Ib
and Little Christine
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1855)
In the forest that extends from the banks of
the Gudenau, in North Jutland, a long way
into the country, and not far from the clear
stream, rises a great ridge of land, which
stretches through the wood like a wall.
Westward of this ridge, and not far from the
river, stands a farmhouse, surrounded by
such poor land that the sandy soil shows
itself between the scanty ears of rye and
wheat which grow in it. Some years have
passed since the people who lived here
cultivated these fields; they kept three
sheep, a pig, and two oxen; in fact they
maintained themselves very well, they had
quite enough to live upon, as people
generally have who are content with their
lot. They even could have afforded to keep
two horses, but it was a saying among the
farmers in those parts, "The horse eats
himself up;" that is to say, he eats as much
as he earns. Jeppe Jans cultivated his
fields in summer, and in the winter he made
wooden shoes. He also had an assistant, a
lad who understood as well as he himself did
how to make wooden shoes strong, but light,
and in the fashion. They carved shoes and
spoons, which paid well; therefore no one
could justly call Jeppe Jans and his family
poor people. Little Ib, a boy of seven years
old and the only child, would sit by,
watching the workmen, or cutting a stick,
and sometimes his finger instead of the
stick. But one day Ib succeeded so well in
his carving that he made two pieces of wood
look really like two little wooden shoes,
and he determined to give them as a present
to Little Christina.
"And who was Little Christina?" She was the
boatman's daughter, graceful and delicate as
the child of a gentleman; had she been
dressed differently, no one would have
believed that she lived in a hut on the
neighboring heath with her father. He was a
widower, and earned his living by carrying
firewood in his large boat from the forest
to the eel-pond and eel-weir, on the estate
of Silkborg, and sometimes even to the
distant town of Randers. There was no one
under whose care he could leave Little
Christina; so she was almost always with him
in his boat, or playing in the wood among
the blossoming heath, or picking the ripe
wild berries. Sometimes, when her father had
to go as far as the town, he would take
Little Christina, who was a year younger
than Ib, across the heath to the cottage of
Jeppe Jans, and leave her there. Ib and
Christina agreed together in everything;
they divided their bread and berries when
they were hungry; they were partners in
digging their little gardens; they ran, and
crept, and played about everywhere. Once
they wandered a long way into the forest,
and even ventured together to climb the high
ridge. Another time they found a few snipes'
eggs in the wood, which was a great event.
Ib had never been on the heath where
Christina's father lived, nor on the river;
but at last came an opportunity. Christina's
father invited him to go for a sail in his
boat; and the evening before, he accompanied
the boatman across the heath to his house.
The next morning early, the two children
were placed on the top of a high pile of
firewood in the boat, and sat eating bread
and wild strawberries, while Christina's
father and his man drove the boat forward
with poles. They floated on swiftly, for the
tide was in their favor, passing over lakes,
formed by the stream in its course;
sometimes they seemed quite enclosed by
reeds and water-plants, yet there was always
room for them to pass out, although the old
trees overhung the water and the old oaks
stretched out their bare branches, as if
they had turned up their sleeves and wished
to show their knotty, naked arms. Old
alder-trees, whose roots were loosened from
the banks, clung with their fibres to the
bottom of the stream, and the tops of the
branches above the water looked like little
woody islands. The water-lilies waved
themselves to and fro on the river,
everything made the excursion beautiful, and
at last they came to the great eel-weir,
where the water rushed through the
flood-gates; and the children thought this a
beautiful sight. In those days there was no
factory nor any town house, nothing but the
great farm, with its scanty-bearing fields,
in which could be seen a few herd of cattle,
and one or two farm laborers. The rushing of
the water through the sluices, and the
scream of the wild ducks, were almost the
only signs of active life at Silkborg. After
the firewood had been unloaded, Christina's
father bought a whole bundle of eels and a
sucking-pig, which were all placed in a
basket in the stern of the boat. Then they
returned again up the stream; and as the
wind was favorable, two sails were hoisted,
which carried the boat on as well as if two
horses had been harnessed to it. As they
sailed on, they came by chance to the place
where the boatman's assistant lived, at a
little distance from the bank of the river.
The boat was moored; and the two men, after
desiring the children to sit still, both
went on shore. they obeyed this order for a
very short time, and then forgot it
altogether. First they peeped into the
basket containing the eels and the
sucking-pig; then they must needs pull out
the pig and take it in their hands, and feel
it, and touch it; and as they both wanted to
hold it at the same time, the consequence
was that they let it fall into the water,
and the pig sailed away with the stream.
Here was a terrible disaster. Ib jumped
ashore, and ran a little distance from the
boat.
"Oh, take me with you," cried Christina; and
she sprang after him. In a few minutes they
found themselves deep in a thicket, and
could no longer see the boat or the shore.
They ran on a little farther, and then
Christina fell down, and began to cry.
Ib helped her up, and said, "Never mind;
follow me. Yonder is the house." But the
house was not yonder; and they wandered
still farther, over the dry rustling leaves
of the last year, and treading on fallen
branches that crackled under their little
feet; then they heard a loud, piercing cry,
and they stood still to listen. Presently
the scream of an eagle sounded through the
wood; it was an ugly cry, and it frightened
the children; but before them, in the
thickest part of the forest, grew the most
beautiful blackberries, in wonderful
quantities. They looked so inviting that the
children could not help stopping; and they
remained there so long eating, that their
mouths and cheeks became quite black with
the juice.
Presently they heard the frightful scream
again, and Christina said, "We shall get
into trouble about that pig."
"Oh, never mind," said Ib; "we will go home
to my father's house. It is here in the wood."
So they went on, but the road led them out
of the way; no house could be seen, it grew
dark, and the children were afraid. The
solemn stillness that reigned around them
was now and then broken by the shrill cries
of the great horned owl and other birds that
they knew nothing of. At last they both lost
themselves in the thicket; Christina began
to cry, and then Ib cried too; and, after
weeping and lamenting for some time, they
stretched themselves down on the dry leaves
and fell asleep.
The sun was high in the heavens when the two
children woke. They felt cold; but not far
from their resting-place, on a hill, the sun
was shining through the trees. They thought
if they went there they should be warm, and
Ib fancied he should be able to see his
father's house from such a high spot. But
they were far away from home now, in quite
another part of the forest. They clambered
to the top of the rising ground, and found
themselves on the edge of a declivity, which
sloped down to a clear transparent lake.
Great quantities of fish could be seen
through the clear water, sparkling in the
sun's rays; they were quite surprised when
they came so suddenly upon such an
unexpected sight.
Close to where they stood grew a hazel-bush,
covered with beautiful nuts. They soon
gathered some, cracked them, and ate the
fine young kernels, which were only just
ripe. But there was another surprise and
fright in store for them. Out of the thicket
stepped a tall old woman, her face quite
brown, and her hair of a deep shining black;
the whites of her eyes glittered like a
Moor's; on her back she carried a bundle,
and in her hand a knotted stick. She was a
gypsy. The children did not at first
understand what she said. She drew out of
her pocket three large nuts, in which she
told them were hidden the most beautiful and
lovely things in the world, for they were
wishing nuts. Ib looked at her, and as she
spoke so kindly, he took courage, and asked
her if she would give him the nuts; and the
woman gave them to him, and then gathered
some more from the bushes for herself, quite
a pocket full. Ib and Christina looked at
the wishing nuts with wide open eyes.
"Is there in this nut a carriage, with a
pair of horses?" asked Ib.
"Yes, there is a golden carriage, with two
golden horses," replied the woman.
"Then give me that nut," said Christina; so
Ib gave it to her, and the strange woman
tied up the nut for her in her handkerchief.
Ib held up another nut. "Is there, in this
nut, a pretty little neckerchief like the
one Christina has on her neck?" asked Ib.
"There are ten neckerchiefs in it," she
replied, "as well as beautiful dresses,
stockings, and a hat and veil."
"Then I will have that one also," said
Christina; "and it is a pretty one too. And
then Ib gave her the second nut.
The third was a little black thing. "You may
keep that one," said Christina; "it is quite
as pretty."
"What is in it?" asked Ib.
"The best of all things for you," replied
the gypsy. So Ib held the nut very tight.
Then the woman promised to lead the children
to the right path, that they might find
their way home: and they went forward
certainly in quite another direction to the
one they meant to take; therefore no one
ought to speak against the woman, and say
that she wanted to steal the children. In
the wild wood-path they met a forester who
knew Ib, and, by his help, Ib and Christina
reached home, where they found every one had
been very anxious about them. They were
pardoned and forgiven, although they really
had both done wrong, and deserved to get
into trouble; first, because they had let
the sucking-pig fall into the water; and,
secondly, because they had run away.
Christina was taken back to her father's
house on the heath, and Ib remained in the
farm-house on the borders of the wood, near
the great land ridge.
The first thing Ib did that evening was to
take out of his pocket the little black nut,
in which the best thing of all was said to
be enclosed. He laid it carefully between
the door and the door-post, and then shut
the door so that the nut cracked directly.
But there was not much kernel to be seen; it
was what we should call hollow or worm-eaten,
and looked as if it had been filled with
tobacco or rich black earth. "It is just
what I expected!" exclaimed Ib. "How should
there be room in a little nut like this for
the best thing of all? Christina will find
her two nuts just the same; there will be
neither fine clothes or a golden carriage in
them."
Winter came; and the new year, and indeed
many years passed away; until Ib was old
enough to be confirmed, and, therefore, he
went during a whole winter to the clergyman
of the nearest village to be prepared.
One day, about this time, the boatman paid a
visit to Ib's parents, and told them that
Christina was going to service, and that she
had been remarkably fortunate in obtaining a
good place, with most respectable people. "Only
think," he said, "She is going to the rich
innkeeper's, at the hotel in Herning, many
miles west from here. She is to assist the
landlady in the housekeeping; and, if
afterwards she behaves well and remains to
be confirmed, the people will treat her as
their own daughter."
So Ib and Christina took leave of each other.
People already called them "the betrothed,"
and at parting the girl showed Ib the two
nuts, which she had taken care of ever since
the time that they lost themselves in the
wood; and she told him also that the little
wooden shoes he once carved for her when he
was a boy, and gave her as a present, had
been carefully kept in a drawer ever since.
And so they parted.
After Ib's confirmation, he remained at home
with his mother, for he had become a clever
shoemaker, and in summer managed the farm
for her quite alone. His father had been
dead some time, and his mother kept no farm
servants. Sometimes, but very seldom, he
heard of Christina, through a postillion or
eel-seller who was passing. But she was well
off with the rich innkeeper; and after being
confirmed she wrote a letter to her father,
in which was a kind message to Ib and his
mother. In this letter, she mentioned that
her master and mistress had made her a
present of a beautiful new dress, and some
nice under-clothes. This was, of course,
pleasant news.
One day, in the following spring, there came
a knock at the door of the house where Ib's
old mother lived; and when they opened it,
lo and behold, in stepped the boatman and
Christina. She had come to pay them a visit,
and to spend the day. A carriage had to come
from the Herning hotel to the next village,
and she had taken the opportunity to see her
friends once more. She looked as elegant as
a real lady, and wore a pretty dress,
beautifully made on purpose for her. There
she stood, in full dress, while Ib wore only
his working clothes. He could not utter a
word; he could only seize her hand and hold
it fast in his own, but he felt too happy
and glad to open his lips. Christina,
however, was quite at her ease; she talked
and talked, and kissed him in the most
friendly manner. Even afterwards, when they
were left alone, and she asked, "Did you
know me again, Ib?" he still stood holding
her hand, and said at last, "You are become
quite a grand lady, Christina, and I am only
a rough working man; but I have often
thought of you and of old times." Then they
wandered up the great ridge, and looked
across the stream to the heath, where the
little hills were covered with the flowering
broom. Ib said nothing; but before the time
came for them to part, it became quite clear
to him that Christina must be his wife: had
they not even in childhood been called the
betrothed? To him it seemed as if they were
really engaged to each other, although not a
word had been spoken on the subject. They
had only a few more hours to remain together,
for Christina was obliged to return that
evening to the neighboring village, to be
ready for the carriage which was to start
the next morning early for Herning. Ib and
her father accompanied her to the village.
It was a fine moonlight evening; and when
they arrived, Ib stood holding Christina's
hand in his, as if he could not let her go.
His eyes brightened, and the words he
uttered came with hesitation from his lips,
but from the deepest recesses of his heart:
"Christina, if you have not become too
grand, and if you can be contented to live
in my mother's house as my wife, we will be
married some day. But we can wait for a
while."
"Oh yes," she replied; "Let us wait a little
longer, Ib. I can trust you, for I believe
that I do love you. But let me think it
over." Then he kissed her lips; and so they
parted.
On the way home, Ib told the boatman that he
and Christina were as good as engaged to
each other; and the boatman found out that
he had always expected it would be so, and
went home with Ib that evening, and remained
the night in the farmhouse; but nothing
further was said of the engagement. During
the next year, two letters passed between Ib
and Christina. They were signed, "Faithful
till death;" but at the end of that time,
one day the boatman came over to see Ib,
with a kind greeting from Christina. He had
something else to say, which made him
hesitate in a strange manner. At last it
came out that Christina, who had grown a
very pretty girl, was more lucky than ever.
She was courted and admired by every one;
but her master's son, who had been home on a
visit, was so much pleased with Christina
that he wished to marry her. He had a very
good situation in an office at Copenhagen,
and as she had also taken a liking for him,
his parents were not unwilling to consent.
But Christina, in her heart, often thought
of Ib, and knew how much he thought of her;
so she felt inclined to refuse this good
fortune, added the boatman. At first Ib said
not a word, but he became as white as the
wall, and shook his head gently, and then he
spoke,- "Christina must not refuse this good
fortune."
"Then will you write a few words to her?"
said the boatman.
Ib sat down to write, but he could not get
on at all. The words were not what he wished
to say, so he tore up the page. The
following morning, however, a letter lay
ready to be sent to Christina, and the
following is what he wrote:-
"The letter written by you to your father I
have read, and see from it that you are
prosperous in everything, and that still
better fortune is in store for you. Ask your
own heart, Christina, and think over
carefully what awaits you if you take me for
your husband, for I possess very little in
the world. Do not think of me or of my
position; think only of your own welfare.
You are bound to me by no promises; and if
in your heart you have given me one, I
release you from it. May every blessing and
happiness be poured out upon you, Christina.
Heaven will give me the heart's consolation.
Ever your sincere friend, Ib"
This letter was sent, and Christina received
it in due time. In the course of the
following November, her banns were published
in the church on the heath, and also in
Copenhagen, where the bridegroom lived. She
was taken to Copenhagen under the protection
of her future mother-in-law, because the
bridegroom could not spare time from his
numerous occupations for a journey so far
into Jutland. On the journey, Christina met
her father at one of the villages through
which they passed, and here he took leave of
her. Very little was said about the matter
to Ib, and he did not refer to it; his
mother, however, noticed that he had grown
very silent and pensive. Thinking as he did
of old times, no wonder the three nuts came
into his mind which the gypsy woman had
given him when a child, and of the two which
he had given to Christina. These wishing
nuts, after all, had proved true
fortune-tellers. One had contained a gilded
carriage and noble horses, and the other
beautiful clothes; all of these Christina
would now have in her new home at
Copenhagen. Her part had come true. And for
him the nut had contained only black earth.
The gypsy woman had said it was the best for
him. Perhaps it was, and this also would be
fulfilled. He understood the gypsy woman's
meaning now. The black earth- the dark
grave- was the best thing for him now.
Again years passed away; not many, but they
seemed long years to Ib. The old innkeeper
and his wife died one after the other; and
the whole of their property, many thousand
dollars, was inherited by their son.
Christina could have the golden carriage now,
and plenty of fine clothes. During the two
long years which followed, no letter came
from Christina to her father; and when at
last her father received one from her, it
did not speak of prosperity or happiness.
Poor Christina! Neither she nor her husband
understood how to economize or save, and the
riches brought no blessing with them,
because they had not asked for it.
Years passed; and for many summers the heath
was covered with bloom; in winter the snow
rested upon it, and the rough winds blew
across the ridge under which stood Ib's
sheltered home. One spring day the sun shone
brightly, and he was guiding the plough
across his field. The ploughshare struck
against something which he fancied was a
firestone, and then he saw glittering in the
earth a splinter of shining metal which the
plough had cut from something which gleamed
brightly in the furrow. He searched, and
found a large golden armlet of superior
workmanship, and it was evident that the
plough had disturbed a Hun's grave. He
searched further, and found more valuable
treasures, which Ib showed to the clergyman,
who explained their value to him. Then he
went to the magistrate, who informed the
president of the museum of the discovery,
and advised Ib to take the treasures himself
to the president.
"You have found in the earth the best thing
you could find," said the magistrate.
"The best thing," thought Ib; "the very best
thing for me,- and found in the earth! Well,
if it really is so, then the gypsy woman was
right in her prophecy."
So Ib went in the ferry-boat from Aarhus to
Copenhagen. To him who had only sailed once
or twice on the river near his own home,
this seemed like a voyage on the ocean; and
at length he arrived at Copenhagen. The
value of the gold he had found was paid to
him; it was a large sum- six hundred
dollars. Then Ib of the heath went out, and
wandered about in the great city.
On the evening before the day he had settled
to return with the captain of the
passage-boat, Ib lost himself in the streets,
and took quite a different turning to the
one he wished to follow. He wandered on till
he found himself in a poor street of the
suburb called Christian's Haven. Not a
creature could be seen. At last a very
little girl came out of one of the
wretched-looking houses, and Ib asked her to
tell him the way to the street he wanted;
she looked up timidly at him, and began to
cry bitterly. He asked her what was the
matter; but what she said he could not
understand. So he went along the street with
her; and as they passed under a lamp, the
light fell on the little girl's face. A
strange sensation came over Ib, as he caught
sight of it. The living, breathing
embodiment of Little Christina stood before
him, just as he remembered her in the days
of her childhood. He followed the child to
the wretched house, and ascended the narrow,
crazy staircase which led to a little garret
in the roof. The air in the room was heavy
and stifling, no light was burning, and from
one corner came sounds of moaning and
sighing. It was the mother of the child who
lay there on a miserable bed. With the help
of a match, Ib struck a light, and
approached her.
"Can I be of any service to you?" he asked.
"This little girl brought me up here; but I
am a stranger in this city. Are there no
neighbors or any one whom I can call?"
Then he raised the head of the sick woman,
and smoothed her pillow. He started as he
did so. It was Christina of the heath! No
one had mentioned her name to Ib for years;
it would have disturbed his peace of mind,
especially as the reports respecting her
were not good. The wealth which her husband
had inherited from his parents had made him
proud and arrogant. He had given up his
certain appointment, and travelled for six
months in foreign lands, and, on his return,
had lived in great style, and got into
terrible debt. For a time he had trembled on
the high pedestal on which he had placed
himself, till at last he toppled over, and
ruin came. His numerous merry companions,
and the visitors at his table, said it
served him right, for he had kept house like
a madman. One morning his corpse was found
in the canal. The cold hand of death had
already touched the heart of Christina. Her
youngest child, looked for in the midst of
prosperity, had sunk into the grave when
only a few weeks old; and at last Christina
herself became sick unto death, and lay,
forsaken and dying, in a miserable room,
amid poverty she might have borne in her
younger days, but which was now more painful
to her from the luxuries to which she had
lately been accustomed. It was her eldest
child, also a Little Christina, whom Ib had
followed to her home, where she suffered
hunger and poverty with her mother.
It makes me unhappy to think that I shall
die, and leave this poor child," sighed she.
"Oh, what will become of her?" She could say
no more.
Then Ib brought out another match, and
lighted a piece of candle which he found in
the room, and it threw a glimmering light
over the wretched dwelling. Ib looked at the
little girl, and thought of Christina in her
young days. For her sake, could he not love
this child, who was a stranger to him? As he
thus reflected, the dying woman opened her
eyes, and gazed at him. Did she recognize
him? He never knew; for not another word
escaped her lips.
_______________________________________________
In the forest by the river Gudenau, not far
from the heath, and beneath the ridge of
land, stood the little farm, newly painted
and whitewashed. The air was heavy and dark;
there were no blossoms on the heath; the
autumn winds whirled the yellow leaves
towards the boatman's hut, in which
strangers dwelt; but the little farm stood
safely sheltered beneath the tall trees and
the high ridge. The turf blazed brightly on
the hearth, and within was sunlight, the
sparkling light from the sunny eyes of a
child; the birdlike tones from the rosy lips
ringing like the song of a lark in spring.
All was life and joy. Little Christina sat
on Ib's knee. Ib was to her both father and
mother; her own parents had vanished from
her memory, as a dream-picture vanishes
alike from childhood and age. Ib's house was
well and prettily furnished; for he was a
prosperous man now, while the mother of the
little girl rested in the churchyard at
Copenhagen, where she had died in poverty.
Ib had money now- money which had come to
him out of the black earth; and he had
Christina for his own, after all. |