The Philosopher’s Stone
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1861)
Far away towards the east, in India, which
seemed in those days the world’s end, stood
the Tree of the Sun; a noble tree, such as
we have never seen, and perhaps never may
see.
The summit of this tree spread itself for
miles like an entire forest, each of its
smaller branches forming a complete tree.
Palms, beech-trees, pines, plane-trees, and
various other kinds, which are found in all
parts of the world, were here like small
branches, shooting forth from the great
tree; while the larger boughs, with their
knots and curves, formed valleys and hills,
clothed with velvety green and covered with
flowers. Everywhere it was like a blooming
meadow or a lovely garden. Here were birds
from all quarters of the world assembled
together; birds from the primeval forests of
America, from the rose gardens of Damascus,
and from the deserts of Africa, in which the
elephant and the lion may boast of being the
only rulers. Birds from the Polar regions
came flying here, and of course the stork
and the swallow were not absent. But the
birds were not the only living creatures.
There were stags, squirrels, antelopes, and
hundreds of other beautiful and light-footed
animals here found a home.
The summit of the tree was a wide-spreading
garden, and in the midst of it, where the
green boughs formed a kind of hill, stood a
castle of crystal, with a view from it
towards every quarter of heaven. Each tower
was erected in the form of a lily, and
within the stern was a winding staircase,
through which one could ascend to the top
and step out upon the leaves as upon
balconies. The calyx of the flower itself
formed a most beautiful, glittering,
circular hall, above which no other roof
arose than the blue firmament and the sun
and stars.
Just as much splendor, but of another kind,
appeared below, in the wide halls of the
castle. Here, on the walls, were reflected
pictures of the world, which represented
numerous and varied scenes of everything
that took place daily, so that it was
useless to read the newspapers, and indeed
there were none to be obtained in this spot.
All was to be seen in living pictures by
those who wished it, but all would have been
too much for even the wisest man, and this
man dwelt here. His name is very difficult;
you would not be able to pronounce it, so it
may be omitted. He knew everything that a
man on earth can know or imagine. Every
invention already in existence or yet to be,
was known to him, and much more; still
everything on earth has a limit. The wise
king Solomon was not half so wise as this
man. He could govern the powers of nature
and held sway over potent spirits; even
Death itself was obliged to give him every
morning a list of those who were to die
during the day. And King Solomon himself had
to die at last, and this fact it was which
so often occupied the thoughts of this great
man in the castle on the Tree of the Sun. He
knew that he also, however high he might
tower above other men in wisdom, must one
day die. He knew that his children would
fade away like the leaves of the forest and
become dust. He saw the human race wither
and fall like leaves from the tree; he saw
new men come to fill their places, but the
leaves that fell off never sprouted forth
again; they crumbled to dust or were
absorbed into other plants.
“What happens to man,” asked the wise man of
himself, “when touched by the angel of
death? What can death be? The body decays,
and the soul. Yes; what is the soul, and
whither does it go?”
“To eternal life,” says the comforting voice
of religion.
“But what is this change? Where and how
shall we exist?”
“Above; in heaven,” answers the pious man;
“it is there we hope to go.”
“Above!” repeated the wise man, fixing his
eyes upon the moon and stars above him. He
saw that to this earthly sphere above and
below were constantly changing places, and
that the position varied according to the
spot on which a man found himself. He knew,
also, that even if he ascended to the top of
the highest mountain which rears its lofty
summit on this earth, the air, which to us
seems clear and transparent, would there be
dark and cloudy; the sun would have a
coppery glow and send forth no rays, and our
earth would lie beneath him wrapped in an
orange-colored mist. How narrow are the
limits which confine the bodily sight, and
how little can be seen by the eye of the
soul. How little do the wisest among us know
of that which is so important to us all.
In the most secret chamber of the castle lay
the greatest treasure on earth—the Book of
Truth. The wise man had read it through page
after page. Every man may read in this book,
but only in fragments. To many eyes the
characters seem so mixed in confusion that
the words cannot be distinguished. On
certain pages the writing often appears so
pale or so blurred that the page becomes a
blank. The wiser a man becomes, the more he
will read, and those who are wisest read
most.
The wise man knew how to unite the sunlight
and the moonlight with the light of reason
and the hidden powers of nature; and through
this stronger light, many things in the
pages were made clear to him. But in the
portion of the book entitled “Life after
Death” not a single point could he see
distinctly. This pained him. Should he never
be able here on earth to obtain a light by
which everything written in the Book of
Truth should become clear to him? Like the
wise King Solomon, he understood the
language of animals, and could interpret
their talk into song; but that made him none
the wiser. He found out the nature of plants
and metals, and their power in curing
diseases and arresting death, but none to
destroy death itself. In all created things
within his reach he sought the light that
should shine upon the certainty of an
eternal life, but he found it not. The Book
of Truth lay open before him, but, its pages
were to him as blank paper. Christianity
placed before him in the Bible a promise of
eternal life, but he wanted to read it in
his book, in which nothing on the subject
appeared to be written.
He had five children; four sons, educated as
the children of such a wise father should
be, and a daughter, fair, gentle, and
intelligent, but she was blind; yet this
deprivation appeared as nothing to her; her
father and brothers were outward eyes to
her, and a vivid imagination made everything
clear to her mental sight. The sons had
never gone farther from the castle than the
branches of the trees extended, and the
sister had scarcely ever left home. They
were happy children in that home of their
childhood, the beautiful and fragrant Tree
of the Sun. Like all children, they loved to
hear stories related to them, and their
father told them many things which other
children would not have understood; but
these were as clever as most grownup people
are among us. He explained to them what they
saw in the pictures of life on the castle
walls—the doings of man, and the progress of
events in all the lands of the earth; and
the sons often expressed a wish that they
could be present, and take a part in these
great deeds. Then their father told them
that in the world there was nothing but toil
and difficulty: that it was not quite what
it appeared to them, as they looked upon it
in their beautiful home. He spoke to them of
the true, the beautiful, and the good, and
told them that these three held together in
the world, and by that union they became
crystallized into a precious jewel, clearer
than a diamond of the first water—a jewel,
whose splendor had a value even in the sight
of God, in whose brightness all things are
dim. This jewel was called the philosopher’s
stone. He told them that, by searching, man
could attain to a knowledge of the existence
of God, and that it was in the power of
every man to discover the certainty that
such a jewel as the philosopher’s stone
really existed. This information would have
been beyond the perception of other
children; but these children understood, and
others will learn to comprehend its meaning
after a time. They questioned their father
about the true, the beautiful, and the good,
and he explained it to them in many ways. He
told them that God, when He made man out of
the dust of the earth, touched His work five
times, leaving five intense feelings, which
we call the five senses. Through these, the
true, the beautiful, and the good are seen,
understood, and perceived, and through these
they are valued, protected, and encouraged.
Five senses have been given mentally and
corporeally, inwardly and outwardly, to body
and soul.
The children thought deeply on all these
things, and meditated upon them day and
night. Then the eldest of the brothers
dreamt a splendid dream. Strange to say, not
only the second brother but also the third
and fourth brothers all dreamt exactly the
same thing; namely, that each went out into
the world to find the philosopher’s stone.
Each dreamt that he found it, and that, as
he rode back on his swift horse, in the
morning dawn, over the velvety green
meadows, to his home in the castle of his
father, that the stone gleamed from his
forehead like a beaming light; and threw
such a bright radiance upon the pages of the
Book of Truth that every word was
illuminated which spoke of the life beyond
the grave. But the sister had no dream of
going out into the wide world; it never
entered her mind. Her world was her father’s
house.
“I shall ride forth into the wide world,”
said the eldest brother. “I must try what
life is like there, as I mix with men. I
will practise only the good and true; with
these I will protect the beautiful. Much
shall be changed for the better while I am
there.”
Now these thoughts were great and daring, as
our thoughts generally are at home, before
we have gone out into the world, and
encountered its storms and tempests, its
thorns and its thistles. In him, and in all
his brothers, the five senses were highly
cultivated, inwardly and outwardly; but each
of them had one sense which in keenness and
development surpassed the other four. In the
case of the eldest, this pre-eminent sense
was sight, which he hoped would be of
special service. He had eyes for all times
and all people; eyes that could discover in
the depths of the earth hidden treasures,
and look into the hearts of men, as through
a pane of glass; he could read more than is
often seen on the cheek that blushes or
grows pale, in the eye that droops or
smiles. Stags and antelopes accompanied him
to the western boundary of his home, and
there he found the wild swans. These he
followed, and found himself far away in the
north, far from the land of his father,
which extended eastward to the ends of the
earth. How he opened his eyes with
astonishment! How many things were to be
seen here! and so different to the mere
representation of pictures such as those in
his father’s house. At first he nearly lost
his eyes in astonishment at the rubbish and
mockery brought forward to represent the
beautiful; but he kept his eyes, and soon
found full employment for them. He wished to
go thoroughly and honestly to work in his
endeavor to understand the true, the
beautiful, and the good. But how were they
represented in the world? He observed that
the wreath which rightly belonged to the
beautiful was often given the hideous; that
the good was often passed by unnoticed,
while mediocrity was applauded, when it
should have been hissed. People look at the
dress, not at the wearer; thought more of a
name than of doing their duty; and trusted
more to reputation than to real service. It
was everywhere the same.
“I see I must make a regular attack on these
things,” said he; and he accordingly did not
spare them. But while looking for the truth,
came the evil one, the father of lies, to
intercept him. Gladly would the fiend have
plucked out the eyes of this Seer, but that
would have been a too straightforward path
for him; he works more cunningly. He allowed
the young man to seek for, and discover, the
beautiful and the good; but while he was
contemplating them, the evil spirit blew one
mote after another into each of his eyes;
and such a proceeding would injure the
strongest sight. Then he blew upon the
motes, and they became beams, so that the
clearness of his sight was gone, and the
Seer was like a blind man in the world, and
had no longer any faith in it. He had lost
his good opinion of the world, as well as of
himself; and when a man gives up the world,
and himself too, it is all over with him.
“All over,” said the wild swan, who flew
across the sea to the east.
“All over,” twittered the swallows, who were
also flying eastward towards the Tree of the
Sun. It was no good news which they carried
home.
“I think the Seer has been badly served,”
said the second brother, “but the Hearer may
be more successful.”
This one possessed the sense of hearing to a
very high degree: so acute was this sense,
that it was said he could hear the grass
grow. He took a fond leave of all at home,
and rode away, provided with good abilities
and good intentions. The swallows escorted
him, and he followed the swans till he found
himself out in the world, and far away from
home. But he soon discovered that one may
have too much of a good thing. His hearing
was too fine. He not only heard the grass
grow, but could hear every man’s heart beat,
whether in sorrow or in joy. The whole world
was to him like a clockmaker’s great
workshop, in which all the clocks were going
“tick, tick,” and all the turret clocks
striking “ding, dong.” It was unbearable.
For a long time his ears endured it, but at
last all the noise and tumult became too
much for one man to bear.
There were rascally boys of sixty years
old—for years do not alone make a man—who
raised a tumult, which might have made the
Hearer laugh, but for the applause which
followed, echoing through every street and
house, and was even heard in country roads.
Falsehood thrust itself forward and played
the hypocrite; the bells on the fool’s cap
jingled, and declared they were
church-bells, and the noise became so bad
for the Hearer that he thrust his fingers
into his ears. Still, he could hear false
notes and bad singing, gossip and idle
words, scandal and slander, groaning and
moaning, without and within. “Heaven help
us!” He thrust his fingers farther and
farther into his ears, till at last the
drums burst. And now he could hear nothing
more of the true, the beautiful, and the
good; for his hearing was to have been the
means by which he hoped to acquire his
knowledge. He became silent and suspicious,
and at last trusted no one, not even
himself, and no longer hoping to find and
bring home the costly jewel, he gave it up,
and gave himself up too, which was worse
than all.
The birds in their flight towards the east,
carried the tidings, and the news reached
the castle in the Tree of the Sun.
“I will try now,” said the third brother; “I
have a keen nose.” Now that was not a very
elegant expression, but it was his way, and
we must take him as he was. He had a
cheerful temper, and was, besides, a real
poet; he could make many things appear
poetical, by the way in which he spoke of
them, and ideas struck him long before they
occurred to the minds of others. “I can
smell,” he would say; and he attributed to
the sense of smelling, which he possessed in
a high degree, a great power in the region
of the beautiful. “I can smell,” he would
say, “and many places are fragrant or
beautiful according to the taste of the
frequenters. One man feels at home in the
atmosphere of the tavern, among the flaring
tallow candles, and when the smell of
spirits mingles with the fumes of bad
tobacco. Another prefers sitting amidst the
overpowering scent of jasmine, or perfuming
himself with scented olive oil. This man
seeks the fresh sea breeze, while that one
climbs the lofty mountain-top, to look down
upon the busy life in miniature beneath
him.”
As he spoke in this way, it seemed as if he
had already been out in the world, as if he
had already known and associated with man.
But this experience was intuitive—it was the
poetry within him, a gift from Heaven
bestowed on him in his cradle. He bade
farewell to his parental roof in the Tree of
the Sun, and departed on foot, from the
pleasant scenes that surrounded his home.
Arrived at its confines, he mounted on the
back of an ostrich, which runs faster than a
horse, and afterwards, when he fell in with
the wild swans, he swung himself on the
strongest of them, for he loved change, and
away he flew over the sea to distant lands,
where there were great forests, deep lakes,
lofty mountains, and proud cities. Wherever
he came it seemed as if sunshine travelled
with him across the fields, for every
flower, every bush, exhaled a renewed
fragrance, as if conscious that a friend and
protector was near; one who understood them,
and knew their value. The stunted rose-bush
shot forth twigs, unfolded its leaves, and
bore the most beautiful roses; every one
could see it, and even the black, slimy
wood-snail noticed its beauty. “I will give
my seal to the flower,” said the snail, “I
have trailed my slime upon it, I can do no
more.”
“Thus it always fares with the beautiful in
this world,” said the poet. And he made a
song upon it, and sung it after his own
fashion, but nobody listened. Then he gave a
drummer twopence and a peacock’s feather,
and composed a song for the drum, and the
drummer beat it through the streets of the
town, and when the people heard it they
said, “That is a capital tune.” The poet
wrote many songs about the true, the
beautiful, and the good. His songs were
listened to in the tavern, where the tallow
candles flared, in the fresh clover field,
in the forest, and on the high-seas; and it
appeared as if this brother was to be more
fortunate than the other two.
But the evil spirit was angry at this, so he
set to work with soot and incense, which he
can mix so artfully as to confuse an angel,
and how much more easily a poor poet. The
evil one knew how to manage such people. He
so completely surrounded the poet with
incense that the man lost his head, forgot
his mission and his home, and at last lost
himself and vanished in smoke.
But when the little birds heard of it, they
mourned, and for three days they sang not
one song. The black wood-snail became
blacker still; not for grief, but for envy.
“They should have offered me incense,” he
said, “for it was I who gave him the idea of
the most famous of his songs—the drum song
of ’The Way of the World;’ and it was I who
spat at the rose; I can bring a witness to
that fact.”
But no tidings of all this reached the
poet’s home in India. The birds had all been
silent for three days, and when the time of
mourning was over, so deep had been their
grief, that they had forgotten for whom they
wept. Such is the way of the world.
“Now I must go out into the world, and
disappear like the rest,” said the fourth
brother. He was as good-tempered as the
third, but no poet, though he could be
witty.
The two eldest had filled the castle with
joyfulness, and now the last brightness was
going away. Sight and hearing have always
been considered two of the chief senses
among men, and those which they wish to keep
bright; the other senses are looked upon as
of less importance.
But the younger son had a different opinion;
he had cultivated his taste in every way,
and taste is very powerful. It rules over
what goes into the mouth, as well as over
all which is presented to the mind; and,
consequently, this brother took upon himself
to taste everything stored up in bottles or
jars; this he called the rough part of his
work. Every man’s mind was to him as a
vessel in which something was concocting;
every land a kind of mental kitchen. “There
are no delicacies here,” he said; so he
wished to go out into the world to find
something delicate to suit his taste.
“Perhaps fortune may be more favorable to me
than it was to my brothers. I shall start on
my travels, but what conveyance shall I
choose? Are air balloons invented yet?” he
asked of his father, who knew of all
inventions that had been made, or would be
made.
Air balloons had not then been invented, nor
steam-ships, nor railways.
“Good,” said he; “then I shall choose an air
balloon; my father knows how they are to be
made and guided. Nobody has invented one
yet, and the people will believe that it is
an aerial phantom. When I have done with the
balloon I shall burn it, and for this
purpose, you must give me a few pieces of
another invention, which will come next; I
mean a few chemical matches.”
He obtained what he wanted, and flew away.
The birds accompanied him farther than they
had the other brothers. They were curious to
know how this flight would end. Many more of
them came swooping down; they thought it
must be some new bird, and he soon had a
goodly company of followers. They came in
clouds till the air became darkened with
birds as it was with the cloud of locusts
over the land of Egypt.
And now he was out in the wide world. The
balloon descended over one of the greatest
cities, and the aeronaut took up his station
at the highest point, on the church steeple.
The balloon rose again into the air, which
it ought not to have done; what became of it
is not known, neither is it of any
consequence, for balloons had not then been
invented.
There he sat on the church steeple. The
birds no longer hovered over him; they had
got tired of him, and he was tired of them.
All the chimneys in the town were smoking.
“There are altars erected to my honor,” said
the wind, who wished to say something
agreeable to him as he sat there boldly
looking down upon the people in the street.
There was one stepping along, proud of his
purse; another, of the key he carried behind
him, though he had nothing to lock up;
another took a pride in his moth-eaten coat;
and another, in his mortified body. “Vanity,
all vanity!” he exclaimed. “I must go down
there by-and-by, and touch and taste; but I
shall sit here a little while longer, for
the wind blows pleasantly at my back. I
shall remain here as long as the wind blows,
and enjoy a little rest. It is comfortable
to sleep late in the morning when one had a
great deal to do,” said the sluggard; “so I
shall stop here as long as the wind blows,
for it pleases me.”
And there he stayed. But as he was sitting
on the weather-cock of the steeple, which
kept turning round and round with him, he
was under the false impression that the same
wind still blew, and that he could stay
where he was without expense.
But in India, in the castle on the Tree of
the Sun, all was solitary and still, since
the brothers had gone away one after the
other.
“Nothing goes well with them,” said the
father; “they will never bring the
glittering jewel home, it is not made for
me; they are all dead and gone.” Then he
bent down over the Book of Truth, and gazed
on the page on which he should have read of
the life after death, but for him there was
nothing to be read or learned upon it.
His blind daughter was his consolation and
joy; she clung to him with sincere
affection, and for the sake of his happiness
and peace she wished the costly jewel could
be found and brought home.
With longing tenderness she thought of her
brothers. Where were they? Where did they
live? How she wished she might dream of
them; but it was strange that not even in
dreams could she be brought near to them.
But at last one night she dreamt that she
heard the voices of her brothers calling to
her from the distant world, and she could
not refrain herself, but went out to them,
and yet it seemed in her dream that she
still remained in her father’s house. She
did not see her brothers, but she felt as it
were a fire burning in her hand, which,
however, did not hurt her, for it was the
jewel she was bringing to her father. When
she awoke she thought for a moment that she
still held the stone, but she only grasped
the knob of her distaff.
During the long evenings she had spun
constantly, and round the distaff were woven
threads finer than the web of a spider;
human eyes could never have distinguished
these threads when separated from each
other. But she had wetted them with her
tears, and the twist was as strong as a
cable. She rose with the impression that her
dream must be a reality, and her resolution
was taken.
It was still night, and her father slept;
she pressed a kiss upon his hand, and then
took her distaff and fastened the end of the
thread to her father’s house. But for this,
blind as she was, she would never have found
her way home again; to this thread she must
hold fast, and trust not to others or even
to herself. From the Tree of the Sun she
broke four leaves; which she gave up to the
wind and the weather, that they might be
carried to her brothers as letters and a
greeting, in case she did not meet them in
the wide world. Poor blind child, what would
become of her in those distant regions? But
she had the invisible thread, to which she
could hold fast; and she possessed a gift
which all the others lacked. This was a
determination to throw herself entirely into
whatever she undertook, and it made her feel
as if she had eyes even at the tips of her
fingers, and could hear down into her very
heart. Quietly she went forth into the
noisy, bustling, wonderful world, and
wherever she went the skies grew bright, and
she felt the warm sunbeam, and a rainbow
above in the blue heavens seemed to span the
dark world. She heard the song of the birds,
and smelt the scent of the orange groves and
apple orchards so strongly that she seemed
to taste it. Soft tones and charming songs
reached her ear, as well as harsh sounds and
rough words—thoughts and opinions in strange
contradiction to each other. Into the
deepest recesses of her heart penetrated the
echoes of human thoughts and feelings. Now
she heard the following words sadly sung,—
“Life is a shadow that flits away
In a night of darkness and woe.”
But then would follow brighter thoughts:
“Life has the rose’s sweet perfume
With sunshine, light, and joy.”
And if one stanza sounded painfully—
“Each mortal thinks of himself alone,
Is a truth, alas, too clearly known;”
Then, on the other hand, came the answer—
“Love, like a mighty flowing stream,
Fills every heart with its radiant gleam.”
She heard, indeed, such words as these—
“In the pretty turmoil here below,
All is a vain and paltry show.”
Then came also words of comfort—
“Great and good are the actions done
By many whose worth is never known.”
And if sometimes the mocking strain reached
her—
“Why not join in the jesting cry
That contemns all gifts from the throne on
high?”
In the blind girl’s heart a stronger voice
repeated—
“To trust in thyself and God is best,
In His holy will forever to rest.”
But the evil spirit could not see this and
remain contented. He has more cleverness
than ten thousand men, and he found means to
compass his end. He betook himself to the
marsh, and collected a few little bubbles of
stagnant water. Then he uttered over them
the echoes of lying words that they might
become strong. He mixed up together songs of
praise with lying epitaphs, as many as he
could find, boiled them in tears shed by
envy; put upon them rouge, which he had
scraped from faded cheeks, and from these he
produced a maiden, in form and appearance
like the blind girl, the angel of
completeness, as men called her. The evil
one’s plot was successful. The world knew
not which was the true, and indeed how
should the world know?
“To trust in thyself and God is best,
In his Holy will forever to rest.”
So sung the blind girl in full faith. She
had entrusted the four green leaves from the
Tree of the Sun to the winds, as letters of
greeting to her brothers, and she had full
confidence that the leaves would reach them.
She fully believed that the jewel which
outshines all the glories of the world would
yet be found, and that upon the forehead of
humanity it would glitter even in the castle
of her father. “Even in my father’s house,”
she repeated. “Yes, the place in which this
jewel is to be found is earth, and I shall
bring more than the promise of it with me. I
feel it glow and swell more and more in my
closed hand. Every grain of truth which the
keen wind carried up and whirled towards me
I caught and treasured. I allowed it to be
penetrated with the fragrance of the
beautiful, of which there is so much in the
world, even for the blind. I took the
beatings of a heart engaged in a good
action, and added them to my treasure. All
that I can bring is but dust; still, it is a
part of the jewel we seek, and there is
plenty, my hand is quite full of it.”
She soon found herself again at home;
carried thither in a flight of thought,
never having loosened her hold of the
invisible thread fastened to her father’s
house. As she stretched out her hand to her
father, the powers of evil dashed with the
fury of a hurricane over the Tree of the
Sun; a blast of wind rushed through the open
doors, and into the sanctuary, where lay the
Book of Truth.
“It will be blown to dust by the wind,” said
the father, as he seized the open hand she
held towards him.
“No,” she replied, with quiet confidence,
“it is indestructible. I feel its beam
warming my very soul.”
Then her father observed that a dazzling
flame gleamed from the white page on which
the shining dust had passed from her hand.
It was there to prove the certainty of
eternal life, and on the book glowed one
shining word, and only one, the word
BELIEVE. And soon the four brothers were
again with the father and daughter. When the
green leaf from home fell on the bosom of
each, a longing had seized them to return.
They had arrived, accompanied by the birds
of passage, the stag, the antelope, and all
the creatures of the forest who wished to
take part in their joy.
We have often seen, when a sunbeam burst
through a crack in the door into a dusty
room, how a whirling column of dust seems to
circle round. But this was not poor,
insignificant, common dust, which the blind
girl had brought; even the rainbow’s colors
are dim when compared with the beauty which
shone from the page on which it had fallen.
The beaming word BELIEVE, from every grain
of truth, had the brightness of the
beautiful and the good, more bright than the
mighty pillar of flame that led Moses and
the children of Israel to the land of
Canaan, and from the word BELIEVE arose the
bridge of hope, reaching even to the
unmeasurable Love in the realms of the
infinite. |