Good Luck Can Lie in a Pin
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1872)
Now I shall tell a story about good luck. We
all know good luck : some see it from year's
end to year's end, others only at certain
seasons, on a certain day ; there are even
people who only see it once in their lives,
but see it we all do.
Now I need not tell you, for every one knows
it, that God sends the little child and lays
it in a mother's lap, it may be in the rich
castle, and in the well-to-do house, but it
may also be in the open field where the cold
wind blows. Every one does not know, however,
but it is true all the same, that God, when
He brings the child, brings also a lucky
gift for it : but it is not laid openly by
its side ; it is laid in some place in the
world where one would least expect to find
it, and yet it always is found : that is the
best of it. It may be laid in an apple ; it
was so for a learned man who was called
Newton : the apple fell, and so he found his
good luck. If you do not know the story,
then ask some one who knows it to tell it
you. I have another story to tell, and that
is a story about a pear.
Once upon a time there was a man who was
born in poverty, had grown up in poverty,
and in poverty he had married. He was a
turner by trade and made, especially,
umbrella handles and rings ; but he only
lived from hand to mouth. ' never find good
luck/ he said. This is a story that really
happened, and one could name the country and
the place where the man lived, but that
doesn't matter.
The red, sour rowan-berries grew in richest
profusion about his house and garden. In the
garden there was also a pear-tree, but it
did not bear a single pear, and yet the good
luck was laid in that pear-tree, laid in the
invisible pears.
One night the wind blew a terrible storm.
They told in the newspapers that the big
stage-coach was lifted off the road and
thrown aside like a rag. It could very well
happen then that a great branch was broken
off the pear-tree.
The branch was put into the workshop, and
the man, as a joke, made a big pear out of
it, and then another big one, then a smaller
one, and then some very little ones. ' The
tree must some time or other have pears,'
the man said, and he gave them to the
children to play with.
One of the necessities of life in a wet
country is an umbrella. The whole house had
only one for common use ; if the wind blew
too strongly, the umbrella turned inside -
out ; it also snapped two or three times,
but the man soon put it right again. The
most provoking thing, however, was that the
button which held it together when it was
down, too often jumped off, or the ring
which was round it broke in two.
One day the button flew off ; the man
searched for it on the floor, and there got
hold of one of the smallest of the wooden
pears which the children had got to play
with. ' The button is not to be found,' said
the man, ' but this little thing will serve
the same purpose.' So he bored a hole
in it, pulled a string through it, and the
little pear fitted very well into the broken
ring. It was assuredly the very best
fastener the umbrella had ever had.
Next year when the man was sending umbrella
handles to the town, as he regularly did, he
also sent some of the little wooden pears,
and begged that they might be tried, and so
they came to America. There they very soon
noticed that the little pears held much
better than any other button, and now they
demanded of the merchant that all the
umbrellas which were sent after that should
be fastened with a little pear.
Now, there was something to do ! Pears in
thousands ! Wooden pears on all umbrellas !
The man must set to work. He turned and
turned. The whole pear-tree was cut up into
little pears ! It brought in pennies, it
brought in shillings !
' My good luck was laid in the pear-tree/
said the man. He now got a big workshop with
workmen and boys. He was always in a good
humour, and said, ' Good luck can lie in a
pin ! '
I also, who tell the story, say so. People
have a saying, ' Take a white pin in your
mouth and you will be invisible, but it must
be the right pin, the one which was given us
as a lucky gift by our Lord. I got that, and
I also, like the man, can catch chinking
gold, gleaming gold, the very best, that
kind which shines from children's eyes, the
kind that sounds from children's mouths, and
from father and mother too. They read the
stories, and I stand among them in the
middle of the room, but invisible, for I
have the white pin in my mouth. If I see
that they are delighted with what I tell
them, then I also say, ' Good luck can lie
in a pin ! ' |