The Last Pearl
by
Hans Christian Andersen
(1854)
WE are
in a rich, happy house, where the master, the servants, the friends of the
family are full of joy and felicity. For on this day a son and heir has been
born, and mother and child are doing well. The lamp in the bed-chamber had been
partly shaded, and the windows were covered with heavy curtains of some costly
silken material. The carpet was thick and soft, like a covering of moss.
Everything invited to slumber, everything had a charming look of repose; and so
the nurse had discovered, for she slept; and well she might sleep, while
everything around her told of happiness and blessing. The guardian angel of the
house leaned against the head of the bed; while over the child was spread, as
it were, a net of shining stars, and each star was a pearl of happiness. All
the good stars of life had brought their gifts to the newly born; here sparkled
health, wealth, fortune, and love; in short, there seemed to be everything for
which man could wish on earth.
“Everything has been bestowed here,” said the guardian
angel.
“No, not everything,” said a voice near him—the voice of the
good angel of the child; “one fairy has not yet brought her gift, but she will,
even if years should elapse, she will bring her gift; it is the last pearl that
is wanting.”
“Wanting!” cried the guardian angel; “nothing must be
wanting here; and if it is so, let us fetch it; let us seek the powerful fairy;
let us go to her.”
“She will come, she will come some day unsought!”
“Her pearl must not be missing; it must be there, that the
crown, when worn, may be complete. Where is she to be found? Where does she
dwell?” said the guardian angel. “Tell me, and I will procure the pearl.”
“Will you do that?” replied the good angel of the child.
“Then I will lead you to her directly, wherever she may be. She has no abiding
place; she rules in the palace of the emperor, sometimes she enters the
peasant’s humble cot; she passes no one without leaving a trace of her
presence. She brings her gift with her, whether it is a world or a bauble. To
this child she must come. You think that to wait for this time would be long
and useless. Well, then, let us go for this pearl—the only one lacking amidst
all this wealth.”
Then hand-in-hand they floated away to the spot where the
fairy was now lingering. It was in a large house with dark windows and empty
rooms, in which a peculiar stillness reigned. A whole row of windows stood
open, so that the rude wind could enter at its pleasure, and the long white
curtains waved to and fro in the current of air. In the centre of one of the
rooms stood an open coffin, in which lay the body of a woman, still in the
bloom of youth and very beautiful. Fresh roses were scattered over her. The
delicate folded hands and the noble face glorified in death by the solemn,
earnest look, which spoke of an entrance into a better world, were alone
visible. Around the coffin stood the husband and children, a whole troop, the
youngest in the father’s arms. They were come to take a last farewell look of
their mother. The husband kissed her hand, which now lay like a withered leaf,
but which a short time before had been diligently employed in deeds of love for
them all. Tears of sorrow rolled down their cheeks, and fell in heavy drops on
the floor, but not a word was spoken. The silence which reigned here expressed
a world of grief. With silent steps, still sobbing, they left the room. A
burning light remained in the room, and a long, red wick rose far above the
flame, which fluttered in the draught of air. Strange men came in and placed
the lid of the coffin over the dead, and drove the nails firmly in; while the
blows of the hammer resounded through the house, and echoed in the hearts that
were bleeding.
“Whither art thou leading me?” asked the guardian angel.
“Here dwells no fairy whose pearl could be counted amongst the best gifts of
life.”
“Yes, she is here; here in this sacred hour,” replied the
angel, pointing to a corner of the room; and there,—where in her life-time, the
mother had taken her seat amidst flowers and pictures: in that spot, where she,
like the blessed fairy of the house, had welcomed husband, children, and
friends, and, like a sunbeam, had spread joy and cheerfulness around her, the
centre and heart of them all,—there, in that very spot, sat a strange woman,
clothed in long, flowing garments, and occupying the place of the dead wife and
mother. It was the fairy, and her name was “Sorrow.” A hot tear rolled into her
lap, and formed itself into a pearl, glowing with all the colors of the
rainbow. The angel seized it: the, pearl glittered like a star with seven-fold
radiance. The pearl of Sorrow, the last, which must not be wanting, increases
the lustre, and explains the meaning of all the other pearls.
“Do you see the shimmer of the rainbow, which unites earth
to heaven?” So has there been a bridge built between this world and the next.
Through the night of the grave we gaze upwards beyond the stars to the end of
all things. Then we glance at the pearl of Sorrow, in which are concealed the
wings which shall carry us away to eternal happiness.
No comments:
Post a Comment