The Snow Queen
There is a legend that, once upon a
time, a beautiful fairy, the Snow Queen, lived on the highest, most solitary
peaks of the Alps. The mountain folk and shepherds climbed to the summits to
admire her, and everyone fell head over heels in love with her.
Every man would have given anything,
including his life, to marry her. Indeed, their lives are just what they did
give, for Fate had decided that no mortal would ever marry the Snow Queen. But
in spite of that, many brave souls did their best to approach her, hoping
always to persuade her.
Each suitor was allowed to enter the great
ice palace with the crystal roof, where the Queen’s throne stood. But the
second he declared his love and asked for her hand, thousands of goblins
appeared to grasp him and push him over the rocks, down into bottomless
abysses.
Without the slightest emotion, the
Queen would watch the scene, her heart of ice unable to feel anything at all.
The legend of the crystal palace and the beautiful heartless Queen spread as
far as the most distant alpine valley, the home of a fearless chamois hunter.
Fascinated by the tale, he decided to set out and try his luck. Leaving his
valley, he journeyed for days on end, climbing the snow-clad mountain faces,
scaling icebound peaks and defying the bitterly cold wind that swept through
the alpine gullies.
More than once he felt all was lost,
but the thought of the lovely Snow Queen gave him new strength and kept him
moving onwards. At last, after many days climbing, he saw glinting in the
sunshine before him, the tall transparent spires of the ice palace.
Summoning all his courage, the young
man entered the Throne Room. But he was so struck by the Snow Queen’s beauty
that he could not utter a word. Shy and timid, he did not dare speak. So he
knelt in admiration before the Queen for hours on end, without opening his
mouth. The Queen looked at him silently, thinking all the while that, provided
he did not ask her hand in marriage, there was no need to call the goblins.
Then, to her great surprise, she
discovered that his behaviour touched her heart. She realised she was becoming
quite fond of this hunter, much younger and more handsome than her other
suitors. Time passed and the Snow Queen dared not admit, not even to herself,
that she would actually like to marry the young man.
In the meantime, the goblins kept
watch over their mistress; first they were astonished, then they became more
and more upset. For they rightly feared that their Queen might be on the point
of breaking the Law and bringing down on the heads of all the Mountain People
the fury of Fate.
Seeing that the Queen was slow to
give the order to get rid of her suitor, the goblins decided to take matters
into their own hands. One night, as dusk fell, they slipped out of the cracks
in the rock and clustered round the young chamois hunter. Then they hurled him
into the abyss. The Snow Queen watched the whole scene from the window, but
there was nothing she could do to stop them. However, her icy heart melted, and
the beautiful cruel fairy suddenly became a woman.
A tear dropped from her eye, the
first she had ever shed. And the Snow Queen’s tear fell on to a stone where it
turned into a little silvery star.
This was the first edelweiss … the
flower that grows only on the highest, most inaccessible peaks in the Alps, on
the edge of the abyss and precipice . . .
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