Page:Hans Andersen's Fairy Tales (1888).djvu/230

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THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE.
205

It was still night, and her father slept; she pressed a kiss upon his hand, and then took her distaff and fastened the end of the thread to her father’s house. But for this, blind as she was, she would never have found her way home again; to this thread she must hold fast, and trust not to others or even to herself. From the Tree of the Sun she broke four leaves; which she gave up to the wind and the weather, that they might be carried to her brothers as letters and a greeting, in case she did not meet them in the wide world. Poor blind child, what would become of her in those distant regions? But she had the invisible thread, to which she could hold fast; and she possessed a gift which all the others lacked. This was a determination to throw herself entirely into whatever she undertook, and it made her feel as if she had eyes even at the tips of her fingers, and could hear down into her very heart. Quietly she went forth into the noisy, bustling, wonderful world, and wherever she went the skies grew bright, and she felt the warm sunbeam, and a rainbow above in the blue heavens seemed to span the dark world. She heard the song of the bird, and smelt the scent of the orange groves and apple orchards so strongly that she seemed to taste it. Soft tones and charming songs reached her ear, as well as harsh sounds and rough words—thoughts and opinions in strange contradiction to each other. Into the deepest recesses of her heart penetrated the echoes of human thoughts and feelings. Now she heard the following words sadly sung:—

Life is a shadow that flits away
In a night of darkness and woe.”


But then would follow brighter thoughts:

Life has the rose’s sweet perfume
With sunshine, light, and joy.”


And if one stanza sounded painfully—

Each mortal thinks of himself alone,
Is a truth, alas, too clearly known”


Then, on the other hand, came the answer—

Love, like a mighty flowing stream,
Fills every heart with its radiant gleam.”


She heard, indeed, such words as these—

In the petty turmoil here below,
All is a vain and paltry show.”


Then came also words of comfort—

Great and good are the actions done
By many whose worth is never known.”


And if sometimes the mocking strain reached her—

Why not join in the jesting cry
That contemns all gifts from the throne on high?”