The
Child in the Grave
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1860)
It was a
very sad day, and every heart in the house
felt the deepest grief; for the youngest
child, a boy of four years old, the joy and
hope of his parents, was dead. Two daughters,
the elder of whom was going to be confirmed,
still remained: they were both good,
charming girls; but the lost child always
seems the dearest; and when it is youngest,
and a son, it makes the trial still more
heavy. The sisters mourned as young hearts
can mourn, and were especially grieved at
the sight of their parents’ sorrow. The
father’s heart was bowed down, but the
mother sunk completely under the deep grief.
Day and night she had attended to the sick
child, nursing and carrying it in her bosom,
as a part of herself. She could not realize
the fact that the child was dead, and must
be laid in a coffin to rest in the ground.
She thought God could not take her darling
little one from her; and when it did happen
notwithstanding her hopes and her belief,
and there could be no more doubt on the
subject, she said in her feverish agony,
“God does not know it. He has hard-hearted
ministering spirits on earth, who do
according to their own will, and heed not a
mother’s prayers.” Thus in her great grief
she fell away from her faith in God, and
dark thoughts arose in her mind respecting
death and a future state. She tried to
believe that man was but dust, and that with
his life all existence ended. But these
doubts were no support to her, nothing on
which she could rest, and she sunk into the
fathomless depths of despair. In her darkest
hours she ceased to weep, and thought not of
the young daughters who were still left to
her. The tears of her husband fell on her
forehead, but she took no notice of him; her
thoughts were with her dead child; her whole
existence seemed wrapped up in the
remembrances of the little one and of every
innocent word it had uttered.
The day of the little child’s funeral came.
For nights previously the mother had not
slept, but in the morning twilight of this
day she sunk from weariness into a deep
sleep; in the mean time the coffin was
carried into a distant room, and there
nailed down, that she might not hear the
blows of the hammer. When she awoke, and
wanted to see her child, the husband, with
tears, said, “We have closed the coffin; it
was necessary to do so.”
“When God is so hard to me, how can I expect
men to be better?” she said with groans and
tears.
The coffin was carried to the grave, and the
disconsolate mother sat with her young
daughters. She looked at them, but she saw
them not; for her thoughts were far away
from the domestic hearth. She gave herself
up to her grief, and it tossed her to and
fro, as the sea tosses a ship without
compass or rudder. So the day of the funeral
passed away, and similar days followed, of
dark, wearisome pain. With tearful eyes and
mournful glances, the sorrowing daughters
and the afflicted husband looked upon her
who would not hear their words of comfort;
and, indeed, what comforting words could
they speak, when they were themselves so
full of grief? It seemed as if she would
never again know sleep, and yet it would
have been her best friend, one who would
have strengthened her body and poured peace
into her soul. They at last persuaded her to
lie down, and then she would lie as still as
if she slept.
One night, when her husband listened, as he
often did, to her breathing, he quite
believed that she had at length found rest
and relief in sleep. He folded his arms and
prayed, and soon sunk himself into healthful
sleep; therefore he did not notice that his
wife arose, threw on her clothes, and glided
silently from the house, to go where her
thoughts constantly lingered—to the grave of
her child. She passed through the garden, to
a path across a field that led to the
churchyard. No one saw her as she walked,
nor did she see any one; for her eyes were
fixed upon the one object of her wanderings.
It was a lovely starlight night in the
beginning of September, and the air was mild
and still. She entered the churchyard, and
stood by the little grave, which looked like
a large nosegay of fragrant flowers. She sat
down, and bent her head low over the grave,
as if she could see her child through the
earth that covered him—her little boy, whose
smile was so vividly before her, and the
gentle expression of whose eyes, even on his
sick-bed, she could not forget. How full of
meaning that glance had been, as she leaned
over him, holding in hers the pale hand
which he had no longer strength to raise! As
she had sat by his little cot, so now she
sat by his grave; and here she could weep
freely, and her tears fell upon it.
“Thou wouldst gladly go down and be with thy
child,” said a voice quite close to her,—a
voice that sounded so deep and clear, that
it went to her heart.
She looked up, and by her side stood a man
wrapped in a black cloak, with a hood
closely drawn over his face; but her keen
glance could distinguish the face under the
hood. It was stern, yet awakened confidence,
and the eyes beamed with youthful radiance.
“Down to my child,” she repeated; and tones
of despair and entreaty sounded in the words.
“Darest thou to follow me?” asked the form.
“I am Death.”
She bowed her head in token of assent. Then
suddenly it appeared as if all the stars
were shining with the radiance of the full
moon on the many-colored flowers that decked
the grave. The earth that covered it was
drawn back like a floating drapery. She sunk
down, and the spectre covered her with a
black cloak; night closed around her, the
night of death. She sank deeper than the
spade of the sexton could penetrate, till
the churchyard became a roof above her. Then
the cloak was removed, and she found herself
in a large hall, of wide-spreading
dimensions, in which there was a subdued
light, like twilight, reigning, and in a
moment her child appeared before her,
smiling, and more beautiful than ever; with
a silent cry she pressed him to her heart. A
glorious strain of music sounded—now
distant, now near. Never had she listened to
such tones as these; they came from beyond a
large dark curtain which separated the
regions of death from the land of eternity.
“My sweet, darling mother,” she heard the
child say. It was the well-known, beloved
voice; and kiss followed kiss, in boundless
delight. Then the child pointed to the dark
curtain. “There is nothing so beautiful on
earth as it is here. Mother, do you not see
them all? Oh, it is happiness indeed.”
But the mother saw nothing of what the child
pointed out, only the dark curtain. She
looked with earthly eyes, and could not see
as the child saw,—he whom God has called to
be with Himself. She could hear the sounds
of music, but she heard not the words, the
Word in which she was to trust.
“I can fly now, mother,” said the child; “I
can fly with other happy children into the
presence of the Almighty. I would fain fly
away now; but if you weep for me as you are
weeping now, you may never see me again. And
yet I would go so gladly. May I not fly away?
And you will come to me soon, will you not,
dear mother?”
“Oh, stay, stay!” implored the mother; “only
one moment more; only once more, that I may
look upon thee, and kiss thee, and press
thee to my heart.”
Then she kissed and fondled her child.
Suddenly her name was called from above;
what could it mean? her name uttered in a
plaintive voice.
“Hearest thou?” said the child. “It is my
father who calls thee.” And in a few moments
deep sighs were heard, as of children
weeping. “They are my sisters,” said the
child. “Mother, surely you have not
forgotten them.”
And then she remembered those she left
behind, and a great terror came over her.
She looked around her at the dark night. Dim
forms flitted by. She seemed to recognize
some of them, as they floated through the
regions of death towards the dark curtain,
where they vanished. Would her husband and
her daughters flit past? No; their sighs and
lamentations still sounded from above; and
she had nearly forgotten them, for the sake
of him who was dead.
“Mother, now the bells of heaven are ringing,”
said the child; “mother, the sun is going to
rise.”
An overpowering light streamed in upon her,
the child had vanished, and she was being
borne upwards. All around her became cold;
she lifted her head, and saw that she was
lying in the churchyard, on the grave of her
child. The Lord, in a dream, had been a
guide to her feet and a light to her spirit.
She bowed her knees, and prayed for
forgiveness. She had wished to keep back a
soul from its immortal flight; she had
forgotten her duties towards the living who
were left her. And when she had offered this
prayer, her heart felt lighter. The sun
burst forth, over her head a little bird
carolled his song, and the church-bells
sounded for the early service. Everything
around her seemed holy, and her heart was
chastened. She acknowledged the goodness of
God, she acknowledged the duties she had to
perform, and eagerly she returned home. She
bent over her husband, who still slept; her
warm, devoted kiss awakened him, and words
of heartfelt love fell from the lips of both.
Now she was gentle and strong as a wife can
be; and from her lips came the words of
faith: “Whatever He doeth is right and best.”
Then her husband asked, “From whence hast
thou all at once derived such strength and
comforting faith?”
And as she kissed him and her children, she
said, “It came from God, through my child in
the grave.”
|