
-with tears in her eyes, for having broken the spell that bound her.
-
-On the following morning, the old king came with all his court, and
-the congratulations lasted till late in the day. Last of all came
-Johannes' fellow-traveler, with his stick in his hand, and his
-knapsack at his back. Johannes embraced him affectionately, and said
-that he must not go away, but stay with him, for he was the cause of
-all his happiness. But his fellow-traveler shook his head, and said in
-a mild and friendly voice: "No; my time is now up. I have but paid a
-debt. Do you remember the dead man whom his wicked creditors would
-fain have ill-used? You gave all you possessed that he might rest in
-peace in his grave. I am that dead man!"
-
-And at the same moment he vanished.
-
-The wedding rejoicings now lasted a full month. Johannes and the
-princess loved each other dearly, and the old king lived to see many a
-happy day, and dandled his little grand-children on his knee, and let
-them play with his scepter. And Johannes became king over the whole
-land.
-
-
-
-
-THE OLD BACHELOR'S NIGHTCAP.
-
-
-There is a street in Copenhagen oddly named Hysken Strâde, and one
-naturally asks what Hysken signifies, and why Hysken at all. Common
-report says it is a German word, but in justice to the German tongue
-this is not the case, since it would then have been Hauschen, of which
-Hysken is the Danish corruption, and it means "the street of tiny
-houses."
-
-For many a year it consisted of nothing but wooden booths, such as may
-be seen to this day in the market-place; possibly they were a little
-larger. The window-panes were not of glass, but horn, for at that time
-glass was too expensive for general use. Remember, we are speaking of
-many years ago. Your great-grandfather would have called them "the
-olden times." Yes, several hundred years ago.
-
-Trade in Copenhagen was entirely, or nearly so, in the hands of
-wealthy Bremen and Lübeck merchants, whose clerks (for they themselves
-stayed at home) lived in the Hysken Sträde, in the booths of this
-street of tiny houses, and sold beer and groceries. Delicious German
-beer it was too, and all kinds for sale--Bremen, Prussian, and
-Brunswick, and spices of every variety--saffron, aniseed, ginger and
-above all pepper. Indeed, this was the staple commodity--hence the
-German clerks in Denmark acquired the nickname Pepper-folk--and since
-they were bound not to marry whilst in that country, many grew old and
-gray in service, and, as they performed their own domestic services
-themselves they became crabbed old fellows with whimsical ideas. This
-being so, it became usual to dub all crotchety old bachelors
-"pepper-fogeys," an expression now naturalized into the German
-language. This must be borne in mind if you would understand what
-follows.
-
-These pepper-fogeys used to be unmercifully ridiculed, and told to
-pull down a nightcap over their ears and toddle off to bed, and many
-are the doggerel verses in which the nightcap figures. Yes, fun was
-poked at the pepper-fogeys with their nightcaps, just because they
-were so little known. And why should not one wish for a nightcap? you
-may ask. Listen, and I will tell you.
-
-Hauschen Street was in those days unpaved, and wayfarers stumbled
-along as if it were a little side-alley. So narrow indeed was it, and
-so huddled together the booths, that in summertime a sail would be
-stretched from side to side, and strong was the fragrance of saffron
-and ginger pervading the stalls, behind which there served for the
-most part old men. They were not, however, clothed, as in the
-portraits of our ancestors, with peruke, knee-breeches, elegant
-waistcoat and tunic of ample cut, as you might suppose.
-
-No, these old pepper-fogeys were no dandies to be portrayed on canvas,
-though one could well wish to have a picture of one as he stood at the
-counter, or betook himself with leisurely gait to church on holy days.
-A broad-brimmed hat, high in the crown, in which maybe the younger
-among them would sport a feather, a woolen shirt beneath a wide
-flapping collar, a close-fitting jacket, a loose cloak worn over it,
-and the trousers tucked into the broadly-peaked shoes, for stockings
-had they none. At his belt a knife and fork, and a larger knife for
-self-defense--a necessary precaution in those days.
-
-Such was the costume of old Anthony, one of the oldest of the
-pepper-fogeys, only in place of the broad-brimmed high-crowned hat he
-always wore a sort of bonnet, under which was a knitted skullcap, a
-veritable nightcap, which never left his head. One or other, for he
-had two, was always on his head day and night. He formed a perfect
-study for an artist, so lean and wizened was he, so wrinkled his brow,
-his fingers so skinny, his eyebrows so bushy. He was said to be a
-native of Bremen; but in truth, though his master was, old Anthony was
-born at Eisenach, hard by the Wartburg. He never told the others, but
-pondered over it the more.
-
-The old fellows did not often come together. He stayed in his own
-room, a dim light penetrating the opaque window-panes. Seated on the
-bed, he chanted his evening psalm. Theirs was not a happy
-lot--strangers in a strange land, heeded by none, save to be brushed
-aside when in the way.
-
-On black nights, when the rain was pelting down outside, it was far
-from cosy within. Not a lamp visible, save that which threw a light on
-a picture of the Virgin painted on the wall. Hark to the rain beating
-in torrents on the masonry of the castle-wharf! Such evenings were
-long and dreary without some task. To arrange and rearrange things in
-the house, to make paper bags, to polish scales, is not work for every
-day. One must find other things to do, as did old Anthony. He would
-darn his clothes, and patch up his boots. And when at last he went to
-bed, true to his habit, down he would draw his nightcap, but soon
-raised it to see the candle was quite extinguished. He would snuff out
-the wick between finger and thumb, pull down his nightcap, and turn
-over to sleep. But it occurred to him to see if the ashes on the
-little hearth in the corner were quite burnt out; if they were damped
-enough, lest a stray spark should kindle a fire, and do damage.
-
-Up he would get again, creep down the ladder (for steps they could not
-be called), and finding not a spark in the ash-pan, would go back in
-peace. But before he was half in bed he would have a doubt whether the
-bolts and shutters of the shop were secured, and down once more went
-the tottering feet, his teeth a-chattering with the cold, for never
-such biting frost as in late winter. Then, pulling up the coverlet and
-drawing down his nightcap, he would dismiss all thoughts of business
-and the day's toil from his mind. But no happier than before--old
-memories would weave their fantastic shapes before his fancy, and a
-many thorn lay hidden in the garlands.
-
-When one pricks one's finger tears brim to the eyelids, and oftentimes
-old Anthony shed hot and bitter tears, that glistened like pearls. The
-largest pearls would fall on the coverlet with so sad a sound that it
-seemed his heart's strings were breaking.
-
-Brightly would they glisten and illumine pictures of his childhood,
-never fading memories.
-
-As he dried his tears on the nightcap, the scenes would vanish, but
-not the source of his tears: that lay deep in his heart.
-
-The scenes did not follow the natural sequence of life; the saddest
-and most joyful together, but the last had the deepest shadows.
-
-The beech forests of Denmark are admitted by all to be fine, but
-fairer still to the eyes of old Anthony were those around the
-Wartburg. More majestic and lofty the aged trees around the baronial
-castle, where the foliage of creepers trailed over the stone
-buttresses. Sweeter there the perfume of apple-blossoms. Vividly did
-he call them to mind, and a shining tear rolled down his cheek,
-wherein he saw two children, a boy and a girl, at play. The boy,
-rosy-cheeked and curly-haired, with clear blue eyes, was himself, the
-little Anthony. The girl had brown eyes, dark hair, and a merry,
-bright expression. She was the Burgomaster's daughter, Molly. The
-children were playing with an apple, which they shook to hear the pips
-rattle inside. They shared the apple and ate it up, all but one pip,
-which the little girl proposed they should plant in the earth.
-
-"Then you will see something you'd never think of," said she; "an
-apple tree will grow, but not all at once." So they busied themselves
-planting it in a flower-pot. He made a hole, and she laid the pip in,
-and both heaped on the earth.
-
-"Mind," said she, "you don't dig up the pip to see if it has struck
-root. Indeed, you mustn't. I did so--only twice--because I knew no
-better, and the flowers withered." Anthony kept the flower-pot, and
-every day the winter through watched it, but nothing was to be seen
-but the black earth. Then came the spring and warm sunshine, and two
-little twigs peeped forth from the pot. "Oh, how lovely!" cried
-Anthony, "they are for Molly and me."
-
-Soon came another shoot; whom could that represent? Then another and
-yet another, and every week it grew, till it became a big plant. All
-this was mirrored in a single tear. Brush it away as he might, the
-source dwelled deep in his bosom.
-
-Not far from Eisenach is a ridge of rocky heights, treeless and bare,
-known as the Venusberg.
-
-Here was the abode of Venus, goddess of heathen mythology, known also
-to every child round about as Lady Holle. She it was who lured the
-knightly Tannhäuser, the minstrel of the Wartburg, to her mountain.
-
-Little Molly and Anthony would ofttimes stand at the foot of the
-mountain, and one day she asked him, "Do you dare knock and say, 'Lady
-Holle! Lady Holle! open the door. Tannhäuser is here'?" But Anthony
-was afraid, only his playmate ventured.
-
-"Lady Holle! Lady Holle!" she cried, loud and clear, but the rest so
-low and indistinct that he believed that she did not utter it. She
-looked so winning and was of such high spirit. When they were at play
-with other children in the garden, Molly alone of them all would dare
-to kiss him, just because he was unwilling and resisted. "I dare kiss
-him," she would cry, and throw her arms round his neck, and the boy
-would submit to her embrace, for how charming, how saucy she was, to
-be sure!
-
-Lady Holle, so people said, was beautiful, but her beauty was that of
-a wicked temptress. The noblest type of beauty was that of the devout
-Elizabeth, tutelary saint of the land, the pious lady whose gracious
-actions were known near and far. Her picture hangs in the chapel lit
-up by silver lamps, but she and Molly bore no resemblance to one
-another.
-
-The apple tree they had planted grew year by year till it was so large
-it had to be planted anew in the open air, where the dew fell and the
-sun shed his warm rays; and it flourished and grew hardy, and could
-bear the wintry blast, blossoming in the springtide as if for very
-joy. In the autumn it bore two apples--one for Molly, one for Anthony.
-Rapidly grew the tree, and with it grew Molly, fresh as one of its
-blossoms; but not for long was Anthony fated to watch this fair
-flower.
-
-All things here on earth are subject to change.
-
-Molly's father left the old home and went afar. Nowadays, by the
-railroad, it takes but some few hours, but in those times over a day
-and night, to travel so far east as to Weimar.
-
-Both Molly and Anthony cried, and she told him he was more to her
-than all the fine folk in Weimar could be.
-
-A year passed by--two, three years--and only two letters came: the
-first sent by a letter-carrier, the other by a traveler--a long and
-devious way by town and hamlet.
-
-How often had he and Molly together read the story of Tristan and
-Isolde, and bethought them the name Tristan meant "conceived in
-tribulation." But with Anthony no such thought could be harbored as
-"She has forsaken me."
-
-True, Isolde did _not_ forsake Tristan; buried side by side in the
-little churchyard, the lime trees met and entwined over their graves.
-Anthony loved this story, sad though it was.
-
-But no sad fate could await him and Molly, and blithely he sang as he
-rode in the clear moonlight towards Weimar to visit Molly.
-
-He would fain come unexpected, and unexpected he came.
-
-And welcome they made him. Wine-cups filled to the brim, distinguished
-company, a comfortable room, all these he found, but it was not as he
-had pictured it, dreamed of it.
-
-Poor Anthony could not make it out, could not understand them, but we
-can. We know how one may be in the midst of others and yet be
-solitary; how one talks as fellow-voyagers in a post-chaise, boring
-one another, and each wishing the other far away.
-
-One day Molly spoke to him. "I am straight-forward, I will tell you
-all. Since we were playmates together much has altered. It is not only
-an outward change in me, you see. Habit and will do not control our
-affections. I wish you well, Anthony, and would not have you bitter
-towards me when I am far away, but love, deep love, I cannot feel for
-you. Fare thee well!"
-
-So Anthony bade her farewell. No tear bedimmed his eye, but he felt he
-had lost a friend. Within four and twenty hours he was back in
-Eisenach; the horse that bore him, bore him no more.
-
-"What matter?" said he, "I am lost. I will destroy whatever reminds me
-of the Lady Holle. The apple tree--I will uproot it, shatter it. Never
-more shall it bloom and bear fruit."
-
-But the tree was not injured. Anthony lay on his bed, stricken with
-fever. What can avail him. Suddenly a medicine, the bitterest medicine
-known to man, cured his fever, convulsing body and soul. Anthony's
-father was no longer the rich merchant he had been!
-
-Troublous days, days of trial, awaited them. Misfortune fell upon the
-home; the father, dogged by fate, became poor. So Anthony had other
-things to think about than the resentment he cherished in his heart
-towards Molly. He must take his father's place, he must go out into
-the great world and earn his bread.
-
-He reached Bremen: hardship and dreary days were his lot--days that
-harden the heart or sometimes make it very tender. How he had
-misjudged his fellow-men in his young days! He became resigned and
-cheerful. God's way is best, was his thought. How had it been if
-heaven had not turned her affection to another before this calamity?
-"Thanks be to heaven," he would say. "She was not to blame, and I have
-felt so bitter towards her."
-
-Time passed on. Anthony's father died, and strangers occupied the old
-home. But he was destined to see it once more. His wealthy master sent
-him on business that brought him once more to Eisenach, his native
-town.
-
-The old Wartburg was unchanged--the monk and nun hewn on its stones.
-The grand old trees set off the landscape as of old. Over the valley
-the Venusberg rose, a gray mass in the twilight. He longed to say,
-"Lady Holle! Lady Holle! open the door to me. Fain would I stay
-forever." It was a sinful thought, and he crossed himself. Old
-memories crowded to his mind as he gazed with tear-bedewed eyes at the
-town of childhood's days. The old homestead stood unchanged, but the
-garden was not the same. A roadway crossed one corner of it. The apple
-tree, which he had _not_ destroyed, was no longer in the garden, but
-across the way.
-
-Still, as of old, bathed in sunshine and dew, the old tree bore
-richly, and its boughs were laden with fruit. One of its branches was
-broken. Wilful hands had done this, for the tree now stood by the
-highway.
-
-Passers-by plucked its blossoms, gathered its fruit, and broke its
-branches. Well might one say, as one says of men, "This was not its
-destiny as it lay in its cradle." So fair its prospects, that this
-should be the end! Neglected, forsaken, no longer tended, there
-between field and highway it stood--bare to the storm, shattered and
-rent. As the years roll by it puts forth fewer blossoms, less
-fruit--and its story comes to a close!
-
-So mused Anthony many a lonely evening in his room in the wooden booth
-in a strange land, in the narrow street in Copenhagen, whither his
-rich master sent him bound by his vow not to marry.
-
-Marriage, forsooth, for him! Ha, ha! he laughed a strange laugh.
-
-The winter was early that year with sharp frost. Outside raged a
-blinding snowstorm, so that every one that could stayed indoors. And
-so it befell that his neighbors never saw that for two days his shop
-was unopened, nor Anthony been seen, for who would venture out if not
-compelled to?
-
-Those were sad, dismal days in his room, where the panes were not of
-glass, and--at best but faintly lighted--it was often pitch dark. For
-two days did Anthony keep his bed; he lacked strength to rise. The
-bitter weather affected his old joints. Forgotten was the
-pepper-fogey; helpless he lay. Scarce could he reach the water-jug by
-the bedside, and the last drop was drunk. Not fever, not sickness,
-laid him low: it was old age.
-
-It was perpetual night to him as he lay there.
-
-A little spider spun a web over the bed, as if for a pall when he
-should close his eyes forever.
-
-Long and very dreary was the time. Yet he shed no tears, nor did he
-suffer pain. His only thought was that the world and its turmoil were
-not for him; that he was away from them even as he had passed from the
-thoughts of others.
-
-At one time he seemed to feel the pangs of hunger, to faint with
-thirst. Was no one coming? None could come. He thought of those who
-perished of thirst, thought how the saintly Elizabeth, the noble lady
-of Thüringen, visited the lowliest hovels, bearing hope to and
-succoring the sick. Her pious deeds inspired his thoughts; he
-remembered how she would console those in pain, bind up their wounds,
-and though her stern lord and master stormed with rage, bear
-sustenance to the starving. He called to mind the legend how her
-husband followed her as she bore a well-stocked basket to the poor,
-and confronting her demanded what lay within. How in her great dread
-she replied, "Flowers I have culled in the garden." How when he
-snatched aside the cloth to see whether her words were true, wine,
-bread, and all the basket held miraculously changed to roses.
-
-Such was the picture of the saint; so his weary eyes imagined her
-standing by his bed in the little room in a strange land. He raised
-his head and gazed into her gentle eyes. All round seemed bright and
-rosy-hued. The flowers expanded, and now he smelt the perfume of
-apple-blossoms; he saw an apple tree in bloom, its branches waving
-above him. It was the tree the children had planted in the flower-pot
-together.
-
-And the drooping leaves fanned his burning brow and cooled his parched
-lips; they were as wine and bread on his breast. He felt calm and
-serene, and composed himself to sleep.
-
-"Now I will sleep, and it will bring relief. To-morrow I shall be
-well; to-morrow I will rise. I planted it in love; I see it now in
-heavenly radiance." And he sunk to rest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the morrow--the third day--the storm abated, and his neighbors came
-to see old Anthony. Prone he lay, clasping in death his old nightcap
-in his hands.
-
-Where were the tears he had shed, where the pearls? They were still in
-the nightcap. True pearls change not. The old thoughts, the tears of
-long ago--yes, they remained in the nightcap of the old pepper-fogey.
-
-Covet not the old nightcap. It would make your brow burn, your pulse
-beat fast. It brings strange dreams. The first to put it on was to
-know this. It was fifty years later that the Burgomaster, who lived in
-luxury with wife and children, put it on. His dreams were of unhappy
-love, ruin, and starvation.
-
-"Phew! how the nightcap burns," said he, and tore it off, and pearl
-after pearl fell from it to the ground. "Good gracious!" cried the
-Burgomaster, "I must be feverish; how they sparkle before my eyes."
-They were tears, wept half a century before by old Anthony of
-Eisenach.
-
-To all who thereafter put on the nightcap came agitating visions and
-dreams. His own history was changed to that of Anthony, till it became
-quite a story. There may be many such stories; we, however, leave
-others to tell them.
-
-We have told the first, and our last words shall be, "Don't wish for
-the old bachelor's nightcap."
-
-
-
-
-THE GARDEN OF PARADISE.
-
-THE FOUR WINDS.
-
-
-There once lived a king's son, who possessed a larger and more
-beautiful collection of books than anybody ever had before. He could
-read in their pages all the events that had ever taken place in the
-world, and see them illustrated by the most exquisite engravings. He
-could obtain information about any people or any country, only not a
-word could he ever find as to the geographical position of the Garden
-of the World; and this was just what he was most desirous of
-ascertaining.
-
-His grandmother had told him, when he was quite a little boy, and
-beginning to go to school, that each flower in the Garden of the World
-was the most delicious cake, and had its stamina filled with luscious
-wine; on one stood written historical facts, on another geography or
-arithmetical tables--and so one need only eat cakes to learn one's
-lesson, and the more one ate, the more history, geography, and
-arithmetic one acquired.
-
-He used to believe this. But when he grew a little older, and had
-learned more and become wiser, he began to understand that there must
-be better delights than these in the Garden of the World.
-
-He was now seventeen, and nothing ran in his head but this garden.
-
-One day he went to take a walk in the forest, all alone, as he best
-liked to be.
-
-As evening came on, the sky grew overcast, and there came on such a
-shower, that it seemed as if the heavens had become one vast sluice
-that kept pouring down water; besides this, it was darker than it
-usually is, even at night, except at the bottom of the deepest well.
-At every step, he either slipped on the wet grass, or stumbled over
-some bare rock. Everything was dripping wet, and the poor prince had
-not a dry thread about him. He was obliged to climb over huge blocks
-of stone, where water was running down from the thick moss. He was
-near fainting away, when he heard a singular rushing noise, and
-perceived a large cavern, lighted up by a huge fire, piled up in the
-middle, and fit to roast a whole deer. And this, indeed, was being
-done. A very fine deer, with its branching horns, was placed on a
-spit, and slowly turned round between the felled trunks of two
-pine-trees. An elderly woman, as bony and masculine as though she were
-a man in female attire, sat by the fire, and kept throwing in one log
-of wood after another.
-
-"Come nearer," said she, "and sit by the fire, and dry your clothes."
-
-"There is a great draught here," observed the prince, sitting down on
-the ground.
-
-"It will be much worse when my sons come home," returned the woman.
-"You are in the Cavern of the Winds. My sons are the Four Winds of
-Heaven--can you understand that?"
-
-"Where are your sons?" asked the prince.
-
-"It is difficult to answer a silly question," said the woman. "My sons
-are now at it, with their own hands. They are playing at shuttle-cock
-with the clouds, up there in the King's hall." And she pointed above.
-
-"Oh, that's it!" quoth the prince. "But you seem to speak rather
-harshly, and are not as gentle as the women I am accustomed to see."
-
-"Because they have nothing else to do. But I must be harsh, to keep my
-boys in any order; which I manage to do, headstrong as they are. You
-see those four bags hanging on the wall? Well, they are every bit as
-much afraid of them as you used to be of the rod behind the
-looking-glass. I bend the boys in two, I can tell you, and then pop
-them into the bag, without their making the least resistance. There
-they stay, and don't dare come out till I think it proper they should.
-But here comes one of them."
-
-It was the North Wind who came in, diffusing an icy coldness around.
-Large hailstones jumped about on the floor, and snowflakes were
-scattered in all directions. He wore a bearskin jacket and clothes;
-his cap of sea-dog's skin came down over his ears; long icicles clung
-to his beard, and one hailstone after another fell from the collar of
-his jacket.
-
-"Don't go too near the fire at once," said the prince, "or your face
-and hands might easily get frozen."
-
-"Frozen, quotha!" said the North Wind, with a loud laugh. "Why, cold
-is my greatest delight! But what kind of little snip are you? How did
-you come into the Cavern of the Winds?"
-
-"He is my guest," said the old woman; "and if that does not satisfy
-you, why, you need only get into the bag. Do you understand me now?"
-
-Well, this did the business at once; and the North Wind then began to
-relate whence he came, and where he had been staying for nearly a
-month past.
-
-"I come from the Arctic Sea," said he, "and I have been on Bear's
-Island, with the Russian sea-cow hunters. I sat and slept at the helm,
-as they sailed away from the North Cape; but whenever I happened to
-wake, the petrels were flying about my legs. What comical birds they
-are! They will flap their wings suddenly, and then remain poised upon
-them, and quite motionless, as if they had had enough of flying."
-
-"Don't be so diffuse," said the mother of the Winds. "And so you
-reached Bear's Island?"
-
-"It's a beautiful place! There's a ballroom floor for you, as smooth
-as a plate! Heaps of half-thawed snow, slightly covered with moss,
-sharp stones, and skeletons of sea-cows and bears were lying about,
-together with the arms and legs of giants in a state of green decay.
-It looks as if the sun had never shone there. I blew slightly on the
-mist, that the hovels might be visible, and there appeared a hut,
-built from the remains of a ship that had been wrecked, and covered
-over with sea-cows' skins. The fleshy side was turned outwards, and it
-was both red and green. A living bear sat growling on the roof. I went
-to the shore, and looked after birds' nests, and saw the unfledged
-youngsters opening their beaks and screaming lustily; so I blew into
-their thousands of throats, and they learned to shut their mouths. A
-little farther on, the sea-cows were rolling about like giant worms
-with pigs' heads, and teeth a yard long."
-
-"You tell your adventures right pleasantly, my son," said his mother;
-"it makes my mouth water to hear you."
-
-"Then the hunting began. The harpoon was flung right into the
-sea-cow's chest, so that a smoking jet of blood spurted forth like
-water from a fountain, and besprinkled the ice. Then I thought of my
-part of the game. I began to blow, and set my vessels, the towering
-icebergs, to stick the boats fast. Oh! what a whistling and a bawling
-there was! Only I whistled louder than all of them. They were obliged
-to unpack the dead sea-cows, the chests, and the tackle upon the ice;
-I then shook snowflakes over them, and left them and their spoils to
-sail in their pent-up vessels towards the south, to drink salt-water.
-They will never return to Bear's Island."
-
-"Then you have done mischief?" said the mother of the Winds.
-
-"Let others tell of the good I may have done!" said he. "But here
-comes my brother from the West. I like him the best, because he smacks
-of the sea, and brings a nice bracing cold with him."
-
-"Is that the little Zephyr?" asked the prince.
-
-"Yes, that is the Zephyr!" said the old woman; "but he's not so very
-little either. Some years ago he was a pretty boy; but that is now
-over."
-
-He looked like a wild man; but he wore a roller round his head, that
-he might not get hurt. In his hand he held a mahogany club, hewn from
-an American mahogany forest. It was no small weight to carry.
-
-"Whence do you come?" asked the mother.
-
-"From the wild forests," said he, "where tangled bindweed forms a
-hedge between each tree, where water-snakes lie in the damp grass, and
-where man seems to be a superfluous nonentity."
-
-"What have you been doing there?"
-
-"I looked into the deep river, and saw it had rushed down from the
-rocks, and then became dust, and flew towards the clouds to support
-the rainbow. I saw a wild buffalo swimming in the river, but he was
-carried away by the tide. He had joined a flock of wild ducks, who
-flew up into the air the moment the waters dashed downwards. The
-buffalo was obliged to be hurled into the precipice. This pleased me,
-and I raised a storm, so that the oldest trees sailed down the river,
-and were reduced to splinters."
-
-"And was that all you did?" asked the old woman.
-
-"I cut capers in the savannahs, I stroked wild horses and shook
-cocoanut trees. Oh! I have plenty of tales to tell! Only one must not
-tell all one knows, as you well know, good mammy." And he kissed his
-mother so roughly, that she had nearly fallen backwards. He was a
-shocking wild lad.
-
-Now, in came the South Wind in a turban and Bedouin's flying mantle.
-
-"It is very cold hereabouts!" said he, throwing wood upon the fire.
-"It is easy to perceive that the North Wind has preceded me."
-
-"It is hot enough here to roast a northern bear!" said the North Wind.
-
-"You are a bear yourself!" answered the South Wind.
-
-"Have you a mind to be both put into the bag?" asked the old woman.
-"There! sit down on that stone, and tell us where you have been."
-
-"In Africa, mother," returned he. "I was amongst the Hottentots, who
-were lion-hunting in Caffraria. The grass in their plains looks as
-green as an olive. An ostrich ran a race with me, but I beat him
-hollow. I reached the yellow sands of the desert, which look like the
-bottom of the sea. I met a caravan. They killed their last camel to
-obtain some water; but they only got a very little. The sun was
-scorching above, and the sand equally scorching beneath one's feet.
-The desert stretched out into boundless expanse. I then rolled in the
-fine loose sand, and made it whirl about in large columns. A fine
-dance I led it! You should have seen how dejected the dromedaries
-looked as they stood stock still, and how the merchants pulled their
-caftans over their heads. They threw themselves on the ground before
-me as they would before Allah, their God. They are now all buried
-beneath a pyramid of sand; and when I come to puff it away, the sun
-will bleach their bones, and travelers will see that others have been
-there before them: a fact which is seldom believed in the desert,
-short of some tangible proof."
-
-"Then you have done nothing but mischief!" said his mother. "Into the
-bag with you!" And before he had time to perceive it, she had taken
-the South Wind round the waist, and popped him into the bag. He
-wiggled about on the ground; but she sat upon him, and then he was
-forced to lie still.
-
-"Your sons are a set of lively boys!" said the prince.
-
-"Yes," answered she; "and I know how to correct them. Here comes the
-fourth."
-
-This was the East Wind, who was dressed like a Chinese.
-
-"Oh! you come from that neighborhood, do you?" said his mother. "I
-thought you had been to the Garden of the World?"
-
-"I am going there to-morrow," said the East Wind. "To-morrow will be a
-hundred years since I was there. I have just returned from China,
-where I danced round the porcelain tower till all the bells were set
-a-jingling. The government officers were being beaten in the street;
-the bamboo stick was broken across their shoulders; and these were
-people belonging to the several degrees from the first to the ninth.
-They cried out: 'Many thanks, my fatherly benefactor!' But the words
-did not come from their hearts, so I made the bells jingle, and sang!
-'Tsing! tsang! tsu!'"
-
-"You are a wanton boy!" said the old woman. "It is well you are going
-to-morrow to the Garden of the World, for that always improves your
-mind. Pray drink abundantly from the fountain of wisdom, and take a
-small phial and bring it home full for me."
-
-"I will," said the East Wind. "But why have you put my brother from
-the South into the bag? Take him out again; I want him to tell me
-about the phoenix, for the princess in the Garden of the World
-always asks after him when I pay her my visit every hundredth year.
-Open the bag, there's a dear mammy, and I'll give you two pocketfuls
-of tea-leaves, all green and fresh, just as I plucked them from the
-bush on the spot where it grew."
-
-"Well, for the sake of the tea, and because you are mammy's own boy, I
-will open the bag."
-
-This she accordingly did, and out crept the South Wind, looking rather
-foolish, because the strange prince had witnessed his disgrace.
-
-"There is a palm-tree leaf for the princess," said the South Wind.
-"The old phoenix, the only bird of his sort in the wide world, gave
-me this leaf. He has traced upon it with his beak the whole history of
-his life during the hundred years that form its span. She may,
-therefore, be now enabled to read how the phoenix set fire to his
-nest, and sat upon it as it was burning, like the widow of a Hindoo.
-How the dried twigs did crackle! and what a smoke there was! At length
-out burst the flames: the old phoenix was burnt to ashes, but an egg
-lay glowing hot in the fire. It burst with a loud report, and the
-young bird flew out; and now he is king over all the other birds, and
-the only phoenix in the world. He has bitten a hole in the leaf
-which I gave you, and that is his way of sending his duty to the
-princess."
-
-"Now let us eat something," said the mother of the Winds. And they all
-sat down to partake of the roast deer. The prince sat beside the East
-Wind; therefore, they soon became good friends.
-
-"And pray what kind of a princess may she be whom you are talking so
-much about and where lies the Garden of the World?"
-
-"Ho, ho!" said the East Wind. "What! have you a mind to go there?
-Well, you can fly over with me to-morrow, though I must tell you no
-mortal ever visited it before. It is inhabited by a fairy queen, and,
-in it lies the Island of Happiness, a lovely spot where death never
-intrudes. Get upon my back to-morrow, and I'll take you with me; for I
-think it can be managed. But now don't speak any more, for I want to
-sleep."
-
-And then to sleep they all went.
-
-The prince awoke at an early hour next morning, and was not a little
-surprised on finding himself high above the clouds. He sat on the
-back of the East Wind, who was holding him faithfully; and they were
-so high in the air that forests, fields, rivers, and lakes lay beneath
-them like a painted map.
-
-"Good morning!" said the East Wind. "You might just as well have slept
-a bit longer, for there is not much to be seen in the flat country
-beneath us, except you have a mind to count the churches. They look
-like chalk dots on the green board."
-
-It was the fields and the meadows that he called the "green board."
-
-"It was uncivil of me not to take leave of your mother and brothers,"
-observed the prince.
-
-"When one is asleep, one is to be excused," replied the East Wind.
-
-And they began to fly quicker than ever. When they swept across the
-tree-tops, you might have heard a rustling in all their leaves and
-branches. On the sea and on the lakes, wherever they flew, the waves
-rose higher and the large ships dipped down into the water like
-swimming swans.
-
-Towards evening, when it grew dark, the large towns looked beautiful.
-They were dotted here and there with lights, much after the fashion of
-a piece of paper that has burned till it is black, when one sees all
-the little sparks going out one after another. The prince clapped his
-hands with delight, but the East Wind begged him to let such
-demonstrations alone, and rather attend to holding fast, or else he
-might easily fall down and remain dangling on a church steeple.
-
-Fast as the eagle flew through the black forests, the East Wind flew
-still faster. The Cossack was scouring the plains on his little horse,
-but the prince soon outstripped him.
-
-"You can now see Himalaya," said the East Wind, "the highest mountain
-in Asia--and now we shall soon reach the Garden of the World." They
-then turned more southwards, and the air was soon perfumed with spices
-and flowers. Figs and pomegranates grew wild, and clusters of blue and
-red grapes hung from wild vines. They now descended to the earth, and
-reclined on the soft grass, where the flowers seemed to nod to the
-wind as though they had said--"Welcome!"
-
-"Are we now in the Garden of the World?" asked the prince.
-
-"No, indeed!" replied the East Wind; "but we soon shall be. Do you see
-yon wall of rocks, and that broad cavern, where the vines hang down
-like a huge green curtain? That's the road through which we must pass.
-Wrap yourself in your mantle, for burning hot as the sun is just
-hereabout, it is as cold as ice a few steps farther. The bird who
-flies past the cavern feels one wing to be in the warm summer abroad
-while the other is in the depth of winter."
-
-"So then this seems to be the way to the Garden of the World?" asked
-the prince.
-
-They now entered the cavern. Oh, how icy cold it was! Only it did not
-last long. The East Wind spread out his wings, and they beamed like
-the brightest fire. But what a cavern it was, to be sure! The huge
-blocks of stone from which the water kept dripping down, hung over
-them in the oddest shapes, sometimes narrowing up till they were
-obliged to creep on all-fours, at other times widening into an
-expanse as lofty as though situated in the open air. It looked like a
-chapel for the dead, with petrified organs and dumb organ-pipes.
-
-"We seem to be crossing through an abode of Death to reach the Garden
-of the World!" said the prince. But the East Wind did not answer a
-syllable, and merely pointed forwards where the loveliest blue light
-met their eyes. The blocks of stone above their heads rolled away into
-a mist that finished by assuming the shape of a white cloud on a
-moonlight night. They were now in a most delightfully mild atmosphere,
-as cool as the mountain breeze, and as perfumed as a valley of roses.
-A river, clear as the air itself, was running along, filled with gold
-and silver fishes; scarlet eels, that emitted blue sparks at every
-motion, were disporting in the depths of the waters; while the broad
-leaves of the water-lilies that lay on its surface showed all the
-tints of the rainbow; the flower itself was a reddish-yellow burning
-flame that received its nourishment from the water as oil feeds the
-flame of a lamp. A marble bridge, as delicately sculptured as though
-it had been made of lace and glass beads, led across the water to the
-Island of Happiness, where bloomed the Garden of the World.
-
-The East Wind took the prince on his arm and carried him over. And the
-flowers and leaves sang the sweetest songs of his childhood, but in so
-lovely a strain of melody as no human voice ever yet sang.
-
-Were they palm-trees or gigantic water-plants that grew on this
-favored spot? The prince could not tell, for never had he seen such
-large and luxuriant trees before. The most singular creepers, too,
-such as one only sees represented in gold and colors in the margins of
-illuminated old missals, or twined around the first letter in a
-chapter, were hanging in long festoons on all sides. It was a most
-curious mixture of birds, and flowers, and scrolls. Just by a flock of
-peacocks were standing on the grass displaying their gorgeous fan-like
-tails. The prince took them for live creatures, but found, on touching
-them, that they were only plants--large burdock leaves, which, in this
-favored spot, beamed with all the glorious colors of the peacock's
-tail. A lion and tiger were disporting with all the pliancy of cats
-amongst the green hedges, that were perfumed like the flower of the
-olive-tree; and both the lion and the tiger were tame. The wild
-wood-pigeon's plumage sparkled like the fairest pearl, and the bird
-flapped the lion's mane with its wings; while the antelope, usually so
-shy, stood near and nodded its head, as if willing to join them at
-play.
-
-Now came the fairy of the garden. Her clothes were radiant as the sun,
-and her countenance was as serene as that of a happy mother rejoicing
-over her child. She was young and beautiful, and was followed by a
-train of lovely girls, each wearing a beaming star in her hair. The
-East Wind gave her the leaf sent by the phoenix, when her eyes
-sparkled with joy. She took the prince by the hand and led him into
-her palace, whose walls were of the hues of the most splendid tulip
-when it is turned towards the sun. The ceiling was a large radiant
-flower, and the more one looked at it, the deeper its calyx appeared
-to grow. The prince stepped to the window, and looked through one of
-the panes, on which was depicted Jacob's dream. The ladder seemed to
-reach to the real sky, and the angels seemed to be flapping their
-wings. The fairy smiled at his astonished look, and explained that
-time had engraved its events on each pane, but they were not merely
-lifeless images, for the leaves rustled, and the persons went and came
-as in a looking-glass. He then looked through other panes, where he
-saw depicted the events of ancient history. For all that had happened
-in the world lived and moved upon these panes; time only could have
-engraved so cunning a masterpiece.
-
-The fairy then led him into a lofty, noble hall, with transparent
-walls. Here were a number of portraits, each of which seemed more
-beautiful than the other. There were millions of happy faces whose
-laughing and singing seemed to melt into one harmonious whole; those
-above were so small that they appeared less than the smallest rosebud
-when represented on paper by a mere dot. In the midst of the hall
-stood a large tree with luxuriant drooping branches. Golden, apples,
-both great and small, hung like china oranges amid the green leaves.
-From each leaf fell a sparkling red dewdrop, as if the tree were
-shedding tears of blood.
-
-"We will now get into the boat," said the fairy, "and enjoy the
-coolness of the water. The boat rocks, but does not stir from the
-spot, while all the countries of the earth glide past us." And it was
-wonderful to behold how the whole coast moved. First came the lofty
-snow-capped Alps, overhung with clouds and overgrown with fir-trees.
-The horn was sounding its melancholy notes, while the shepherd was
-caroling in the vale. Then banana-trees flung their drooping branches
-over the boat; coal-black swans swam on the water, and flowers and
-animals of the strangest description might be seen on the shore. This
-was New Holland, the fifth part of the world, that glided past, with a
-view of the blue mountains. One could hear the hymns of the priests
-and see the savages dancing to the sound of drums and trumpets made of
-bones. Egypt's pyramids reaching to the clouds, overturned columns and
-sphinxes, half buried in the sand, followed in their turn. The aurora
-borealis next shone upon the extinguished volcanoes of the north.
-These were fireworks that nobody could have imitated! The prince was
-delighted; and he saw a hundred times more than what we have
-mentioned.
-
-"Can I remain here forever?" asked he.
-
-"That depends on yourself," replied the fairy. "If you do not long for
-what is forbidden, you may stay here forever."
-
-"I will not touch the apple on the Tree of Knowledge," said the
-prince; "here are thousands of fruits equally fine."
-
-"Examine your own heart, and if you do not feel sufficient strength,
-return with the East Wind who brought you hither. He is now about to
-fly back, and will not appear again in this place for the next hundred
-years. The time would seem to you here to be only a hundred hours, but
-even that is a long span for temptation and sin. Every evening, on
-leaving you, I shall be obliged to say: 'Come with me!' I shall make a
-sign with my hand, yet you must stay away. If once you followed, your
-longing would increase at every step. You would then enter the hall
-where grows the Tree of Knowledge I sleep beneath its perfumed,
-drooping branches. You would bend over me, and I should be forced to
-smile. But if you pressed a kiss on my lips, then would the garden
-sink into the earth and be lost for you. The sharp winds of the desert
-would howl around you, the cold rain would trickle over your head, and
-sorrow and distress would fall to your lot."
-
-"I will remain here," said the prince. And the East Wind kissed his
-forehead, saying, "Be firm, and then we shall meet again in a hundred
-years. Farewell! farewell!" And the East Wind spread his large wings,
-and they shone like the lightning in harvest time, or like the
-northern lights in a cold winter.
-
-"Farewell! farewell!" sounded from the flowers and the trees. Storks
-and pelicans flew in long rows, like streaming ribbons to accompany
-him to the boundaries of the garden.
-
-"We will now begin our dances," said the fairy. "At the close, when
-I'm dancing with you, and just as the sun is sinking, you will see me
-make a sign, and you will hear me say, 'Come with me.' But do not do
-it. For a hundred years shall I be obliged to repeat the same thing
-every evening; and each time when it is over will you gain fresh
-strength. In the end you'll cease to think about it. This evening will
-be the first time--and now you are warned."
-
-The fairy then led him into a large room made of white transparent
-lilies. The yellow stamina in each flower pictured a little golden
-harp that yielded a sweet music partaking of the combined sounds of
-stringed instruments and the tones of the flute. Lovely girls with
-slender aerial figures, and dressed in lightest gauze, floated through
-the mazes of the dance, and sang of the delights of living and being
-immortal, and blooming forever in the Garden of the World.
-
-The sun now set. The whole sky was one mass of gold that imparted the
-tints of the richest roses to the lilies; and the prince drank of the
-sparkling wine handed to him by the young maidens, and felt a bliss
-he had never before experienced. He saw the background of the ballroom
-now opening, and the Tree of Knowledge stood before him in such
-streams of light that his eyes were dazzled. The singing that rang in
-his ears was soft and lovely as his mother's voice, and it seemed as
-if she sang, "My child! my beloved child!"
-
-The fairy then made him a sign with her eyes, and cried most sweetly:
-"Come with me! Come with me!" And he rushed towards her, forgetting
-his promise, though it was but the first evening, and she continued to
-beckon to him and to smile. The spicy perfumes around grew yet more
-intoxicating; the harps sounded sweeter; and it was as if the millions
-of smiling faces in the room, where grew the tree, nodded and sang:
-"We must know everything! Man is the lord of the earth!" And there
-were no more tears of blood dropping down from the leaves of the Tree
-of Knowledge; but he thought he saw red sparkling stars instead.
-
-"Come with me! come with me!" said the thrilling tones; and at each
-step the prince's cheeks glowed more intensely, and his blood rushed
-more wildly.
-
-"I must!" said he; "it is no sin, and cannot be one! Why not follow
-when beauty calls? I will see her asleep; and provided I do not kiss
-her, there will be no harm done--and kiss I will not, for I have
-strength to resist, and a firm will."
-
-And the fairy cast aside her dazzling attire, bent back the boughs,
-and in another moment was completely concealed.
-
-"I have not yet sinned," said the prince, "and do not intend to sin!"
-And then he pushed the boughs aside; there she lay already asleep, and
-lovely as only the fairy of the Garden of the World is privileged to
-be. She smiled in her dreams; yet as he bent over her, he saw tears
-trembling between her eyelashes.
-
-"And do you weep for me?" whispered he. "Oh, weep not, most admirable
-of women! I now begin to understand the happiness to be found in this
-place. It penetrates into my blood, and I feel the joys of the blessed
-in this my earthly form! Though it were ever after eternally dark for
-me, one moment like this is happiness enough!" And he kissed the tears
-in her eyes, and his mouth pressed her lips.
-
-Then came a thunder-clap, so loud and so tremendous as never was heard
-before. Down everything fell to ruins--the beautiful fairy, the
-blooming garden, all sank deeper and deeper still. The prince saw the
-garden sinking into the dark abyss below, and it soon only shone like
-a little star in the distance. He turned as cold as death, and closed
-his eyes, and lay senseless.
-
-The cold rain fell on his face, and the sharp wind blew over his head.
-He then returned to consciousness. "What have I done?" sighed he.
-"Alas! I have sinned, and the Island of Happiness has sunk down into
-the earth!" And he opened his eyes and saw a distant star like that of
-the sinking garden; but it was the morning star in the sky.
-
-He got up and found himself in the large forest close to the Cavern of
-the Winds. The mother of the Winds sat by him, and looked angry, and
-raised her arm aloft.
-
-"The very first evening," said she. "I thought it would be so! If you
-were my son, you should be put into the bag presently."
-
-"Into it he shall go, sure enough!" said Death. He was a stalwart man
-with a scythe in his hand, and large black wings. "In his coffin shall
-he be laid, but not yet. I'll only mark him now, and allow him to
-wander about the world yet awhile, to expiate his sins and to grow
-better. But I shall come at last. When he least expects it, I shall
-put him into the black bag, place it on my head, and fly up to the
-stars. There, too, blooms a lovely garden, and if he be good and
-pious, he will be allowed to enter it; but should his thoughts be
-wicked, and his heart still full of sin, then will he sink in his
-coffin yet lower than he saw the Garden of the World sink down; and it
-will be only once in every thousand years that I shall go and fetch
-him, when he will either be condemned to sink still deeper, or be
-borne aloft to the beaming stars above."
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
- A. L. Burt's Catalogue of Books for
- Young People by Popular Writers, 52-58
- Duane Street, New York
-
-
-BOOKS FOR GIRLS.
-
-
-=Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. By LEWIS CARROLL.= 12mo,
-cloth, 42 illustrations, price 75 cents.
-
- "From first to last, almost without exception, this story is
- delightfully droll, humorous and illustrated in harmony with the
- story."--=New York Express.=
-
-=Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There.= By LEWIS
-CARROLL. 12mo, cloth, 50 illustrations, price 75 cents.
-
- "A delight alike to the young people and their elders, extremely
- funny both in text and illustrations."--=Boston Express.=
-
-=Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe.= By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "This story is unique among tales intended for children, alike
- for pleasant instruction, quaintness of humor, gentle pathos,
- and the subtlety with which lessons moral and otherwise are
- conveyed to children, and perhaps to their seniors as
- well."--=The Spectator.=
-
-=Joan's Adventures at the North Pole and Elsewhere.= BY ALICE
-CORKRAN. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "Wonderful as the adventures of Joan are, it must be admitted
- that they are very naturally worked out and very plausibly
- presented. Altogether this is an excellent story for
- girls."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Count Up the Sunny Days=: A Story for Girls and Boys. By C. A.
-JONES. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "An unusually good children's story."--=Glasgow Herald.=
-
-=The Dove in the Eagle's Nest.= By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Among all the modern writers we believe Miss Yonge first, not
- in genius, but in this, that she employs her great abilities for
- a high and noble purpose. We know of few modern writers whose
- works may be so safely commended as hers."--=Cleveland Times.=
-
-=Jan of the Windmill.= A Story of the Plains. By MRS. J. H.
-EWING. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Never has Mrs. Ewing published a more charming volume, and that
- is saying a very great deal. From the first to the last the book
- overflows with the strange knowledge of child-nature which so
- rarely survives childhood: and moreover, with inexhaustible
- quiet humor, which is never anything but innocent and well-bred,
- never priggish, and never clumsy."--=Academy.=
-
-=A Sweet Girl Graduate.= By L. T. MEADE. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "One of this popular author's best. The characters are well
- imagined and drawn. The story moves with plenty of spirit and
- the interest does not flag until the end too quickly
- comes."--=Providence Journal.=
-
-=Six to Sixteen=: A Story for Girls. By JULIANA HORATIA EWING.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "There is no doubt as to the good quality and attractiveness of
- 'Six to Sixteen.' The book is one which would enrich any girl's
- book shelf."--=St. James' Gazette.=
-
-=The Palace Beautiful=: A Story for Girls. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "A bright and interesting story. The many admirers of Mrs. L. T.
- Meade in this country will be delighted with the 'Palace
- Beautiful' for more reasons than one. It is a charming book for
- girls."--=New York Recorder.=
-
-=A World of Girls=: The Story of a School. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "One of those wholesome stories which it does one good to read.
- It will afford pure delight to numerous readers. This book
- should be on every girl's book shelf."--=Boston Home Journal.=
-
-=The Lady of the Forest=: A Story for Girls. By L. T. MEADE.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "This story is written in the author's well-known, fresh and
- easy style. All girls fond of reading will be charmed by this
- well-written story. It is told with the author's customary grace
- and spirit."--=Boston Times.=
-
-=At the Back of the North Wind.= By GEORGE MACDONALD. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "A very pretty story, with much of the freshness and vigor of
- Mr. Macdonald's earlier work.... It is a sweet, earnest, and
- wholesome fairy story, and the quaint native humor is
- delightful. A most delightful volume for young
- readers."--=Philadelphia Times.=
-
-=The Water Babies=: A Fairy Tale for a Land Baby. By CHARLES
-KINGSLEY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "The strength of his work, as well as its peculiar charms,
- consist in his description of the experiences of a youth with
- life under water in the luxuriant wealth of which he revels with
- all the ardor of a poetical nature."--=New York Tribune.=
-
-=Our Bessie.= By ROSA N. CAREY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price
-$1.00.
-
- "One of the most entertaining stories of the season, full of
- vigorous action, and strong in character-painting. Elder girls
- will be charmed with it, and adults may read its pages with
- profit."--=The Teachers' Aid.=
-
-=Wild Kitty.= A Story of Middleton School. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Kitty is a true heroine--warm-hearted, self-sacrificing, and,
- as all good women nowadays are, largely touched with the
- enthusiasm of humanity. One of the most attractive gift books of
- the season."--=The Academy.=
-
-=A Young Mutineer.= A Story for Girls. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "One of Mrs. Meade's charming books for girls, narrated in that
- simple and picturesque style which marks the authoress as one of
- the first among writers for young people."--=The Spectator.=
-
-=Sue and I.= By MRS. O'REILLY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75
-cents.
-
- "A thoroughly delightful book, full of sound wisdom as well as
- fun."--=Athenæum.=
-
-=The Princess and the Goblin.= A Fairy Story. By GEORGE
-MACDONALD. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "If a child once begins this book, it will get so deeply
- interested in it that when bedtime comes it will altogether
- forget the moral, and will weary its parents with importunities
- for just a few minutes more to see how everything
- ends."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Pythia's Pupils=: A Story of a School. By EVA HARTNER. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "This story of the doings of several bright school girls is sure
- to interest girl readers. Among many good stories for girls this
- is undoubtedly one of the very best."--=Teachers' Aid.=
-
-=A Story of a Short Life.= By JULIANA HORATIA EWING. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "The book is one we can heartily recommend, for it is not only
- bright and interesting, but also pure and healthy in tone and
- teaching."--=Courier.=
-
-=The Sleepy King.= A Fairy Tale. By AUBREY HOPWOOD AND SEYMOUR
-HICKS. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "Wonderful as the adventures of Bluebell are, it must be
- admitted that they are very naturally worked out and very
- plausibly presented. Altogether this is an excellent story for
- girls."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Two Little Waifs.= By MRS. MOLESWORTH. 12mo, cloth, illustrated,
-price 75 cents.
-
- "Mrs. Molesworth's delightful story of 'Two Little Waifs' will
- charm all the small people who find it in their stockings. It
- relates the adventures of two lovable English children lost in
- Paris, and is just wonderful enough to pleasantly wring the
- youthful heart."--=New York Tribune.=
-
-=Adventures in Toyland.= By EDITH KING HALL. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "The author is such a bright, cheery writer, that her stories
- are always acceptable to all who are not confirmed cynics, and
- her record of the adventures is as entertaining and enjoyable as
- we might expect."--=Boston Courier.=
-
-=Adventures in Wallypug Land.= By G. E. FARROW. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "These adventures are simply inimitable, and will delight boys
- and girls of mature age, as well as their juniors. No happier
- combination of author and artist than this volume presents could
- be found to furnish healthy amusement to the young folks. The
- book is an artistic one in every sense."--=Toronto Mail.=
-
-=Fussbudget's Folks.= A Story for Young Girls. By ANNA F.
-BURNHAM. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Mrs. Burnham has a rare gift for composing stories for
- children. With a light, yet forcible touch, she paints sweet and
- artless, yet natural and strong,
- characters."--=Congregationalist.=
-
-=Mixed Pickles.= A Story for Girls. By MRS. E. M. FIELD. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "It is, in its way, a little classic, of which the real beauty
- and pathos can hardly be appreciated by young people. It is not
- too much to say of the story that it is perfect of its
- kind."--=Good Literature.=
-
-=Miss Mouse and Her Boys.= A Story for Girls, By MRS. MOLESWORTH.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "Mrs. Molesworth's books are cheery, wholesome, and particularly
- well adapted to refined life. It is safe to add that she is the
- best English prose writer for children. A new volume from Mrs.
- Molesworth is always a treat."--=The Beacon.=
-
-=Gilly Flower.= A Story for Girls. By the author of "=Miss
-Toosey's Mission=." 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Jill is a little guardian angel to three lively brothers who
- tease and play with her.. .. Her unconscious goodness brings
- right thoughts and resolves to several persons who come into
- contact with her. There is no goodiness in this tale, but its
- influence is of the best kind."--=Literary World.=
-
-=The Chaplet of Pearls=; or, The White and Black Ribaumont. By
-CHARLOTTE M. YONGE. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Full of spirit and life, so well sustained throughout that
- grown-up readers may enjoy it as much as children. It is one of
- the best books of the season."--=Guardian.=
-
-=Naughty Miss Bunny=: Her Tricks and Troubles. By CLARA
-MULHOLLAND. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "The naughty child is positively delightful. Papas should not
- omit the book from their list of juvenile presents."--=Land and
- Water.=
-
-=Meg's Friend.= By ALICE CORKRAN. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price
-$1.00.
-
- "One of Miss Corkran's charming books for girls, narrated in
- that simple and picturesque style which marks the authoress as
- one of the first among writers for young people."--=The
- Spectator.=
-
-=Averil.= By ROSA N. CAREY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price
-$1.00.
-
- "A charming story for young folks. Averil is a delightful
- creature--piquant, tender, and true--and her varying fortunes
- are perfectly realistic."--=World.=
-
-=Aunt Diana.= By ROSA N. CAREY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price
-$1.00.
-
- "An excellent story, the interest being sustained from first to
- last. This is, both in its intention and the way the story is
- told, one of the best books of its kind which has come before us
- this year."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Little Sunshine's Holiday=: A Picture from Life. By MISS MULOCK.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "This is a pretty narrative of child life, describing the simple
- doings and sayings of a very charming and rather precocious
- child. This is a delightful book for young people."--=Gazette.=
-
-=Esther's Charge.= A Story for Girls. By ELLEN EVERETT GREEN.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "...This is a story showing in a charming way how one little
- girl's jealousy and bad temper were conquered; one of the best,
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-=Fairy Land of Science.= By ARABELLA B. BUCKLEY. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
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-
-=Merle's Crusade.= By ROSA N. CAREY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated,
-price $1.00.
-
- "Among the books for young people we have seen nothing more
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- in which it is written."--=Journal.=
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-=Birdie=: A Tale of Child Life. By H. L. CHILDE-PEMBERTON. 12mo,
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- "The story is quaint and simple, but there is a freshness about
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- "The charm of the story lies in the cheery helpfulness of spirit
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-=Giannetta=: A Girl's Story of Herself. By ROSA MULHOLLAND. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
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-=Margery Merton's Girlhood.= By ALICE CORKRAN. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
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-DOUDNEY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
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-=Down the Snow Stairs=; or, From Good-night to Good-morning. By
-ALICE CORKRAN. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
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-=The Tapestry Room=: A Child's Romance. By MRS. MOLESWORTH. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
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- "Mrs. Molesworth is a charming painter of the nature and ways of
- children; and she has done good service in giving us this
- charming juvenile which will delight the young
- people."--=Athenæum, London.=
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-=Little Miss Peggy=: Only a Nursery Story. By MRS. MOLESWORTH.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
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-=Polly=: A New Fashioned Girl. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
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-cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
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-
-=The Little Princess of Tower Hill.= By L. T. MEADE. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "This is one of the prettiest books for children published, as
- pretty as a pond-lily, and quite as fragrant. Nothing could be
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- a book that can be read with pleasure even by older boys and
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-
-
-For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by
-the publisher, =A. L. BURT, 52-58 Duane Street, New York=.
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-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note:
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-Archaic and inconsistent spelling and punctuation retained.
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Rudy and Babette, by Hans Christian Andersen
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Rudy and Babette
- Or, Capture of The Eagle's Nest
-
-Author: Hans Christian Andersen
-
-Illustrator: Helen Stratton
-
-Release Date: July 20, 2012 [EBook #40283]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUDY AND BABETTE ***
-
-
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-Produced by Bruce Albrecht, Matthew Wheaton and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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-</pre>
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40283 ***</div>
<div class="figcenter">
<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="400" height="645" alt="" />
@@ -4102,380 +4063,6 @@ borne aloft to the beaming stars above."</p>
<img class="border2" src="images/i222.jpg" width="400" height="585" alt="" />
</div>
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Rudy and Babette, by Hans Christian Andersen
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUDY AND BABETTE ***
-
-***** This file should be named 40283-h.htm or 40283-h.zip *****
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40283 ***</div>
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Rudy and Babette, by Hans Christian Andersen
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Rudy and Babette
- Or, Capture of The Eagle's Nest
-
-Author: Hans Christian Andersen
-
-Illustrator: Helen Stratton
-
-Release Date: July 20, 2012 [EBook #40283]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUDY AND BABETTE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Bruce Albrecht, Matthew Wheaton and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- RUDY AND BABETTE
-
- _Or, The Capture of the Eagle's Nest_
-
- By HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
-
-
- WITH TWENTY ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- By HELEN STRATTON
-
-
- A. L. BURT COMPANY,
-
- PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I. LITTLE RUDY
- CHAPTER II. GOING TO THE NEW HOME
- CHAPTER III. UNCLE
- CHAPTER IV. BABETTE
- CHAPTER V. THE RETURN HOME
- CHAPTER VI. A VISIT TO THE MILL
- CHAPTER VII. THE EAGLE'S NEST
- CHAPTER VIII. I HOLD FAST TO BABETTE
- CHAPTER IX. THE ICE-MAIDEN
- CHAPTER X. THE GODMOTHER
- CHAPTER XII. THE POWERS OF EVIL
- CHAPTER XIII. IN THE MILLER'S HOUSE
- CHAPTER XIV. VISIONS IN THE NIGHT
- CHAPTER XV. CONCLUSION
- THE FELLOW-TRAVELER
- THE OLD BACHELOR'S NIGHTCAP
- THE GARDEN OF PARADISE
-
-
-
-
-RUDY AND BABETTE;
-
-OR,
-
-THE CAPTURE OF THE EAGLE'S NEST.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-LITTLE RUDY.
-
-
-Let us now go to Switzerland, and see its wonderful mountains, whose
-steep, rocky sides are covered with trees. We will climb up to the
-fields of snow, and then make our way down to the grassy valleys, with
-their countless streams and rivulets, impetuously rushing to lose
-themselves in the sea. The sunshine is hot in the narrow valley; the
-snow becomes firm and solid, and in the course of time it either
-descends as an avalanche, or creeps along as a glacier. There are two
-of these glaciers in the valleys below the Schreckhorn and the
-Wetterhorn, near the long village of Grindelwald. They are a
-remarkable sight, and therefore many travelers from all countries come
-in the summer to visit them: they come over the high mountains covered
-with snow, they traverse the deep valleys; and to do this they must
-climb, hour after hour, leaving the valley far beneath them, till they
-see it as if they were in an air-balloon. The clouds hang above them
-like thick mists over the mountains, and the sun's rays make their way
-through the openings between the clouds to where the brown houses lie
-spread, lighting up some chance spot with a vivid green. Below, the
-stream foams and blusters; but above it murmurs and ripples, and looks
-like a band of silver hanging down the side of the rock.
-
-On either side of the path up the mountain lie wooden houses. Each
-house has its little plot of potatoes; and this they all require, for
-there are many children, and they all have good appetites. The
-children come out to meet every stranger, whether walking or riding,
-and ask him to buy their carved wooden chalets, made like the houses
-they live in. Be it fine or be it wet, the children try to sell their
-carvings.
-
-About twenty years since you might have seen one little boy standing
-apart from the others, but evidently very desirous to dispose of his
-wares. He looked grave and sad, and held his little tray tightly with
-both hands as if he was afraid of losing it. This serious look and his
-small size caused him to be much noticed by travelers, who often
-called him and purchased many of his toys, though he did not know why
-he was so favored. His grandfather lived two miles off among the
-mountains, where he did his carving. He had a cabinet full of the
-things he had made. There were nut-crackers, knives and forks, boxes
-carved with leaves and chamois, and many toys for children; but little
-Rudy cared for nothing so much as for an old gun, hanging from a
-rafter in the ceiling, for his grandfather had told him it should be
-his own when he was big enough to know how to use it.
-
-Though the boy was little, he was set in charge of the goats; and Rudy
-could climb as high as any of his flock, and was fond of climbing tall
-trees after birds' nests. He was brave and high-spirited, but he never
-smiled except when he watched the foaming cataract, or heard the
-thundering roar of an avalanche. He never joined in the children's
-games, and only met them when his grandfather sent him to sell his
-carvings; and this employment Rudy did not much like. He would rather
-wander alone amongst the mountains, or sit by his grandfather while he
-told him stories of former ages, or of the people who lived at
-Meiningen, from whence he had come. He told him they had not always
-lived there, but had come from a distant northern country called
-Sweden. Rudy took great pride in this knowledge; but he also learnt
-much from his four-footed friends. He had a large dog, named Ajola,
-who had been his father's; and he had also a tom-cat who was his
-particular friend, for it was from him he had learnt how to climb.
-
-"Come with me on the roof," the cat said to him; for when children
-have not learnt to talk, they can understand the speech of birds and
-animals quite as well as that of their father and mother; but that is
-only while they are very little, and their grandfather's stick seems
-as good as a live horse, with head, legs, and tail. Some children lose
-this later than others, and we call them backward. People say such
-funny things!
-
-"Come with me, little Rudy, on the roof," was one of the first things
-the cat had said which Rudy had understood: "it is all imagination
-about falling; you don't fall if you are not afraid. Come; put one of
-your paws so, and the other so! Feel for yourself with your fore-paws!
-Use your eyes and be active; and if there's a crevice, just spring and
-take firm hold, as I do!"
-
-Rudy did as he was told, and you might often have seen him sitting
-beside the cat on the top of the roof; afterwards they climbed
-together to the tops of the trees, and Rudy even found his way to the
-rocky ledges which were quite out of the cat's reach.
-
-"Higher! higher!" said the trees and the bushes; "see how we can
-climb. We stretch upwards, and take firm hold of the highest and
-narrowest ledges of the rocks."
-
-So Rudy found his way to the very top of the mountain, and often got
-up there before sunrise; for he enjoyed the pure invigorating air,
-fresh from the hands of the Creator, which men say combines the
-delicate perfume of the mountain herbs with the sweet scent of the
-wild thyme and the mint found in the valley. The grosser part of it is
-taken up by the clouds, and as they are carried by the winds, the
-lofty trees catch the fragrance and make the air pure and fresh. And
-so Rudy loved the morning air.
-
-The happy sunbeams kissed his cheek, and Giddiness, who was always
-near, was afraid to touch him; the swallows, who had built seven
-little nests under his grandfather's eaves, circled about him and his
-goats, singing: "We and you! and you and we!" They reminded him of his
-home, his grandfather, and of the fowls; but although the fowls lived
-with them in the same house, Rudy had never made friends with them.
-
-Although he was such a little boy, he had already traveled a
-considerable distance. His birthplace was in the canton of Vallais,
-whence he had been brought over the mountains to where he now lived.
-He had even made his way on foot to the Staubbach, which descends
-through the air gleaming like silver below the snow-clad mountain
-called the Jungfrau. He had also been to the great glacier at
-Grindelwald; but that was a sad story. His mother lost her life at
-that spot; and Rudy's grandfather said that it was there he had lost
-his happy spirits. Before he was a twelvemonth old his mother used to
-say that he laughed more than he cried, but since he had been rescued
-from the crevasse in the ice, a different spirit seemed to have
-possession of him. His grandfather would not talk of it, but every one
-in that district knew the story.
-
-Rudy's father had been a postilion. The large dog, which was now lying
-in the grandfather's room, was his constant companion when traveling
-over the Simplon on his way to the Lake of Geneva. Some of his
-relations lived in the valley of the Rhone, in the canton of Vallais.
-His uncle was a successful chamois-hunter and an experienced guide.
-When Rudy was only a twelvemonth old his father died, and his mother
-now wished to return to her own relations in the Bernese Oberland. Her
-father lived not many miles from Grindelwald; he was able to maintain
-himself by wood-carving. So she started on her journey in the month of
-June, with her child in her arms, and in the company of two
-chamois-hunters, over the Gemmi towards Grindelwald. They had
-accomplished the greater part of their journey, had passed the highest
-ridge and reached the snow-field, and were now come in sight of the
-valley where her home was, with its well-remembered wooden houses, but
-still had to cross one great glacier. It was covered with recent snow,
-which hid a crevasse which was much deeper than the height of a man,
-although it did not extend to where the water rushed below the
-glacier. The mother, while carrying her baby, slipped, fell into
-the cleft, and disappeared from sight. She did not utter a sound, but
-they could hear the child crying. It was more than an hour before they
-could fetch ropes and poles from the nearest house, and recover what
-seemed to be two corpses from the cleft in the ice. They tried every
-possible means, and succeeded in restoring the child, but not his
-mother, to life; so the old man had his daughter's son brought into
-his home, a little orphan, the boy who used to laugh more than he
-cried; but he seemed to be entirely changed, and this change was made
-down in the crevasse, in the cold world of ice, where, as the Swiss
-peasants think, lost souls are imprisoned until Doomsday.
-
-[Illustration: She started on her journey, with her child in her arms,
-and in company of two chamois-hunters.]
-
-The immense glacier looks like the waves of the sea frozen into ice,
-the great greenish blocks heaped together, while the cold stream of
-melted ice rushes below towards the valley, and huge caverns and
-immense crevasses stretch far away beneath it. It is like a palace of
-glass, and is the abode of the Ice-Maiden, the Queen of the Glaciers.
-She, the fatal, the overwhelming one, is in part a spirit of the air,
-though she also rules over the river; therefore she can rise to the
-topmost peak of the snow mountain, where the adventurous climbers have
-to cut every step in the ice before they can place their feet; she can
-float on the smallest branch down the torrent, and leap from block to
-block with her white hair and her pale blue robe flying about her, and
-resembling the water in the beautiful Swiss lakes.
-
-"I have the power to crush and to seize!" she cries. "They have robbed
-me of a lovely boy whom I have kissed, but have not killed. He now
-lives among men: he keeps his goats amid the hills, he ever climbs
-higher and higher away from his fellows, but not away from me. He
-belongs to me, and I will again have him!"
-
-So she charged Giddiness to seize him for her, for the Ice-Maiden
-dared not venture among the woods in the hot summer time; and
-Giddiness and his brethren--for there are many of them--mounted up to
-the Ice-Maiden, and she selected the strongest of them for her
-purpose. They sit on the edge of the staircase, and on the rails at
-the top of the tower; they scamper like squirrels on the ridge of the
-rock, they leap from the rails and the footpath, and tread the air
-like a swimmer treading water, to tempt their victims after them and
-dash them into the abyss. Both Giddiness and the Ice-Maiden seize a
-man as an octopus seizes all within its reach. And now Giddiness had
-been charged to seize little Rudy.
-
-"I seize him!" said Giddiness; "I cannot. The miserable cat has taught
-him all her tricks. The boy possesses a power which keeps me from him;
-I cannot seize him even when he hangs by a branch above the precipice.
-I should be delighted to tickle his feet, or pitch him headlong
-through the air; but I cannot!"
-
-"We will succeed between us," said the Ice-Maiden. "Thou or I! I! I!"
-
-"No, no!" an unseen voice replied, sounding like distant church bells;
-the joyful singing of good spirits--the Daughters of the Sun. These
-float above the mountain every evening; they expand their rosy wings
-which glow more and more like fire as the sun nears to setting over
-the snowy peaks. People call it the "Alpine glow." And after sunset
-they withdraw into the snow and rest there until sunrise, when they
-again show themselves. They love flowers, and butterflies and human
-beings; and they were particularly fond of Rudy.
-
-"You shall never catch him--you shall never have him," said they.
-
-"I have captured bigger and stronger boys than he," said the
-Ice-Maiden.
-
-The Daughters of the Sun now sang a song of a traveler whose cloak was
-carried away by the storm: "The storm took the cloak but not the man.
-You can grasp at him, but not hold him, ye strong ones. He is
-stronger, he is more spiritual than we are! He will ascend above the
-sun, our mother! He has the power to bind the winds and the waves, and
-make them serve him and do his bidding. If you unloose the weight that
-holds him down, you will set him free to rise yet higher."
-
-Thus ran the chorus which sounded like distant church bells.
-
-Each morning the sunbeams shone through the little window of the
-grandfather's house and lighted on the silent boy. The Daughters of
-the Sun kissed him, and tried to thaw the cold kisses which the Queen
-of the Glaciers had given him, while he was in the arms of his dead
-mother, in the deep crevasse, whence he had been so wonderfully
-rescued.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-GOING TO THE NEW HOME.
-
-
-Rudy was now a boy of eight. His uncle, who lived in the Rhone valley
-at the other side of the mountains, wished him to come to him, and
-learn how to make his way in the world; his grandfather approved of
-this, and let him go.
-
-Rudy therefore said good-by. He had to take leave of others beside his
-grandfather; and the first of these was his old dog, Ajola.
-
-"When your father was postilion, I was his post-dog," said Ajola. "We
-traveled backwards and forwards together; and I know some dogs at the
-other side of the mountains and some of the people. I was never a
-chatterer, but now that we are not likely to have many more chances of
-talking, I want to tell you a few things, I will tell you something I
-have had in my head and thought over for a long time. I can't make it
-out, and you won't make it out; but that doesn't matter. At least I
-can see that things are not fairly divided in this world, whether for
-dogs or for men. Only a few are privileged to sit in a lady's lap and
-have milk to drink. I've never been used to it myself, but I've seen a
-little lap-dog riding in the coach, and occupying the place of a
-passenger. The lady to whom it belonged, or who belonged to it, took a
-bottle of milk with her for the dog to drink; and she offered him
-sweets, but he sniffed at them and refused them, so she ate them
-herself. I had to run in the mud beside the coach, and was very
-hungry, thinking all the time that this couldn't be right; but they
-say that there are a great many things that aren't right. Would you
-like to sit in a lady's lap and ride in a carriage? I wish you could.
-But you can't arrange that for yourself. I never could, bark and howl
-as I might!"
-
-This is what Ajola said; and Rudy put his arms round him, and kissed
-his cold, wet nose. Then he took up the cat, but puss tried to get
-away, and said,--
-
-"You're too strong! and I don't want to scratch you. Climb over the
-mountains, as I taught you. Don't fancy you can fall, and then you
-will always keep firm hold." As he said this, the cat ran away; for he
-did not wish Rudy to see that he was crying.
-
-The fowls strutted about the room. One of them had lost its tail
-feathers. A tourist, who imagined he was a sportsman, had shot its
-tail off, as he thought it was a wild bird.
-
-"Rudy is going away over the mountains," said one of the fowls.
-
-The other one replied, "He's in too great a hurry; I don't want to say
-good-by." And then they both made off.
-
-He then said good-by to the goats; they bleated "Med! med! may!" and
-that made him feel sad.
-
-Two neighboring guides, who wanted to cross the mountains to beyond
-the Gemmi took Rudy with them, going on foot. It was a fatiguing walk
-for such a little boy; but he was strong, and never feared anything.
-
-The swallows flew part of the way with them. "We and you! and you and
-we!" they sang. Their route lay across the roaring Luetschine, which
-flows in many little streams from the Grindel glacier, and some fallen
-trees served for a bridge. When they gained the forest at the other
-side, they began to mount the slope where the glacier had quitted the
-mountain, and then they had to climb over or make their way round the
-blocks of ice on the glacier. Rudy sometimes was obliged to crawl
-instead of walking; but his eyes sparkled with pleasure, and he
-planted his feet so firmly that you would think he wanted to leave the
-mark of his spiked shoes behind him at every step. The dark earth
-which the mountain torrent had scattered over the glacier made it look
-almost black, but still you could catch sight of the bluish-green ice.
-They had to skirt the countless little pools which lay amongst the
-huge blocks of ice; and sometimes they passed by a great stone that
-had rested at the edge of a cleft, and then the stone would be upset,
-and crash down into the crevasse, and the echoes would reverberate
-from all the deep clefts in the glacier.
-
-So they went on climbing. The mighty glacier seemed like a great river
-frozen into ice, hemmed in by the steep rocks. Rudy remembered what he
-had been told, of how he and his mother had been pulled up out of one
-of those, deep, cold crevasses; but he soon thought no more of it, and
-it seemed no more than many other stories which he had been told.
-Occasionally, when the men thought the path too rough for the boy,
-they offered him a hand; but he was not easily tired, and stood on the
-ice as securely as a chamois. Now they got on rock, and clambered over
-the rough stones; then they would have to walk through the pine-trees,
-or over pasture-lands, whilst the landscape was constantly changing.
-Around them were the great snow mountains--the Jungfrau, the Moench and
-the Eiger. Every child knew their names, and, of course, Rudy knew
-them. Rudy had never before been up so high; he had never walked over
-the wide snow-fields: like the ocean with its waves immovable, the
-wind now and again blowing off some of the snow as if it were the foam
-of the sea. The glaciers meet here as if they were joining hands; each
-forms one of the palaces of the Ice-Maiden, whose power and aim is to
-capture and overwhelm. The sunshine was hot, the snow was brilliantly
-white, and seemed to sparkle as if covered with diamonds. Countless
-insects, most of them butterflies or bees, were lying dead on the
-snow; they had gone up too high, or been carried by the wind, and had
-been frozen to death. A threatening cloud hung over the Wetterhorn,
-looking like a bundle of black wool; it hung down, heavy with its own
-weight, ready to burst with the resistless force of a whirlwind. The
-recollection of this whole journey--the encamping for the night, at
-such a height, the walk in the dark, the deep clefts in the rock, worn
-away by the force of water during countless years--all this was fixed
-in Rudy's memory.
-
-An empty stone hut beyond the _mer de glace_ gave them shelter for the
-night. Here they found pine branches for fuel, and they quickly made
-a fire and arranged the bed as comfortably as they could. They then
-seated themselves about the fire, lighted their pipes, and drank the
-hot drink which they had prepared. They gave Rudy some of their
-supper, and then began to tell tales and legends of the spirits of the
-Alps; of the mighty serpents that lay coiled in the lakes; of the
-spirits who were reported to have carried men in their sleep to the
-marvelous floating city, Venice; of the mysterious shepherd, who
-tended his black sheep on the mountain pastures, and how no one had
-seen him, although many had heard the tones of his bell and the
-bleating of his flock. Rudy listened to all this, though he was not
-frightened, as he did not know what fear was; and as he was listening
-he thought he heard the weird bleating; it grew more and more distinct
-till the men heard it too, and left off talking to listen, and told
-Rudy to keep awake.
-
-This was the Foehn, the blast, the terrible tempest, which sweeps down
-from the mountains upon the valleys, rending the trees as if they
-were reeds, and sweeping away the houses by a flood as easily as one
-moves chessmen.
-
-[Illustration: They then seated themselves about the fire, and began
-to tell tales of the spirits of the Alps.]
-
-After a time they said to Rudy that it was all over, and he might go
-to sleep; and he was so tired with his long tramp that he obeyed at
-once.
-
-When day broke, they pushed forward. The sun now shone for Rudy on new
-mountains, new glaciers, and snow-fields. They were now in the canton
-of Vallais, and had crossed the range which could be seen from
-Grindelwald, but were yet far from his new home. Other ravines, other
-pastures, woods, and mountain-paths now came into sight, other houses,
-and other people; but they were strange and deformed-looking beings,
-with pale faces, and huge wens hanging from their necks. They were
-_cretins_, feebly moving about, and looking listlessly at Rudy and his
-companions--the women were particularly repulsive to look at. Should
-he find such people in his new home?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-UNCLE.
-
-
-Rudy had now come to his uncle's house, and found to his relief that
-the people were like those he had been used to. There was only one
-_cretin_, a poor silly boy--one of those who rove from one house to
-another in the canton of Vallais, staying a month or two in each
-house, and the unfortunate Saperli was there when Rudy came.
-
-Uncle was a great hunter, and also knew the cooper's trade. His wife
-was a lively little person, and almost looked like a bird; her eyes
-were like those of an eagle, and her long neck was quite downy.
-
-Rudy found everything new to him--dress, habits and customs, and
-language, though he would soon get used to that. They seemed more
-comfortably off than in his grandfather's house. The rooms were large,
-and the walls were decorated with chamois' horns and polished guns,
-and there was a picture of the Virgin over the door; fresh Alpine
-roses and a burning lamp stood before it.
-
-Uncle was, as I have said, one of the most successful chamois-hunters
-in the neighborhood, and also one of the best guides. Rudy soon became
-the pet of the household. They had one pet already, an old hound,
-blind and deaf; he was no longer able to go out hunting, but they took
-care of him in return for his former services. Rudy patted the dog,
-and wished to make friends; but he did not care to make friends with
-strangers, though Rudy was not long a stranger there.
-
-"We live very well here in the canton of Vallais," said uncle; "we
-have chamois, who are not so easily killed as the steinbock, but we
-get on better than in the old days. It is all very well to praise
-former times, but we are better off now. An opening has been made, and
-the air blows through our secluded vale. We always get something
-better when the old thing is done with," said he; for uncle had much
-to say, and would tell tales of his childhood, and of the days when
-his father was vigorous, when Vallais was, as he said, a closed bag,
-full of sick folk and unfortunate _cretins_; "but the French soldiers
-came, and they were the right sort of doctors, for they killed both
-the disease and the persons who had it. The French knew all about
-fighting; they struck their blows in many ways, and their maidens
-could strike too!" and here uncle nodded at his wife, who was a
-Frenchwoman. "The French struck at our stones in fine style! They
-struck the Simplon road through the rocks; they struck the road, so
-that I may say to a child of three years old, 'Go to Italy, keep right
-on the highway!' and the child will find himself in Italy if he only
-keeps right on the road!" and then uncle sang a French song, "Hurrah
-for Napoleon Buonaparte!"
-
-[Illustration: His uncle would tell tales of his childhood.]
-
-Rudy now heard for the first time of France, and of Lyons, a great
-town on the river Rhone, where his uncle had been.
-
-In a few years Rudy was to become an active chamois-hunter. His uncle
-said he was capable of it; he therefore taught him to handle a gun and
-to shoot. In the hunting season he took him to the mountains, and made
-him drink the warm blood from the chamois, which keeps a hunter from
-giddiness. He taught him to know the seasons when avalanches would
-roll down the mountain sides, at midday or in the afternoon, according
-to whether the sun had been strong on the places. He taught him to
-watch how the chamois sprang, and notice how his feet fell that he
-might stand firm; and that where he could obtain no foothold he must
-catch hold with his elbows, grasp with his muscles, and hold with his
-thighs and knees--that he might even hold with his neck if necessary.
-The chamois were very wary,--they would send one to look out; but the
-hunter must be still more wary,--put them off the scent. He had known
-them so stupid that if he hung his coat and hat on an alpenstock, the
-chamois took the coat for a man. Uncle played his trick one day when
-he and Rudy were out hunting.
-
-The mountain paths were narrow; they were often a mere cornice or
-ledge projecting over a giddy precipice. The snow was half melted, and
-the rock crumbled beneath the feet; so the uncle laid himself down at
-full length and crept along. Each stone, as it broke off, fell,
-striking and rolling from ledge to ledge till it was out of sight.
-Rudy stood about a hundred paces from his uncle on a projecting rock,
-and from this point he saw a great bearded vulture swooping over his
-uncle, whom it seemed to be about to strike over the precipice with
-its wings, to make him its prey. Uncle had his eye on the chamois,
-which he could see with its kid on the other side of the ravine; Rudy
-kept his eye on the bird, knew what it would do, and had his hands on
-his gun ready to fire; the chamois suddenly sprang up, uncle fired,
-the animal fell dead, the kid made off as if it was used to dangers.
-At the sound of the gun the bird flew away, and uncle knew nothing of
-his danger until told of it by Rudy.
-
-[Illustration: "Hold fast, Rudy!" shouted his uncle, and Rudy clung to
-the tree.]
-
-As they were going home in the best of humors, uncle whistling one of
-his songs, they suddenly heard a strange noise not far off; they
-looked round them, and saw that the snow on the side of the mountain
-was all in motion. It waved up and down, broke into pieces, and came
-down with a roar like thunder. It was an avalanche, not over Rudy and
-uncle, but near, too near, to them.
-
-"Hold fast, Rudy!" he shouted; "fast, with all your power!"
-
-And Rudy clung to the stem of a tree; uncle climbed above him up to
-the branches and held fast, while the avalanche rolled past at a
-distance of a few yards; but the rush of air broke the trees and
-bushes all around like reeds, and cast the fragments down, and left
-Rudy pressed to the earth. The tree-stem to which he had held was
-broken, and the top flung to a distance; there, among the broken
-branches, lay uncle, his head crushed; his hand was still warm, but
-you would not know his face. Rudy stood pale and trembling; it was the
-first shock in his life, the first time he had felt horror.
-
-It was late when he brought the tidings of death to what was now a
-sorrowful home. The wife was speechless and tearless until they
-brought the body home, then her grief broke forth. The unfortunate
-_cretin_ hid himself in his bed, nor did they see him all the next
-day; but in the evening he came to Rudy.
-
-"Write a letter for me! Saperli cannot write! Saperli can go with the
-letter to the post!"
-
-"A letter from thee?" exclaimed Rudy. "And to whom?"
-
-"To the Lord Christ!"
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-And the half-idiot, as they called the _cretin_, cast a pathetic
-glance at Rudy, folded his hands, and said solemnly and slowly:
-
-"Jesus Christ! Saperli wishes to send a letter to ask Him that Saperli
-may lie dead, and not the man in this house."
-
-And Rudy took him by the hand. "That letter would not go there! that
-letter would not bring him back."
-
-But it was impossible for Rudy to make him understand.
-
-"Now thou art the support of the house," said the widow, and Rudy
-became so.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-BABETTE.
-
-
-Who is the best shot in the canton of Vallais? Even the chamois knew.
-"Take care of Rudy's shooting!" they said. "Who is the handsomest
-huntsman?" "Rudy is!" said the maidens, but they did not say, "Take
-care of Rudy's shooting!" nor did their serious mothers say so either;
-he nodded to them as lightly as he did to a young girl; for he was
-brave and joyous, his cheeks were brown, his teeth sound and white,
-and his eyes coal-black and sparkling; he was a handsome fellow, and
-not more than twenty. The ice-cold water did not hurt him in swimming;
-he swam like a fish, could climb better than any other man, could hold
-fast like a snail to the walls of rock, for his muscles and sinews
-were good; and you saw when he leapt that he had taken lessons from
-the cat and from the chamois. Rudy was the surest guide to depend
-on, and might have made his fortune in that way; his uncle had also
-taught him coopering, but he gave little thought to that, for his
-pleasure and delight was in shooting the chamois; and in this way he
-earned money. Rudy was a good match, as they say, if he did not look
-above his own position. And he was a dancer among dancers, so that the
-maidens dreamt of him, and some of them even thought of him when
-waking.
-
-[Illustration: "Rudy gave me a kiss at the dance!" said Annette to her
-dearest friend.]
-
-"He gave me a kiss at the dance!" said Annette, the schoolmaster's
-daughter, to her dearest friend; but she ought not to have said that
-even to her dearest friend. Such a secret is not easy to keep: it is
-like sand in a bag full of holes, it will run out; and they all soon
-knew that Rudy had given her a kiss at the dance, though he had not
-kissed the one that he wanted to kiss.
-
-"Just watch him!" said an old huntsman; "he has kissed Annette; he has
-begun with A and he will kiss all through the alphabet."
-
-A kiss at the dance was all that the gossips could say against Rudy so
-far; but although he had kissed Annette, she was not the flower of his
-heart.
-
-Down at Bex, among the great walnut-trees, close to a little rapid
-mountain stream, there lived a rich miller; his dwelling-house was a
-big building of three floors, with small turrets, roofed with shingle
-and ornamented with metal plates which shone in the rays of the sun or
-the moon; the biggest turret had for a weather-cock a glittering arrow
-which had transfixed an apple, in memory of Tell's marksmanship. The
-mill appeared fine and prosperous, and one could both sketch and
-describe it, but one could not sketch or describe the miller's
-daughter; at least, Rudy says one could not, and yet he had her image
-in his heart. Her eyes had so beamed upon him that they had quite
-kindled a flame; this had come quite suddenly, as other fires come,
-and the strangest thing was, that the miller's daughter, the charming
-Babette, had no thought of it, as she and Rudy had never spoken to
-each other.
-
-The miller was rich, and his riches made Babette hard to approach;
-"But nothing is so high," said Rudy to himself, "that a man can't get
-up to it; a man must climb, and he need not fall, nor lose faith in
-himself." This lesson he had learnt at home.
-
-It happened one day that Rudy had business at Bex, and it was quite a
-journey, for the railway did not then go there. From the Rhone
-glacier, at the foot of the Simplon, between many and various
-mountain-heights, stretches the broad valley of the Rhone, whose flood
-often overflows its banks, overwhelming everything. Between the towns
-of Sion and St. Maurice the valley bends in the shape of an elbow, and
-below St. Maurice it is so narrow that it hardly allows room for more
-than the river itself and a narrow road. An old tower stands here on
-the mountain side, as a sentry to mark the boundary of the canton of
-Vallais, opposite the stone bridge by the toll-house; and here begins
-the canton Vaud, not far from the town of Bex. As you advance you
-notice the increase of fertility, you seem to have come into a garden
-of chestnuts and walnut-trees; here and there are cypresses and
-pomegranates in flower; there is a southern warmth, as if you had come
-into Italy.
-
-Rudy arrived at Bex, finished his business, and looked about him; but
-never a lad from the mill, not to mention Babette, could he see. This
-was not what he wished.
-
-It was now towards evening; the air was full of the scent of the wild
-thyme and of the flowers of the limes; a shining veil seemed to hang
-over the wooded mountains, with a stillness, not of sleep, nor of
-death, but rather as if nature were holding its breath, in order to
-have its likeness photographed on the blue vault of heaven. Here and
-there between the trees, and across the green fields stood poles, to
-support the telegraph wires already carried through that tranquil
-valley; by one of these leaned an object, so still that it might have
-been mistaken for a tree-stump, but it was Rudy, who was as still and
-quiet as everything about him; he was not asleep, and he certainly was
-not dead. But thoughts were rushing through his brain, thoughts
-mighty and overwhelming, which were to mold his future.
-
-His eyes were directed to one point amidst the leaves, one light in
-the miller's parlor where Babette lived. So still was Rudy standing,
-that you might believe he was taking aim at a chamois, for the chamois
-will sometimes stand for an instant as if a part of the rock, and then
-suddenly, startled by the rolling of a stone, will spring away; and so
-it was with Rudy--a sudden thought startled him.
-
-"Never give up!" he cried. "Call at the mill! Good evening to the
-miller, good day to Babette. A man doesn't fall when he doesn't think
-about it; Babette must see me at some time if I am ever to be her
-husband."
-
-Rudy laughed, for he was of good cheer, and he went to the mill; he
-knew well enough what he wished for--he wished for Babette.
-
-The river, with its yellowish water, rushed along, and the willows and
-limes overhung its banks; Rudy went up the path, and as it says in the
-old children's song:
-
- "to the miller's house,
- But found no one at home
- Except little Puss!"
-
-The parlor cat stood on the steps, put up his back, and said "Miou!"
-but Rudy had no thought for that speech; he knocked at the door; no
-one heard, no one opened it. "Miou!" said the cat. If Rudy had been
-little, he would have understood animals' language, and known that the
-cat said: "There's no one at home!" So he went over to the mill to
-ask, and there he got the information. The master had gone on a
-journey, as far as the town of Interlaken "_inter lacus_, between
-the lakes," as the schoolmaster, Annette's father, had explained it in
-a lesson. The miller was far away, and Babette with him; there was a
-grand shooting competition--it began to-morrow, and went on for eight
-days. Switzers from all the German cantons would be there.
-
-Unlucky Rudy, you might say, this was not a fortunate time to come to
-Bex; so he turned and marched above St. Maurice and Sion to his own
-valley and his own mountains; but he was not disheartened. The sun
-rose next morning, but his spirits were already high, for they had
-never set.
-
-[Illustration: The cat stood on the steps, put up his back and said,
-"Miou!" as Rudy knocked at the door.]
-
-"Babette is at Interlaken, many days' journey from hence," he said to
-himself. "It is a long way there if one goes by the high road, but it
-is not so far if you strike across the mountains, as I have often done
-in chamois-hunting. There is my old home, where I lived when little
-with my grandfather; and the shooting-match is at Interlaken! I will
-be the best of them; and I will be with Babette, when I have made
-acquaintance with her."
-
-With his light knapsack, containing his Sunday suit and his gun and
-game-bag, Rudy went up the mountain by the short way, which was,
-however, pretty long; but the shooting-match only began that day and
-was to last over a week, and all that time, he was told, the miller
-and Babette would spend with their relations at Interlaken. So Rudy
-crossed the Gemmi, meaning to come down near Grindelwald.
-
-Healthy and joyful, he stepped along, up in the fresh, the light, the
-invigorating mountain air. The valley sank deeper, the horizon opened
-wider; here was a snow-peak, and there another, and soon he could see
-the whole shining range of the Alps. Rudy knew every snow-mountain,
-and he made straight for the Schreckhorn, which raised its
-white-sprinkled, stony fingers high into the blue air.
-
-At length he crossed the highest ridge. The pastures stretched down
-towards his own valley; the air was light, and he felt merry; mountain
-and valley smiled with abundance of flowers and verdure; his heart was
-full of thoughts of youth: one should never become old, one need never
-die; to live, to conquer, to be happy! free as a bird--and he felt
-like a bird. And the swallows flew by him, and sang, as they used to
-do in his childhood: "We and you, and you and we!" All was soaring and
-rejoicing.
-
-Below lay the velvety green meadow, sprinkled with brown chalets, and
-the Luetschine humming and rushing. He saw the glacier, with its
-bottle-green edges covered with earth-soiled snow; he saw the deep
-fissures, and the upper and the lower glacier. The sound of the
-church bells came to him, as if they were ringing to welcome him home;
-his heart beat more strongly, and swelled so that Babette was
-forgotten for a moment, so large was his heart and so full of
-memories!
-
-He again went along the way where he had stood as a little urchin with
-the other children, and sold the carved chalets. He saw among the
-pines his grandfather's house, but strangers now lived in it. Children
-came along the path to sell things, and one of them offered him an
-Alpine rose; Rudy took it as a good omen, and he thought of Babette.
-He soon crossed the bridge where the two Luetschine unite; the trees
-here grew thicker, and the walnuts gave a refreshing shade. He now saw
-the flag waving, the white cross on a red background, the flag of the
-Switzers and the Danes; and now he had reached Interlaken.
-
-This, Rudy thought, was certainly a splendid town. It was a Swiss town
-in Sunday dress; not like other places, crowded with heavy stone
-houses, ponderous, strange, and stately. No! here it seemed as if the
-chalets had come down from the mountains into the green valley, close
-by the clear, rapid stream, and had arranged themselves in a row, a
-little in and out, to make a street. And the prettiest of all the
-streets--yes, that it certainly was!--had sprung up since Rudy was
-here, when he was little. It seemed to have been built of all the
-charming chalets which his grandfather had carved and stored in the
-cabinet at home, and they had grown up here by some power like the
-old, oldest chestnut-trees. Each house was a hotel, with carved
-woodwork on the windows and doors, and a projecting roof, and was
-elegantly built; and in front of the house was a flower-garden,
-between it and the broad, macadamized road; all the houses stood on
-one side of the road, so as not to hide the fresh green meadows, where
-the cows wandered about with bells like those in the high Alpine
-pastures. It seemed to be in the midst of lofty mountains, which had
-drawn apart in one direction to allow the snow-clad peak of the
-Jungfrau to be seen, most lovely of all the Swiss mountains.
-
-There were a great many well-dressed visitors from foreign countries
-as well as many Switzers from the different cantons. Each competitor
-had his number in a garland on his hat. Singing and playing on all
-kinds of instruments were to be heard everywhere, mingled with cries
-and shouts. Mottoes were put up on the houses and bridges, flags and
-pennons floated in the breeze; the crack of the rifles was frequently
-heard, and Rudy thought this the sweetest sound of all; indeed, in the
-excitement of the moment he quite forgot Babette, although he had come
-on purpose to meet her.
-
-The marksmen now went in the direction of the target. Rudy went with
-them, and was the best shot of them all--he hit the bull's-eye every
-time.
-
-"Who is that young stranger who shoots so well?" the onlookers asked
-each other. "He talks French as they do in canton Vallais. But he also
-speaks German very well," others replied.
-
-"They say he was brought up near Grindelwald," one of the competitors
-remarked.
-
-There was life in the fellow, his eyes shone, his arm was steady, and
-for that reason he never failed in hitting the mark. Courage comes
-with success, but Rudy had a store of natural courage. Admiring
-friends soon gathered around him, and complimented him on his success;
-he altogether forgot Babette. Then some one laid his hand on his
-shoulder, and spoke to him in French.
-
-"You belong to the canton of Vallais?"
-
-Rudy turned, and saw a burly individual with a rosy, good-humored
-face. It was the wealthy miller from Bex; his stout form almost
-concealed the pretty, slim Babette, but she looked at Rudy with her
-sparkling, dark eyes. The miller was glad that a rifleman from his own
-canton should prove the best shot, and should have won universal
-applause. Rudy was certainly in luck, for although he had forgotten
-his principal object in coming, she had now come forward to him.
-
-When neighbors meet one another at a distance from home they generally
-get to talking, and make each other's acquaintance. Because Rudy was
-a good shot he had become a leader at the rifle competition, just as
-much as the miller was at Bex, because of his wealth and his good
-business; so they clasped each other by the hand for the first time;
-Babette also offered her hand to Rudy who squeezed it, and looked at
-her so earnestly that she quite blushed.
-
-The miller spoke of their long journey, and how many large towns they
-had come through; and it certainly seemed to have been a very long
-journey, as they had traveled by the steamboat, and also by rail and
-by post-chaise.
-
-"I came the nearest way," said Rudy. "I walked over the mountains; no
-road is too high for a man to come over it."
-
-"And break your neck," said the miller. "You look just the man to
-break his neck one day, you look so headstrong."
-
-"A man doesn't fall if he doesn't think about it," replied Rudy.
-
-The miller's relatives in Interlaken, with whom he and Babette were
-staying, asked Rudy to visit them, as he was from the same canton.
-This was a chance for Rudy; fortune favored him, as she always does
-favor those who endeavor to succeed by their own energy, and remember
-that "Providence gives us nuts, but we have to crack them for
-ourselves."
-
-Rudy was welcomed by the miller's relatives as if he had belonged to
-the family, and they drank to the health of the best shot, and Babette
-clinked her glass with the others, and Rudy thanked them for the
-toast.
-
-In the evening they went for a stroll on the road by the big hotels
-beneath the old walnut-trees, and there was such a throng, and the
-people pushed so that Rudy was able to offer his arm to Babette. He
-said he was glad to have met the people from Vaud. The cantons of Vaud
-and Vallais were very good neighbors. He seemed so thoroughly pleased
-that Babette could not resist the inclination to press his hand. They
-walked together just like old acquaintances, and she was very amusing.
-Rudy was delighted with her naive remarks on the peculiarities in the
-dress and behavior of the foreign ladies; and yet she did not wish to
-make fun of them, for she knew that many of them were amiable and
-worthy people--indeed, her own godmother was an English lady. She had
-been living in Bex eighteen years ago, when Babette was christened,
-and she had given her the valuable brooch she was now wearing. Her
-godmother had twice written to her, and Babette was now hoping to see
-her and her daughters in Interlaken.
-
-"They were two old maids, almost thirty!" said Babette; but you must
-remember that she was only eighteen.
-
-Her little tongue was never still for an instant, and all that Babette
-had to say was intensely interesting to Rudy; and he told her all
-about himself--that he had frequently been to Bex, and knew the mill
-well, and that he had often seen her, though he did not suppose she
-had ever noticed him; and how he had called at the mill, hoping to see
-her, and found that her father and she were away from home, a long way
-from home, indeed, but not so far that he could not get over the
-barrier which divided them.
-
-He told her a great deal more than this. He told her that he was very
-fond of her, and that he had come here on purpose to see her, and not
-for the rifle competition.
-
-Babette was very quiet when he told her this; she thought he set too
-high a value on her.
-
-While they continued rambling, the sun set behind the mighty wall of
-rock; the Jungfrau stood out in all its beauty and magnificence, with
-the green of the tree-clad slopes on either side of it. All stood
-still to admire the gorgeous spectacle, and both Rudy and Babette were
-happy in watching it.
-
-"There is no place more lovely than this!" said Babette.
-
-"No, indeed!" exclaimed Rudy, and then he looked at Babette.
-
-"I must go home to-morrow," he said, after a short silence.
-
-"You must come to see us at Bex," Babette whispered to him; "my father
-will be pleased."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE RETURN HOME.
-
-
-Oh what a load Rudy had to carry home with him over the mountains the
-next day! He had won three silver cups, two rifles, and a silver
-coffee-pot; this would be of use to him when he began housekeeping.
-But that was not the heaviest thing; there was something heavier and
-stronger which he carried with him--or which carried him--on that
-return journey over the mountains. The weather was wild, dull, heavy,
-and wet; dense clouds covered the mountain tops like a thick veil,
-quite hiding the snowy peaks. From the valleys he heard the sound of
-the woodman's ax, and huge trunks of trees rolled down the steep
-mountain sides; they seemed only like small sticks, but they were big
-enough for masts. The Luetschine rushed along with its continual hum,
-the wind shrieked, and the clouds hurried across the sky. Then Rudy
-discovered that a young maid was walking at his side; he had not seen
-her until she was quite near. She also was about to climb over the
-mountain. The girl's eyes had a strange power; you could not help
-looking at them, and they were wonderful eyes, very clear, and
-deep--oh, so deep!
-
-"Have you a sweetheart?" said Rudy, for that was all he could think
-of.
-
-"No, I have not," laughingly replied the maiden; but she did not look
-as if she spoke the truth. "Don't go round all that way," she then
-said. "You must bear more to the left; that is the shortest way."
-
-"Yes, and tumble down a crevasse!" said Rudy. "You're a fine one to be
-a guide if you don't know better than that!"
-
-"I know the way," she replied, "and my thoughts have not gone astray.
-Yours are below, in the valley, but here, on high, you should be
-thinking of the Ice-Maiden; people say that she does not love men."
-
-"I fear her not!" exclaimed Rudy. "She had to yield me up when I was a
-baby, and I am not going to yield myself up to her now that I am a
-man."
-
-It grew darker, and the rain poured down; then came the snow,
-dazzling and bewildering.
-
-"Take my hand," said the maiden, "I will help you;" and she touched
-him with her ice-cold fingers.
-
-[Illustration: "Have you a sweetheart?" said Rudy.]
-
-"You needn't help me!" returned Rudy; "I don't need a girl to teach me
-to climb!" and he hurried on, leaving her behind. The snow came down
-all around him, the wind shrieked, and he heard strange sounds of
-laughing and singing behind him. He believed she was one of the
-spirits in the Ice-Maiden's train, of whom he had heard tales when he
-spent the night up in the mountains as a boy.
-
-The snow ceased to fall, and he was now above the clouds. He looked
-behind him, but saw nobody; yet he heard a strange singing and
-yodeling that he did not like, as it did not sound human.
-
-When Rudy was quite at the highest ridge, from which the way tended
-downwards towards the Rhone valley, he saw above Chamonix, in a patch
-of blue sky, two bright stars shining and twinkling; they reminded him
-of Babette, and of his own good fortune, and the thought made him feel
-quite warm.
-
-[Illustration: Rudy believed she was one of the spirits in the
-Ice-Maiden's train.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-A VISIT TO THE MILL.
-
-
-"What splendid things you have brought back with you!" cried his old
-foster-mother; and her eagle eyes sparkled, and her lean neck waved
-backwards and forwards more than ever. "You are lucky, Rudy! Let me
-kiss you, my dear boy!"
-
-And Rudy submitted to be kissed; but he looked as if he regarded it as
-a thing which had to be put up with. "What a handsome fellow you are
-getting, Rudy!" said the old woman.
-
-"Don't talk such nonsense," Rudy replied, laughing; but nevertheless
-he liked to hear it.
-
-"I say it again," said the old woman. "You are very lucky!"
-
-"Perhaps you may be right," he rejoined, for he was thinking of
-Babette.
-
-He had never before been so anxious to go down the valley.
-
-"They must have gone home," he said to himself. "They were to have
-been back two days ago. I must go to Bex."
-
-So Rudy went to Bex, and found his friends at home at the mill. They
-received him kindly, and had brought a message for him from the family
-at Interlaken. Babette did not speak much; she was very quiet, but her
-eyes spoke volumes, and that satisfied Rudy. Even the miller, who had
-always led the conversation, and who had always had his remarks and
-jokes laughed at on account of his wealth, seemed to delight in
-hearing of all Rudy's adventures in his hunting; and Rudy described
-the difficulties and perils which the chamois-hunters have to face
-among the mountains--how they must cling to, or creep over, the narrow
-ledges of snow which are frozen on to the mountain sides, and make
-their way over the snow bridges which span deep chasms in the rocks.
-And Rudy's eyes sparkled as he was relating these hunting adventures,
-the intelligence and activity of the chamois, and the dangers of the
-tempest and the avalanche. He perceived as he went on that the miller
-grew increasingly interested in his wild life, and that the old man
-paid especial attention to his account of the bearded vulture and the
-royal eagle.
-
-Among other things, he happened to mention that, at no great distance,
-in the canton of Vallais, an eagle had built its nest most ingeniously
-under a steep projecting rock, and that the nest contained a young one
-which nobody could capture. Rudy said that an Englishman had offered
-him a handful of gold the other day if he could take him the eaglet
-alive; "but there is a limit to everything," said he. "That eaglet
-cannot be taken; it would be foolhardy to try."
-
-But the wine assisted the flow of conversation; and Rudy thought the
-evening all too short, though he did not start on his return journey
-until past midnight, the first time he visited the mill.
-
-Lights were still to be seen at the windows of the mill; and the
-parlor cat came out at an opening in the roof, and met the kitchen cat
-on the gutter.
-
-"Have you heard the news at the mill?" said the parlor cat. "There's
-love-making going on in the house! The father doesn't know of it. Rudy
-and Babette have been treading on each other's paws all the evening
-under the table. They trod on me more than once, but I kept quiet,
-lest it should be noticed."
-
-"I would have mewed," replied the kitchen cat.
-
-"Kitchen behavior will not suit the parlor," said the parlor cat; "but
-I should like to know what the miller will say when he hears of the
-love-making."
-
-What will the miller say, indeed? Rudy, also, wanted to know that; and
-he would not wait very long without finding it out. So a few days
-later, when the omnibus rolled over the Rhone bridge between Vallais
-and Vaud, Rudy was in it, in his usual high spirits, happy in the
-expectation of a favorable answer to the question he intended to ask
-that same evening.
-
-In the evening, when the omnibus was returning Rudy was again inside;
-but the parlor cat had great news to tell.
-
-"Do you know it, you from the kitchen? The miller knows everything.
-That was a fine end to the expedition! Rudy came here towards the
-evening, and he and Babette had much to whisper about; they stood in
-the passage which leads to the miller's room. I lay at their feet, but
-they had neither eyes nor thoughts for me. 'I am going straight in to
-your father!' said Rudy; 'that is the fair thing.' 'Shall I accompany
-you?' said Babette; 'it will encourage you.' 'I have sufficient
-courage!' said Rudy, 'but if you go too, he must look kindly on us,
-whether he will or no!' And they both went in. Rudy trod violently on
-my tail. Rudy is very clumsy! I mewed, but neither he nor Babette had
-ears to hear me. They opened the door, and they both went in, I in
-front; but I sprang up on the back of a chair, for I could not tell
-how Rudy would kick. But the miller kicked! and it was a good kick!
-out of the door, and into the mountains to the chamois! Rudy may aim
-at them, and not at our little Babette."
-
-"But what did they talk about?" asked the kitchen cat.
-
-"Talk?---- They talked of everything that people say when they go
-a-wooing: 'I am fond of her, and she is fond of me! and when there is
-milk in the pail for one, there is also milk in the pail for two!'
-'But she sits too high for you!' said the miller; 'she sits on grits,
-on golden grits; you can't reach her!' 'Nothing sits so high that a
-man can't reach it, if he will!' said Rudy; for he was very pert. 'But
-you can't reach the eaglet--you said so yourself! Babette sits
-higher!' 'I will take them both!' said Rudy. 'Yes, I will give her to
-you, when you give me the eaglet alive!' said the miller, and laughed
-till the tears stood in his eyes; 'but now I thank you for your
-visits, Rudy; come again in the morning, and you will find no one at
-home! Farewell, Rudy!' And Babette also said farewell, as miserable as
-a little kitten that can't see its mother. 'An honest man's word is as
-good as his bond!' said Rudy. 'Don't cry, Babette; I shall bring the
-eaglet!' 'You will break your neck, I hope!' said the miller, 'and so
-put an end to your race!' I call _that_ a kick! Now Rudy is off, and
-Babette sits and cries, but the miller sings German songs that he
-has learnt on his journey! I won't grieve over that now; it can't be
-helped!"
-
-"But yet there is still some hope for him," said the kitchen cat.
-
-[Illustration: "You are lucky, Rudy!" said his foster-mother; "let me
-kiss you, my dear boy!"]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE EAGLE'S NEST.
-
-
-From the mountain path sounds the yodeling, merry and strong, telling
-of good spirits and dauntless courage; it is Rudy--he is going to see
-his friend Vesinaud.
-
-"You will help me! we will take Ragli with us. I must capture the
-eaglet up the face of the mountain!"
-
-"Won't you take the spots of the moon first; that is as easy!" said
-Vesinaud. "You are in good spirits!"
-
-"Yes, for I am thinking of getting married! But now, to be in earnest,
-I will tell you what I am intending!"
-
-And soon Vesinaud and Ragli knew what Rudy wished.
-
-"You are a daring lad!" said they. "You will not get there! You will
-break your neck!"
-
-"A man does not fall down when he does not think of it!" said Rudy.
-
-At midnight they set off with poles, ladders, and ropes; the way was
-through thickets and bushes, and over rolling stones, always up, up in
-the gloomy night. The water rushed below; the water murmured above,
-heavy clouds drove through the air. When the hunters reached the
-precipitous face of the mountain it was still darker, the rocky walls
-were almost met, and the sky could only be seen high up in a small
-cleft. Close by, under them, was the deep abyss with its rushing
-waters. All three sat quite still, waiting for daybreak, when the
-eagle would fly out; for they must first shoot it before they could
-think of taking the young one. Rudy sat down, as still as if he were a
-piece of the stone he sat on. He had his gun in his hand ready to
-shoot; his eyes were fixed on the topmost cleft, where, under a
-projecting ledge, the eagle's nest was concealed.
-
-After waiting long, the hunters heard high above them a cracking,
-rushing sound; and suddenly they saw a great, hovering object. Two
-gun-barrels were pointed as the great black figure of the eagle flew
-out of its nest. One shot was heard; for a moment the bird moved its
-outstretched wings, and then slowly fell, as if with its greatness and
-the extension of its wings it would fill the whole of the chasm, and
-carry the hunters with it in its fall. The eagle sank into the depths;
-and brushing against the branches of trees and bushes, broke them as
-it fell.
-
-And now the hunters began work. They tied three of the longest ladders
-together, setting them up from the last secure foothold at the side of
-the precipice. But the ladders did not quite reach; the nest was
-higher up, hidden safe below the projecting rock, where it was as
-smooth as a wall. After some deliberation they decided to tie two
-ladders together, and lower them into the cleft from above, and join
-them to the three which had been set up from below. With great trouble
-they drew up the two ladders and secured the rope; they were then
-suspended over the projecting rock, and hung swinging over the abyss,
-and Rudy took his place on the lowest rung. It was an ice-cold
-morning, and vapors rose from the black chasm. Rudy sat out there as a
-fly sits on a waving straw which some bird has taken to the top of
-some high factory-chimney; but the fly can fly away if the straw gets
-loose, while Rudy can only break his neck. The wind whispered about
-him, and below, in the abyss, rushed the hurrying water from the
-melting glacier, the Ice-Maiden's palace.
-
-When Rudy began to climb, the ladders trembled and swung like a
-spider's web; but when he reached the fourth ladder he found it
-secure, for the lashing had been well done. The topmost ladder was
-flattened against the rock, yet it swung ominously with Rudy's weight.
-And now came the most dangerous part of the climb. But Rudy knew this,
-for the cat had taught him; he did not think about Giddiness, which
-hovered in the air behind him, and stretched its octopus-like arms
-towards him. Now he stood on the highest rung of the ladder, and found
-that after all it did not reach high enough for him to see into the
-nest; he could only reach up to it with his hands. He tested the
-firmness of the thick plaited boughs that supported the lower part of
-the nest, and when he found a thick and firm bough, he pulled himself
-up by it till he got his head and chest over the nest. But there
-poured upon him an overpowering smell of carrion; putrefying lambs,
-chamois, and birds lay here torn to pieces. Giddiness, which was not
-able to reach him, puffed the poisonous exhalation into his face, to
-confuse him, and below, in the black gaping depth, over the hurrying
-water, sat the Ice-Maiden herself, with her long greenish hair,
-staring with deathly eyes like two gun-barrels, and saying to herself,
-"Now I shall capture you!"
-
-[Illustration: It was captured alive.]
-
-In a corner of the nest he saw a large and powerful eaglet, which
-could not yet fly. Rudy fastened his eyes on it, held himself with
-all the force of one hand, and cast, with the other hand, a noose over
-the young bird. Thus, with its legs entangled in the line, it was
-captured alive. Rudy threw the noose with the bird in it over his
-shoulder, so that it hung a good way below him, and by the help of a
-rope he made himself fast till his toes reached the highest rung of
-the ladder.
-
-"Hold fast! don't believe you will fall, and you won't fall!" this was
-his old lesson, and he stuck to it; he held fast, he scrambled, he was
-certain he should not fall, and he did not fall.
-
-And now was heard a yodel, so vigorous and joyful. Rudy stood on the
-firm rock with his eaglet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-"I HOLD FAST TO BABETTE."
-
-
-"Here is what you demanded!" said Rudy, entering the miller's house at
-Bex; and, setting on the floor a large basket, he took off the cloth,
-and there glared from it two yellow, black-rimmed eyes, so sparkling,
-so wild, that they seemed to burn and devour everything they saw; the
-short, strong beak gaped, ready to bite, the neck was red and downy.
-
-"The eaglet!" shouted the miller. Babette gave one scream, and sprang
-aside, but she could not turn her eyes away from Rudy or the eaglet.
-
-"You are not to be frightened!" said the miller.
-
-"And you always keep your word!" said Rudy; "each has his own
-characteristic!"
-
-"But how is it you did not break your neck?" inquired the miller.
-
-"Because I held fast!" answered Rudy, "and that I do still! I hold
-fast to Babette!"
-
-"First see that you have her!" said the miller with a laugh; and that
-was a good sign, Babette knew.
-
-"Let us get the eaglet out of the basket; it looks dangerous. How it
-stares! How did you catch it?"
-
-And Rudy had to tell them, and the miller stared, opening his eyes
-wider and wider.
-
-"With your boldness and luck you can maintain three wives!" said the
-miller.
-
-"Thank you! thank you!" cried Rudy.
-
-"Yes; still you have not got Babette!" said the miller, and jestingly
-slapped the young hunter on the shoulder.
-
-"Have you heard the news in the mill?" said the parlor cat to the
-kitchen cat. "Rudy has brought us the eaglet, and will take Babette in
-exchange. They have kissed each other and let father see it! That is
-as good as an engagement. The old man didn't kick; he drew in his
-claws, and took his nap after dinner, and let the two sit and wag
-their tails. They have so much to say, they won't be finished before
-Christmas."
-
-Nor had they finished before Christmas. The wind scattered the brown
-leaves, the snow drifted in the valley and on the high mountains. The
-Ice-Maiden sat in her noble palace, which grows in the winter; the
-rocky walls were coated with ice, there were icicles ponderous as
-elephants where in the summer the mountain-torrent poured its watery
-deluge; ice-garlands of fantastic ice-crystals glittered on the
-snow-powdered fir-trees. The Ice-Maiden rode on the whistling wind
-across the deepest valleys. The snow carpet was spread quite down to
-Bex, and she could come there and see Rudy within doors, more than he
-was accustomed to, for he sat with Babette. The marriage was to take
-place towards the summer; he often had a ringing in his ears, so
-frequently did his friends talk of it. There was summer, glowing with
-the most beautiful Alpine roses, the merry, laughing Babette,
-beautiful as spring, the spring that makes all the birds sing of
-summer and of weddings.
-
-[Illustration: Rudy and Babette.]
-
-"How can those two sit and hang over each other?" said the parlor cat.
-"I am now quite tired of their mewing!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE ICE-MAIDEN.
-
-
-The walnuts and chestnut-trees, all hung with the green garlands of
-spring, spread from the bridge at St. Maurice to the margin of the
-Lake of Geneva along the Rhone, which with violent speed rushes from
-its source under the green glacier--the ice palace, where the
-Ice-Maiden lives, whence she flies on the wind to the highest
-snow-field, and there, in the strong sunlight, stretches herself on
-her drifting bed. And as she sits there she looks with far-seeing
-glance into the deepest valleys, where men, like ants on a sunlit
-stone, busily move about.
-
-"Powerful Spirits, as the Children of the Sun call you!" said the
-Ice-Maiden, "you are creeping things! with a rolling snowball both you
-and your houses and towns are crushed and effaced!" And she raised her
-proud head higher, and looked about her and deep down with deathly
-eyes. But from the valley was heard a rumbling, blasting of the rocks;
-men were at work; roads and tunnels were being made for railways.
-
-"They play like moles!" said she; "they are digging passages,
-therefore I hear sounds like musket-shots. When I move my castle the
-sound is louder than the rolling of thunder."
-
-From the valley arose a smoke, which moved onward like a flickering
-veil; it was the flying plume from a locomotive, which was drawing a
-train on the recently opened railway, the winding serpent, whose
-joints are the carriages.
-
-"They play at masters down below, the Powerful Spirits!" said the
-Ice-Maiden. "Yet the powers of nature are mightier!" and she laughed
-and sang, and the valleys resounded.
-
-"Now there is an avalanche rolling!" said the men below.
-
-But the Children of the Sun sang yet higher of human ideas, the
-powerful means which subdue the sea, remove mountains, fill up
-valleys; human ideas, they are the lords of the powers of nature. At
-the same moment there came over the snow-field, where the Ice-Maiden
-sat, a party of mountain climbers; they had bound themselves to one
-another with cords for greater security on the smooth plain of ice,
-near the deep precipices.
-
-"Creeping things!" said she. "You the lords of nature!" and she turned
-herself away from them and looked mockingly down into the deep valley,
-where the railway train was rushing past.
-
-"There they sit, these _thinkers!_ they sit in their power! I see them
-all! One sits proud as a king, alone! there they sit in a cluster!
-there half of them are asleep! and when the steam dragon stops they
-get out, and go their way. The thinkers go out into the world!" And
-she laughed.
-
-"There is an avalanche rolling again!" said those down below in the
-valley.
-
-"It will not reach us!" said two people behind the steam dragon; "two
-souls with one thought," as they say. It was Rudy and Babette; the
-miller also was with them.
-
-"As luggage!" said he. "I am with them as something necessary!"
-
-"There sit those two!" said the Ice-Maiden.
-
-"Many chamois have I crushed, millions of Alpine roses have I snapped
-and broken, not leaving the roots! I will blot them out! Thinkers!
-Powerful Spirits!" And she laughed.
-
-"There's an avalanche rolling again!" said those down below in the
-valley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE GODMOTHER.
-
-
-At Montreux, one of the nearest towns which, with Clarens, Vernex, and
-Glion, form a garland at the northeastern end of the Lake of Geneva,
-lived Babette's godmother, an English lady of position, with her
-daughters and a young relative; they had recently arrived, but the
-miller had already paid them a visit, told them of Babette's
-engagement, and of Rudy and the eaglet, and of his visit to
-Interlaken--in short, the whole history--and they had been highly
-delighted and pleased with Rudy and Babette, and with the miller; and
-at last made them all three come, and so they came--Babette must see
-her godmother, the godmother see Babette.
-
-Near the little town of Villeneuve, at the end of the Lake of Geneva,
-lay the steamboat which in its half-hour's journey to Vernex lies
-under Montreux. This is a shore which poets have praised; here, under
-the walnut-trees, on the deep blue-green lake, sat Byron, and wrote
-his melodious lines on the prisoner in the Castle of Chillon. Yonder,
-where Clarens is reflected with its weeping willows in the lake,
-wandered Rousseau, dreaming of Heloise. The river Rhone glides forth
-under the high, snow-capped mountains of Savoy; here lies, not far
-from its outlet in the lake, a little island--indeed, it is so small
-that from the shore it seems to be a boat out there; it is a rock
-which, more than a hundred years ago, a lady had surrounded with a
-stone wall, covered with soil, and planted with three acacia-trees,
-which now overshadow the whole island. Babette was quite enraptured
-with the little spot--it was to her the most charming in the whole
-voyage; she thought they ought to stay there, for it was a most
-delightful place. But the steamboat passed by it, and stopped, as it
-always did, at Vernex.
-
-The little company wandered hence between the white, sunlit walls
-which enclosed the vineyards about the little mountain town of
-Montreux, where fig-trees cast a shade in front of the peasants'
-cottages, and laurels and cypresses grow in the gardens. Half-way up
-stood the boarding-house where the godmother was living.
-
-They were very cordially received. The godmother was a tall, kind lady
-with a round, smiling face; as a child she must have been like one of
-Raphael's angel heads, but now she was an old angel head, as her
-silvery hair was quite curly. The daughters were handsome,
-delicate-looking, tall and slim. The young cousin, who was with them,
-was entirely dressed in white from top to toe, with yellow hair and
-whiskers, of which he had so much that it might have been divided
-between three gentlemen, and he at once paid great attention to little
-Babette.
-
-Handsomely bound books, pieces of music, and drawings were spread over
-the large table, the balcony doors stood open overlooking the
-beautiful, extensive lake, which was so bright and still that the
-mountains of Savoy, with the country towns, woods, and snowy tops,
-were all reflected in it.
-
-Rudy, who was always bold, lively, and confident, felt himself out of
-his element, as they say; and he moved about as if he were walking on
-peas on a smooth floor. How slowly the hours passed! as if on the
-treadmill. And now they went for a walk, and it was just as tedious;
-Rudy might have taken two steps forward and then one back, and still
-kept pace with the others. They walked down to Chillon, the old gloomy
-castle on the rock, to see the instruments of torture, and
-death-chambers, the rusty chains on the rocky walls, the stony bed for
-those sentenced to death, the trap-doors through which the unfortunate
-beings were precipitated downwards and impaled on the iron spikes
-amidst the surf. They called it delightful to see all this. It was a
-place of execution, elevated by Byron's song into the world of poetry.
-Rudy felt it altogether the scene of executions; he leaned against the
-great stone window-frames and looked into that deep, bluish-green
-water, and over to the little solitary island with the three acacias;
-he wished himself there, and away from the whole chattering party; but
-Babette felt herself particularly cheerful. She said she had been
-unusually entertained; she found the cousin perfect.
-
-"Yes, a perfect chatterbox!" said Rudy; and it was the first time that
-Rudy said anything which displeased her. The Englishman had presented
-her with a little book as a memento of Chillon; it was a French
-version of Byron's poem, _The Prisoner of Chillon_, which Babette
-could read.
-
-"The book may be good enough," said Rudy, "but I don't care for the
-much-combed fellow who gave it you."
-
-"He seemed to me like a meal-sack without any meal!" said the miller,
-laughing at his own wit. Rudy also laughed, and said that it was very
-well put.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE COUSIN.
-
-
-A few days later, when Rudy came to call at the mill, he found the
-young Englishman there. Babette was just offering him some boiled
-trout, which she herself must have garnished with parsley, it looked
-so dainty. That was quite unnecessary. What business had the
-Englishman here? What did he come for? To enjoy refreshments from the
-hands of Babette? Rudy was jealous, and that amused Babette; it
-gratified her to get a glimpse of all sides of his disposition, both
-strong and weak. Love was as yet but play to her, and she played with
-Rudy's whole heart; and though, as one may say, he was her happiness,
-the chief thought of her life, the best and grandest in the world;
-yes--but the more gloomy did he look, so much the more did her eyes
-laugh; she could almost have kissed the blond Englishman with the
-yellow whiskers, if by that means she could succeed in sending Rudy
-fuming away, for by that she would know how she was beloved by him.
-But this was not right or prudent of little Babette, only she was no
-more than nineteen. She did not think much of it; she thought still
-less how she could explain her conduct, which was more free and easy
-with the young Englishman than was suitable for the miller's modest
-and recently betrothed daughter.
-
-The mill was situated where the highroad from Bex runs under the
-snow-covered peak which, the country people call the Diablerets, not
-far from a rapid, grayish-white mountain stream, like foaming
-soap-suds. This did not drive the mill; it was driven by a lesser
-stream, which was precipitated from the rock on the other side of the
-river, and was dammed up by a stone wall so as to increase its force
-and headway, and carried into a closed wooden basin by a broad channel
-away over the rapid river. This channel was so abundantly supplied
-with water that it overflowed, and made a wet, slippery path for those
-who used it as a short cut to the mill. The idea occurred to the young
-Englishman to use it, and dressed in white, like a working miller, he
-clambered over in the evening, guided by the light shining from
-Babette's room. But he had not learnt to climb, and nearly went
-head-foremost into the stream, but escaped with wet sleeves and
-bespattered trousers. Muddy and dirty he came below Babette's windows,
-clambered up into the old lime-tree and imitated the call of an owl,
-for he could not sing like any other bird. Babette heard it, and
-peeped through her thin curtains; but when she saw the white man, and
-easily guessed who it was, her little heart beat with fright and with
-resentment. She hastily put out her light, saw that all the
-window-bolts were fastened, and left him to hoot.
-
-[Illustration: "Babette peeped through the curtains."]
-
-It would be terrible if Rudy were now in the mill, but Rudy was not in
-the mill; no, what was much worse, he was just below it. There was
-high talk, angry words; there would be fighting, perhaps murder.
-
-Babette opened her window in alarm, called Rudy's name, and told him
-to go away.
-
-"You will not let me stay!" he shouted; "then it is an appointment!
-You are expecting good friends, better than me! Shame on you,
-Babette!"
-
-"You are detestable!" said Babette; "I hate you!" and now she was
-crying. "Go! go!"
-
-"I have not deserved this treatment!" said he, and he went; his cheeks
-were like fire, his heart was like fire.
-
-Babette flung herself on her bed, and wept.
-
-"I love you so much, Rudy! and you can believe that of me!"
-
-And she was angry, very angry, and that did her good, for otherwise
-she would have been deeply grieved; now she could fall asleep and
-sleep the invigorating sleep of youth.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE POWERS OF EVIL.
-
-
-Rudy left Bex, and took the homeward path up the mountains, in the
-fresh, cooling air, the domain of the Ice-Maiden. The thick foliage of
-the trees deep below him looked as if they were potato plants; the
-firs and the bushes appeared even less, the Alpine roses bloomed near
-the snow, which lay in separate patches as if it were linen put out to
-bleach. There was a single blue gentian, and he crushed it with the
-butt-end of his gun.
-
-Higher up he saw two chamois. Rudy's eyes sparkled, his thoughts took
-a new flight; but he was not near enough to them for him to shoot with
-confidence; so he climbed higher, where only coarse grass grew among
-the blocks of stone; the chamois went placidly along the snow-fields.
-Rudy hurried on eagerly, surrounded by misty clouds, and on a sudden
-he stood in front of a precipitous rocky wall, and the rain began to
-fall in torrents.
-
-He felt a parching thirst, his head was hot, but his limbs were cold.
-He seized his hunting-flask, but it was empty; he had not thought of
-it when he rushed up the mountain. He had never been ill, but now he
-had a presentiment of it; he was tired, he felt a desire to throw
-himself down and go to sleep, but everything was streaming with water.
-Strange objects vibrated before his eyes, but he saw on a sudden, what
-he had never seen there before, a newly-built low house, leaning
-against the rock, and at the door stood a young maiden. He thought it
-was the schoolmaster's Annette, whom he once had kissed at a dance,
-but it was not Annette, and yet he had seen her before, perhaps near
-Grindelwald, that night when he went home from the shooting match at
-Interlaken.
-
-"Where do you come from?" he demanded.
-
-"I am at home!" said she. "I am watching my flock."
-
-"Your flock! Where do they graze? Here are only snow and rocks!"
-
-"You are very clever!" said she with a laugh. "Here behind us, lower
-down, is a beautiful meadow! that is where my goats go. I take good
-care of them! I don't lose one; what is mine remains mine!"
-
-[Illustration: She came out with a bowl of wine and gave it to Rudy to
-drink.]
-
-"You are brave!" said Rudy.
-
-"You also!" replied she.
-
-"Have you any milk? Pray give me some, for I am intolerably thirsty!"
-
-"I have something better than milk!" said she, "that you shall have!
-Yesterday some travelers came here with their guide; they forgot half
-a bottle of wine, such as you have never tasted; they will not fetch
-it, and I don't drink it, so you can have it."
-
-And she came out with the wine, poured it into a wooden bowl, and gave
-it to Rudy.
-
-"That is good!" said he. "I have never tasted any wine so warming and
-fiery!" and his eyes sparkled, and there came an animation, a glow
-into him, as if all sorrow and depression had evaporated; and the
-gushing, fresh human nature coursed through his veins.
-
-"But this is surely the schoolmaster's Annette!" he exclaimed. "Give
-me a kiss!"
-
-"Then give me the pretty ring you have on your finger!"
-
-"My engagement ring?"
-
-"Exactly so!" said the girl; and she poured wine into the bowl, and
-held it to his lips, and he drank it. The joy of living was in his
-blood, he felt as if all the world belonged to him, and why should he
-worry? Everything is for us to enjoy and to make us happy! The stream
-of life is a stream of joy; to ride on it, to let ourselves float on
-its surface, that is felicity! He looked at the young girl: it was
-Annette, and still it was not Annette; even less was it the goblin
-phantom, as he had called her, he met near Grindelwald. The girl here
-on the mountain was fresh as the new-fallen snow, blooming as an
-Alpine rose, and nimble as a kid, but still formed out of Adam's ribs,
-as human as Rudy. And he put his arms around her, and gazed into her
-wonderfully clear eyes. It was only for a second, and in this--who can
-explain it? was it the spirit of life or of death that filled
-him?--was he raised on high, or did he sink down into the deep,
-murderous abyss of ice, deeper, ever deeper? He saw the walls of ice
-like blue-green glass; endless crevasses gaped around him, and water
-dripped sounding like chimes, and gleaming like pearls in bluish-white
-flames. The Ice-Maiden gave him a kiss, and it chilled him through his
-backbone and into his brain. He gave one cry of pain, dragged himself
-away, stumbled and fell, and it was night before his eyes. The powers
-of evil had played their game.
-
-[Illustration: "The Ice-maiden gave him a kiss."]
-
-When he reopened his eyes the Alpine maiden was gone, as was also the
-sheltering cottage. Water drove down the bare rocky wall, the snow lay
-all round him; Rudy shivered with cold, he was soaked to the skin, and
-his ring was gone, his engagement ring which Babette had given him.
-His gun lay by him in the snow; he took it up and wished to discharge
-it, but it missed fire. Watery clouds lay like solid masses of snow in
-the crevasse; Giddiness sat there and lured on her helpless prey, and
-under her there was a sound in the deep crevasse as if a huge rock
-were falling, crushing and sweeping away everything that would stop it
-in its fall.
-
-But in the mill Babette sat weeping. Rudy had not been near her for
-six days--he who was in the wrong, he who ought to ask her
-forgiveness, because she loved him with her whole heart.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-IN THE MILLER'S HOUSE.
-
-
-"What horrid nonsense it is with these human beings!" said the parlor
-cat to the kitchen cat. "Now it is broken off again with Babette and
-Rudy. She is crying, and he does not think any more of her."
-
-"I can't endure that," said the kitchen cat.
-
-"No more can I," said the parlor cat, "but I won't grieve over it!
-Babette may now be the beloved of the red whiskers! but he has not
-been here since he wished to get on the roof."
-
-The powers of evil have their game, both without us and within us.
-This Rudy had discovered and thought over. What was it that had taken
-place about him and in him on the top of the mountain? Was it a
-vision, or a feverish dream? Never before had he known fever or
-illness. He had made an examination of his own heart when he judged
-Babette. Could he confess to Babette the thoughts which assailed him
-in the hour of temptation? He had lost her ring, and it was exactly in
-that loss that she had regained him. Would she confess to him? It
-seemed as if his heart would burst asunder when he thought of her;
-there arose within him so many memories; he seemed really to see her,
-laughing like a merry child. Many an affectionate word she had spoken
-in the abundance of her heart came like a gleam of sunshine into his
-breast, and soon it was all sunshine therein for Babette.
-
-She might be able to confess to him, and she ought to do so.
-
-He went to the mill, and confessed, beginning with a kiss, and ending
-in the admission that he was the offender. It was a great offense in
-him that he could distrust Babette's fidelity; it was almost
-unpardonable! Such distrust, such impetuosity might bring them both to
-grief. Yes, indeed! and therefore Babette lectured him, and she was
-pleased with herself, and it suited her so well. But in one thing Rudy
-was right--godmother's relation was a chatterbox! She wished to burn
-the book which he had given her, and not have the least thing in her
-possession that could remind her of him.
-
-"Now that's all over!" said the parlor cat. "Rudy is here again, they
-understand each other, and that is the greatest good fortune, they
-say."
-
-"I heard in the night," said the kitchen cat, "the rats say the
-greatest good fortune is to eat tallow-candles and to have quite
-enough rancid bacon. Now, which shall I believe--rats, or a pair of
-lovers?"
-
-"Neither of them!" said the parlor cat. "That is always safest."
-
-The greatest good fortune for Rudy and Babette was close at hand; the
-wedding day--the most beautiful day, as they called it.
-
-But the marriage was not to take place at the church at Bex, or in the
-miller's house; the godmother wished the wedding to be held at her
-house, and that they should be married in the pretty little church at
-Montreux. The miller stuck to it that this request should be complied
-with; he alone was aware what the godmother intended to give the
-bride for a wedding present, and considered they ought to make so
-slight a concession. The day was fixed. On the previous evening they
-were to journey to Villeneuve, and to proceed in the early morning to
-Montreux by boat, that the godmother's daughters might deck the bride.
-
-"There will be a feast here the day after the wedding," said the
-parlor cat. "Otherwise I would not give one mew for the lot."
-
-"There _will_ be a feast!" said the kitchen cat; "ducks and pigeons
-are killed, and a whole deer hangs on the wall. It makes my mouth
-water to look at it! In the morning they start on their journey."
-
-Yes, in the morning! This evening Rudy and Babette sat together, as
-betrothed, for the last time at the mill.
-
-Out of doors was the Alpine glow, the evening bells chimed, the
-daughters of the sunbeams sang: "May the best thing happen!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-VISIONS IN THE NIGHT.
-
-
-The sun was set, the clouds came down in the Rhone valley between the
-high mountains, the wind blew from the south, a wind from Africa, but,
-over the high Alps, a tempest, rending the clouds asunder, and, when
-the wind had swept by, for one instant it was quite still; the torn
-clouds hung in fantastic shapes among the tree-clad mountains, and
-over the rushing Rhone; they hung in shapes like antediluvian
-monsters, like eagles hovering in the air and like frogs leaping in a
-pool; they came down over the rapid stream, they sailed over it
-although they sailed in the air. The river bore on its surface a
-pine-tree torn up by the roots, watery eddies flowed before it; that
-was Giddiness--there were more than one--moving in a circle on the
-onward-rushing stream. The moon shone on the snow-covered mountain
-tops, on the black woods and the strange white clouds, visions of
-night, spirits of the powers of nature; the mountain peasants saw
-them through the windows, they sailed below in crowds before the
-Ice-Maiden who came from her glacier palace, and sat on her
-frail-craft, the uprooted pine-tree, carrying the glacier water with
-her down the stream to the open lake.
-
-"The wedding guests are coming!" That was what whistled and sang in
-the air and the water.
-
-There were visions without and visions within. Babette dreamed a
-strange dream.
-
-It appeared to her as if she was married to Rudy, and that many years
-had passed. He was now hunting chamois, but she was at home, and there
-sat with her the young Englishman with the yellow whiskers. His
-glances were warm, his words had a power of witchcraft; he held out
-his hands to her, and she was obliged to follow him. They left her
-home and went down the mountain, ever down, and it seemed to Babette
-as if there lay a burden on her heart, which was always growing
-heavier. It was a sin against Rudy, a sin against God. And then on a
-sudden she was standing deserted; her clothes were torn by the
-thorns, her hair was gray. She looked up in her grief, and on the edge
-of a cliff she saw Rudy. She held out her arms towards him, but did
-not venture to call or pray. Nor would it have helped her, for she
-quickly saw that it was not he, but only his hunting-jacket and hat,
-which were hanging on his alpenstock, as hunters set them to deceive
-the chamois. And in the depth of her affliction Babette wailed out:
-"Oh, that I had died on the day I was married, the day of my greatest
-happiness! that would have been a happy life! that would have been the
-best thing that could happen for me and Rudy! None knows his future!"
-and in her impious grief she precipitated herself into a deep chasm in
-the rocks. The spell was broken, and with a cry she awoke.
-
-The dream had vanished, but she knew that she had dreamed something
-dreadful, and that she had dreamed of the young Englishman, whom she
-had not seen or thought of for several months. Was he in Montreux? Was
-she about to see him at the wedding? Her pretty lips tightened at the
-thought, and she knit her brows. But soon there came a smile, and her
-eyes gleamed; the sun was shining so beautifully outside, and the
-morning was that of her wedding with Rudy.
-
-He was already in the parlor when she came down, and soon they were
-away to Villeneuve. They were a very happy couple; and the miller with
-them laughed and beamed in the highest spirits; he was a good father
-and an upright man.
-
-"Now we are the masters at home!" said the parlor cat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-
-It was not yet evening when the three happy people reached Villeneuve,
-and sat down to their repast. After dinner the miller sat in an
-easy-chair with his pipe, and took a little nap. The young couple went
-arm in arm out of the town, then by the carriage road under the rocks
-so thick with bushes, skirting the deep bluish-green lake. The gloomy
-Chillon reflected its gray walls and massive towers in the clear
-water; the little island with the three acacia trees lay still nearer,
-appearing like a bouquet in the lake.
-
-"It must be delightful out there!" said Babette; she had still the
-strongest inclination to go there, and that wish could be immediately
-fulfilled; there lay a boat by the bank, the line that held it was
-easy to unfasten. They could not see any one from whom to ask
-permission, and so they took the boat, for Rudy could row well.
-
-The oars caught hold of the water like the fins of a fish, the water
-that is so pliable and yet so strong, that is all a back to bear, all
-a mouth to devour, mildly smiling, softness itself, and yet
-overwhelming and strong to rend asunder. The water foamed in the wake
-of the boat, in which in a few minutes the couple had gained the
-island, where they landed. There was not more than room enough on it
-for two to dance.
-
-Rudy turned Babette round two or three times, and then, hand in hand,
-they seated themselves on the little bench beneath the overhanging
-acacias, and gazed into each other's eyes, while all around them was
-illuminated in the splendor of the setting sun. The pine forests on
-the mountains put on a lilac hue like heather when in flower, and
-where the trees ceased and the bare rock came into view it glowed as
-if the mountain was transparent; the clouds in the heavens were
-lighted up as if with red fire, the whole lake was like a fresh,
-blushing rose-leaf. Already, as the shadows lifted themselves up to the
-snow-clad hills of Savoy, they became bluish, but the topmost peaks
-shone as if of red lava, and for one moment looked as if these glowing
-masses had raised themselves from the bowels of the earth and were not
-yet extinguished. That was an Alpine glow, such as Rudy and Babette
-could never hope to see the equal of. The snow-covered Dent du Midi
-had a splendor like the face of the full moon when it is rising.
-
-"So much beauty! so much happiness!" they both said.
-
-"The earth has no more to give me!" said Rudy. "An evening hour like
-this is a whole lifetime! How often have I felt my good fortune as I
-feel it now, and thought, 'If all were now ended, how fortunately I
-should have lived! How blessed is this world!' and the day ended; but
-a new one began again, and it seemed to me that it was fairer still!
-Heaven is infinitely good, Babette!"
-
-"I am so happy!" said she.
-
-"Earth has nothing more to give me!" exclaimed Rudy.
-
-And the evening bells chimed from the mountains of Savoy, from the
-mountains of Switzerland; the dark blue Jura lifted itself towards the
-west in a golden luster.
-
-"God give thee what is grandest and best!" exclaimed Babette.
-
-"That He will!" said Rudy. "To-morrow I shall have it! to-morrow thou
-wilt be mine! my own little, charming wife!"
-
-"The boat!" cried Babette at that moment.
-
-The boat, which was to take them back, had broken loose and drifted
-from the island.
-
-"I will fetch it!" said Rudy, throwing off his coat; and he pulled off
-his boots, sprang into the lake, and took rapid strokes towards the
-boat.
-
-Cold and deep was the clear, bluish-green water from the mountain
-glacier. Rudy looked down below, only one single glance--and he
-thought he saw a golden ring rolling, and gleaming, and playing--he
-thought of his lost betrothal ring, and the ring became larger, and
-expanded into a sparkling circle, and in that shone the clear glacier;
-interminable deep crevasses yawned around him, and the dripping water
-sounded like a carillon of bells and gleamed with bluish flames; in an
-instant he saw what we have to tell in so many words. Young huntsmen
-and young maidens, men and women, once swallowed up in the crevasses
-of the glacier, stood here alive, with open eyes and smiling mouth,
-and deep under them came the sound of church bells from submerged
-towns; a congregation knelt under the church arches, pieces of ice
-formed the organ-pipes, mountain torrents played on it. The Ice-Maiden
-sat on the clear, transparent floor; she raised herself up towards
-Rudy, kissed his feet, and there ran a deadly coldness through his
-limbs, an electric shock--ice and fire! one does not know the
-difference at the first touch.
-
-"Mine! mine!" sounded about him and in him. "I kissed thee when thou
-wast little! I kissed thee on the mouth! now I kiss thee on the toe
-and on the heel--thou art mine altogether!"
-
-And he was lost in the clear blue water.
-
-All was still; the church bells ceased to ring, the last notes died
-away with the splendor on the red clouds. "Mine thou art!" sounded
-again in the depths; "Mine thou art!" sounded in the heights, from the
-Infinite.
-
-The icy kiss of Death overcame that which was corruptible; the prelude
-was over before the drama of life could begin, the discord resolved
-into harmony.
-
-It is beautiful to fly from love to Love, from earth into the Heaven.
-
-Do you call that a sad story?
-
-Unfortunate Babette! It was a fearful time for her! the boat drifted
-farther and farther away. No one on shore knew that the bridal pair
-were on the little island. Night drew on; the clouds descended and it
-became dark. She stood there alone, despairing, weeping. A furious
-storm broke over her; lightning illuminated the mountains of Jura,
-Switzerland, and Savoy, and thunder rolled continuously. The
-lightning was almost as bright as the sun; one could see each single
-vine as at midday, and then immediately everything would be shrouded
-in the thickest darkness. The flashes formed knots, rings, zig-zags;
-they struck round about the lake, they shone from all sides, while the
-peals were increased by the echoes. On the land people drew the boats
-higher up the banks; every living thing sought shelter, and the rain
-poured down in torrents.
-
-"Wherever are Rudy and Babette in this furious storm?" said the
-miller.
-
-Babette sat with clasped hands, with her head in her lap speechless
-with grief.
-
-"In that deep water!" she said within herself. "He is deep down, as
-under the glacier!"
-
-And she remembered what Rudy had told her of his mother's death, of
-his own rescue, and how he had been brought up as one dead out of the
-crevasse in the glacier. "The Ice-Maiden has him again!"
-
-And the lightning flashed as blinding as a ray of the sun on the white
-snow. Babette started; the lake lifted itself at that instant, like a
-shining glacier; the Ice-Maiden stood there, majestic, pale blue,
-shining, and at her feet lay Rudy's corpse. "Mine!" said she; and
-round about was again darkness and gloom, and rushing water.
-
-"Cruel!" moaned Babette. "Why then should he die, when the happy day
-was come! O God! enlighten my understanding! shine into my heart! I
-cannot understand Thy ways, but I bow to Thy power and wisdom!"
-
-And God shone into her heart. A flash of thought, a ray of light, her
-dream of last night, as if it were real, seemed to shine through her;
-she called to mind the words which she had spoken: she had wished for
-_the best thing_ for herself and Rudy.
-
-"Woe is me! was that the seed of sin in my heart? was my dream a future
-life, whose string must be snapped for my salvation? Miserable me!"
-
-She sat wailing in the gloomy, dark night. In the deep stillness she
-thought that Rudy's words sounded again, the last he had uttered:
-"Earth has nothing more to give me!" They had been said in the
-abundance of happiness, they came back to her in the depth of her
-grief.
-
-[Illustration: The Ice-Maiden stood there, majestic, pale blue,
-shining, and at her feet lay Rudy.]
-
-A couple of years have elapsed. The lake smiles, the banks smile; the
-vines put forth swelling grapes; steamboats with waving flags hurry
-past, pleasure-boats with both their sails set fly like white
-butterflies over the expanse of water; the railway above Chillon has
-been opened, and leads deep into the Rhone valley. At every station
-visitors get out, they come with their red guide-books and read to
-themselves what remarkable things they have to see. They visit
-Chillon, they see from thence in the lake the little island with the
-three acacias, and read in the book of a bridal pair who, in the year
-1856, sailed thither one evening, of the bridegroom's death and: "next
-morning the bride's despairing cry was first heard on the shore."
-
-But the guide-books make no mention of Babette's quiet life with her
-father, not in the mill--strangers live there--but in the pretty
-house near the railway station, where from the windows she often looks
-out in the afternoon over the chestnut trees to the snow mountains
-where Rudy used to disport himself; she sees in the evenings the
-Alpine glow, the Children of the Sun encamping above and repeating the
-song of the traveler whose mantle the whirlwind carried away; it took
-the covering, but not the man himself.
-
-There is a rosy luster on the snow of the mountains, there is a rosy
-luster in every heart where the thought is: "God lets that which is
-best come to pass!" but that is not always revealed to us as it was to
-Babette in her dream.
-
-
-
-
-THE FELLOW-TRAVELER.
-
-
-Poor Johannes was sorely afflicted, for his father was ill, past all
-hope of recovery. Besides their two selves, not a soul was present in
-the little room. The lamp on the table was flickering, and it was late
-at night.
-
-"You have been a good son, Johannes," said the sick father, "and God
-will, no doubt, help you on in the world." And he gazed at him with
-mild and thoughtful eyes, fetched a deep sigh, and then died--though
-he only looked as if he had gone to sleep. But Johannes wept; for now
-he had nobody in the wide world--neither father, mother, sister, nor
-brother. Poor Johannes! He knelt down beside the bed, kissed his dead
-father's hand, and shed many, many bitter tears! But at length his
-eyes closed, and he fell asleep against the hard bedpost.
-
-He had then a strange dream. He thought the sun and moon came down to
-him, and he saw his father again in full health and freshness, and
-heard him laugh as he used to do when he was pleased. A pretty girl,
-with a gold crown on her long, shining hair, presented her hand to
-him; and his father said: "Look what a bride you have won. She is the
-loveliest maid upon earth." He then woke, and all these fine things
-vanished; his father lay dead and cold in his bed, and nobody was near
-them. Poor Johannes!
-
-In the following week, the dead man was buried. The son followed close
-behind the coffin, for he was never again to behold the father who had
-loved him so dearly. He heard them fling the earth down upon the
-coffin, and still saw a little corner of it left; but, at the next
-shovelful, even that disappeared. Then he felt as though his heart
-would break, so afflicted was he. They sang a psalm round the grave,
-and it sounded so beautiful that it brought tears into Johannes' eyes.
-He wept, and felt relieved. The sun shone down gloriously on the green
-trees, just as if it meant to say: "You must not be so mournful,
-Johannes. Look how beautifully blue the sky is yonder! Your father is
-up above, and is begging of the All-merciful that you may thrive at
-all times!"
-
-"I will always be good," said Johannes, "then I shall join my father
-in heaven; and what joy it will be to meet him again! How much I shall
-have to tell him, and how much he will have to teach me about the
-delights of heaven, just as he used to teach me here on earth. Oh,
-what joy that will be!"
-
-He fancied it all so plainly that he smiled, while the tears still ran
-down his cheeks. The birds in the chestnut trees kept twittering,
-"Twit! twit!" They were gay, although they had been at the funeral;
-but they knew that the dead man was now in heaven, and had wings much
-larger and more beautiful than their own; and that he was happy,
-because he had been good here on earth: and, therefore, they were
-pleased. Johannes saw how they flew from the green trees out into the
-wide world, and then he wished to fly away also. But he first cut out
-a large wooden cross to place on his father's grave; and when he
-brought it thither in the evening, he found the grave decked with
-gravel and flowers. This had been done by strangers, who all esteemed
-the worthy man who had gone to his last home.
-
-Early the next morning, Johannes packed up his little bundle, and put
-into his girdle his whole legacy, consisting of fifty dollars and a
-couple of silver shillings, with which he meant to wander forth into
-the world. But first of all he repaired to his father's grave in the
-churchyard, where he repeated the Lord's Prayer, and then said,
-"Farewell!"
-
-Abroad in the fields through which he passed, all the flowers looked
-fresh and lovely in the warm sunshine. And they nodded in the wind,
-just as if they meant to say: "Welcome to the greenwood! Is it not
-delightful here?" But Johannes turned round to give a last look at the
-old church, in which he was christened as an infant, and where he used
-to go with his father every Sunday to hear the service, and to sing
-his psalm; and in so doing he perceived, in one of the upper loopholes
-of the church tower, the little goblin belonging to it, who stood
-with his little pointed, red cap on his head, shading his countenance
-with his arm, so that the sun might not stream into his eyes. Johannes
-nodded farewell to him; and the little goblin waved his red cap, laid
-his hand on his heart, and then kissed his hand to him, to show that
-he was kindly disposed towards him, and wished him a happy journey.
-
-Johannes now thought of how many beautiful things he should see in the
-wide world, so large and so magnificent as it was; and he went on and
-on much further than he had ever been before. He did not know the
-places through which he passed, nor the people whom he met. He was now
-abroad in a foreign land.
-
-The first night he was obliged to lie on a haycock in the open fields,
-for he had no other bed. But this he thought was so nice a bed that
-the king himself could not be better off. The field, and the haycock,
-with the blue sky above, certainly formed a very pretty bed-chamber.
-The green grass, dotted with little red and white flowers, was the
-carpet; the elder bushes and hedges of wild roses were the nosegays
-that decorated the room; and his washing-basin was the brook, with its
-clear, pure waters, where the reeds were nodding to bid him good night
-and good morning. The moon was a large lamp, high up in the blue
-ceiling, and one that could not set fire to the curtains. Johannes
-might sleep in peace, and he did so, nor did he wake till the sun
-rose, and all the little birds around were singing: "Good morrow! Good
-morrow! Are you not yet up?"
-
-The bells were ringing for church, for it was Sunday. The people were
-going to hear the preacher, and Johannes followed them, sang a psalm,
-and heard the word of God. He felt just as if he were in his own
-parish church, in which he had been christened, and where he sang
-psalms with his father.
-
-In the churchyard were several graves, some of which were overgrown
-with very high grass. And he thought how his father's grave would grow
-to look the same in the end, as he would not be there to weed it and
-deck it. So he fell to work and tore up the grass, and set up the
-wooden crosses that had fallen down, and replaced the wreaths that had
-been blown away by the wind, thinking all the time, "Perhaps some one
-is doing the same for my father's grave, as I am unable to take care
-of it."
-
-Before the church door stood an aged beggar, leaning on a crutch.
-Johannes gave him his silver shillings, and then went forth on his
-way, lighter and happier than he had felt before.
-
-Towards evening there arose a violent storm, which made him hasten to
-find a shelter. Darkness soon came on; but at length he reached a
-small and lonely church that stood on a little hill.
-
-"I will sit down in a corner," said he, as he went in; "I am so tired
-that I need rest." He then sat down, and folded his hands, and said
-his evening prayer; and before he perceived it, he was fast asleep,
-and dreaming, while a thunderstorm was raging abroad.
-
-When he awoke, it was in the middle of the night, but the fearful
-storm was over, and the moon shone in through the window to greet him.
-In the middle of the church stood an open coffin, in which lay the
-body of a man, that was awaiting burial. Johannes was not fearful, for
-he had a good conscience; and, besides, he knew that the dead never
-injure any one. It is only living, wicked men that do any harm. Two
-such bad characters stood beside the dead man that was lying in the
-church awaiting burial, and they wanted to vent their spite, by not
-letting him rest in his coffin, and casting his poor body outside the
-church door.
-
-"Why do you want to do so?" asked Johannes. "It would be very wicked.
-In Christ's name, let him rest in peace!"
-
-"Oh, stuff and nonsense!" said the two hideous men; "he has taken us
-in. He owed us money, and couldn't pay it; and now he is dead into the
-bargain, and we shan't recover a penny! Therefore we will take our
-revenge, and he shall lie outside the church door like a dog."
-
-"I have nothing in the world but fifty dollars," said Johannes, "which
-form my whole patrimony; yet will I willingly give them to you,
-provided you promise truly to leave the dead man in peace. I shall
-manage without the money. I have strong and healthy limbs, and a
-merciful God will assist me in times of need!"
-
-"Of course," said the ugly men, "if you pay his debt, we will neither
-of us lay a finger upon him--that you may depend upon." And hereupon
-they took the money which he gave them, laughed aloud at his simple
-good nature, and went their ways. Then he laid the body carefully back
-into the coffin, folded the dead man's hands, took leave of him and
-continued his way through a large forest, in a contented frame of
-mind.
-
-All around him, wherever the moon shone through the trees, he saw
-numbers of elegant little elves at play. His presence did not disturb
-them, for they knew him to be a good and harmless son of the earth;
-for it is only bad people who are not privileged to see the elves.
-Some of them were not taller than the breadth of one's finger, and
-wore their long yellow hair fastened up with gold combs. They were
-rocking themselves, two by two, on the large dewdrops that sparkled on
-the leaves and the tall grass. Now and then the drop would roll away,
-and down they fell between the long blades, occasioning a deal of
-laughter and merriment amongst the tiny folk. It was a pretty sight.
-Then they sang, and Johannes recognized distinctly all the pretty
-songs he had learned as a little boy. Large speckled spiders, with
-silver crowns upon their heads, were set to build suspension bridges
-and palaces from one hedge to another, which, when spangled by the
-dew, glittered like glass in the moonshine. These frolics continued
-till sunrise, when the little elves crept into the flower-buds and the
-wind took possession of their bridges and palaces, which were tossed
-upon the air as cobwebs.
-
-Johannes had just left the forest, when the full-toned voice of a man
-cried out to him, "Ho there, comrade! whither are you going?"
-
-"Into the wide world," said he. "I have neither father nor mother, and
-am a poor boy; but the Lord will help me in time of need."
-
-"I am likewise going into the wide world," said the stranger. "Shall
-we keep each other company?"
-
-"Willingly," said he; and so they walked on together. They soon felt a
-mutual liking for each other, for both were good; only Johannes soon
-found out that the stranger was much wiser than himself. He had
-traveled throughout nearly the whole world, and could tell of
-everything that existed.
-
-The sun was already high when they sat down under a tree to eat their
-breakfast, just as an old woman was coming up to them. She was very
-aged, and almost bent double, and supported herself on a crutch-stick,
-while she carried on her back a bundle of firewood, which she had
-gathered in the forest. Her apron was tucked up, and Johannes saw
-three large rods of fern and willow twigs peeping out at each end.
-When she was quite close to our travelers, her foot slipped, and she
-fell with a loud scream, for she had broken her leg--poor old woman!
-
-Johannes at once proposed that they should carry the old woman home;
-but the stranger opened his knapsack, and took out a box, saying that
-he had an ointment which would immediately make her leg whole again,
-and so strong that she would be able to walk home by herself, just as
-if the accident had never happened: only he required that she should
-give him in return the three rods she carried in her apron.
-
-"That would be well paid," said the old woman, nodding her head in a
-peculiar manner. She did not like giving up the rods; but, on the
-other hand, it was still more disagreeable to be lying there with a
-broken limb. So she gave him the rods, and the moment he had rubbed
-her leg with the ointment the old dame got up, and walked much better
-than before. Such were the effects of the ointment; and truly it was
-not of a sort to be purchased at the apothecary's.
-
-"What do you want with these rods?" asked Johannes of his
-fellow-traveler.
-
-"They are three very pretty herb-brooms," said he, "and I like them,
-because I am a foolish fellow."
-
-They then went on a good deal further.
-
-"Look how overcast the sky appears!" said Johannes, pointing before
-them. "Those are frightfully heavy clouds."
-
-"No," said his fellow-traveler, "they are not clouds; they are
-mountains--fine, large mountains--at the top of which one may overlook
-the clouds, and breathe fresh air. And delightful it is, believe me,
-to stand there! To-morrow we shall assuredly be far out in the wide
-world."
-
-But they were not so near as they looked, and it took a full day
-before they had reached the mountains, where the black forests were
-towering up to the sky, and where blocks of stone might be found as
-huge as a large town. It seemed a somewhat difficult undertaking to
-cross them; therefore, Johannes and his fellow-traveler turned into an
-inn, in order to rest and gather strength for the next day's
-excursion.
-
-A number of persons were assembled in the tap-room of the inn, where a
-man was exhibiting a puppet-show. He had just set up his little
-theater, and the people were sitting round to see the play. But, right
-in front, a stout butcher had sat himself down in the very best place,
-while a great bulldog by his side--who looked wondrously snappish--sat
-staring like the rest of the audience.
-
-The play now began. It was a very pretty piece, with a king and queen,
-who sat on a splendid throne, with gold crowns on their heads and long
-trains to their robes; for their means allowed them to indulge in such
-luxuries. The prettiest little puppets, with glass eyes and large
-mustaches, stood at all the doors, and opened and shut them, to let in
-fresh air. It was a very agreeable play, and not at all mournful. But,
-just as the queen got up, and passed across the stage, no one knows
-what the huge bulldog took into his head; but, being no longer held by
-the butcher, he jumped right into the theater, and seized the queen by
-the middle of her slender waist, so that it cracked again. It was
-quite shocking to hear.
-
-The poor man who exhibited the show was both frightened and sorry for
-the loss of his queen, for she was the most elegant puppet in his
-stock, and the ugly bulldog had bitten her head off. But when the rest
-of the spectators had retired, the stranger who traveled with Johannes
-said that he would set her to rights, and taking out his box, he
-smeared the puppet with the same ointment that had cured the old
-woman's broken leg. The moment this was done, the puppet was whole
-again, and could even move all her limbs of herself, and no longer
-required to be pulled by wires. The puppet was like a human being,
-except that it could not speak. The showman was vastly delighted, for
-now he had no longer any occasion to hold this puppet, who could dance
-of her own accord, which none of the others could do.
-
-Late at night, when all the folks at the inn had gone to bed, somebody
-was heard to sigh so dreadfully deep, and so frequently, that the
-whole household got up, to see what could be the matter. The showman
-went to his little theater, for it was from thence the sighing
-proceeded. All the wooden puppets were lying in a heap; the king and
-his body-guard it was who were sighing so piteously, and staring with
-their glass eyes, because they wished to be smeared a little like the
-queen, in order that they might move of themselves. The queen knelt
-down and lifted up her pretty crown, saying, "Take this, but do smear
-my husband and my courtiers." The poor showman could not then help
-crying, for he was really sorry for his puppets. He immediately
-promised Johannes' fellow-traveler all the money he might earn on the
-following evening through his puppet-show, if he would only smear four
-or five of his prettiest puppets. But the fellow-traveler said he did
-not require anything but the large sword that he wore at his side, on
-receiving which, he besmeared six puppets, that immediately danced so
-gracefully that all living girls that beheld them were irresistibly
-impelled to dance likewise. The coachman and the cook began dancing,
-then the waiters and the chambermaids, and all the strangers present,
-as well as the shovel and the tongs--only the latter fell down at the
-very first leap. They had indeed, a merry night of it!
-
-Next morning, Johannes started with his fellow-traveler, before any of
-the others were astir, and crossed the large forest of fir-trees, in
-their way up the high mountains. They climbed to such a height that
-the church steeples below looked like little blue berries in the green
-grass, and they could see for miles and miles around, where they had
-never yet been. Johannes had never before seen so much at once of the
-beauties of this lovely world. And then the sun shone so warmly
-through the fresh blue air, and the huntsmen's horns echoed so
-beautifully between the mountains, that tears came into his eyes, and
-he could not forbear exclaiming, "All-merciful God! what a kind Father
-Thou art to us, to have given us all the fine things to be seen in the
-world!"
-
-His fellow-traveler likewise stood with folded hands, and gazed upon
-the forest, and the towns that lay in the bright sunshine. At the same
-moment, they heard a lovely sound above their heads, and on looking
-up, they perceived a large white swan hovering in the air, and singing
-as no bird had ever sung before. But its voice grew weaker and weaker,
-till its head drooped, and it slowly dropped down to their feet, where
-the poor bird lay quite dead.
-
-"Two such beautiful wings," said the fellow-traveler, "so white and so
-large as this bird's, are worth some money; so I will take them with
-me. You see it was well that I obtained a sword." And he cut off the
-two wings of the dead swan at a single blow, and kept them.
-
-They now traveled many miles across the mountains till they at length
-reached a large city containing hundreds of towers, that shone like
-silver in the sunshine. In the midst of the town stood a handsome
-marble palace, roofed with pure red gold, in which dwelt the king.
-
-Johannes and his fellow-traveler did not care to enter the town
-immediately, but went into an inn, situated in the outskirts, in order
-to dress themselves; for they wished to look tidy when they walked
-through the streets. The landlord informed them how good a man the
-king was, and that he never injured anybody; but as to his
-daughter--heaven defend us!--she was a bad princess indeed! Beauty she
-possessed in abundance: nobody was prettier or more elegant than
-herself. But what of that? She was a wicked witch, and was the cause
-of many accomplished princes having lost their lives. She had given
-leave to everybody to woo her. Any one might present himself, be he a
-prince or a beggar; it was all the same to her. Only he must guess
-three things that she had thought of and questioned him about. If he
-succeeded, he was to marry her, and become king over all the land at
-her father's death; but if he could not guess the three things, he was
-then to be hung, or to have his head struck off. Her father the old
-king, was deeply concerned at all this: but he could not forbid her
-being so wicked because he had once declared that he would never
-meddle with her lovers and that she might do as she liked about them.
-Every time a prince came to try his luck at guessing, in order to
-obtain the princess's hand, he was sure to fail, and was, therefore,
-hung or beheaded. He had been warned betimes that it would be safer to
-desist from his suit. The old king was so afflicted at the mourning
-and wretchedness thus occasioned that, for one whole day in the year,
-he and all his soldiers used to kneel and pray that the princess might
-grow good; but she would not. The old women who tippled brandy used to
-color it quite black before they drank it; this was their way of
-mourning, and they could not well do more.
-
-"What a shocking princess!" said Johannes. "She deserves the rod, and
-it would do her good. If I were the old king, she should have been
-thrashed long ago."
-
-They now heard the mob cheering outside the inn. The princess was
-passing, and she was really so beautiful that everybody forgot how
-wicked she was, and therefore hurrahed. Twelve beautiful maidens,
-dressed in white silk clothes and holding golden tulips in their
-hands, rode by her side on coal-black horses. The princess herself was
-mounted on a snow-white steed, with diamond and ruby trappings. Her
-riding-dress was of gold brocade; and the whip she held in her hand
-looked like a sunbeam. The gold crown on her head resembled the little
-stars twinkling in the heavens, while her mantle consisted of
-thousands of splendid butterflies' wings stitched together. Yet, in
-spite of this magnificence, she was herself far more beautiful than
-her clothes.
-
-When Johannes caught sight of her, his face grew as red as a drop of
-blood, and he was struck completely dumb; for the princess exactly
-resembled the beautiful girl with the golden crown, whom he had
-dreamed of the night his father died. He thought her most beautiful,
-and could not help loving her passionately. It could not be possible,
-thought he, that she was a wicked witch, who ordered people to be hung
-or beheaded when they were unable to guess what she asked. "But since
-every one, down to the poorest beggar, is free to woo her," said he,
-"I will repair to the palace, for I cannot resist doing so." Everybody
-advised him not to attempt such a thing, as he must inevitably fail
-like the rest. His fellow-traveler, likewise, warned him to desist;
-but Johannes thought he should succeed. He brushed his shoes and his
-coat, washed his hands and face, combed his pretty flaxen hair, and
-then went alone into the town, and proceeded to the palace.
-
-"Come in," said the old king, when Johannes knocked at the door.
-Johannes opened it, and the old king came forward to meet him in his
-dressing-gown and embroidered slippers; he wore his crown on his
-head, and bore his scepter in one hand and his ball in the other.
-"Wait a bit," said he, putting the ball under his arm, to leave one
-hand free to present to Johannes. But the moment he heard he came as a
-suitor, he began to weep so violently that both ball and scepter fell
-on the floor, and he was fain to wipe his eyes with the skirts of his
-dressing-gown. Poor old king!
-
-"Think not of it," said he, "you will fare as badly as all the others.
-Come, you shall see."
-
-He then led him into the princess's pleasure-garden, and a frightful
-sight was there to behold! From every tree hung three or four kings'
-sons who had wooed the princess, but had been unable to guess her
-riddles. At every breeze that blew, all these skeletons rattled till
-the little birds were frightened, and never dared to come into the
-garden. All the flowers were propped with human bones; and human
-skulls might be seen grinning in flowerpots. It was an odd garden for
-a princess.
-
-"Now, you see," said the old king, "your fate will be just the same as
-that of all the others whose remains you behold. Therefore give up
-the attempt. You really make me quite unhappy, for I take it so to
-heart."
-
-Johannes kissed the good old king's hand, and assured him that all
-would be well; for he was quite enchanted with the lovely princess.
-
-As the princess then rode into the palaceyard, accompanied by all her
-ladies, they went out to greet her. She was marvelously fair to look
-upon, as she presented her hand to Johannes. And he thought a great
-deal more of her than he did before; and felt certain she could not be
-a wicked witch, as everybody said she was. They then went into a room
-where little pages handed them sweetmeats and gingerbread-nuts. But
-the old king was so out of sorts, he could not eat at all. Besides,
-the gingerbread-nuts were too hard for him.
-
-It was agreed that Johannes should return to the palace on the
-following morning, when the judges and the whole council would be
-assembled to see and hear how the guessing was carried on. If he
-succeeded, he was then to return twice more; but there never yet had
-been anybody who had been able to solve any question the first time,
-and in each case his life was forfeited.
-
-Johannes felt no anxiety as to how he should fare. On the contrary, he
-was pleased, and thought only of the beautiful princess; and was quite
-confident that God would help him through his trials. Though how this
-was to be accomplished he knew not, and preferred not troubling
-himself to think about the matter. He capered along on the high-road,
-as he returned to the inn where his fellow-traveler was waiting his
-return.
-
-Johannes could not cease expatiating on the gracious reception he had
-met with from the princess, and on her extreme beauty. He quite longed
-for the morrow, when he was to go to the palace and try his luck at
-guessing.
-
-But his fellow-traveler shook his head mournfully. "I wish you so
-well!" said he. "We might have remained together a good deal longer,
-and now I must lose you! Poor, dear Johannes! I could weep, only I
-will not spoil your joy on the last evening that we may ever spend
-together. We will be merry--right merry! To-morrow, when you are gone,
-I shall be able to weep undisturbed."
-
-All the inhabitants of the town had immediately heard that there was a
-new suitor for the princess's hand, and there prevailed universal
-consternation. The theater was closed; the pastry-cooks put crape
-round their sugar-husbands; and the king and the priests were on their
-knees in the church. This sadness was occasioned by the conviction
-that Johannes could not succeed better than all the other suitors had
-done.
-
-Towards evening Johannes' fellow-traveler prepared a goodly bowl of
-punch, and said: "Now let us be merry, and drink the princess's
-health." But after drinking a couple of glasses, Johannes proved so
-sleepy, that he could not possibly keep his eyes open, and fell fast
-asleep. His fellow-traveler then lifted him gently out of his chair,
-and laid him in bed; and when it was quite dark, he took the two large
-wings he had cut off from the dead swan, and fastened them firmly to
-his own shoulders. He then put into his pocket the largest rod that
-he had obtained from the old woman who fell and broke her leg; and
-opening the window, he flew over the town, straight to the palace,
-where he placed himself in an upper corner of the building right under
-the princess's bed-chamber.
-
-The whole town was perfectly quiet. The clock now struck a quarter to
-twelve, when the window opened, and the princess, wrapped in a flowing
-white mantle, and provided with a pair of black wings, flew over the
-city towards a large mountain. But the fellow-traveler made himself
-invisible; and as he flew behind the princess, he thrashed her with
-his rod till she bled. What a strange flight through the air it was!
-The wind caught her mantle, which swelled out on all sides like the
-large sail of a ship, and the moon shone through it.
-
-"How it does hail, to be sure!" said the princess, at every blow she
-received from the rod; and such weather suited her. At last she
-reached the mountain, and knocked for admittance. Then came a noise
-like a clap of thunder, while the mountain opened, and the princess
-went in. The fellow-traveler followed her, for nobody could see him,
-as he was invisible. They went through a long, wide passage, where the
-walls shone brilliantly from the light of above a thousand glittering
-spiders that were running up and down and illuminating them like fire.
-They next entered a large hall built of silver and gold; red and blue
-flowers as large as sunflowers were beaming from the walls; but nobody
-could pluck them, for the stems were ugly, venomous serpents, and the
-flowers were the flames their jaws kept vomiting forth. The whole
-ceiling was covered with glow-worms and light-blue bats that were
-flapping their thin wings. It looked quite frightful. In the middle of
-the floor stood a throne that was supported by the skeletons of four
-horses, whose harness had been furnished by the red, fiery spiders.
-The throne itself was of milk-white glass, and the cushions were
-little black mice that kept biting each other's tails. Above it was a
-canopy of a deep-red cobweb, dotted with the prettiest little green
-flies that sparkled like precious stones. On the throne sat an old
-magician, with a crown on his ugly head and a scepter in his hand. He
-kissed the princess on her forehead, and placed her beside him on his
-splendid throne, and then the music struck up. Huge black grasshoppers
-played the jew's-harp, while the owl beat a tattoo on its own body,
-having no better drum. It was a ludicrous concert. Little dark-colored
-goblins, with a will-o'-the-wisp in their caps, danced about the room.
-But nobody could see the fellow-traveler, who had placed himself right
-behind the throne, where he could see and hear everything. The
-courtiers, who now came in, were very delicate and genteel. But
-anybody who could see what is what, would quickly perceive what they
-were made of. They were nothing better than broomsticks with cabbages
-for their heads, whom the magician had conjured into life, and whom he
-had tricked out in embroidered clothes. However, they did just as
-well, as they were only wanted for show.
-
-After a little dancing, the princess related to the magician that she
-had a new suitor, and consulted him as to what she should ask him
-next morning when he came to the palace.
-
-"I will tell you what," said the magician; "you must choose something
-easy, and then he'll never hit upon it. Think of one of your shoes.
-He'll never guess that. Then you will have him beheaded, and mind you
-don't forget to bring me his eyes to-morrow night."
-
-The princess bowed, and said she would not forget to bring them. The
-magician then opened the mountain, and she flew back; but the
-fellow-traveler followed her, and struck her so smartly with the rod,
-that she sighed most deeply over such a hail-storm, and hastened all
-she could to reach her bed-chamber through the window. The
-fellow-traveler then returned to the inn, where Johannes was still
-asleep, took off his wings, and went to bed likewise, for he might
-well be tired.
-
-Johannes woke at an early hour next morning. His fellow-traveler got
-up, and told him that he had had a strange dream that night about the
-princess and her shoe, and therefore urged him to ask whether it was
-not her shoe that the princess was thinking about? For this he had
-learned from the magician in the mountain.
-
-"I may as well ask that as anything else," said Johannes. "Perhaps
-your dream may turn out to be the truth, for I trust in God to help me
-through. Still, I will take leave of you, because should I guess
-wrong, I shall never see you again."
-
-They then embraced one another, and Johannes went into the town, and
-walked to the palace. The whole hall was filled with people. The
-judges sat in their armchairs, with their heads propped up by
-eider-down cushions, because they had so much to think about. The old
-king stood wiping his eyes with a white pocket-handkerchief. The
-princess now entered. She looked more beautiful than even the day
-before, and saluted the assembly with charming grace. But she extended
-her hand to Johannes, saying: "Good morning to you."
-
-Johannes was now called upon to guess what she had thought of. Bless
-me! how kindly she did look at him! But no sooner had he pronounced
-the single word "shoe," than she turned as pale as chalk, and trembled
-all over. Still, this did not serve her much, since he had guessed
-correctly.
-
-But, goodness! how pleased the old king was--he cut a caper that was
-quite pleasant to behold! And all present clapped their hands, to
-cheer both him and Johannes, who had been successful in this, his
-first ordeal.
-
-The fellow-traveler was likewise much rejoiced on hearing how matters
-had turned out. But Johannes folded his hands and thanked his God, who
-he felt certain would help him through the two next times. On the
-following day, he was to make a second attempt at guessing.
-
-The evening passed much the same as the foregoing one. When Johannes
-had gone to sleep, his fellow-traveler flew after the princess to the
-mountain, and thrashed her more violently than before, having taken
-two rods with him. Nobody saw him, and he heard all that was said. The
-princess was to think of her glove, and this he repeated to Johannes,
-as if it had been a dream. So that he was able to guess correctly,
-which occasioned great joy amongst the inmates of the palace. The
-whole court cut capers as they had seen the king do the first time.
-But the princess lay on the sofa, and would not speak a word. All now
-depended on whether Johannes could guess right the third time. If he
-succeeded, he was to marry the beautiful princess, and reign over the
-land at the old king's death. But if he guessed wrong, he was to
-forfeit his life, and the magician would have his beautiful blue eyes.
-
-On the preceding evening, Johannes went to bed early, said his
-prayers, and then fell into a quiet sleep. But his fellow-traveler
-tied his wings to his back, and put his sword at his side, and taking
-the three rods with him, flew towards the palace.
-
-It was as dark as pitch, and there was such a storm that the tiles
-were flying off from the roofs of the houses, and the trees in the
-garden, where hung the skeletons, bent like so many reeds beneath the
-wind. It lightened every moment, and the thunder rolled along as
-though it was a single clap that lasted through the whole night. The
-window now opened, and the princess flew out. She was as pale as
-death, but she laughed at the bad weather, and thought it was scarcely
-bad enough. And her white mantle fluttered in the wind like a large
-sail, while the fellow-traveler thrashed her with the three rods till
-her blood flowed, and she could scarcely fly any farther. She managed,
-however, to reach the mountain.
-
-"This is a violent hail-storm," said she; "I was never out in such
-weather before."
-
-"There may be too much of a good thing," observed the magician.
-
-She now told him that Johannes had guessed aright the second time, and
-should he succeed again on the following morning, he would then have
-won, and she would never again be able to come to the mountain, or to
-practise magic arts as she had hitherto done; therefore was she quite
-out of spirits.
-
-"He shall not be able to guess it," said the magician, "for I will
-find out something that he will never hit upon, unless he is a greater
-conjurer than myself. But now let's be merry!" And then he took both
-the princess's hands, and they danced about with all the little
-goblins, wearing will-o'-the-wisp lights, that were in the room. The
-red spiders jumped just as merrily up and down the walls; it looked as
-if the fiery flowers were emitting sparks. The owl beat the drum, the
-crickets whistled, and the black grasshoppers played on the
-jew's-harp. It was a frolicsome ball.
-
-When they had danced enough the princess was obliged to go home, for
-fear of being missed in the palace. The magician said he would
-accompany her, that they might be together a little longer.
-
-They then flew away through the bad weather, while the fellow-traveler
-broke his three rods across their shoulders. The magician had never
-been out in such a hail-storm before. Just on reaching the palace, and
-on bidding the princess farewell, he whispered, "Think of my head."
-But the fellow-traveler heard him, and just as the princess slipped in
-at her bedroom window, and the magician was about to turn round, he
-seized him by the long black beard, and cut off his ugly head at a
-single stroke from his sword, so that the magician had not even time
-to see him. He then threw the body into the sea, to serve as food for
-the fishes; but he merely dipped the head in the waters, and then tied
-it up in his silk handkerchief, and took it to the inn, and went to
-bed.
-
-Next morning he gave the bundle to Johannes, bidding him not open it
-till the princess should ask him what she was thinking of.
-
-There were so many spectators in the large hall of the palace, that
-they stood as thick as radishes tied in a bunch. The council sat on
-their armchairs with the soft cushions, and the old king was dressed
-in new clothes; his golden crown and scepter had been furbished up;
-and the whole scene looked very solemn. But the princess was pale as
-ashes, and wore a coal-black dress, as though she were attending a
-funeral. "What have I thought of?" asked she of Johannes. And he
-immediately opened the silk handkerchief, when he was himself quite
-startled on beholding the ugly magician's head. Everybody shuddered,
-for it was frightful to look at; but the princess sat like a statue,
-and could not speak a word. At length she rose and gave her hand to
-Johannes, for he had guessed aright. She looked neither to the right
-nor the left, but sighed out: "Now you are my master! Our wedding will
-be celebrated this evening."
-
-"So much the better," said the old king, "that's just what I wish."
-All present cried "Hurrah!" The soldiers on parade struck up their
-music in the streets, the bells were set-a-ringing, the pastry-cooks
-took the black crape off their sugar-husbands, and rejoicings were
-held everywhere. Three oxen, stuffed with ducks and chickens, and
-roasted whole, were placed in the middle of the market-place, and
-every one was free to cut a slice; the fountains spouted the most
-delicious wine; and if one bought a penny cracknel at the baker's one
-received six large biscuits as a present--and the biscuits had raisins
-in them!
-
-Towards night the whole town was illuminated, the soldiers fired
-cannons, and the boys let off pop-guns; and there was a deal of
-eating, and drinking, and crushing, and capering at the palace. All
-the fine gentlemen and the beautiful young ladies danced together, and
-one might hear them from afar singing the following song:--
-
- "Here are many maidens fair,
- Who twirl like any spinning-wheel,
- And tread the floor as light as air;
- Still round and round, sweet maiden, reel,
- And dance away the mazes through,
- Until the sole has left your shoe."
-
-But the princess was still a witch, and could not endure Johannes.
-This struck his fellow-traveler, and therefore he gave Johannes three
-feathers out of the swan's wings, and a small phial containing only a
-few drops, and told him to place a large vat full of water in front of
-the princess's bed, and when the princess was about to get into bed,
-he must give her a slight push, so that she should fall into the
-water, into which he must dip her three times, having taken care first
-to shake in the feathers and the contents of the phial. The magic
-spell would then be broken, and she would love him tenderly.
-
-Johannes did all that his fellow-traveler suggested. The princess
-shrieked aloud when he dipped her into the water, and struggled out of
-his hands under the form of a coal-black swan with fiery eyes. The
-second time she rose to the surface the swan had become white, all but
-a black ruff round its neck. Johannes prayed to God, and made the bird
-dive down a third time, when it was suddenly transformed to the most
-beautiful princess. She was far lovelier than before, and thanked him,
-with tears in her eyes, for having broken the spell that bound her.
-
-On the following morning, the old king came with all his court, and
-the congratulations lasted till late in the day. Last of all came
-Johannes' fellow-traveler, with his stick in his hand, and his
-knapsack at his back. Johannes embraced him affectionately, and said
-that he must not go away, but stay with him, for he was the cause of
-all his happiness. But his fellow-traveler shook his head, and said in
-a mild and friendly voice: "No; my time is now up. I have but paid a
-debt. Do you remember the dead man whom his wicked creditors would
-fain have ill-used? You gave all you possessed that he might rest in
-peace in his grave. I am that dead man!"
-
-And at the same moment he vanished.
-
-The wedding rejoicings now lasted a full month. Johannes and the
-princess loved each other dearly, and the old king lived to see many a
-happy day, and dandled his little grand-children on his knee, and let
-them play with his scepter. And Johannes became king over the whole
-land.
-
-
-
-
-THE OLD BACHELOR'S NIGHTCAP.
-
-
-There is a street in Copenhagen oddly named Hysken Strade, and one
-naturally asks what Hysken signifies, and why Hysken at all. Common
-report says it is a German word, but in justice to the German tongue
-this is not the case, since it would then have been Hauschen, of which
-Hysken is the Danish corruption, and it means "the street of tiny
-houses."
-
-For many a year it consisted of nothing but wooden booths, such as may
-be seen to this day in the market-place; possibly they were a little
-larger. The window-panes were not of glass, but horn, for at that time
-glass was too expensive for general use. Remember, we are speaking of
-many years ago. Your great-grandfather would have called them "the
-olden times." Yes, several hundred years ago.
-
-Trade in Copenhagen was entirely, or nearly so, in the hands of
-wealthy Bremen and Luebeck merchants, whose clerks (for they themselves
-stayed at home) lived in the Hysken Straede, in the booths of this
-street of tiny houses, and sold beer and groceries. Delicious German
-beer it was too, and all kinds for sale--Bremen, Prussian, and
-Brunswick, and spices of every variety--saffron, aniseed, ginger and
-above all pepper. Indeed, this was the staple commodity--hence the
-German clerks in Denmark acquired the nickname Pepper-folk--and since
-they were bound not to marry whilst in that country, many grew old and
-gray in service, and, as they performed their own domestic services
-themselves they became crabbed old fellows with whimsical ideas. This
-being so, it became usual to dub all crotchety old bachelors
-"pepper-fogeys," an expression now naturalized into the German
-language. This must be borne in mind if you would understand what
-follows.
-
-These pepper-fogeys used to be unmercifully ridiculed, and told to
-pull down a nightcap over their ears and toddle off to bed, and many
-are the doggerel verses in which the nightcap figures. Yes, fun was
-poked at the pepper-fogeys with their nightcaps, just because they
-were so little known. And why should not one wish for a nightcap? you
-may ask. Listen, and I will tell you.
-
-Hauschen Street was in those days unpaved, and wayfarers stumbled
-along as if it were a little side-alley. So narrow indeed was it, and
-so huddled together the booths, that in summertime a sail would be
-stretched from side to side, and strong was the fragrance of saffron
-and ginger pervading the stalls, behind which there served for the
-most part old men. They were not, however, clothed, as in the
-portraits of our ancestors, with peruke, knee-breeches, elegant
-waistcoat and tunic of ample cut, as you might suppose.
-
-No, these old pepper-fogeys were no dandies to be portrayed on canvas,
-though one could well wish to have a picture of one as he stood at the
-counter, or betook himself with leisurely gait to church on holy days.
-A broad-brimmed hat, high in the crown, in which maybe the younger
-among them would sport a feather, a woolen shirt beneath a wide
-flapping collar, a close-fitting jacket, a loose cloak worn over it,
-and the trousers tucked into the broadly-peaked shoes, for stockings
-had they none. At his belt a knife and fork, and a larger knife for
-self-defense--a necessary precaution in those days.
-
-Such was the costume of old Anthony, one of the oldest of the
-pepper-fogeys, only in place of the broad-brimmed high-crowned hat he
-always wore a sort of bonnet, under which was a knitted skullcap, a
-veritable nightcap, which never left his head. One or other, for he
-had two, was always on his head day and night. He formed a perfect
-study for an artist, so lean and wizened was he, so wrinkled his brow,
-his fingers so skinny, his eyebrows so bushy. He was said to be a
-native of Bremen; but in truth, though his master was, old Anthony was
-born at Eisenach, hard by the Wartburg. He never told the others, but
-pondered over it the more.
-
-The old fellows did not often come together. He stayed in his own
-room, a dim light penetrating the opaque window-panes. Seated on the
-bed, he chanted his evening psalm. Theirs was not a happy
-lot--strangers in a strange land, heeded by none, save to be brushed
-aside when in the way.
-
-On black nights, when the rain was pelting down outside, it was far
-from cosy within. Not a lamp visible, save that which threw a light on
-a picture of the Virgin painted on the wall. Hark to the rain beating
-in torrents on the masonry of the castle-wharf! Such evenings were
-long and dreary without some task. To arrange and rearrange things in
-the house, to make paper bags, to polish scales, is not work for every
-day. One must find other things to do, as did old Anthony. He would
-darn his clothes, and patch up his boots. And when at last he went to
-bed, true to his habit, down he would draw his nightcap, but soon
-raised it to see the candle was quite extinguished. He would snuff out
-the wick between finger and thumb, pull down his nightcap, and turn
-over to sleep. But it occurred to him to see if the ashes on the
-little hearth in the corner were quite burnt out; if they were damped
-enough, lest a stray spark should kindle a fire, and do damage.
-
-Up he would get again, creep down the ladder (for steps they could not
-be called), and finding not a spark in the ash-pan, would go back in
-peace. But before he was half in bed he would have a doubt whether the
-bolts and shutters of the shop were secured, and down once more went
-the tottering feet, his teeth a-chattering with the cold, for never
-such biting frost as in late winter. Then, pulling up the coverlet and
-drawing down his nightcap, he would dismiss all thoughts of business
-and the day's toil from his mind. But no happier than before--old
-memories would weave their fantastic shapes before his fancy, and a
-many thorn lay hidden in the garlands.
-
-When one pricks one's finger tears brim to the eyelids, and oftentimes
-old Anthony shed hot and bitter tears, that glistened like pearls. The
-largest pearls would fall on the coverlet with so sad a sound that it
-seemed his heart's strings were breaking.
-
-Brightly would they glisten and illumine pictures of his childhood,
-never fading memories.
-
-As he dried his tears on the nightcap, the scenes would vanish, but
-not the source of his tears: that lay deep in his heart.
-
-The scenes did not follow the natural sequence of life; the saddest
-and most joyful together, but the last had the deepest shadows.
-
-The beech forests of Denmark are admitted by all to be fine, but
-fairer still to the eyes of old Anthony were those around the
-Wartburg. More majestic and lofty the aged trees around the baronial
-castle, where the foliage of creepers trailed over the stone
-buttresses. Sweeter there the perfume of apple-blossoms. Vividly did
-he call them to mind, and a shining tear rolled down his cheek,
-wherein he saw two children, a boy and a girl, at play. The boy,
-rosy-cheeked and curly-haired, with clear blue eyes, was himself, the
-little Anthony. The girl had brown eyes, dark hair, and a merry,
-bright expression. She was the Burgomaster's daughter, Molly. The
-children were playing with an apple, which they shook to hear the pips
-rattle inside. They shared the apple and ate it up, all but one pip,
-which the little girl proposed they should plant in the earth.
-
-"Then you will see something you'd never think of," said she; "an
-apple tree will grow, but not all at once." So they busied themselves
-planting it in a flower-pot. He made a hole, and she laid the pip in,
-and both heaped on the earth.
-
-"Mind," said she, "you don't dig up the pip to see if it has struck
-root. Indeed, you mustn't. I did so--only twice--because I knew no
-better, and the flowers withered." Anthony kept the flower-pot, and
-every day the winter through watched it, but nothing was to be seen
-but the black earth. Then came the spring and warm sunshine, and two
-little twigs peeped forth from the pot. "Oh, how lovely!" cried
-Anthony, "they are for Molly and me."
-
-Soon came another shoot; whom could that represent? Then another and
-yet another, and every week it grew, till it became a big plant. All
-this was mirrored in a single tear. Brush it away as he might, the
-source dwelled deep in his bosom.
-
-Not far from Eisenach is a ridge of rocky heights, treeless and bare,
-known as the Venusberg.
-
-Here was the abode of Venus, goddess of heathen mythology, known also
-to every child round about as Lady Holle. She it was who lured the
-knightly Tannhaeuser, the minstrel of the Wartburg, to her mountain.
-
-Little Molly and Anthony would ofttimes stand at the foot of the
-mountain, and one day she asked him, "Do you dare knock and say, 'Lady
-Holle! Lady Holle! open the door. Tannhaeuser is here'?" But Anthony
-was afraid, only his playmate ventured.
-
-"Lady Holle! Lady Holle!" she cried, loud and clear, but the rest so
-low and indistinct that he believed that she did not utter it. She
-looked so winning and was of such high spirit. When they were at play
-with other children in the garden, Molly alone of them all would dare
-to kiss him, just because he was unwilling and resisted. "I dare kiss
-him," she would cry, and throw her arms round his neck, and the boy
-would submit to her embrace, for how charming, how saucy she was, to
-be sure!
-
-Lady Holle, so people said, was beautiful, but her beauty was that of
-a wicked temptress. The noblest type of beauty was that of the devout
-Elizabeth, tutelary saint of the land, the pious lady whose gracious
-actions were known near and far. Her picture hangs in the chapel lit
-up by silver lamps, but she and Molly bore no resemblance to one
-another.
-
-The apple tree they had planted grew year by year till it was so large
-it had to be planted anew in the open air, where the dew fell and the
-sun shed his warm rays; and it flourished and grew hardy, and could
-bear the wintry blast, blossoming in the springtide as if for very
-joy. In the autumn it bore two apples--one for Molly, one for Anthony.
-Rapidly grew the tree, and with it grew Molly, fresh as one of its
-blossoms; but not for long was Anthony fated to watch this fair
-flower.
-
-All things here on earth are subject to change.
-
-Molly's father left the old home and went afar. Nowadays, by the
-railroad, it takes but some few hours, but in those times over a day
-and night, to travel so far east as to Weimar.
-
-Both Molly and Anthony cried, and she told him he was more to her
-than all the fine folk in Weimar could be.
-
-A year passed by--two, three years--and only two letters came: the
-first sent by a letter-carrier, the other by a traveler--a long and
-devious way by town and hamlet.
-
-How often had he and Molly together read the story of Tristan and
-Isolde, and bethought them the name Tristan meant "conceived in
-tribulation." But with Anthony no such thought could be harbored as
-"She has forsaken me."
-
-True, Isolde did _not_ forsake Tristan; buried side by side in the
-little churchyard, the lime trees met and entwined over their graves.
-Anthony loved this story, sad though it was.
-
-But no sad fate could await him and Molly, and blithely he sang as he
-rode in the clear moonlight towards Weimar to visit Molly.
-
-He would fain come unexpected, and unexpected he came.
-
-And welcome they made him. Wine-cups filled to the brim, distinguished
-company, a comfortable room, all these he found, but it was not as he
-had pictured it, dreamed of it.
-
-Poor Anthony could not make it out, could not understand them, but we
-can. We know how one may be in the midst of others and yet be
-solitary; how one talks as fellow-voyagers in a post-chaise, boring
-one another, and each wishing the other far away.
-
-One day Molly spoke to him. "I am straight-forward, I will tell you
-all. Since we were playmates together much has altered. It is not only
-an outward change in me, you see. Habit and will do not control our
-affections. I wish you well, Anthony, and would not have you bitter
-towards me when I am far away, but love, deep love, I cannot feel for
-you. Fare thee well!"
-
-So Anthony bade her farewell. No tear bedimmed his eye, but he felt he
-had lost a friend. Within four and twenty hours he was back in
-Eisenach; the horse that bore him, bore him no more.
-
-"What matter?" said he, "I am lost. I will destroy whatever reminds me
-of the Lady Holle. The apple tree--I will uproot it, shatter it. Never
-more shall it bloom and bear fruit."
-
-But the tree was not injured. Anthony lay on his bed, stricken with
-fever. What can avail him. Suddenly a medicine, the bitterest medicine
-known to man, cured his fever, convulsing body and soul. Anthony's
-father was no longer the rich merchant he had been!
-
-Troublous days, days of trial, awaited them. Misfortune fell upon the
-home; the father, dogged by fate, became poor. So Anthony had other
-things to think about than the resentment he cherished in his heart
-towards Molly. He must take his father's place, he must go out into
-the great world and earn his bread.
-
-He reached Bremen: hardship and dreary days were his lot--days that
-harden the heart or sometimes make it very tender. How he had
-misjudged his fellow-men in his young days! He became resigned and
-cheerful. God's way is best, was his thought. How had it been if
-heaven had not turned her affection to another before this calamity?
-"Thanks be to heaven," he would say. "She was not to blame, and I have
-felt so bitter towards her."
-
-Time passed on. Anthony's father died, and strangers occupied the old
-home. But he was destined to see it once more. His wealthy master sent
-him on business that brought him once more to Eisenach, his native
-town.
-
-The old Wartburg was unchanged--the monk and nun hewn on its stones.
-The grand old trees set off the landscape as of old. Over the valley
-the Venusberg rose, a gray mass in the twilight. He longed to say,
-"Lady Holle! Lady Holle! open the door to me. Fain would I stay
-forever." It was a sinful thought, and he crossed himself. Old
-memories crowded to his mind as he gazed with tear-bedewed eyes at the
-town of childhood's days. The old homestead stood unchanged, but the
-garden was not the same. A roadway crossed one corner of it. The apple
-tree, which he had _not_ destroyed, was no longer in the garden, but
-across the way.
-
-Still, as of old, bathed in sunshine and dew, the old tree bore
-richly, and its boughs were laden with fruit. One of its branches was
-broken. Wilful hands had done this, for the tree now stood by the
-highway.
-
-Passers-by plucked its blossoms, gathered its fruit, and broke its
-branches. Well might one say, as one says of men, "This was not its
-destiny as it lay in its cradle." So fair its prospects, that this
-should be the end! Neglected, forsaken, no longer tended, there
-between field and highway it stood--bare to the storm, shattered and
-rent. As the years roll by it puts forth fewer blossoms, less
-fruit--and its story comes to a close!
-
-So mused Anthony many a lonely evening in his room in the wooden booth
-in a strange land, in the narrow street in Copenhagen, whither his
-rich master sent him bound by his vow not to marry.
-
-Marriage, forsooth, for him! Ha, ha! he laughed a strange laugh.
-
-The winter was early that year with sharp frost. Outside raged a
-blinding snowstorm, so that every one that could stayed indoors. And
-so it befell that his neighbors never saw that for two days his shop
-was unopened, nor Anthony been seen, for who would venture out if not
-compelled to?
-
-Those were sad, dismal days in his room, where the panes were not of
-glass, and--at best but faintly lighted--it was often pitch dark. For
-two days did Anthony keep his bed; he lacked strength to rise. The
-bitter weather affected his old joints. Forgotten was the
-pepper-fogey; helpless he lay. Scarce could he reach the water-jug by
-the bedside, and the last drop was drunk. Not fever, not sickness,
-laid him low: it was old age.
-
-It was perpetual night to him as he lay there.
-
-A little spider spun a web over the bed, as if for a pall when he
-should close his eyes forever.
-
-Long and very dreary was the time. Yet he shed no tears, nor did he
-suffer pain. His only thought was that the world and its turmoil were
-not for him; that he was away from them even as he had passed from the
-thoughts of others.
-
-At one time he seemed to feel the pangs of hunger, to faint with
-thirst. Was no one coming? None could come. He thought of those who
-perished of thirst, thought how the saintly Elizabeth, the noble lady
-of Thueringen, visited the lowliest hovels, bearing hope to and
-succoring the sick. Her pious deeds inspired his thoughts; he
-remembered how she would console those in pain, bind up their wounds,
-and though her stern lord and master stormed with rage, bear
-sustenance to the starving. He called to mind the legend how her
-husband followed her as she bore a well-stocked basket to the poor,
-and confronting her demanded what lay within. How in her great dread
-she replied, "Flowers I have culled in the garden." How when he
-snatched aside the cloth to see whether her words were true, wine,
-bread, and all the basket held miraculously changed to roses.
-
-Such was the picture of the saint; so his weary eyes imagined her
-standing by his bed in the little room in a strange land. He raised
-his head and gazed into her gentle eyes. All round seemed bright and
-rosy-hued. The flowers expanded, and now he smelt the perfume of
-apple-blossoms; he saw an apple tree in bloom, its branches waving
-above him. It was the tree the children had planted in the flower-pot
-together.
-
-And the drooping leaves fanned his burning brow and cooled his parched
-lips; they were as wine and bread on his breast. He felt calm and
-serene, and composed himself to sleep.
-
-"Now I will sleep, and it will bring relief. To-morrow I shall be
-well; to-morrow I will rise. I planted it in love; I see it now in
-heavenly radiance." And he sunk to rest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the morrow--the third day--the storm abated, and his neighbors came
-to see old Anthony. Prone he lay, clasping in death his old nightcap
-in his hands.
-
-Where were the tears he had shed, where the pearls? They were still in
-the nightcap. True pearls change not. The old thoughts, the tears of
-long ago--yes, they remained in the nightcap of the old pepper-fogey.
-
-Covet not the old nightcap. It would make your brow burn, your pulse
-beat fast. It brings strange dreams. The first to put it on was to
-know this. It was fifty years later that the Burgomaster, who lived in
-luxury with wife and children, put it on. His dreams were of unhappy
-love, ruin, and starvation.
-
-"Phew! how the nightcap burns," said he, and tore it off, and pearl
-after pearl fell from it to the ground. "Good gracious!" cried the
-Burgomaster, "I must be feverish; how they sparkle before my eyes."
-They were tears, wept half a century before by old Anthony of
-Eisenach.
-
-To all who thereafter put on the nightcap came agitating visions and
-dreams. His own history was changed to that of Anthony, till it became
-quite a story. There may be many such stories; we, however, leave
-others to tell them.
-
-We have told the first, and our last words shall be, "Don't wish for
-the old bachelor's nightcap."
-
-
-
-
-THE GARDEN OF PARADISE.
-
-THE FOUR WINDS.
-
-
-There once lived a king's son, who possessed a larger and more
-beautiful collection of books than anybody ever had before. He could
-read in their pages all the events that had ever taken place in the
-world, and see them illustrated by the most exquisite engravings. He
-could obtain information about any people or any country, only not a
-word could he ever find as to the geographical position of the Garden
-of the World; and this was just what he was most desirous of
-ascertaining.
-
-His grandmother had told him, when he was quite a little boy, and
-beginning to go to school, that each flower in the Garden of the World
-was the most delicious cake, and had its stamina filled with luscious
-wine; on one stood written historical facts, on another geography or
-arithmetical tables--and so one need only eat cakes to learn one's
-lesson, and the more one ate, the more history, geography, and
-arithmetic one acquired.
-
-He used to believe this. But when he grew a little older, and had
-learned more and become wiser, he began to understand that there must
-be better delights than these in the Garden of the World.
-
-He was now seventeen, and nothing ran in his head but this garden.
-
-One day he went to take a walk in the forest, all alone, as he best
-liked to be.
-
-As evening came on, the sky grew overcast, and there came on such a
-shower, that it seemed as if the heavens had become one vast sluice
-that kept pouring down water; besides this, it was darker than it
-usually is, even at night, except at the bottom of the deepest well.
-At every step, he either slipped on the wet grass, or stumbled over
-some bare rock. Everything was dripping wet, and the poor prince had
-not a dry thread about him. He was obliged to climb over huge blocks
-of stone, where water was running down from the thick moss. He was
-near fainting away, when he heard a singular rushing noise, and
-perceived a large cavern, lighted up by a huge fire, piled up in the
-middle, and fit to roast a whole deer. And this, indeed, was being
-done. A very fine deer, with its branching horns, was placed on a
-spit, and slowly turned round between the felled trunks of two
-pine-trees. An elderly woman, as bony and masculine as though she were
-a man in female attire, sat by the fire, and kept throwing in one log
-of wood after another.
-
-"Come nearer," said she, "and sit by the fire, and dry your clothes."
-
-"There is a great draught here," observed the prince, sitting down on
-the ground.
-
-"It will be much worse when my sons come home," returned the woman.
-"You are in the Cavern of the Winds. My sons are the Four Winds of
-Heaven--can you understand that?"
-
-"Where are your sons?" asked the prince.
-
-"It is difficult to answer a silly question," said the woman. "My sons
-are now at it, with their own hands. They are playing at shuttle-cock
-with the clouds, up there in the King's hall." And she pointed above.
-
-"Oh, that's it!" quoth the prince. "But you seem to speak rather
-harshly, and are not as gentle as the women I am accustomed to see."
-
-"Because they have nothing else to do. But I must be harsh, to keep my
-boys in any order; which I manage to do, headstrong as they are. You
-see those four bags hanging on the wall? Well, they are every bit as
-much afraid of them as you used to be of the rod behind the
-looking-glass. I bend the boys in two, I can tell you, and then pop
-them into the bag, without their making the least resistance. There
-they stay, and don't dare come out till I think it proper they should.
-But here comes one of them."
-
-It was the North Wind who came in, diffusing an icy coldness around.
-Large hailstones jumped about on the floor, and snowflakes were
-scattered in all directions. He wore a bearskin jacket and clothes;
-his cap of sea-dog's skin came down over his ears; long icicles clung
-to his beard, and one hailstone after another fell from the collar of
-his jacket.
-
-"Don't go too near the fire at once," said the prince, "or your face
-and hands might easily get frozen."
-
-"Frozen, quotha!" said the North Wind, with a loud laugh. "Why, cold
-is my greatest delight! But what kind of little snip are you? How did
-you come into the Cavern of the Winds?"
-
-"He is my guest," said the old woman; "and if that does not satisfy
-you, why, you need only get into the bag. Do you understand me now?"
-
-Well, this did the business at once; and the North Wind then began to
-relate whence he came, and where he had been staying for nearly a
-month past.
-
-"I come from the Arctic Sea," said he, "and I have been on Bear's
-Island, with the Russian sea-cow hunters. I sat and slept at the helm,
-as they sailed away from the North Cape; but whenever I happened to
-wake, the petrels were flying about my legs. What comical birds they
-are! They will flap their wings suddenly, and then remain poised upon
-them, and quite motionless, as if they had had enough of flying."
-
-"Don't be so diffuse," said the mother of the Winds. "And so you
-reached Bear's Island?"
-
-"It's a beautiful place! There's a ballroom floor for you, as smooth
-as a plate! Heaps of half-thawed snow, slightly covered with moss,
-sharp stones, and skeletons of sea-cows and bears were lying about,
-together with the arms and legs of giants in a state of green decay.
-It looks as if the sun had never shone there. I blew slightly on the
-mist, that the hovels might be visible, and there appeared a hut,
-built from the remains of a ship that had been wrecked, and covered
-over with sea-cows' skins. The fleshy side was turned outwards, and it
-was both red and green. A living bear sat growling on the roof. I went
-to the shore, and looked after birds' nests, and saw the unfledged
-youngsters opening their beaks and screaming lustily; so I blew into
-their thousands of throats, and they learned to shut their mouths. A
-little farther on, the sea-cows were rolling about like giant worms
-with pigs' heads, and teeth a yard long."
-
-"You tell your adventures right pleasantly, my son," said his mother;
-"it makes my mouth water to hear you."
-
-"Then the hunting began. The harpoon was flung right into the
-sea-cow's chest, so that a smoking jet of blood spurted forth like
-water from a fountain, and besprinkled the ice. Then I thought of my
-part of the game. I began to blow, and set my vessels, the towering
-icebergs, to stick the boats fast. Oh! what a whistling and a bawling
-there was! Only I whistled louder than all of them. They were obliged
-to unpack the dead sea-cows, the chests, and the tackle upon the ice;
-I then shook snowflakes over them, and left them and their spoils to
-sail in their pent-up vessels towards the south, to drink salt-water.
-They will never return to Bear's Island."
-
-"Then you have done mischief?" said the mother of the Winds.
-
-"Let others tell of the good I may have done!" said he. "But here
-comes my brother from the West. I like him the best, because he smacks
-of the sea, and brings a nice bracing cold with him."
-
-"Is that the little Zephyr?" asked the prince.
-
-"Yes, that is the Zephyr!" said the old woman; "but he's not so very
-little either. Some years ago he was a pretty boy; but that is now
-over."
-
-He looked like a wild man; but he wore a roller round his head, that
-he might not get hurt. In his hand he held a mahogany club, hewn from
-an American mahogany forest. It was no small weight to carry.
-
-"Whence do you come?" asked the mother.
-
-"From the wild forests," said he, "where tangled bindweed forms a
-hedge between each tree, where water-snakes lie in the damp grass, and
-where man seems to be a superfluous nonentity."
-
-"What have you been doing there?"
-
-"I looked into the deep river, and saw it had rushed down from the
-rocks, and then became dust, and flew towards the clouds to support
-the rainbow. I saw a wild buffalo swimming in the river, but he was
-carried away by the tide. He had joined a flock of wild ducks, who
-flew up into the air the moment the waters dashed downwards. The
-buffalo was obliged to be hurled into the precipice. This pleased me,
-and I raised a storm, so that the oldest trees sailed down the river,
-and were reduced to splinters."
-
-"And was that all you did?" asked the old woman.
-
-"I cut capers in the savannahs, I stroked wild horses and shook
-cocoanut trees. Oh! I have plenty of tales to tell! Only one must not
-tell all one knows, as you well know, good mammy." And he kissed his
-mother so roughly, that she had nearly fallen backwards. He was a
-shocking wild lad.
-
-Now, in came the South Wind in a turban and Bedouin's flying mantle.
-
-"It is very cold hereabouts!" said he, throwing wood upon the fire.
-"It is easy to perceive that the North Wind has preceded me."
-
-"It is hot enough here to roast a northern bear!" said the North Wind.
-
-"You are a bear yourself!" answered the South Wind.
-
-"Have you a mind to be both put into the bag?" asked the old woman.
-"There! sit down on that stone, and tell us where you have been."
-
-"In Africa, mother," returned he. "I was amongst the Hottentots, who
-were lion-hunting in Caffraria. The grass in their plains looks as
-green as an olive. An ostrich ran a race with me, but I beat him
-hollow. I reached the yellow sands of the desert, which look like the
-bottom of the sea. I met a caravan. They killed their last camel to
-obtain some water; but they only got a very little. The sun was
-scorching above, and the sand equally scorching beneath one's feet.
-The desert stretched out into boundless expanse. I then rolled in the
-fine loose sand, and made it whirl about in large columns. A fine
-dance I led it! You should have seen how dejected the dromedaries
-looked as they stood stock still, and how the merchants pulled their
-caftans over their heads. They threw themselves on the ground before
-me as they would before Allah, their God. They are now all buried
-beneath a pyramid of sand; and when I come to puff it away, the sun
-will bleach their bones, and travelers will see that others have been
-there before them: a fact which is seldom believed in the desert,
-short of some tangible proof."
-
-"Then you have done nothing but mischief!" said his mother. "Into the
-bag with you!" And before he had time to perceive it, she had taken
-the South Wind round the waist, and popped him into the bag. He
-wiggled about on the ground; but she sat upon him, and then he was
-forced to lie still.
-
-"Your sons are a set of lively boys!" said the prince.
-
-"Yes," answered she; "and I know how to correct them. Here comes the
-fourth."
-
-This was the East Wind, who was dressed like a Chinese.
-
-"Oh! you come from that neighborhood, do you?" said his mother. "I
-thought you had been to the Garden of the World?"
-
-"I am going there to-morrow," said the East Wind. "To-morrow will be a
-hundred years since I was there. I have just returned from China,
-where I danced round the porcelain tower till all the bells were set
-a-jingling. The government officers were being beaten in the street;
-the bamboo stick was broken across their shoulders; and these were
-people belonging to the several degrees from the first to the ninth.
-They cried out: 'Many thanks, my fatherly benefactor!' But the words
-did not come from their hearts, so I made the bells jingle, and sang!
-'Tsing! tsang! tsu!'"
-
-"You are a wanton boy!" said the old woman. "It is well you are going
-to-morrow to the Garden of the World, for that always improves your
-mind. Pray drink abundantly from the fountain of wisdom, and take a
-small phial and bring it home full for me."
-
-"I will," said the East Wind. "But why have you put my brother from
-the South into the bag? Take him out again; I want him to tell me
-about the phoenix, for the princess in the Garden of the World
-always asks after him when I pay her my visit every hundredth year.
-Open the bag, there's a dear mammy, and I'll give you two pocketfuls
-of tea-leaves, all green and fresh, just as I plucked them from the
-bush on the spot where it grew."
-
-"Well, for the sake of the tea, and because you are mammy's own boy, I
-will open the bag."
-
-This she accordingly did, and out crept the South Wind, looking rather
-foolish, because the strange prince had witnessed his disgrace.
-
-"There is a palm-tree leaf for the princess," said the South Wind.
-"The old phoenix, the only bird of his sort in the wide world, gave
-me this leaf. He has traced upon it with his beak the whole history of
-his life during the hundred years that form its span. She may,
-therefore, be now enabled to read how the phoenix set fire to his
-nest, and sat upon it as it was burning, like the widow of a Hindoo.
-How the dried twigs did crackle! and what a smoke there was! At length
-out burst the flames: the old phoenix was burnt to ashes, but an egg
-lay glowing hot in the fire. It burst with a loud report, and the
-young bird flew out; and now he is king over all the other birds, and
-the only phoenix in the world. He has bitten a hole in the leaf
-which I gave you, and that is his way of sending his duty to the
-princess."
-
-"Now let us eat something," said the mother of the Winds. And they all
-sat down to partake of the roast deer. The prince sat beside the East
-Wind; therefore, they soon became good friends.
-
-"And pray what kind of a princess may she be whom you are talking so
-much about and where lies the Garden of the World?"
-
-"Ho, ho!" said the East Wind. "What! have you a mind to go there?
-Well, you can fly over with me to-morrow, though I must tell you no
-mortal ever visited it before. It is inhabited by a fairy queen, and,
-in it lies the Island of Happiness, a lovely spot where death never
-intrudes. Get upon my back to-morrow, and I'll take you with me; for I
-think it can be managed. But now don't speak any more, for I want to
-sleep."
-
-And then to sleep they all went.
-
-The prince awoke at an early hour next morning, and was not a little
-surprised on finding himself high above the clouds. He sat on the
-back of the East Wind, who was holding him faithfully; and they were
-so high in the air that forests, fields, rivers, and lakes lay beneath
-them like a painted map.
-
-"Good morning!" said the East Wind. "You might just as well have slept
-a bit longer, for there is not much to be seen in the flat country
-beneath us, except you have a mind to count the churches. They look
-like chalk dots on the green board."
-
-It was the fields and the meadows that he called the "green board."
-
-"It was uncivil of me not to take leave of your mother and brothers,"
-observed the prince.
-
-"When one is asleep, one is to be excused," replied the East Wind.
-
-And they began to fly quicker than ever. When they swept across the
-tree-tops, you might have heard a rustling in all their leaves and
-branches. On the sea and on the lakes, wherever they flew, the waves
-rose higher and the large ships dipped down into the water like
-swimming swans.
-
-Towards evening, when it grew dark, the large towns looked beautiful.
-They were dotted here and there with lights, much after the fashion of
-a piece of paper that has burned till it is black, when one sees all
-the little sparks going out one after another. The prince clapped his
-hands with delight, but the East Wind begged him to let such
-demonstrations alone, and rather attend to holding fast, or else he
-might easily fall down and remain dangling on a church steeple.
-
-Fast as the eagle flew through the black forests, the East Wind flew
-still faster. The Cossack was scouring the plains on his little horse,
-but the prince soon outstripped him.
-
-"You can now see Himalaya," said the East Wind, "the highest mountain
-in Asia--and now we shall soon reach the Garden of the World." They
-then turned more southwards, and the air was soon perfumed with spices
-and flowers. Figs and pomegranates grew wild, and clusters of blue and
-red grapes hung from wild vines. They now descended to the earth, and
-reclined on the soft grass, where the flowers seemed to nod to the
-wind as though they had said--"Welcome!"
-
-"Are we now in the Garden of the World?" asked the prince.
-
-"No, indeed!" replied the East Wind; "but we soon shall be. Do you see
-yon wall of rocks, and that broad cavern, where the vines hang down
-like a huge green curtain? That's the road through which we must pass.
-Wrap yourself in your mantle, for burning hot as the sun is just
-hereabout, it is as cold as ice a few steps farther. The bird who
-flies past the cavern feels one wing to be in the warm summer abroad
-while the other is in the depth of winter."
-
-"So then this seems to be the way to the Garden of the World?" asked
-the prince.
-
-They now entered the cavern. Oh, how icy cold it was! Only it did not
-last long. The East Wind spread out his wings, and they beamed like
-the brightest fire. But what a cavern it was, to be sure! The huge
-blocks of stone from which the water kept dripping down, hung over
-them in the oddest shapes, sometimes narrowing up till they were
-obliged to creep on all-fours, at other times widening into an
-expanse as lofty as though situated in the open air. It looked like a
-chapel for the dead, with petrified organs and dumb organ-pipes.
-
-"We seem to be crossing through an abode of Death to reach the Garden
-of the World!" said the prince. But the East Wind did not answer a
-syllable, and merely pointed forwards where the loveliest blue light
-met their eyes. The blocks of stone above their heads rolled away into
-a mist that finished by assuming the shape of a white cloud on a
-moonlight night. They were now in a most delightfully mild atmosphere,
-as cool as the mountain breeze, and as perfumed as a valley of roses.
-A river, clear as the air itself, was running along, filled with gold
-and silver fishes; scarlet eels, that emitted blue sparks at every
-motion, were disporting in the depths of the waters; while the broad
-leaves of the water-lilies that lay on its surface showed all the
-tints of the rainbow; the flower itself was a reddish-yellow burning
-flame that received its nourishment from the water as oil feeds the
-flame of a lamp. A marble bridge, as delicately sculptured as though
-it had been made of lace and glass beads, led across the water to the
-Island of Happiness, where bloomed the Garden of the World.
-
-The East Wind took the prince on his arm and carried him over. And the
-flowers and leaves sang the sweetest songs of his childhood, but in so
-lovely a strain of melody as no human voice ever yet sang.
-
-Were they palm-trees or gigantic water-plants that grew on this
-favored spot? The prince could not tell, for never had he seen such
-large and luxuriant trees before. The most singular creepers, too,
-such as one only sees represented in gold and colors in the margins of
-illuminated old missals, or twined around the first letter in a
-chapter, were hanging in long festoons on all sides. It was a most
-curious mixture of birds, and flowers, and scrolls. Just by a flock of
-peacocks were standing on the grass displaying their gorgeous fan-like
-tails. The prince took them for live creatures, but found, on touching
-them, that they were only plants--large burdock leaves, which, in this
-favored spot, beamed with all the glorious colors of the peacock's
-tail. A lion and tiger were disporting with all the pliancy of cats
-amongst the green hedges, that were perfumed like the flower of the
-olive-tree; and both the lion and the tiger were tame. The wild
-wood-pigeon's plumage sparkled like the fairest pearl, and the bird
-flapped the lion's mane with its wings; while the antelope, usually so
-shy, stood near and nodded its head, as if willing to join them at
-play.
-
-Now came the fairy of the garden. Her clothes were radiant as the sun,
-and her countenance was as serene as that of a happy mother rejoicing
-over her child. She was young and beautiful, and was followed by a
-train of lovely girls, each wearing a beaming star in her hair. The
-East Wind gave her the leaf sent by the phoenix, when her eyes
-sparkled with joy. She took the prince by the hand and led him into
-her palace, whose walls were of the hues of the most splendid tulip
-when it is turned towards the sun. The ceiling was a large radiant
-flower, and the more one looked at it, the deeper its calyx appeared
-to grow. The prince stepped to the window, and looked through one of
-the panes, on which was depicted Jacob's dream. The ladder seemed to
-reach to the real sky, and the angels seemed to be flapping their
-wings. The fairy smiled at his astonished look, and explained that
-time had engraved its events on each pane, but they were not merely
-lifeless images, for the leaves rustled, and the persons went and came
-as in a looking-glass. He then looked through other panes, where he
-saw depicted the events of ancient history. For all that had happened
-in the world lived and moved upon these panes; time only could have
-engraved so cunning a masterpiece.
-
-The fairy then led him into a lofty, noble hall, with transparent
-walls. Here were a number of portraits, each of which seemed more
-beautiful than the other. There were millions of happy faces whose
-laughing and singing seemed to melt into one harmonious whole; those
-above were so small that they appeared less than the smallest rosebud
-when represented on paper by a mere dot. In the midst of the hall
-stood a large tree with luxuriant drooping branches. Golden, apples,
-both great and small, hung like china oranges amid the green leaves.
-From each leaf fell a sparkling red dewdrop, as if the tree were
-shedding tears of blood.
-
-"We will now get into the boat," said the fairy, "and enjoy the
-coolness of the water. The boat rocks, but does not stir from the
-spot, while all the countries of the earth glide past us." And it was
-wonderful to behold how the whole coast moved. First came the lofty
-snow-capped Alps, overhung with clouds and overgrown with fir-trees.
-The horn was sounding its melancholy notes, while the shepherd was
-caroling in the vale. Then banana-trees flung their drooping branches
-over the boat; coal-black swans swam on the water, and flowers and
-animals of the strangest description might be seen on the shore. This
-was New Holland, the fifth part of the world, that glided past, with a
-view of the blue mountains. One could hear the hymns of the priests
-and see the savages dancing to the sound of drums and trumpets made of
-bones. Egypt's pyramids reaching to the clouds, overturned columns and
-sphinxes, half buried in the sand, followed in their turn. The aurora
-borealis next shone upon the extinguished volcanoes of the north.
-These were fireworks that nobody could have imitated! The prince was
-delighted; and he saw a hundred times more than what we have
-mentioned.
-
-"Can I remain here forever?" asked he.
-
-"That depends on yourself," replied the fairy. "If you do not long for
-what is forbidden, you may stay here forever."
-
-"I will not touch the apple on the Tree of Knowledge," said the
-prince; "here are thousands of fruits equally fine."
-
-"Examine your own heart, and if you do not feel sufficient strength,
-return with the East Wind who brought you hither. He is now about to
-fly back, and will not appear again in this place for the next hundred
-years. The time would seem to you here to be only a hundred hours, but
-even that is a long span for temptation and sin. Every evening, on
-leaving you, I shall be obliged to say: 'Come with me!' I shall make a
-sign with my hand, yet you must stay away. If once you followed, your
-longing would increase at every step. You would then enter the hall
-where grows the Tree of Knowledge I sleep beneath its perfumed,
-drooping branches. You would bend over me, and I should be forced to
-smile. But if you pressed a kiss on my lips, then would the garden
-sink into the earth and be lost for you. The sharp winds of the desert
-would howl around you, the cold rain would trickle over your head, and
-sorrow and distress would fall to your lot."
-
-"I will remain here," said the prince. And the East Wind kissed his
-forehead, saying, "Be firm, and then we shall meet again in a hundred
-years. Farewell! farewell!" And the East Wind spread his large wings,
-and they shone like the lightning in harvest time, or like the
-northern lights in a cold winter.
-
-"Farewell! farewell!" sounded from the flowers and the trees. Storks
-and pelicans flew in long rows, like streaming ribbons to accompany
-him to the boundaries of the garden.
-
-"We will now begin our dances," said the fairy. "At the close, when
-I'm dancing with you, and just as the sun is sinking, you will see me
-make a sign, and you will hear me say, 'Come with me.' But do not do
-it. For a hundred years shall I be obliged to repeat the same thing
-every evening; and each time when it is over will you gain fresh
-strength. In the end you'll cease to think about it. This evening will
-be the first time--and now you are warned."
-
-The fairy then led him into a large room made of white transparent
-lilies. The yellow stamina in each flower pictured a little golden
-harp that yielded a sweet music partaking of the combined sounds of
-stringed instruments and the tones of the flute. Lovely girls with
-slender aerial figures, and dressed in lightest gauze, floated through
-the mazes of the dance, and sang of the delights of living and being
-immortal, and blooming forever in the Garden of the World.
-
-The sun now set. The whole sky was one mass of gold that imparted the
-tints of the richest roses to the lilies; and the prince drank of the
-sparkling wine handed to him by the young maidens, and felt a bliss
-he had never before experienced. He saw the background of the ballroom
-now opening, and the Tree of Knowledge stood before him in such
-streams of light that his eyes were dazzled. The singing that rang in
-his ears was soft and lovely as his mother's voice, and it seemed as
-if she sang, "My child! my beloved child!"
-
-The fairy then made him a sign with her eyes, and cried most sweetly:
-"Come with me! Come with me!" And he rushed towards her, forgetting
-his promise, though it was but the first evening, and she continued to
-beckon to him and to smile. The spicy perfumes around grew yet more
-intoxicating; the harps sounded sweeter; and it was as if the millions
-of smiling faces in the room, where grew the tree, nodded and sang:
-"We must know everything! Man is the lord of the earth!" And there
-were no more tears of blood dropping down from the leaves of the Tree
-of Knowledge; but he thought he saw red sparkling stars instead.
-
-"Come with me! come with me!" said the thrilling tones; and at each
-step the prince's cheeks glowed more intensely, and his blood rushed
-more wildly.
-
-"I must!" said he; "it is no sin, and cannot be one! Why not follow
-when beauty calls? I will see her asleep; and provided I do not kiss
-her, there will be no harm done--and kiss I will not, for I have
-strength to resist, and a firm will."
-
-And the fairy cast aside her dazzling attire, bent back the boughs,
-and in another moment was completely concealed.
-
-"I have not yet sinned," said the prince, "and do not intend to sin!"
-And then he pushed the boughs aside; there she lay already asleep, and
-lovely as only the fairy of the Garden of the World is privileged to
-be. She smiled in her dreams; yet as he bent over her, he saw tears
-trembling between her eyelashes.
-
-"And do you weep for me?" whispered he. "Oh, weep not, most admirable
-of women! I now begin to understand the happiness to be found in this
-place. It penetrates into my blood, and I feel the joys of the blessed
-in this my earthly form! Though it were ever after eternally dark for
-me, one moment like this is happiness enough!" And he kissed the tears
-in her eyes, and his mouth pressed her lips.
-
-Then came a thunder-clap, so loud and so tremendous as never was heard
-before. Down everything fell to ruins--the beautiful fairy, the
-blooming garden, all sank deeper and deeper still. The prince saw the
-garden sinking into the dark abyss below, and it soon only shone like
-a little star in the distance. He turned as cold as death, and closed
-his eyes, and lay senseless.
-
-The cold rain fell on his face, and the sharp wind blew over his head.
-He then returned to consciousness. "What have I done?" sighed he.
-"Alas! I have sinned, and the Island of Happiness has sunk down into
-the earth!" And he opened his eyes and saw a distant star like that of
-the sinking garden; but it was the morning star in the sky.
-
-He got up and found himself in the large forest close to the Cavern of
-the Winds. The mother of the Winds sat by him, and looked angry, and
-raised her arm aloft.
-
-"The very first evening," said she. "I thought it would be so! If you
-were my son, you should be put into the bag presently."
-
-"Into it he shall go, sure enough!" said Death. He was a stalwart man
-with a scythe in his hand, and large black wings. "In his coffin shall
-he be laid, but not yet. I'll only mark him now, and allow him to
-wander about the world yet awhile, to expiate his sins and to grow
-better. But I shall come at last. When he least expects it, I shall
-put him into the black bag, place it on my head, and fly up to the
-stars. There, too, blooms a lovely garden, and if he be good and
-pious, he will be allowed to enter it; but should his thoughts be
-wicked, and his heart still full of sin, then will he sink in his
-coffin yet lower than he saw the Garden of the World sink down; and it
-will be only once in every thousand years that I shall go and fetch
-him, when he will either be condemned to sink still deeper, or be
-borne aloft to the beaming stars above."
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
- A. L. Burt's Catalogue of Books for
- Young People by Popular Writers, 52-58
- Duane Street, New York
-
-
-BOOKS FOR GIRLS.
-
-
-=Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. By LEWIS CARROLL.= 12mo,
-cloth, 42 illustrations, price 75 cents.
-
- "From first to last, almost without exception, this story is
- delightfully droll, humorous and illustrated in harmony with the
- story."--=New York Express.=
-
-=Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There.= By LEWIS
-CARROLL. 12mo, cloth, 50 illustrations, price 75 cents.
-
- "A delight alike to the young people and their elders, extremely
- funny both in text and illustrations."--=Boston Express.=
-
-=Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe.= By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "This story is unique among tales intended for children, alike
- for pleasant instruction, quaintness of humor, gentle pathos,
- and the subtlety with which lessons moral and otherwise are
- conveyed to children, and perhaps to their seniors as
- well."--=The Spectator.=
-
-=Joan's Adventures at the North Pole and Elsewhere.= BY ALICE
-CORKRAN. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "Wonderful as the adventures of Joan are, it must be admitted
- that they are very naturally worked out and very plausibly
- presented. Altogether this is an excellent story for
- girls."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Count Up the Sunny Days=: A Story for Girls and Boys. By C. A.
-JONES. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "An unusually good children's story."--=Glasgow Herald.=
-
-=The Dove in the Eagle's Nest.= By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Among all the modern writers we believe Miss Yonge first, not
- in genius, but in this, that she employs her great abilities for
- a high and noble purpose. We know of few modern writers whose
- works may be so safely commended as hers."--=Cleveland Times.=
-
-=Jan of the Windmill.= A Story of the Plains. By MRS. J. H.
-EWING. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Never has Mrs. Ewing published a more charming volume, and that
- is saying a very great deal. From the first to the last the book
- overflows with the strange knowledge of child-nature which so
- rarely survives childhood: and moreover, with inexhaustible
- quiet humor, which is never anything but innocent and well-bred,
- never priggish, and never clumsy."--=Academy.=
-
-=A Sweet Girl Graduate.= By L. T. MEADE. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "One of this popular author's best. The characters are well
- imagined and drawn. The story moves with plenty of spirit and
- the interest does not flag until the end too quickly
- comes."--=Providence Journal.=
-
-=Six to Sixteen=: A Story for Girls. By JULIANA HORATIA EWING.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "There is no doubt as to the good quality and attractiveness of
- 'Six to Sixteen.' The book is one which would enrich any girl's
- book shelf."--=St. James' Gazette.=
-
-=The Palace Beautiful=: A Story for Girls. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "A bright and interesting story. The many admirers of Mrs. L. T.
- Meade in this country will be delighted with the 'Palace
- Beautiful' for more reasons than one. It is a charming book for
- girls."--=New York Recorder.=
-
-=A World of Girls=: The Story of a School. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "One of those wholesome stories which it does one good to read.
- It will afford pure delight to numerous readers. This book
- should be on every girl's book shelf."--=Boston Home Journal.=
-
-=The Lady of the Forest=: A Story for Girls. By L. T. MEADE.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "This story is written in the author's well-known, fresh and
- easy style. All girls fond of reading will be charmed by this
- well-written story. It is told with the author's customary grace
- and spirit."--=Boston Times.=
-
-=At the Back of the North Wind.= By GEORGE MACDONALD. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "A very pretty story, with much of the freshness and vigor of
- Mr. Macdonald's earlier work.... It is a sweet, earnest, and
- wholesome fairy story, and the quaint native humor is
- delightful. A most delightful volume for young
- readers."--=Philadelphia Times.=
-
-=The Water Babies=: A Fairy Tale for a Land Baby. By CHARLES
-KINGSLEY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "The strength of his work, as well as its peculiar charms,
- consist in his description of the experiences of a youth with
- life under water in the luxuriant wealth of which he revels with
- all the ardor of a poetical nature."--=New York Tribune.=
-
-=Our Bessie.= By ROSA N. CAREY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price
-$1.00.
-
- "One of the most entertaining stories of the season, full of
- vigorous action, and strong in character-painting. Elder girls
- will be charmed with it, and adults may read its pages with
- profit."--=The Teachers' Aid.=
-
-=Wild Kitty.= A Story of Middleton School. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Kitty is a true heroine--warm-hearted, self-sacrificing, and,
- as all good women nowadays are, largely touched with the
- enthusiasm of humanity. One of the most attractive gift books of
- the season."--=The Academy.=
-
-=A Young Mutineer.= A Story for Girls. By L. T. MEADE. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "One of Mrs. Meade's charming books for girls, narrated in that
- simple and picturesque style which marks the authoress as one of
- the first among writers for young people."--=The Spectator.=
-
-=Sue and I.= By MRS. O'REILLY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75
-cents.
-
- "A thoroughly delightful book, full of sound wisdom as well as
- fun."--=Athenaeum.=
-
-=The Princess and the Goblin.= A Fairy Story. By GEORGE
-MACDONALD. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "If a child once begins this book, it will get so deeply
- interested in it that when bedtime comes it will altogether
- forget the moral, and will weary its parents with importunities
- for just a few minutes more to see how everything
- ends."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Pythia's Pupils=: A Story of a School. By EVA HARTNER. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "This story of the doings of several bright school girls is sure
- to interest girl readers. Among many good stories for girls this
- is undoubtedly one of the very best."--=Teachers' Aid.=
-
-=A Story of a Short Life.= By JULIANA HORATIA EWING. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "The book is one we can heartily recommend, for it is not only
- bright and interesting, but also pure and healthy in tone and
- teaching."--=Courier.=
-
-=The Sleepy King.= A Fairy Tale. By AUBREY HOPWOOD AND SEYMOUR
-HICKS. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "Wonderful as the adventures of Bluebell are, it must be
- admitted that they are very naturally worked out and very
- plausibly presented. Altogether this is an excellent story for
- girls."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Two Little Waifs.= By MRS. MOLESWORTH. 12mo, cloth, illustrated,
-price 75 cents.
-
- "Mrs. Molesworth's delightful story of 'Two Little Waifs' will
- charm all the small people who find it in their stockings. It
- relates the adventures of two lovable English children lost in
- Paris, and is just wonderful enough to pleasantly wring the
- youthful heart."--=New York Tribune.=
-
-=Adventures in Toyland.= By EDITH KING HALL. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "The author is such a bright, cheery writer, that her stories
- are always acceptable to all who are not confirmed cynics, and
- her record of the adventures is as entertaining and enjoyable as
- we might expect."--=Boston Courier.=
-
-=Adventures in Wallypug Land.= By G. E. FARROW. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "These adventures are simply inimitable, and will delight boys
- and girls of mature age, as well as their juniors. No happier
- combination of author and artist than this volume presents could
- be found to furnish healthy amusement to the young folks. The
- book is an artistic one in every sense."--=Toronto Mail.=
-
-=Fussbudget's Folks.= A Story for Young Girls. By ANNA F.
-BURNHAM. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Mrs. Burnham has a rare gift for composing stories for
- children. With a light, yet forcible touch, she paints sweet and
- artless, yet natural and strong,
- characters."--=Congregationalist.=
-
-=Mixed Pickles.= A Story for Girls. By MRS. E. M. FIELD. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "It is, in its way, a little classic, of which the real beauty
- and pathos can hardly be appreciated by young people. It is not
- too much to say of the story that it is perfect of its
- kind."--=Good Literature.=
-
-=Miss Mouse and Her Boys.= A Story for Girls, By MRS. MOLESWORTH.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "Mrs. Molesworth's books are cheery, wholesome, and particularly
- well adapted to refined life. It is safe to add that she is the
- best English prose writer for children. A new volume from Mrs.
- Molesworth is always a treat."--=The Beacon.=
-
-=Gilly Flower.= A Story for Girls. By the author of "=Miss
-Toosey's Mission=." 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Jill is a little guardian angel to three lively brothers who
- tease and play with her.. .. Her unconscious goodness brings
- right thoughts and resolves to several persons who come into
- contact with her. There is no goodiness in this tale, but its
- influence is of the best kind."--=Literary World.=
-
-=The Chaplet of Pearls=; or, The White and Black Ribaumont. By
-CHARLOTTE M. YONGE. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Full of spirit and life, so well sustained throughout that
- grown-up readers may enjoy it as much as children. It is one of
- the best books of the season."--=Guardian.=
-
-=Naughty Miss Bunny=: Her Tricks and Troubles. By CLARA
-MULHOLLAND. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "The naughty child is positively delightful. Papas should not
- omit the book from their list of juvenile presents."--=Land and
- Water.=
-
-=Meg's Friend.= By ALICE CORKRAN. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price
-$1.00.
-
- "One of Miss Corkran's charming books for girls, narrated in
- that simple and picturesque style which marks the authoress as
- one of the first among writers for young people."--=The
- Spectator.=
-
-=Averil.= By ROSA N. CAREY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price
-$1.00.
-
- "A charming story for young folks. Averil is a delightful
- creature--piquant, tender, and true--and her varying fortunes
- are perfectly realistic."--=World.=
-
-=Aunt Diana.= By ROSA N. CAREY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price
-$1.00.
-
- "An excellent story, the interest being sustained from first to
- last. This is, both in its intention and the way the story is
- told, one of the best books of its kind which has come before us
- this year."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Little Sunshine's Holiday=: A Picture from Life. By MISS MULOCK.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "This is a pretty narrative of child life, describing the simple
- doings and sayings of a very charming and rather precocious
- child. This is a delightful book for young people."--=Gazette.=
-
-=Esther's Charge.= A Story for Girls. By ELLEN EVERETT GREEN.
-12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "...This is a story showing in a charming way how one little
- girl's jealousy and bad temper were conquered; one of the best,
- most suggestive and improving of the Christmas juveniles."--=New
- York Tribune.=
-
-=Fairy Land of Science.= By ARABELLA B. BUCKLEY. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "We can highly recommend it; not only for the valuable
- information it gives on the special subjects to which it is
- dedicated, but also as a book teaching natural sciences in an
- interesting way. A fascinating little volume, which will make
- friends in every household in which there are children."--=Daily
- News.=
-
-=Merle's Crusade.= By ROSA N. CAREY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated,
-price $1.00.
-
- "Among the books for young people we have seen nothing more
- unique than this book. Like all of this author's stories it will
- please young readers by the very attractive and charming style
- in which it is written."--=Journal.=
-
-=Birdie=: A Tale of Child Life. By H. L. CHILDE-PEMBERTON. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
- "The story is quaint and simple, but there is a freshness about
- it that makes one hear again the ringing laugh and the cheery
- shout of children at play which charmed his earlier
- years."--=New York Express.=
-
-=The Days of Bruce=: A Story from Scottish History. By GRACE
-AGUILAR. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "There is a delightful freshness, sincerity and vivacity about
- all of Grace Aguilar's stories which cannot fail to win the
- interest and admiration of every lover of good
- reading."--=Boston Beacon.=
-
-=Three Bright Girls=: A Story of Chance and Mischance. By ANNIE
-E. ARMSTRONG. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "The charm of the story lies in the cheery helpfulness of spirit
- developed in the girls by their changed circumstances; while the
- author finds a pleasant ending to all their happy makeshifts.
- The story is charmingly told, and the book can be warmly
- recommended as a present for girls."--=Standard.=
-
-=Giannetta=: A Girl's Story of Herself. By ROSA MULHOLLAND. 12mo,
-cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Extremely well told and full of interest. Giannetta is a true
- heroine--warm-hearted, self-sacrificing, and, as all good women
- nowadays are, largely touched with enthusiasm of humanity. The
- illustrations are unusually good. One of the most attractive
- gift books of the season."--=The Academy.=
-
-=Margery Merton's Girlhood.= By ALICE CORKRAN. 12mo, cloth,
-illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "The experiences of an orphan girl who in infancy is left by her
- father to the care of an elderly aunt residing near Paris. The
- accounts of the various persons who have an after influence on
- the story are singularly vivid. There is a subtle attraction
- about the book which will make it a great favorite with
- thoughtful girls."--=Saturday Review.=
-
-=Under False Colors=: A Story from Two Girls' Lives. By SARAH
-DOUDNEY. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price $1.00.
-
- "Sarah Doudney has no superior as a writer of high-toned
- stories--pure in style, original in conception, and with
- skillfully wrought out plots; but we have seen nothing equal in
- dramatic energy to this book."--=Christian Leader.=
-
-=Down the Snow Stairs=; or, From Good-night to Good-morning. By
-ALICE CORKRAN. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, price 75 cents.
-
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