The
Elf of the Rose
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1842)
In the midst of a garden grew a rose-tree,
in full blossom, and in the prettiest of all
the roses lived an elf. He was such a little
wee thing, that no human eye could see him.
Behind each leaf of the rose he had a
sleeping chamber. He was as well formed and
as beautiful as a little child could be, and
had wings that reached from his shoulders to
his feet. Oh, what sweet fragrance there was
in his chambers! and how clean and beautiful
were the walls! for they were the blushing
leaves of the rose.
During the whole day he enjoyed himself in
the warm sunshine, flew from flower to
flower, and danced on the wings of the
flying butterflies. Then he took it into his
head to measure how many steps he would have
to go through the roads and cross-roads that
are on the leaf of a linden-tree. What we
call the veins on a leaf, he took for roads;
ay, and very long roads they were for him;
for before he had half finished his task,
the sun went down: he had commenced his work
too late. It became very cold, the dew fell,
and the wind blew; so he thought the best
thing he could do would be to return home.
He hurried himself as much as he could; but
he found the roses all closed up, and he
could not get in; not a single rose stood
open. The poor little elf was very much
frightened. He had never before been out at
night, but had always slumbered secretly
behind the warm rose-leaves. Oh, this would
certainly be his death. At the other end of
the garden, he knew there was an arbor,
overgrown with beautiful honey-suckles. The
blossoms looked like large painted horns;
and he thought to himself, he would go and
sleep in one of these till the morning. He
flew thither; but “hush!” two people were in
the arbor,—a handsome young man and a
beautiful lady. They sat side by side, and
wished that they might never be obliged to
part. They loved each other much more than
the best child can love its father and
mother.
“But we must part,” said the young man;
“your brother does not like our engagement,
and therefore he sends me so far away on
business, over mountains and seas. Farewell,
my sweet bride; for so you are to me.”
And then they kissed each other, and the
girl wept, and gave him a rose; but before
she did so, she pressed a kiss upon it so
fervently that the flower opened. Then the
little elf flew in, and leaned his head on
the delicate, fragrant walls. Here he could
plainly hear them say, “Farewell, farewell;”
and he felt that the rose had been placed on
the young man’s breast. Oh, how his heart
did beat! The little elf could not go to
sleep, it thumped so loudly. The young man
took it out as he walked through the dark
wood alone, and kissed the flower so often
and so violently, that the little elf was
almost crushed. He could feel through the
leaf how hot the lips of the young man were,
and the rose had opened, as if from the heat
of the noonday sun.
There came another man, who looked gloomy
and wicked. He was the wicked brother of the
beautiful maiden. He drew out a sharp knife,
and while the other was kissing the rose,
the wicked man stabbed him to death; then he
cut off his head, and buried it with the
body in the soft earth under the linden-tree.
“Now he is gone, and will soon be forgotten,”
thought the wicked brother; “he will never
come back again. He was going on a long
journey over mountains and seas; it is easy
for a man to lose his life in such a journey.
My sister will suppose he is dead; for he
cannot come back, and she will not dare to
question me about him.”
Then he scattered the dry leaves over the
light earth with his foot, and went home
through the darkness; but he went not alone,
as he thought,—the little elf accompanied
him. He sat in a dry rolled-up linden-leaf,
which had fallen from the tree on to the
wicked man’s head, as he was digging the
grave. The hat was on the head now, which
made it very dark, and the little elf
shuddered with fright and indignation at the
wicked deed.
It was the dawn of morning before the wicked
man reached home; he took off his hat, and
went into his sister’s room. There lay the
beautiful, blooming girl, dreaming of him
whom she loved so, and who was now, she
supposed, travelling far away over mountain
and sea. Her wicked brother stopped over
her, and laughed hideously, as fiends only
can laugh. The dry leaf fell out of his hair
upon the counterpane; but he did not notice
it, and went to get a little sleep during
the early morning hours. But the elf slipped
out of the withered leaf, placed himself by
the ear of the sleeping girl, and told her,
as in a dream, of the horrid murder;
described the place where her brother had
slain her lover, and buried his body; and
told her of the linden-tree, in full blossom,
that stood close by.
“That you may not think this is only a dream
that I have told you,” he said, “you will
find on your bed a withered leaf.”
Then she awoke, and found it there. Oh, what
bitter tears she shed! and she could not
open her heart to any one for relief.
The window stood open the whole day, and the
little elf could easily have reached the
roses, or any of the flowers; but he could
not find it in his heart to leave one so
afflicted. In the window stood a bush
bearing monthly roses. He seated himself in
one of the flowers, and gazed on the poor
girl. Her brother often came into the room,
and would be quite cheerful, in spite of his
base conduct; so she dare not say a word to
him of her heart’s grief.
As soon as night came on, she slipped out of
the house, and went into the wood, to the
spot where the linden-tree stood; and after
removing the leaves from the earth, she
turned it up, and there found him who had
been murdered. Oh, how she wept and prayed
that she also might die! Gladly would she
have taken the body home with her; but that
was impossible; so she took up the poor head
with the closed eyes, kissed the cold lips,
and shook the mould out of the beautiful
hair.
“I will keep this,” said she; and as soon as
she had covered the body again with the
earth and leaves, she took the head and a
little sprig of jasmine that bloomed in the
wood, near the spot where he was buried, and
carried them home with her. As soon as she
was in her room, she took the largest
flower-pot she could find, and in this she
placed the head of the dead man, covered it
up with earth, and planted the twig of
jasmine in it.
“Farewell, farewell,” whispered the little
elf. He could not any longer endure to
witness all this agony of grief, he
therefore flew away to his own rose in the
garden. But the rose was faded; only a few
dry leaves still clung to the green hedge
behind it.
“Alas! how soon all that is good and
beautiful passes away,” sighed the elf.
After a while he found another rose, which
became his home, for among its delicate
fragrant leaves he could dwell in safety.
Every morning he flew to the window of the
poor girl, and always found her weeping by
the flower pot. The bitter tears fell upon
the jasmine twig, and each day, as she
became paler and paler, the sprig appeared
to grow greener and fresher. One shoot after
another sprouted forth, and little white
buds blossomed, which the poor girl fondly
kissed. But her wicked brother scolded her,
and asked her if she was going mad. He could
not imagine why she was weeping over that
flower-pot, and it annoyed him. He did not
know whose closed eyes were there, nor what
red lips were fading beneath the earth. And
one day she sat and leaned her head against
the flower-pot, and the little elf of the
rose found her asleep. Then he seated
himself by her ear, talked to her of that
evening in the arbor, of the sweet perfume
of the rose, and the loves of the elves.
Sweetly she dreamed, and while she dreamt,
her life passed away calmly and gently, and
her spirit was with him whom she loved, in
heaven. And the jasmine opened its large
white bells, and spread forth its sweet
fragrance; it had no other way of showing
its grief for the dead. But the wicked
brother considered the beautiful blooming
plant as his own property, left to him by
his sister, and he placed it in his sleeping
room, close by his bed, for it was very
lovely in appearance, and the fragrance
sweet and delightful. The little elf of the
rose followed it, and flew from flower to
flower, telling each little spirit that
dwelt in them the story of the murdered
young man, whose head now formed part of the
earth beneath them, and of the wicked
brother and the poor sister. “We know it,”
said each little spirit in the flowers, “we
know it, for have we not sprung from the
eyes and lips of the murdered one. We know
it, we know it,” and the flowers nodded with
their heads in a peculiar manner. The elf of
the rose could not understand how they could
rest so quietly in the matter, so he flew to
the bees, who were gathering honey, and told
them of the wicked brother. And the bees
told it to their queen, who commanded that
the next morning they should go and kill the
murderer. But during the night, the first
after the sister’s death, while the brother
was sleeping in his bed, close to where he
had placed the fragrant jasmine, every
flower cup opened, and invisibly the little
spirits stole out, armed with poisonous
spears. They placed themselves by the ear of
the sleeper, told him dreadful dreams and
then flew across his lips, and pricked his
tongue with their poisoned spears. “Now have
we revenged the dead,” said they, and flew
back into the white bells of the jasmine
flowers. When the morning came, and as soon
as the window was opened, the rose elf, with
the queen bee, and the whole swarm of bees,
rushed in to kill him. But he was already
dead. People were standing round the bed,
and saying that the scent of the jasmine had
killed him. Then the elf of the rose
understood the revenge of the flowers, and
explained it to the queen bee, and she, with
the whole swarm, buzzed about the flower-pot.
The bees could not be driven away. Then a
man took it up to remove it, and one of the
bees stung him in the hand, so that he let
the flower-pot fall, and it was broken to
pieces. Then every one saw the whitened
skull, and they knew the dead man in the bed
was a murderer. And the queen bee hummed in
the air, and sang of the revenge of the
flowers, and of the elf of the rose and said
that behind the smallest leaf dwells One,
who can discover evil deeds, and punish them
also. |