The
Marsh Kings's Daughter
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1858)
The storks tell their little ones very many
stories, all of the swamp and the marsh.
These stories are generally adapted to the
age and capacity of the hearers. The
youngest are content if they are told '
Cribble -Grabble, plurry-murry ' as a story,
and find it charming ; but the older ones
want something with a deeper meaning, or at
any rate something relating to the family.
Of the two
oldest and longest stories that have been
preserved among the storks we all know the
one, namely, that of Moses, who was exposed
by his mother on the banks of the Nile, and
whom the King's daughter found, and who
afterwards became a great man and the place
of whose burial is unknown. That story is very well known..
The second is not known yet, perhaps because
it is quite an inland story. It has been
handed down from storkmamma to stork-mamma,
for thousands of years, and each of them has
told it better and better ; and now we'll
tell it best of all.
The first Stork pair who told the story had
their summer residence on the wooden house
of the Viking, which lay by the wild moor in
Wendsyssel : that is to say, if we are to
speak out of the abundance of our knowledge,
hard by the great moor in the circle of
Hjorring, high up by Skagen, the most
northern point of Jutland. The wilderness
there is still a great wild inoss, about
which we can read in the official
description of the district. It is said that
in old times there was here a sea, whose
bottom was upheaved ; now the moss extends
for miles on all sides, surrounded by damp
meadows, and unsteady shaking swamp, and
turfy moor, with blueberries and stunted
trees. Mists are almost always hovering over
this region, which seventy years ago was
still inhabited by the wolves. It is
certainly rightly called the ' wild moss ' ;
and one can easily think how dreary and
lonely it must have been, and how much marsh
and lake there was here a thousand years ago.
Yes, in detail, exactly the same things were
seen then that may yet be beheld. The reeds
had the same height, and bore
the same kind of long leaves and
bluish-brown feathery
plumes that they bear now ; the birch stood
there, with
its white bark and its fine loosely-hanging
leaves, just as
now ; and as regards the living creatures
that dwelt here
why, the fly wore its gauzy dress of the
same cut that it
wears now, and the favourite colours of the
stork were
white picked out with black, and red
stockings. The people
certainly wore coats of a different cut from
those they now
wear ; but whoever stepped out on the
shaking moss, be
he huntsman or follower, master or servant,
met with the
same fate a thousand years ago that he would
meet with
to-day. He sank and went down to the Marsh
King, as
they called him, who ruled below in the
great empire of
the moss. They also called him Quagmire King
; but we
like the name Marsh King better, and by that
name the
storks also called him. Very little is known
of the Marsh
King's rule ; but perhaps that is a good
thing.
In the neighbourhood of the moss, close by
Limf jorden,
lay the wooden house of the Viking, with its
stone water-
tight cellars, with its tower and its three
projecting stories.
On the roof the Stork had built his nest,
and Stork -mamma
there hatched the eggs, and felt sure that
her hatching
would come to something.
One evening Stork -papa stayed out very late,
and when
he came home he looked very bustling and
important.
' I've something very terrible to tell you/
he said to the
Stork-mamma.
Let that be, she replied. ' Remember that
I'm hatching
the eggs, and you might agitate me," and I
might do them
a mischief.'
' You must know it,' he continued. ' She has
arrived
here the daughter of our host in Egypt she
has dared
to undertake the journey here and she 's
gone ! '
' She who came from the race of the fairies
? Oh, tell
me all about it ! You know I can't bear to
be kept long
in suspense when I'm hatching eggs.'
You see, mother, she believed in what the
doctor said,
and you told me true. She believed that the
moss flowers
would bring healing to her sick father, and
she has flown
here in swan's plumage, in company with the
other Swan
Princesses, who come to the North every year
to renew
their youth. She has come here, and she is
gone ! '
' You are much too long-winded ! ' exclaimed
the Stork-mamma, ' and the eggs might catch cold. I
can't bear
being kept in such suspense ! '
' I have kept watch,' said the Stork-papa ;
' and to-night,
when I went into the reeds there where the
marsh ground
will bear me three swans came. Something in
their flight
seemed to say to me, " Look out ! That 's
not altogether
swan ; it 's only swan's feathers " Yes,
mother, you have
a feeling of intuition just as I have ; you
can tell whether
a thing is right or wrong.'
' Yes, certainly,' she replied ; ; but tell
me about the
Princess. I'm sick of hearing of the swan's
feathers.'
Well, you know that in the middle of the
moss there
is something like a lake,' continued Stork
-papa. ' You
can see one corner of it if you raise
yourself a little. There,
by the reeds and the green mud, lay a great
elder stump,
and on this the three swans sat, flapping
their wings and
looking about them. One of them threw off
her plumage,
and I immediately recognized her as our own
Princess
from Egypt ! There she sat, with no covering
but her long
black hair. I heard her tell the others to
pay good heed
to the swan's plumage, while she dived down
into the water
to pluck the flowers which she fancied she
saw growing
there. The others nodded, and picked up the
empty
feather dress and took care of it. "I wonder
what they
will do with it ? " thought I ; and perhaps
she asked herself the same question. If so, she got an
answer, for the
two rose up and flew away with her swan's
plumage. " Do
thou dive down ! " they cried ; " thou shalt
never fly more
in swan's form, thou shalt never see Egypt
again ! Remain
thou there in the moss ! " And so saying,
they tore the
swan's plumage into a hundred pieces, so
that the feathers
whirled about like a snow-storm ; and away
they flew
the two faithless Princesses ! '
' Why, that is terrible ! ' said Stork
-mamma. ' I can't
bear to hear it. But now tell me what
happened next.'
' The Princess wept and lamented. Her tears
fell fast
on the elder stump, and the latter moved,
for it was the
Marsh King himself he who lives in the moss
! I myself
saw it how the stump of the tree turned
round, and ceased
to be a tree stump ; long thin branches grew
forth from
it like arms. Then the poor child was
terribly frightened,
and sprang away on to the green slimy ground
; but
that cannot even carry me, much less her.
She sank
immediately, and the elder stump dived down
too ; and
it was he who drew her down. Great black
bubbles rose
up, and there was no more trace of them. Now
the Princess
is buried in the wild moss, and never more
will she bear
away a flower to Egypt. Your heart would
have burst,
mother, if you had seen it.'
' You ought not to tell me anything of the
kind at such
a time as this,' said Stork-mamma ; ' the
eggs might suffer
by it. The 'Princess will find some way of
escape ; some
one will come to help her. If it had been
you or I, or one
of our people, it would certainly have been
all over with us.'
' But I shall go and look every day to see
if anything
happens/ said Stork-papa.
And he was as good as his word.
A long time had passed, when at last he saw
a green
stalk shooting up out of the deep moss. When
it reached
the surface a leaf spread out and unfolded
itself broader
and broader ; close by it, a bud came out.
And one
morning, when the Stork flew over the stalk,
the bud
opened through the power of the strong
sunbeams, and in
the cup of the flower lay a beautiful child
a little girl
looking just as if she had risen out of the
bath. The little
one so closely resembled the Princess from
Egypt, that at
the first moment the Stork thought it must
be the Princess
herself ; but, on second thoughts, it 'appeared
more probable that it must be the daughter of the
Princess and of
the Marsh King ; and that also explained her
being placed
in the cup of the water-lily.
' But she cannot possibly be left lying
there,' thought
the Stork ; ' and in my nest there are so
many already.
But stay, I have a thought. The wife of the
Viking has
no children, and how often has she not
wished for a little
one ! People always say, " The stork has
brought a little
one ; " and I will do so in earnest this
time. I shall fly
with the child to the Viking's wife. What
rejoicing there
will be there ! '
And the Stork lifted the little girl, flew
to the wooden
house, picked a hole with his beak in the
bladder-covered
window, laid the child on the bosom of the
Viking's wife,
and then hurried up to the Stork -mamma, and
told her
what he had seen and done ; and the little
Storks listened
to the story, for they were big enough to do
so now.
' So you see/ he concluded, ' the Princess
is not dead,
for she must have sent the little one up
here ; and now
that is provided for too.'
Ah, I said it would be so from the very
beginning !
said the Stork-mamma ; ' but now think a
little of your
own family. Our travelling time is drawing
on ; sometimes
I feel quite restless in my wings already.
The cuckoo and
the nightingale have started, and I heard
the quails saying
that they were going too, as soon as the
wind was favourable. Our young ones will behave well at the
exercising,
or I am much deceived in them.'
The Viking's wife was extremely glad when
she woke
next morning and found the charming infant
lying in her
arms. She kissed and caressed it, but it
cried violently,
and struggled with its arms and legs, and
did not seem
rejoiced at all. At length it cried itself
to sleep, and as
it lay there it looked exceedingly beautiful.
The Viking's
wife was in high glee : she felt light in
body and soul ;
her heart leapt within her ; and it seemed
to her as if her
husband and his warriors, who were absent,
must return quite
as suddenly and unexpectedly as the little
one had come.
Therefore she and the whole household had
enough to
do in preparing everything for the reception
of her lord.
The long coloured curtains of tapestry,
which she and her
maids had worked, and on which they had
woven pictures
of their idols, Odin, Thor, and Freia, were
hung up ; the
slaves polished the old shields that served
as ornaments ;
and cushions were placed on the benches, and
dry wood
laid on the fireplace in the midst of the
hall, so that the
fire could be lighted at a moment's notice.
The Viking's
wife herself assisted in the work, so that
towards evening
she was very tired, and slept well.
When she awoke towards morning, she was
violently
alarmed, for the infant had vanished ! She
sprang from
her couch, lighted a pine torch, and
searched all round
about ; and, behold, in the part of the bed
where she had
stretched her feet, lay, not the child, but
a great ugly frog !
She was horror-struck at the sight, and
seized a heavy
stick to kill the frog ; but the creature
looked at her with
such strange mournful eyes, that she was not
able to strike
the blow. Once more she looked round the
room the frog
uttered a low, wailing croak, and she
started, sprang from
the couch, and ran to the window and opened
it. At that
moment the sun shone forth, and flung its
beams through
the window on the couch and on the great
frog ; and
suddenly it appeared as though the frog's
great mouth
contracted and became small and red, and its
limbs moved
and stretched and became beautifully
symmetrical, and it
was no longer an ugly frog which lay there,
but her pretty
child !
' What is this ? ' she said. ' Have I had a
bad dream ?
Is it not my own lovely cherub lying there ?
'
And she kissed and hugged it ; but the child
struggled
and fought like a little wild cat.
Not on this day nor on the morrow did the
Viking
return, although he was on his way home ;
but the wind
was against him, for it blew towards the
south, favourably
for the storks. A good wind for one is a
contrary wind
for another.
When one or two more days and nights had
gone, the
Viking's wife clearly understood how the
case was with her
child, that a terrible power of sorcery was
upon it. By
day it was charming as an angel of light,
though it had
a wild, savage temper ; but at night it
became an ugly
frog, quiet and mournful, with sorrowful
eyes. Here were
two natures changing inwardly as well as
outwardly with
the sunlight. The reason of this was that by
day the child
had the form of its mother, but the
disposition of its father ;
while, on the contrary, at night the
paternal descent became
manifest in its bodily appearance, though
the mind and
heart of the mother then became dominant hi
the child.
Who might be able to loosen this charm that
wicked sorcery
had worked ?
The wife of the Viking lived in care and
sorrow about
it ; and yet her heart yearned towards the
little creature,
of whose condition she felt she should not
dare tell her
husband on his return, for he would probably,
according
to the custom which then prevailed, expose
the child on
the public highway, and let whoever listed
take it away.
The good Viking woman could not find it in
her heart to
allow this, and she therefore determined
that the Viking
should never see the child except by
daylight.
One morning the wings of storks were heard
rushing
over the roof ; more than a hundred pairs of
those birds
had rested from their exercise during the
previous night,
and now they soared aloft, to travel
southwards.
' All males here, and ready,' they cried ; '
and the wives
and children too.'
' How light we feel ! ' screamed the young
Storks in
chorus : ' it seems to be creeping all over
us, down into
our very toes, as if we were filled with
living frogs. Ah,
how charming it is, travelling to foreign
lands ! '
' Mind you keep close to us during your
flight said
papa and mamma. ' Don't use your beaks too
much, for
that tires the chest.'
And the Storks flew away.
At the same time the sound of the trumpets
rolled across
the heath, for the Viking had landed with
his warriors ;
they were returning home, richly laden with
spoil, from
the Gallic coast, where the people, as in
the land of the
Britons, sang in their terror :
' Deliver us from the wild Northmen ! '
And life and tumultuous joy came with them
into the
Viking's castle on the moorland. The great
mead-tub was
brought into the hall, the pile of wood was
set ablaze,
horses were killed, and a great feast was to
begin. The
officiating priest sprinkled the slaves with
the warm blood ;
the fire crackled, the smoke rolled along
beneath the roof,
soot dropped from the beams, but they were
accustomed
to that. Guests were invited, and received
handsome gifts :
all feuds and all malice were forgotten. And
the company
drank deep, and threw the bones of the feast
in each other's
faces, and this was considered a sign of
good humour. The
bard, a kind of minstrel, who was also a
warrior and
had been on the expedition with the rest,
sang them a song
in which they heard all their warlike deeds
praised, and
everything remarkable was specially noticed.
Every verse
ended with the burden :
Goods and gold, friends and foes will die ;
every man must one day die ;
But a famous name will never die.
And with that they beat upon their shields,
and hammered the table with bones and
knives.
The Viking's wife sat upon the crossbench in
the open
hall. She wore a silken dress and golden
armlets, and
great amber beads : she was in her costliest
garb. And
the bard mentioned her in his song, and sang
of the rich
treasure she had brought her rich husband.
The latter
was delighted with the beautiful child,
which he had seen
in the daytime in all its loveliness ; and
the savage ways
of the little creature pleased him
especially. He declared
that the girl might grow up to be a stately
heroine, strong
and determined as a man. She would not wink
her eyes
when a practised hand cut off her eyebrows
with a sword
by way of a jest.
The full mead -barrel was emptied, and a
fresh one
brought in, for these were people who liked
to enjoy all
things plentifully. The old proverb was
indeed well known,
which says, ' The cattle know when they
should quit the
pasture, but a foolish man knoweth not the
measure of
his own appetite.' Yes, they knew it well
enough ; but
one knows one thing, and one does another.
They also
knew that ' even the welcome guest becomes
wearisome
when he sitteth long in the house ' ; but
for all that they
sat still, for pork and mead are good things
; and there
was high carousing, and at night the bondmen
slept among
the warm ashes, and dipped their fingers in
the fat grease
and licked them. Those were glorious times !
Once more in the year the Viking sallied
forth, though
the storms of autumn already began to roar :
he went
with his warriors to the shores of Britain,
for he declared
that was but an excursion across the water ;
and his wife
stayed at home with the little girl. And
thus much is
certain, that the foster-mother soon got to
love the frog
with its gentle eyes and its sorrowful sighs,
almost better
than the pretty child that bit and beat all
around her.
The rough damp mist of autumn, which devours
the
leaves of the forest, had already descended
upon thicket
and heath. ' Birds featherless,' as they
called the snow,
flew in thick masses, and the winter was
coming on fast.
The sparrows took possession of the storks'
nests, and
talked about the absent proprietors
according to their
fashion ; but these the Stork-pair, with all
the young
ones what had become of them ?
The Storks were now in the land of Egypt,
where the sun
sent forth warm rays, as it does here on a
fine midsummer
day. Tamarinds and acacias bloomed in the
country all
around ; the crescent of Mohammed glittered
from the
cupolas of the temples, and on the slender
towers sat
many a stork-pair resting after the long
journey. Great
troops divided the nests, built close
together on venerable
pillars and in fallen temple arches of
forgotten cities. The
date-palm lifted up its screen as if it
would be a sunshade ;
the greyish-white pyramids stood like masses
of shadow
in the clear air of the far desert, where
the ostrich ran his
swift career, and the lion gazed with his
great grave eyes
at the marble Sphinx which lay half buried
in the sand.
The waters of the Nile had fallen, and the
whole river
bed was crowded with frogs ; and that was,
for the Stork
family, the finest spectacle in the country.
The young
Storks thought it was optical illusion, they
found everything so glorious.
' Yes, it 's delightful here ; and it 's
always like this in
our warm country,' said the Stork -mamma.
And the young ones felt quite frisky on the
strength
of it.
' Is there anything more to be seen ? ' they
asked. ' Are
we to go much farther into the country ? '
There 's nothing further to be seen,'
answered Storkmamma. ' Behind this delightful region there
are only wild
forests, whose branches are interlaced with
one another,
while prickly climbing plants close up the
paths only the
elephant can force a way for himself with
his great feet ;
and the snakes are too big and the lizards
too quick for
us. If you go into the desert, you'll get
your eyes full of
sand when there 's a light breeze, but when
it blows great
guns you may get into the middle of a pillar
of sand. It
is best to stay here, where there are frogs
and locusts.
I shall stay here, and you shall stay too.'
And there they remained. The parents sat in
the nest
on the slender minaret, and rested, and yet
were busily
employed smoothing their feathers, and
whetting their
beaks against their red stockings. -Now and
then they
stretched out their necks, and bowed gravely,
and lifted their
heads, with their high foreheads and fine
smooth feathers,
and looked very clever with their brown eyes.
The female
young ones strutted about in the juicy reeds,
looked slyly
at the other young storks, made
acquaintances, and swallowed a frog at every third step, or rolled
a little snake
to and fro in their bills, which they
thought became them
well, and, moreover, tasted nice. The male
young ones
began a quarrel, beat each other with their
wings, struck
with their beaks, and even pricked each
other till the blood
came. And in this way sometimes one couple
was betrothed,
and sometimes another, of the young ladies
and gentlemen,
and that was just what they lived for : then
they took
to a new nest, and began new quarrels, for
in hot countries
people are generally hot tempered and
passionate. But it
was pleasant for all that, and the old
people especially
were much rejoiced, for all that young
people do seems
to suit them well. There was sunshine every
day, and every
day plenty to eat, and nothing to think of
but pleasure.
But in the rich castle at the Egyptian
host's, as they called
him, there was no pleasure to be found.
The rich mighty lord reclined on his divan,
in the midst
of the great hall of the many-coloured walls,
looking as
if he were sitting in a tulip ; but he was
stiff and powerless
in all his limbs, and lay stretched out like
a mummy. His
family and servants surrounded him, for he
was not dead,
though one could not exactly say that he was
alive. The
healing moss flower from the North, which
was to have
been found and brought home by her who loved
him best,
never appeared. His beauteous young daughter,
who had
flown in the swan's plumage over sea and
land to the far
North, was never to come back. ' She is dead
! ' the two
returning Swan -maidens had said, and they
had made up
a complete story, which ran as follows :
' We three together flew high in the air : a
hunter saw
us, and shot his arrow at us ; it struck our
young companion and friend, and slowly, singing her
farewell song,
she sank down, a dying swan, into the
woodland lake. By
the shore of the lake, under a weeping birch
tree, we
buried her. But we had our revenge. We bound
fire
under the wings of the swallow who had her
nest beneath
the huntsman's thatch ; the house burst into
flames, the
huntsman was burned in the house, and the
glare shone
over the sea as far as the hanging birch
beneath which
she sleeps. Never will she return to the
land of Egypt.'
And then the two wept. And when Stork-papa
heard
the story, he clapped with his beak so that
it could be
heard a long way off.
Falsehood and lies ! ' he cried. ' I
should like to run
my beak deep into their chests.'
' And perhaps break it off,' interposed the
Stork-mamma : and then you would look well. Think first
of yourself, and
then of your family, and all the rest does
not concern you.'
But to-morrow I shall seat myself at the
edge of the
open cupola, when the wise and learned men
assemble to
consult on the sick man's state : perhaps
they may come
a little nearer the truth.'
And the learned and wise men came together
and spoke
a great deal, out of which the Stork could
make no sense
and it had no result, either for the sick
man or for the
daughter in the swampy waste. But for all
that we may
listen to what the people said, for we have
to listen to
a great deal of talk in the world.
But then it will be an advantage to hear
what went
before, and in this case we are well
informed, for we know
just as much about it as Storkpapa.
Love gives life ! the highest love gives
the highest life !
Only through love can his life be preserved.'
That is what they all said, and the learned
men said it
was very cleverly and beautifully spoken.
' That is a beautiful thought ! ' Stork-papa
said immediately.
' I don't quite understand it,' Stork -mamma
replied ;' and that 's not my fault, but the fault of
the thought.
But let it be as it will, I've something
else to think of.'
And now the learned men had spoken of the
love to this
one and that one, and of the difference
between the love of
one's neighbour and love between parents and
children, of
the love of plants for the light, when the
sunbeam kisses
the ground and the germ springs forth from
it, everything
was so fully and elaborately explained that
it was quite
impossible for Stork-papa to take it in,
mttch less to repeat
it. He felt quite weighed down with thought,
and half
shut his eyes, and the whole of the
following day he stood
thoughtfully upon one leg : it was quite
heavy for him
to carry, all that learning.
But one thing Stork -papa understood. All,
high and
low, had spoken out of their inmost hearts,
and said that
it was a great misfortune for thousands of
people, yes, for
the whole country, that this man was lying
sick, and could
not get well, and that it would spread joy
and pleasure
abroad if he should recover. But where grew
the flower
that could restore him to health ? They had
all searched
for it, consulted learned books, the
twinkling stars, the
weather and the wind ; they had made
inquiries in every
by-way of which they could think ; and at
length the wise
men and the learned men had said, as we have
already
told, that ' Love begets life will restore a
father's life ' ;
and on this occasion they said more than
they understood.
They repeated it, and wrote down as a recipe,
' Love begets
life.' But how was the thing to be prepared
according to
the recipe ? that was a difficulty they
could not get over.
At last they were decided upon the point
that help must
come by means of the Princess, who loved her
father with
her whole soul ; and at last a method had
been devised
whereby help could be procured. Yes, it was
already more
than a year ago since the Princess was to go
forth by night,
when the brief rays of the new moon were
waning : she
was to go out to the marble Sphinx, to shake
the dust
from her sandals, and to go onward through
the long
passage which leads into the midst of one of
the great
pyramids, where one of the mighty Kings of
antiquity,
surrounded by pomp and treasure, lay swathed
in mummy
cloths. There she was to incline her ear to
the dead King,
and then it would be revealed to her where
she might find
life and health for her father. She had
fulfilled all this,
and had seen in a vision that she was to
bring home from
the deep moss up in the Danish land the very
place had
been accurately described to her the lotos
flower which
grows in the depths of the waters, and then
her father
would regain health and strength.
And therefore she had gone forth in the
swan's plumage
out of the land of Egypt up to the wild moss.
And the
Stork -papa and Stork -mamma knew all this ;
and now we
also know it more accurately than we knew it
before. We
know that the Marsh King had drawn her down
to himself,
and know that to those at home she is dead
for ever. Only
the wisest of them said, as the Stork-mamma
said too,
' She will manage to help herself ; ' and
they resolved to
wait and see what would happen, for they
knew of nothing
better that they could do.
I should like to take away the swans'
feathers from
the two faithless Princesses,' said the
Stork -papa ; ' then
at any rate, they will not be able to fly up
again to the
wild moss and do mischief. I'll hide the two
swan -feather
suits up there, till somebody has occasion
for them.'
' But where do you intend to hide them ? '
asked Storkmamma.
' Up in our nest in the moss,' answered he.
'I and our
young ones will take turns in carrying them
up yonder on
our return, and if that should prove too
difficult for us,
there are places enough on the way where we
can conceal
them till our next journey. Certainly, one
suit of swan's
feathers would be enough for the Princess,
but two are
always better. In those northern countries
no one can
have too many wraps.'
' No one will thank you for it,' quoth
Stork-mamma ;
' but you're the master. Except at
breeding-time, I have
nothing to say.'
In the Viking's castle by the wild moss,
whither the
Storks bent their flight when the spring
approached, they
had given the little girl the name of Helga
; but this name
was too soft for a temper like that which
went with her
beauteous form. Month by month this temper
showed
itself more and more ; and in the course of
years during
which the Storks made the same journey over
and over
again, in autumn to the Nile, in spring back
to the moorland lake the child grew to be a big girl ;
and before
people were aware of it, she was a beautiful
maiden in her
sixteenth year. The shell was splendid, but
the kernel was
harsh and hard ; harder even than most in
those dark,
gloomy times. It was a pleasure to "her to
splash about
with her white hands in the blood of the
horse that had
been slain in sacrifice. In her wild mood
she bit off the
neck of the black cock the priest was about
to offer up ;
and to her foster-father she said in perfect
seriousness,
' If thy enemy should pull down the roof of
thy house,
while thou wert sleeping, I would not wake
thee even if
I had the power. I should never hear it, for
my ears still
tingle with the blow that thou gavest me
years ago
thou ! I have never forgotten it.'
But the Viking took her words in jest ; for,
like all
others, he was bewitched with her beauty,
and he knew not
how temper and form changed in Helga.
Without a saddle
she sat upon a horse, as if she were part of
it, while it
rushed along in full career ; nor would she
spring from
the horse when it quarrelled and fought with
other horses.
Often she would throw herself, in her
clothes, from the
high shore into the sea, and swim to meet
the Viking when
his boat steered near home ; and she cut her
longest lock
of hair, and twisted it into a string for
her bow.
' Self-made is well-made,' she said.
The Viking's wife was strong of character
and of will,
according to the custom of the times ; but,
compared to
her daughter, she appeared as a feeble,
timid woman ;
moreover, she knew that an evil charm
weighed heavily
upon the unfortunate child.
It seemed as if, out of mere malice, when
her mother
stood on the threshold or came out into the
yard, Helga
would often seat herself on the margin of
the well, and
wave her arms in the air ; then suddenly she
would dive
into the deep well, where her frog nature
enabled her to
dive and rise, down and up, until she
climbed forth again
like a cat, and came back into the hall
dripping with water,
so that the green leaves strewn upon the
ground turned
about in the stream.
But there was one thing that imposed a check
upon
Helga, and that was the evening twilight.
When that
came she was quiet and thoughtful, and would
listen to
reproof and advice ; and then a secret
feeling seemed to
draw her towards her mother. And when the
sun sank,
and the usual transformation of body and
spirit took place
in her, she would sit quiet and mournful,
shrunk to the
shape of the frog, her body indeed much
larger than that
of the animal, and for that reason much more
hideous to
behold, for she looked like a wretched dwarf
with a frog's
head and webbed fingers. Her eyes then had a
very
melancholy expression. She had no voice, and
could only
utter a hollow croaking that sounded like
the stifled sob
of a dreaming child. Then the Viking's wife
took her on
her lap, and forgot the ugly form as she
looked into the
mournful eyes, and said,
' I could almost wish that thou wert always
my poor
dumb frog-child ; for thou art only the more
terrible to
look at when thy beauty is on the outside.'
And she wrote Runes against sorcery and
sickness, and
threw them over the wretched child ; but she
could not
see that they worked any good.
' One can scarcely believe that she was ever
so small
that she could lie in the cup of a
water-lily,' said Stork-
papa, ' now she 's grown up the image of her
Egyptian
mother. Her we shall never see again ! She
did not know
how to help herself, as you and the learned
physicians said.
Year after year I have flown to and fro,
across and across
the great moss, and she has never once given
a sign that
she was still alive. Yes, I may as well tell
you, that every
year, when I came here a few days before you,
to repair
the nest and attend to various matters, I
spent a whole
night in flying to and fro over the lake, as
if I had been
an owl or a bat, but every time in vain. The
two suits
of swan feathers which I and the young ones
dragged up
here out of the land of the Nile have
consequently not
been used : we had trouble enough with them
to bring
them hither in three journeys ; and now they
have lain
for many years at the bottom of the nest,
and if it should
happen that a fire broke out, and the wooden
house were
burned, they would be destroyed.'
' And our good nest would be destroyed too,'
said Stork-
mamma ; ' but you think less of that than of
your plumage
stuff and of your Moor Princess. You'd best
go down into
the mud and stay there with her. You're a
bad father to
your own children, as I told you when I
hatched our
first brood. I only hope neither we nor our
children will
get an arrow in our wings through that wild
girl. Helga
doesn't know in the least what she does. I
wish she would
only remember that we have lived here"
longer than she,
and that we have never forgotten our duty,
and have
given our toll every year, a feather, an egg,
and a young
one, as it was right we should do. Do you
think I can now
wander about in the courtyard and everywhere,
as I used
to in former days, and as I still do in
Egypt, where
I am almost the playfellow of the people,
and that I can
press into pot and kettle as I can yonder ?
No, I sit
up here and am angry at her, the stupid chit
! And
I am angry at you too. You should have just
left her
lying in the water-lily, and she would have
been dead
long ago.'
' You are much better than your words,' said
Stork-
papa. ' I know you better than you know
yourself.'
And with that he gave a hop, and napped his
wings
heavily twice, stretched out his legs behind
him, and flew
away, or rather sailed away, without moving
his wings.
He had already gone some distance when he
gave a great flap! The sun shone upon the white feathers,
and his
ad and neck were stretched forth proudly.
There was
power in it, and dash !
' After all, he 's handsomer than any of
them,' said
Stork-mamma to herself ; ' but I don't tell
him so.'
Early in that autumn the Viking came home,
laden with
booty, and bringing prisoners with him.
Among these was
a young Christian priest, one of those who
contemned the
gods of the North.
Often in those later times there had been a
talk, in hall
and chamber, of the new faith that was
spreading far and
wide in the South, and which, by means of
Saint Ansgar,
had penetrated as far as Hedeby on the Slie.
Even Helga
had heard of this belief in the White Christ
who, from love
to men and for their redemption, had
sacrificed His life ;
but with her all this had, as the saying is,
gone in at one
ear and come out at the other. It seemed as
if she only
understood the meaning of the word 'love '
when she
crouched in a corner of the chamber in the
form of a miserable frog ; but the Viking's wife had
listened, and had felt
strangely moved by the stories and tales
which were told
in the South about the one only true Word.
On their return from their last voyage, the
men told of
the splendid temples built of hewn stones,
raised for the
worship of Him whose message is love. Some
massive
vessels of gold, made with cunning art, had
been brought
home among the booty, and each one had a
peculiar
fragrance ; for they were incense vessels,
which had been
swung by Christian priests before the altar.
In the deep cellars of the Viking's house
the young
priest had been immured, his hands and feet
bound with
strips of bark. The Viking's wife declared
that he was
beautiful as Balder to behold, and his
misfortune touched
her heart ; but Helga declared that it would
be right to
tie ropes to his heels and fasten him to the
tails of wild
oxen. And she exclaimed,
' Then I would let loose the dogs hurrah !
over the
moor and across the swamp ! That would be a
spectacle !
And yet finer would it be to follow him in
his career.'
But the Viking would not suffer him to die
such a death :
he purposed to sacrifice the priest on the
morrow, on the
death-stone in the grove, as a despiser and
foe of the
high gods.
For the first time a man was to be
sacrificed here.
Helga begged, as a boon, that she might
sprinkle the
image of the god and the assembled multitude
with the
blood of the victim. She sharpened her
glittering knife,
and when one of the great savage dogs, of
whom a number
were running about near the Viking's abode,
ran by her,
she thrust the knife into his side, ' merely
to try its sharpness,' as she said. And the Viking's wife
looked mournfully at the wild, evil-disposed girl ; and
when night came
on and the maiden exchanged beauty of form
for gentleness of soul, she spoke in eloquent words to
Helga of the
sorrow that was deep in her heart.
The ugly frog, in its monstrous form, stood
before her,
and fixed its brown eyes upon her face,
listening to her
words, and seeming to comprehend them with
human
intelligence.
' Never, not even to my husband, have I
allowed my
lips to utter a word concerning the
sufferings I have to
undergo through thee,' said the Viking's
wife ; ' my heart
is full of more compassion for thee than I
myself believed :
great is the love of a mother ! But love "ftever
entered into
thy heart thy heart that is like the wet,
cold moorland
plants. From whence have you come into my
house ? '
Then the miserable form trembled, and it was
as though
these words touched an invisible bond
between body and
soul, and great tears came into her eyes.
' Thy hard time will come,' said the
Viking's wife ; ' and
it will be terrible to me too. It had been
better if thou
hadst been set out by the high road, and the
night wind
had lulled thee to sleep.'
And the Viking's wife wept bitter tears, and
went away
full of wrath and bitterness of spirit,
disappearing behind
the curtain of furs that hung over the beam
and divided
the hall.
The wrinkled frog crouched in the corner
alone. A deep
silence reigned all around, but at intervals
a half -stifled
sigh escaped from its breast, from the
breast of Helga.
It seemed as though a painful new life were
arising in
her inmost heart. She came forward and
listened ; and,
stepping forward again, grasped with her
clumsy hands
the heavy pole that was laid across before
the door.
Silently she pushed back the pole, silently
drew back the
bolt, and took up the flickering lamp which
stood in the
ante-chamber of the hall. It seemed as if a
strong will
gave her strength. She drew back the iron
bolt from the
closed cellar door, and crept in to the
captive. He was
asleep ; she touched him with her cold,
clammy hand,
and when he awoke and saw the hideous form,
he shuddered
as though he had beheld a wicked apparition.
She drew
her knife, cut his bonds, and beckoned him
to follow her.
He uttered some holy names and made the sign
of the
cross ; and when the form remained unchanged,
he said,
' Who art thou ? Whence this animal shape
that thou
bearest, while yet thou art full of gentle
mercy ? '
The frog-woman beckoned him to follow, and
led him
through passages shrouded with curtains,
into the stables,
and there pointed to a horse. He mounted on
its back,
and she also sprang up before him, holding
fast by the
horse's mane. The prisoner understood her
meaning, and
in a rapid trot they rode on a way which he
would never
have found, out on to the open heath.
He thought not of her hideous form, but felt
how the
mercy and loving-kindness of the Almighty
were working
by means of this monster apparition ; he
prayed pious
prayers and sang songs of praise. Then she
trembled.
Was it the power of song and of prayer that
worked in
her, or was she shuddering at the cold
morning twilight
that was approaching ? What were her
feelings ? She
raised herself up, and wanted to stop the
horse and to
alight ; but the Christian priest held her
back with all his
strength, and sang a psalm, as if that would
have the
power to loosen the charm that turned her
into the hideous
semblance of a frog. And the horse galloped
on more
wildly than ever ; the sky turned red, the
first sunbeam
pierced through the clouds, and as the flood
of light came
streaming down, the frog changed its nature.
Helga was
again the beautiful maiden with the wicked,
demoniac
spirit. He held a beautiful maiden in his
arms, but was
horrified at the sight : he swung himself
from the horse,
and compelled it to stand. This seemed to
him a new and
terrible sorcery ; but Helga likewise leaped
from the saddle,
and stood on the ground. The child's short
garment
reached only to her knee. She plucked the
sharp knife
from her girdle, and rushed in upon the
astonished priest.
' Let me get at thee ! ' she screamed ; '
let me get at
thee, and plunge this knife in thy body !
Thou art pale
as straw, thou beardless slave ! '
She pressed in upon him. They struggled
together in
a hard strife, but an invisible power seemed
given to the
Christian captive. He held her fast ; and
the old oak tree
beneath which they stood came to his
assistance ; for its
roots, which projected over the ground, held
fast the
maiden's feet that had become entangled in
it. Quite close
to them gushed a spring ; and he sprinkled
Helga 's face
and neck with the fresh water, and commanded
the unclean
spirit to come forth, and blessed her in the
Christian
fashion ; but the water of faith has no
power when the
well-spring of faith flows not from within.
And yet the Christian showed his power even
now, and
opposed more than the mere might of a man
against the
evil that struggled within the girl. His
holy action seemed
to overpower her : she dropped her hands,
and gazed with
astonished eyes and pale cheeks upon him who
appeared
to her a mighty magician learned in secret
arts ; he seemed
to her to speak in a dark Runic tongue, and
to be making
magic signs in the air. She would not have
winked had
he swung a sharp knife or a glittering axe
against her ;
but she trembled when he signed her with the
sign of the
cross on her brow and her bosom, and she sat
there like
a tame bird with bowed head.
Then he spoke to her in gentle words of the
kindly deed
she had done for him in the past night, when
she came
to him in the form of the hideous frog, to
loosen his bonds
and to lead him out to life and light ; and
he told her that
she too was bound in closer bonds than
those that had
confined him, and that she should be
released by his means.
He would take her to Hedeby, to the holy
Ansgar, and
there in the Christian city the spell that
bound her would
be loosed. But he would not let her sit
before him on
the horse, though of her own accord she
offered to do so.
' Thou must sit behind me, not before me,'
he said.
' Thy magic beauty hath a power that comes
of evil, and
I fear it ; and yet I feel that the victory
is sure to him
who hath faith.'
And he knelt down and prayed fervently. It
seemed
as though the woodland scenes were
consecrated as a holy
church by his prayer. The birds sang as
though they
belonged to the new congregation, the wild
flowers smelt
sweet as incense ; and while he spoke the
horse that had
carried them both in headlong career stood
still before the
tall bramble bushes, and plucked at them, so
that the ripe juicy berries fell down upon
Helga's hands, offering themselves for her refreshment.
Patiently she suffered the priest to lift
her on the horse,
and sat like a somnambulist, neither
completely asleep nor
wholly awake. The Christian bound two
branches together
with bark, in the form of a cross, which he
held up high
as they rode through the forest. The wood
became thicker
as they went on, and at last became a
trackless wilderness.
The wild sloe grew across the way, so that
they had to
ride round the bushes. The spring became not
a stream
but a standing marsh, round which likewise
they were
obliged to ride. There was strength and
refreshment in the
cool forest breeze ; and no small power lay
in the gentle
words which were spoken in faith and in
Christian love,
from a strong inward yearning to lead the
poor lost one
into the way of light and life.
They say the rain-drops can hollow the hard
stone, and
the waves of the sea can smooth and round
the sharp edges
of the rocks. Thus did the dew of mercy,
that dropped
upon Helga, smooth what was rough and
penetrate what
was hard in her. The effects did not yet
appear, nor was
she aware of them herself ; but doth the
seed in the bosom
of earth know, when the refreshing dew and
the quickening
sunbeams fall upon it, that it hath within
itself the power
of growth and blossoming ? As the song of
the mother
penetrates into the heart of the child, and
it babbles the
words after her, without understanding their
import, until
they afterwards engender thought, and come
forward in
due time clearer and more clearly, so here
also did the
Word take effect, that is powerful to create.
They rode forth from the dense forest,
across the heath,
and then again through pathless woods ; and
towards
evening they encountered a band of robbers.
' Where hast thou stolen that beauteous
maiden ? ' cried
the robbers ; and they seized the horse's
bridle and dragged
the two riders from its back. The priest had
no weapon
save the knife he had taken from Helga, and
with this he
tried to defend himself. One of the robbers
lifted his axe,
but the young priest sprang aside, otherwise
he would
have been struck, and now the edge of the
axe went deep
into the horse's neck, so that the blood
spurted forth, and
the creature sank down on the ground. Then
Helga seemed
suddenly to wake up from her long reverie,
and threw herself hastily upon the gasping animal. The
priest stood
before her to protect and defend her, but
one of the robbers
swung his iron hammer over the Christian's
head, and
brought it down with such a crash that blood
and brains
were scattered around, and the priest sank
to the earth,
dead.
Then the robbers seized little Helga by her
white arms ;
but the sun went down, and its last ray
disappeared at
that moment, and she was changed into the
form of a frog.
A white -green mouth spread over half her
face, her arms
became thin and slimy, and broad hands with
webbed
fingers spread out upon them like fans. Then
the robbers
were seized with terror, and let her go. She
stood, a hideous
monster, among them ; and as it is the
nature of the frog
to do, she hopped up high, and disappeared
in the thicket.
Then the robbers saw that this must be a bad
prank of
the spirit Loke, or the evil power of magic,
and in great
affright they hurried away from the spot.
The full moon was already rising. Presently
it shone
with splendid radiance over the earth, and
poor Helga
crept forth from the thicket in the wretched
frog's shape.
She stood still beside the corpse of the
priest and the
carcass of the slain horse. She looked at
them with eyes
that appeared to weep, and from the
frog-mouth came
forth a croaking like the voice of a child
bursting into
tears. She leaned first over the one, then
over the other,
brought water in her hand, which had become
larger and
more hollow by the webbed skin, and poured
it over them ;
but dead they were, and dead they would
remain, she at
last understood. Soon the wild beasts would
come and
tear their dead bodies ; but no, that must
not be ! so she
dug up the earth as well as she could, in
the endeavour
to prepare a grave for them. She had nothing
to work
with but a stake and her two hands
encumbered with the
webbed skin that grew between the fingers,
and which was
torn by the labour, so that the blood flowed.
At last she
saw that her endeavours would not succeed.
Then she
brought water and washed the dead man's face,
and covered
it with fresh green leaves ; she brought
large boughs and laid
them upon him, scattering dead leaves in the
spaces between.
Then she brought the heaviest stones she
could carry and
laid them over the dead body, stopping up
the openings
with moss. And now she thought the
grave-hill would be
strong and secure. The night had passed away
in this
difficult work the sun broke through the
clouds, and
beautiful Helga stood there in all her
loveliness, with
bleeding hands, and for the first time with
tears on her
blushing maiden cheeks.
Then in this transformation it seemed as if
two natures
were striving within her. Her whole frame
trembled, and
she looked around, as if she had just awoke
from a troubled
dream. Then she ran towards the slender tree,
clung to
it for support, and in another moment she
had climbed to
the summit of the tree, and held fast. There
she sat like
a startled squirrel, and remained the whole
day long in
the silent solitude of the wood, where
everything is quiet,
and, as they say, dead. Butterflies
fluttered around in
sport, and in the neighbourhood were several
ant-hills,
each with its hundreds of busy little
occupants moving
briskly to and fro. In the air danced
innumerable gnats,
swarm upon swarm, and hosts of buzzing flies,
ladybirds,
gold beetles, and other little winged
creatures ; the worm
crept forth from the damp ground, the moles
came out ;
but except these all was silent around
silent, and, as
people say, dead. No one noticed Helga, but
some flocks
of jays, that flew screaming about the top
of the tree on
which she sat : the birds hopped close up to
her on the
twigs with pert curiosity ; but when the
glance of her eye
fell upon them, it was a signal for their
flight. But they
could not understand her nor, indeed, could
she understand herself.
When the evening twilight came on, and the
sun was
sinking, the time of her transformation
roused her to fresh
activity. She glided down from the tree, and
as the last
sunbeam vanished she stood in the wrinkled
form of the
frog, with the torn webbed skin on her hands
; but her
eyes now gleamed with a splendour of beauty
that had
scarcely been theirs when she wore her garb
of loveliness,
for they were a pair of pure, pious,
maidenly eyes that
shone out of the frog-face. They bore
witness of depth
of feeling, of the gentle human heart ; and
the beauteous
eyes overflowed in tears, weeping precious
drops that
lightened the heart.
On the sepulchral mound she had raised there
yet lay
the cross of boughs, the last work of him
who slept beneath.
Helga lifted up the cross, in pursuance of a
sudden thought
that came upon her. She planted it between
the stones,
over the priest and the dead horse. The
sorrowful remembrance of him called fresh tears into her
eyes ; and in this
tender frame of mind she marked the same
sign in the
earth around the grave ; and as she wrote
the sign with
both her hands, the webbed skin fell from
them like a torn
glove ; and when she washed her hands in the
woodland
spring, and gazed in wonder at her fine
white hands, she
again made the holy sign in the air between
herself and the
dead man ; then her lips trembled, the holy
name that
had been preached to her during the ride
from the forest
came to her mouth, and she pronounced it
audibly.
Then the frog-skin fell from her, and she
was once more
the beauteous maiden. But her head sank
wearily, her
tired limbs required rest, and she slept.
Her sleep, however, was short. Towards
midnight she
awoke. Before her stood the dead horse,
beaming and
full of life, which gleamed forth from his
eyes and from
his wounded neck ; close beside the creature
stood the
murdered Christian priest, more beautiful
than Balder,'
the Viking woman would have said ; and yet
he seemed
to stand in a flame of fire.
Such gravity, such an air of justice, such a
piercing look
shone out of his great mild eyes, that their
glance seemed
to penetrate every corner of her heart.
Little Helga
trembled at the look, and her remembrance
awoke as
though she stood before the tribunal of
judgement. Every
good deed that had been done for her, every
loving word
that had been spoken, seemed endowed with
life : she
understood that it had been love that kept
her here during
the days of trial, during which the creature
formed of dust
and spirit, soul and earth, combats and
struggles ; she
acknowledged that she had only followed the
leading of
temper, and had done nothing for herself ;
everything had
been given her, everything had been guided
by Providence.
She bowed herself humbly, confessing her own
deep imperfection in the presence of the Power that
can read every
thought of the heart and then the priest
spoke.
' Thou daughter of the moss/ he said, ' out
of the earth,
out of the moor, thou earnest ; but from the
earth thou
shalt arise. The sunbeam in you, which comes
not from
the sun, but from God, will go back to its
origin, conscious
of the body it has inhabited. No soul shall
be lost, but
time is long ; it is the course of life
through eternity.
I come from the land of the dead. Thou, too,
shalt pass
through the deep valleys into the beaming
mountain region,
where dwell mercy and completeness. I cannot
lead thee
to Hedeby, to receive Christian baptism ;
for, first, thou
must burst the veil of waters over the deep
moss, and draw
forth the living source of thy being and of
thy birth ; thou
must exercise thy faculties in deeds before
the consecration
can be given thee.'
And he lifted her upon the horse, and gave
her a golden
censer similar to the one she had seen in
the Viking's castle.
The open wound in the forehead of the slain
Christian
shone like a diadem. He took the cross from
the grave
and held it aloft. And now they rode through
the air,
over the rustling wood, over the mounds
where the old
heroes lay buried, each on his dead
war-horse ; and the
mighty figures rose up and galloped forth,
and stationed
themselves on the summits of the mounds. The
golden
hoop on the forehead of each gleamed in the
moonlight
and their mantles floated in the night
breeze. The dragon
that guards buried treasures likewise lifted
up his head and
gazed after the riders. The gnomes and wood
spirits peeped
forth from beneath the hills and from
between the furrows
of the fields, and flitted to and fro with
red, blue, and
green torches, like the sparks in the ashes
of a burned
paper.
Over woodland and heath, over river and
marsh they
fled away, up to the wild moss ; and over
this they hovered
in wide circles. The Christian priest held
the cross aloft :
it gleamed like gold ; and from his lips
dropped pious
prayers. Beautiful Helga joined in the hymns
he sang,
like a child joining in its mother's song.
She swung the
censer, and a wondrous fragrance of incense
streamed forth
thence, so that the reeds and grass of the
moss burst
forth into blossom. Every germ came forth
from the deep
ground. All that had life lifted itself up.
A veil of waterlilies spread itself forth like a carpet of
wrought flowers,
and upon this carpet lay a sleeping woman,
young and
beautiful. Helga thought it was her own
likeness she saw
upon the mirror of the calm waters. But it
was her mother
whom she beheld, the Marsh King's wife, the
Princess from
the banks of the Nile.
The dead priest commanded that the
slumbering woman
should be lifted upon the horse ; but .the
horse sank under
the burden, as though its body had been a
cloth fluttering
in the wind. But the holy sign gave strength
to the airy
phantom, and then the three rode from the
moss to the
firm land.
Then the cock crowed in the Viking's castle,
and the
phantom shapes dissolved and floated away in
air ; but
mother and daughter stood opposite each
other.
' Is it myself that I see in the deep waters
? ' asked the
mother.
' Is it myself that I see reflected on the
clear mirror ? '
exclaimed the daughter.
And they approached one another and embraced.
The
heart of the mother beat quickest, and she
understood it.
' My child ! thou flower of my own heart !
my lotos
flower of the deep waters ! '
And she embraced her child anew, and wept ;
and the
tears were as a new baptism of life and love
to Helga.
' In the swan's plumage came I hither,' said
the mother,
' and threw it off. I sank through the
shaking mud, far
down into the black slime, which closed like
a wall around
me. But soon I felt a fresher stream ; a
power drew me
down, deeper and ever deeper. I felt the
weight of sleep
upon my eyelids ; I slumbered, and dreams
hovered round
me. It seemed to me that I was again in the
pyramid in
Egypt, and yet the waving alder trunk that
had frightened
me up in the moss was ever before me. I
looked at the
clefts and wrinkles in the stem, and they
shone forth in
colours and took the form of hieroglyphics :
it was the
case of the mummy at which I was gazing ;
the case
burst, and forth stepped the thousand-year
old King, the
mummied form, black as pitch, shining black
as the wood
snail or the fat mud of the swamp : whether
it was the
Marsh King or the mummy of the pyramids I
knew not.
He seized me in his arms, and I felt as if I
must die. When
I returned to consciousness a little bird
was sitting on my
bosom, beating with its wings, and
twittering and singing.
The bird flew away from me up towards the
heavy, dark
covering, but a long green band still
fastened him to me.
I heard and understood his longing tones : "
Freedom !
Sunlight ! To my father ! " Then I thought
of my father
and the sunny land of my birth, my life, and
my love ;
and I loosened the band and let the bird
soar away home
to the father. Since that hour I have
dreamed no more.
I have slept a sleep, a long and heavy sleep,
till in this
hour harmony and incense awoke me and set me
free.'
The green band from the heart of the mother
to the
bird's wings, where did it flutter now ?
whither had it
been wafted ? Only the Stork had seen it.
The band was
the green stalk, the bow at the end, the
beauteous flower,
the cradle of the child that had now bloomed
into beauty
and was once more resting on its mother's
hea"rt.
And while the two were locked in each
other's embrace,
the old Stork flew around them in circles,
and at length
shot away towards his nest, whence he
brought out the swan-feather suits he had
preserved there for years, throwing one to each of them, and the feathers
closed around
them, so that they soared up from the earth
in the semblance of two white swans.
And now we will speak with one another,'
quoth Stork-
papa, now we understand each other, though
the beak of
one bird is differently shaped from that of
another. It
happens more than fortunately that you came
to-night.
To-morrow we should have been gone mother,
myself,
and the young ones, for we are flying
southward. Yes,
only look at me ! I am an old friend from
the land of the
Nile, and mother has a heart larger than her
beak. She
always declared the Princess would find a
way to help
herself ; and I and the young ones carried
the swans'
feathers up here. But how glad I am ! and
how fortunate
that I'm here still ! At dawn of day we
shall move hence,
a great company of storks. We'll fly first,
and do you
follow us ; thus you cannot miss your way ;
moreover,
I and the youngsters will keep a sharp eye
upon you.'
' And the lotos flower which I was to bring
with me,'
said the Egyptian Princess, ' she is flying
by my side in
the swans' plumage ! I bring with me the
flower of my
heart ; and thus the riddle has been read.
Homeward !
homeward! '
But Helga declared she could not quit the
Danish land
before she had once more seen her
foster-mother, the
affectionate Viking woman. Every beautiful
recollection,
every kind word, every tear that her
foster-mother had
wept for her, rose up in her memory, and in
that moment
she almost felt as if she loved the
VikingVoman best of all.
' Yes, we must go to the Viking's castle,'
said Stork-
papa ; ' mother and the youngsters are
waiting for us there.
How they will turn up their eyes and flap
their wings !
Yes, you see, mother doesn't speak much she
's short and
dry, but she means all the better. I'll
begin clapping at
once, that they may know we're coming.'
And Stork-papa clapped in first-rate style,
and they all
flew away towards the Viking's castle.
In the castle every one was sunk in deep
sleep. The
Viking's wife had not retired to rest until
it was late. She
was anxious about Helga, who had vanished
with the
Christian priest three days before : she
must have assisted
him in his flight, for it was the girl's
horse that had been
missed from the stables ; but how all this
had been effected
was a mystery to her. The Viking woman had
heard of
the miracles told of the White Christ, and
by those who
believed in His words and followed Him. Her
passing
thoughts formed themselves into a dream, and
it seemed
to her that she was still lying awake on her
couch, and
that deep darkness reigned without. The
storm drew near :
she heard the sea roaring and rolling to the
east and to
the west, like the waves of the North Sea
and the Cattegat.
The immense snake which was believed to
surround the
span of the earth in the depths of the ocean
was trembling
in convulsions ; she dreamed that the night
of the fall of
the gods had come Ragnarok, as the heathen
called the
last day, when everything was to pass away,
even the
great gods themselves. The war-trumpet
sounded, and
the gods rode over the rainbow, clad in
steel, to fight the
last battle. The winged Valkyries rode
before them, and
the dead warriors closed the train. The
whole firmament
was ablaze with Northern Lights, and yet the
darkness
seemed to predominate. It was a terrible
hour.
And, close by the terrified Viking woman,
Helga seemed
to be crouching on the floor in the hideous
frog-form,
trembling and pressing close to her
foster-mother, who
took her on her lap and embraced her
affectionately,
hideous though she was. The air resounded
with the blows
of clubs and swords, and with the hissing of
arrows, as if
a hail-storm were passing across it. The
hour was come
when earth and sky were to burst, the stars
to fall, and
all things to be swallowed up in Surfs sea
of fire ; but she
knew that there would be a new heaven and a
new earth,
that the cornfields then would wave where
now the ocean
rolled over the desolate tracts of sand, and
that the unutterable God would reign ; and up to Him rose
Balder the
gentle, the affectionate, delivered from the
kingdom of the
dead : he came ; the Viking woman saw him
and recognized
his countenance ; it was that of the captive
Christian
priest. ' White Christ ! ' she cried aloud,
and with these
words she pressed a kiss upon the forehead
of the hideous
frog-child. Then the frog-skin fell off, and
Helga stood
revealed in all her beauty, lovely and
gentle as she had
never appeared, and with beaming eyes. She
kissed her
foster-mother's hands, blessed her for all
the care and
affection lavished during the days of
bitterness and trial,
for the thought she had awakened and
cherished in her,
for naming the name, which she repeated,
White Christ ; '
and beauteous Helga arose in the form of a
mighty swan,
and spread her white wings with a rushing
like the sound
of a troop of birds of passage winging their
way through
the air.
The Viking woman awoke, and she heard the
same noise
without still continuing. She knew it was
the time for
the storks to depart, and that it must be
those birds whose
wings she heard. She wished to see them once
more, and
to bid them farewell as they set forth on
their journey.
Therefore she rose from her couch and
stepped out upon
the threshold, and on the top of the gable
she saw stork
ranged behind stork, and around the castle,
over the high
trees, flew bands of storks wheeling in wide
circles ; but
opposite her, by the well where Helga had
often sat and
alarmed her with her wildness, sat two white
swans gazing
at her with intelligent eyes. And she
remembered her
dream, which still filled her soul as if it
were reality. She
thought of Helga in the shape of a swan, and
of the Christian
priest ; and suddenly she felt her heart
rejoice within her.
The swans flapped their wings and arched
their necks,
as if they would send her a greeting, and
the Viking's
wife spread out her arms towards them, as if
she understood it, and smiled through her tears, and
then stood
sunk in deep thought.
Then all the storks arose, napping their
wings and
clapping with their beaks, to start on their
voyage towards
the South.
' We will not wait for the swans,' said
Stork-mamma :
' if they want to go with us they had better
come. We
can't sit here till the plovers start. It is
a fine thing, after
all, to travel in this way, in families, not
like the finches
and partridges, where the male and female
birds fly in
separate bodies, which appears to me a very
unbecoming
thing. What are yonder swans flapping their
wings for ? '
' Every one flies in his own fashion,' said
Stork-papa :
' the swans in an oblique line, the cranes
in a triangle, and
the plovers in a snake's line.'
' Don't talk about snakes while we are
flying up here,"
said Stork-mamma. ' It only puts ideas into
the children's
heads which can't be gratified.'
Are those the high mountains of which I
have heard
tell ? ' asked Helga, in the swan's plumage.
' They are storm clouds driving on beneath
us,' replied
her mother.
' What are yonder white clouds that rise so
high ? '
asked Helga again.
' Those are the mountains covered with
perpetual snow
which you see yonder,' replied her mother.
And they flew across the lofty Alps towards
the blue
Mediterranean .
' Africa's land ! Egypt's strand ! ' sang,
rejoicingly, in
her swan's plumage, the daughter of the Nile,
as from the
lofty air she saw her native land in the
form of a yellowish
wavy stripe of shore.
And all the birds caught sight of it, and
hastened their
flight.
' I can scent the Nile mud and wet frogs,'
said Stork -
mamma ; ' I begin to feel quite hungry. Yes
; now you
shall taste something nice ; and you will
see the marabou
bird, the crane, and the ibis. They all
belong to our
family, though they are not nearly so
beautiful as we.
They give themselves great airs, especially
the ibis. He
has been quite spoiled by the Egyptians, for
they make
a mummy of him and stuff him with spices. I
would
rather be stuffed with live frogs, and so
would you, and
so you shall. Better have something in one's
inside while
one is alive than to be made a fuss of after
one is dead.
That 's my opinion, and I am always right.'
' Now the storks are come,' said the people
in the rich
house on the banks of the Nile, where the
royal lord lay
in the open hall on the downy cushions,
covered with
a leopard-skin, not alive and yet not dead,
but waiting
and hoping for the lotos flower from the
deep moss in the
far North. Friends and servants stood around
his couch.
And into the hall flew two beauteous swans.
They had
come with the storks. They threw off their
dazzling white
plumage, and two lovely female forms were
revealed, as
like each other as two dew-drops. They bent
over the old,
pale, sick man, they put back their long
hair, and while
Helga bent over her grandfather, his white
cheeks reddened,
his eyes brightened, and life came back to
his wasted
limbs. The old man rose up cheerful and well,
and daughter
and granddaughter embraced him joyfully, as
if they were
giving him a morning greeting after a long
heavy dream.
And joy reigned through the whole house, and
likewise
in the Stork's nest, though there the chief
cause was
certainly the good food, especially the
numberless frogs ;
and while the learned men wrote down hastily,
in flying
characters, a sketch of the history of the
two Princesses,
and of the flower of health that had been a
source of joy
for the home and the land, the Stork -pair
told the story
to their family in their own fashion, but
not till all had
eaten their fill, otherwise they would have
found something
more interesting to do than to listen to
stories.
' Now, at last, you will become something,'
whispered
Stork-mamma, e there 's no doubt about that.'
' What should I become ? ' asked Stork
-papa. " What
have I done ? Nothing at all ! '
You have done more than the rest ! But for
you and
the youngsters the two Princesses would
never have seen
Egypt again, or have effected the old man's
cure. You
will turn out something ! They must
certainly give you
a doctor's degree, and our youngsters will
inherit it, and
so will their children after them, and so^
on. You already
look like an Egyptian doctor at least in my
eyes.'
The learned and wise men developed the
ground-thought,
as they called it, which went through the
whole affair.
' Love begets life ; ' this maxim they
explained in various
ways. The warm sunbeam was the Egyptian
Princess ;
she descended to the Marsh King, and from
their meeting
arose the flower
I cannot quite repeat the words as they
were spoken,'
said Stork-papa, who had listened from the
roof, and was
now telling it again to his own family. '
What they said
was so involved, it was so wise and learned,
that they
immediately received rank and presents :
even the head
cook received an especial mark of
distinction probably
for the soup.'
' And what did you receive ? ' asked
Stork-mamma.
' Surely they ought not to forget the most
important
person of all, and you are certainly he !
The learned men
have done nothing throughout the whole
affair but used
their tongues ; but you will doubtless
receive what is due
to you.'
Late in the night, when the gentle peace of
sleep rested
upon the now happy house, there was one who
still watched.
It was not Stork-papa, though he stood upon
one leg and
slept on guard it was Helga who watched. She
bowed
herself forward over the balcony, and looked
into the clear
air, gazed at the great gleaming stars,
greater and purer
in their lustre than she had ever seen them
in the North,
and yet the same orbs. She thought of the
Viking woman
in the wild moorland, of the gentle eyes of
her fostermother, and of the tears which the kind soul
had wept
over the poor frog-child that now lived in
splendour under
the gleaming stars, in the beauteous spring
air on the
banks of the Nile. She thought of the love
that dwelt in
the breast of the heathen woman, the love
that had been
shown to a wretched creature, hateful in
human form, and
hideous in its transformation. She looked at
the gleaming
stars, and thought of the glory that had
shone upon the
forehead of the dead man, when she flew with
him through
the forest and across the moorland ; sounds
passed through
her memory, words she had heard pronounced
as they rode
onward, and when she was borne wondering and
trembling
through the air, words from the great
Fountain of love
that embraces all human kind.
Yes, great things had been achieved and won
! Day
and night beautiful Helga was absorbed in
the contemplation of the great sum of her happiness, and
stood in the
contemplation of it like a child that turns
hurriedly from
the giver to gaze on the splendours of the
gifts it has
received. She seemed to lose herself in the
increasing
happiness, in contemplation of what might
come, of what
would come. Had she not been borne by
miracle to greater
and greater bliss ? And in this idea she one
day lost herself so completely, that she thought no more
of the Giver.
It was the exuberance of youthful courage,
unfolding its
wings for a bold flight ! Her eyes were
gleaming with
courage, when suddenly a loud noise in the
courtyard below
recalled her thoughts from their wandering
flight. There
she saw two great ostriches running round
rapidly in
a narrow circle. Never before had she seen
such creatures
great clumsy things they were, with wings
that looked
as if they had been clipped, and the birds
themselves
looking as if they had suffered violence of
some kind ; and
now for the first time she heard the legend
which the
Egyptians tell of the ostrich.
Once, they say, the ostriches were a
beautiful, glorious
race of birds, with strong large wings ; and
one evening
the larger birds of the forest said to the
ostrich, Brother,
shall we fly to-morrow, God willing, to the
river to drink ? '
And the ostrich answered, ' I will.' At
daybreak, accord-
ingly, they winged their flight from thence,
flying first up
on high, towards the sun, that gleamed like
the eye of
God higher and higher, the ostrich far in
advance of all
the other birds. Proudly the ostrich flew
straight towards
the light, boasting of his strength, and not
thinking of
the Giver, or saying, ' God willing ! ' Then
suddenly the
avenging angel drew aside the veil from the
flaming ocean
of sunlight, and in a moment the wings of
the proud bird
were scorched and shrivelled up, and he sank
miserably
to the ground. Since that time the ostrich
has never
again been able to raise himself in the air,
but flees timidly
along the ground, and runs round in a narrow
circle. And
this is a warning for us men, that in all
our thoughts and
schemes, in all our doings and devices, we
should say, God willing.' And Helga bowed her head
thoughtfully,
and looked at the circling ostrich, noticing
its timid fear,
and its stupid pleasure at sight of its own
great shadow
cast upon the white sunlit wall. And
seriousness struck
its roots deep into her mind and heart. A
rich life in
present and future happiness was given and
won ; and
what was yet to come ? the best of all, '
God willing.'
In early spring, when the storks flew again
towards the
North, beautiful Helga took off her golden
bracelet and
scratched her name upon it ; and beckoning
to the Stork-
papa, she placed the golden hoop around his
neck, and
begged him to deliver it to the Viking
woman, so that the
latter might see that her adopted daughter
was well, and
had not forgotten her.
' That 's heavy to carry,' thought the Stork
-papa, when
he had the golden ring round his neck ; '
but gold and
honour are not to be flung on the highway.
The stork
brings good fortune ; they'll be obliged to
acknowledge
that up there.'
' You lay gold and I lay eggs,' said the
Stork -mamma.
' But with you it 's only once in a way,
whereas I lay eggs
every year ; but neither of us is
appreciated that 's very
disheartening.'
' Still one has one's inward consciousness,
mother,' replied
Stork -papa.
' But you can't hang that round your neck,'
Stork -
inamma retorted, ' and it won't give you a
good wind or
a good meal.'
The little nightingale, singing in the
tamarind tree, would
soon be going north too. Helga the fair had
often heard
the sweet bird sing up yonder by the wild
moss ; now she
wanted to give it a message to carry, for
she had learned
the language of birds when she flew in the
swan's plumage ;
she had often conversed with stork and with
swallow, and
she knew the nightingale would understand
her. So she
begged the little bird to fly to the
beech-wood on the
peninsula of Jutland, where the grave-mound
had been
reared with stones and branches and asked
the nightingale
to beg all other little birds to build their
nests around the
grave, and sing their song there again and
again. And
the nightingale flew away and time flew
away.
In autumn the eagle stood upon the pyramid,
and saw
a stately train of richly laden camels
approaching, and
richly attired armed men on snorting Arab
steeds, shining
white as silver, with pink trembling
nostrils, and great
thick manes hanging down almost over their
slender legs.
Wealthy guests, a royal Prince of Arabia,
handsome as
a Prince should be, came into the proud
mansion on whose
roof the storks' nests now stood empty ;
those who had
inhabited the nest were away in the far
North, but they
would soon return. And, indeed, they
returned on that
very day that was so rich in joy and
gladness. Here
a marriage was celebrated, and fair Helga
was the bride,
shining in jewels and silk. The bridegroom
was the young
Arab Prince, and bride and bridegroom sat
together at the
upper end of the table, between mother and
grandfather.
But her gaze was not fixed upon the
bridegroom, with
his manly sun-browned cheeks, round which a
black beard
curled ; she gazed not at his dark fiery
eyes that were
fixed upon her but far away at a gleaming
star that
shone down from the sky.
Then strong wings were heard beating the
air. The storks
were coming home, and however tired the old
Stork -pair
might be from the journey, and however much
they needed
repose, they did not fail to come down at
once to the
balustrades of the verandah, for they knew
what feast was
being celebrated. Already on the frontier of
the land they
had heard that Helga had caused their
figures to be painted
on the wall for did they not belong to her
history ?
' That 's very pretty and suggestive,' said
Stork -papa.
But it 's very little,' observed
Stork-mamma. They
could not possibly have done less.'
And when Helga saw them, she rose and came
on to the
verandah, to stroke the backs of the Storks.
The old pair
bowed their necks, and even the youngest
among the young
ones felt highly honoured by the reception.
And Helga looked up to the gleaming star,
which seemed
to glow purer and purer ; and between the
star and herself
there floated a form, purer than the air,
and visible through
it : it floated quite close to her. It was
the spirit of the
dead Christian priest ; he too was conning
to her wedding
feast coming from heaven.
' The glory and brightness yonder outshines
everything
that is known on earth ! ' he said.
And fair Helga begged so fervently, so
beseechingly, as
she had never yet prayed, that it might be
permitted her
to gaze in there for one single moment, that
she might be
allowed to cast but a single glance into the
brightness that
beamed in the kingdom of heaven.
Then he bore her up amid splendour and
glory. Not
only around her, but within her, sounded
voices and beamed
a brightness that words cannot express.
' Now we must go back ; thou wilt be
missed,' he said.
'Only one more look ! ' she begged. ' But
one short
minute more ! '
'We must go back to the earth. The guests
will all
depart.'
'Only one more look the last.'
And Helga stood again in the verandah ; but
the
marriage lights without had vanished, and
the lamps in
the hall were extinguished, and the storks
were gone
nowhere a guest to be seen no bridegroom all
seemed
to have been swept away in those few short
minutes !
Then a great dread came upon her. Alone she
went
through the empty great hall into the next
chamber.
Strange warriors slept yonder. She opened a
side door
which led into her own chamber, and, as she
thought to
step in there, she suddenly found herself in
the garden ;
but yet it had not looked thus here before
the sky gleamed
red the morning dawn was come.
Three minutes only in heaven and a whole
night on
earth had passed away !
Then she saw the Storks again. She called to
them and
spoke their language ; and Stork-papa turned
his head
towards her, listened to her words, and drew
near.
' You speak our language,' he said ; ' what
do you wish ?
Why do you appear here you, a strange woman
? '
' It is I it is Helga dost thou not know me
? Three
minutes ago we were speaking together yonder
in the
verandah ! '
'That 's a mistake,' said the Stork ; ' you
must have
dreamed that ! '
' No, no ! ' she persisted. And she reminded
him of the
Viking's castle, and of the wild moss, and
of the journey
hither.
Then Stork-papa winked with his eyes, and
said,
' That 's an old story, which I heard from
the time of
my great-great-grandmother. There certainly
was here in
Egypt a Princess of that kind from the
Danish land, but
she vanished on the evening of her
wedding-day, many
hundred years ago, and never came back ! You
may read
about it yourself yonder on the monument in
the garden ;
there you'll find swans and storks
sculptured, and at the
top you yourself are cut in white marble 1 '
And thus it was. Helga saw it, and
understood it, and
sank on her knees.
The sun burst forth in glory ; and as, in
time of yore,
the frog-shape had vanished in its beams,
and the beautiful
form had stood displayed, so now in the
light a beauteous
form, clearer, purer than air a beam of
brightness flew
up into heaven !
The body crumbled to dust, and a faded lotus
flower
lay on the spot where Helga had stood.
' Well, that 's a new ending to the story,'
said Stork-
papa. ' I had certainly not expected it. But
I like it
very well.'
' But what will the young ones say to it ? '
said Stork-mamma.
' Yes, certainly, that 's the important
point,' replied he.
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