The Wild Swans by Hans Christian Andersen ♣ ©winnie caw 2003
(follow the arrows below for more of winnie caw's whimsy, or click on a link)
Far
hence, in a country whither the Swallows fly in our
winter-time, there dwelt a King who had eleven sons,
and one daughter, the beautiful Elise. The eleven
brothers went to school with stars on their breasts,
and swords by their sides; they wrote on golden
tablets with diamond pens, and could read either with
a book or without one; in short, it was easy to
perceive that they were Princes. Their sister Elise
used to sit upon a little glass stool, and had a
picture-book which had cost the half of the kingdom.
Oh, the children were so happy! But happy they were
not to remain always. Their
father, the King, married a very wicked Queen, who
was not at all kind to the poor children; they found
this out on the first day after the marriage, when
there was a grand gala at the palace; for when the
children played at receiving company, instead of
giving them as many cakes and sweetmeats as they
liked, the Queen gave them only some sand in a little
dish, and told them to imagine that was something
nice. The
week after, she sent the little Elise to be brought
up by some peasants in the country, and it was not
long before she told the King so many falsehoods
about the poor Princes that he would have nothing
more to do with them. "Away,
out into the world, and take care of
yourselves," said the wicked Queen; "fly
away in the form of great speechless birds." But
she could not make their transformation so
disagreeable as she wished - the Princes were changed
into eleven white swans. Sending forth a strange cry,
they flew out of the palace windows, over the park
and over the wood. It
was still early in the morning when they passed by
the place where Elise lay sleeping in the peasant's
cottage; they flew several times round the roof,
stretched their long necks, and flapped their wings,
but no one either heard or saw them; they were forced
to fly away, up to the clouds, and into the wide
world; so on they went to the forest, which extended
as far as the seashore. The
poor Elise stood in the peasant's cottage amusing
herself with a green leaf, for she had no other
plaything. She pricked a hole in the leaf and peeped
through it at the sun, and then she fancied she saw
her brothers' bright eyes, and whenever the warm
sunbeams shone full upon her cheeks she thought of
her brothers' kisses. One
day passed exactly like the other. When the wind blew
through the thick hedge of rose-trees, in front of
the house, she would whisper to the roses, "Who
is more beautiful than you?" but the roses would
shake their heads and say "Elise." And when
the peasant's wife sat on Sundays at the door of her
cottage reading her hymn-book, the wind would rustle
in the leaves and say to the book, "Who is more
pious than thou?" - "Elise," replied
the hymn-book. And what the roses and the hymn-book
said was no more than the truth. Elise,
who was now fifteen years old, was sent for to return
home; but when the Queen saw how beautiful she was,
she hated her the more, and would willingly have
transformed her like her brothers into a wild swan;
but she dared not do so, because the King wished to
see his daughter. So
the next morning the Queen went into a bath which was
made of marble, and fitted up with soft pillows and
the gayest carpets; she took three toads, kissed
them, and said to one,"Settle thou upon Elise's
head, that she may become dull and sleepy like
thee." - "Settle thou upon her
forehead," said she to another, "and let
her become ugly like thee, so that her father may not
know her again." - And "Do thou place
thyself upon her bosom," whispered she to the
third, "that her heart may become corrupt and
evil, a torment to herself." She
then put the toads into the clear water, which was
immediately tinted with a green colour, and having
called Elise, took off her clothes and made her get
into the bath - one toad settled among her hair,
another on her forehead, and the third upon her
bosom; but Elise seemed not at all aware of it. She
rose up, and three poppies were seen swimming on the
water. Had
not the animals been poisonous and kissed by a witch,
they would have been changed into roses whilst they
remained on Elise's head and heart - she was too good
for magic to have any power over her. When the Queen
perceived this, she rubbed walnut juice all over the
maiden's skin, so that it became quite swarthy,
smeared a nasty salve over her lovely face, and
entangled her long thick hair. It was impossible to
recognise the beautiful Elise after this. When
her father saw, he was shocked, and said she could
not be his daughter; no one would have anything to do
with her but the mastiff and the swallows; but they,
poor things, could not say anything in her favour. Poor
Elise wept, and thought of her eleven brothers, not
one of whom she saw at the palace. In great distress
she stole away and wandered the whole day over fields
and moors,till she reached the forest. She knew not
where to go, but she was so sad, and longed so much
to see her brothers, who had been driven into the
world, that she determined to seek and find them. She
had not been long in the forest when night came on,
and she lost her way amid the darkness. So she lay
down on the soft moss, said her evening prayer, and
leaned her head against the trunk of a tree. It was
still in the forest, the air was mild, and from the
grass and mould around gleamed the green light of
many hundred glow-worms; and when Elise lightly
touched one of the branches hanging over her bright
insects fell down upon her like falling stars. All
the night long she dreamed of her brothers. They were
all children again, played together, wrote with
diamond pens upon golden tablets, and looked at the
pictures in the beautiful book which had cost half of
a kingdom. But
they did not, as formerly, make straight strokes and
pothooks upon the tablets; no, they wrote of the bold
actions they had performed, and the strange
adventures they had encountered, and in the
picture-book everything seemed alive. The birds sang,
men and women stepped from the book and talked to
Elise and her brothers. However, when she turned the
leaves, they jumped back into their places, so that
the pictures did not get confused together. When
Elise awoke the sun was already high in the heavens.
She could not see it certainly, for the tall trees of
the forest entwined their thick-leaved branches
closely together, and as the sunbeams played upon
them, they looked like a golden veil waving to and
fro. The air was fragrant, and the birds perched upon
Elise's shoulders. She heard the noise of water;
there were several springs forming a pool, with the
prettiest pebbles at the bottom; bushes were gowing
thickly round. But the deer had trodden a broad path
through them, and by this path Elise went down to the
water's edge. The water was so clear that, had not
the boughs and bushes around been moved by the wind,
you might have fancied they were painted upon the
smooth surface, so distinctly was each little leaf
mirrored upon it. As
soon as Elise saw her face reflected in the water,
she was quite startled, so brown and ugly did it
look; however, when she wetted her little hand, and
rubbed her brow and eyes, the white skin again
appeared. So Elise took off her clothes, stepped into
the fresh water, and in the whole world there was not
a King's daughter more beautiful than she then
appeared. After
she dressed herself, and braided her long hair, she
went to the bubbling spring, drank out of the hollow
of her hand, and then wandered farther into the
forest. She did not know where she was going, but she
thought of her brothers, and of the good God who, she
felt, would never forsake her. He it was who made the
wild crab-trees grow in order to feed the hungry, and
who showed her a tree whose boughs bent under the
weight of their fruit. She made her noonday meal
under its shade, propped up the boughs, and then
walked on amid the dark twilight of the forest. It
was so still that she could hear her own footsteps,
and the rustling of each little withered leaf that
was crushed beneath her feet. Not a bird was to be
seen; not a single sunbeam penetrated through the
thick foliage; and the tall stems of the trees stood
so close together that, when she looked straight
before her, she seemed encircled by trelliswork. Oh!
there was a loneliness in this forest such as Elise
had never known before. And
the night was so dark! Not a single glow-worm sent
forth its light. Sad at heart she lay down to sleep,
and then it seemed to her as if the boughs above her
opened, and she saw an Angel looking down with gentle
aspect, and a thousand little cherubs all around him.
When she awoke in the morning she could not tell
whether this was a dream, or whether she had really
been watched. She
walked on and met an old woman with a basket full of
berries; the old woman gave her some of them, and
Elise asked if she had seen eleven princes ride
through the wood. "No,"
said the old woman, "but I saw yesterday eleven
swans with golden crowns on their heads swim down the
brook near this place." And
she led Elise to a precipice, the base of which was
washed by a brook; the trees on each side stretched
their long leafy branches towards each other, and
where they could not unite, the roots had disengaged
themselves from the earth and hung over the water. Elise
bade the old woman farewell, and wandered by the side
of the stream till she came to the place where it
reached the open sea. The
beautiful sea lay stretched out before the maiden's
eyes, but not a ship, not a boat was to be seen; how
was she to go on? She observed the little stones on
the shore, all of which the waves had washed into a
round form; glass, iron, stone, everything lay
scattered there, had been moulded into shape, and yet
the water which had done this was much softer than
Elise's delicate little hand. "It rolls on
unweariedly," said she, "and subdues what
is so hard; I will be no less unwearied! Thank you
for the lesson you have given me, ye bright rolling
waves; some day, my heart tells me, you shall carry
me to my dear brothers!" There
lay upon the wet sea-grass eleven white
swan-feathers; Elise collected them together; drops
of water hung about them, whether dew or tears she
could not tell. She was quite alone on the seashore,
but she did not care for that; the sea presented an
eternal variety to her, more indeed in a few hours
than the gentle inland waters would have offered in a
whole year. When
a black cloud passed over the sky, it seemed as if
the sea was saying, "I too can look dark";
and then the wind would blow and the waves fling out
their white foam. But when the clouds shone with a
bright red tint, and the winds were asleep, the sea
also became like a rose-leaf in hue. It was now
green, now white; but as it reposed peacefully, a
slight breeze on the shore caused the water to heave
gently like the bosom of a sleeping child. At
sunset Elise saw eleven Wild Swans with golden crowns
upon their heads flying towards the land; they flew
one behind another, looking like a streaming white
ribbon. Elise climbed the precipice, and concealed
herself behind a bush; the swans settled close to
her, and flapped their long white wings. As
the sun sank beneath the water, the swans also
vanished, and in their place stood eleven handsome
princes, the brothers of Elise. She uttered a loud
cry, for although they were very much altered, Elise
knew them to be her brothers. She ran into their
arms, called them by their names - and how happy were
they to see and recognise their sister, who was grown
so tall and beautiful! They laughed and wept, and
soon told each other how wickedly their stepmother
had treated them. "We,"
said the eldest of the brothers, "fly or swim as
long as the sun is above the horizon, but, when it
sinks below, we appear again in our human form. We
are therefore obliged to look out for a safe
resting-place, for, if at sunset we were flying among
the clouds, we should fall down as soon as we resumed
our own form. We do not dwell here. A land quite as
beautiful as this lies on the opposite side of the
sea, but it is far off. To reach it, we have to cross
the deep waters, and there is no island midway on
which we may rest at night; one little solitary rock
rises from the waves, and upon it we find only just
room to stand side by side. "There
we spend the night in our human form, and when the
sea is rough we are sprinkled by its foam; but we are
thankful for this resting-place, for without it we
should never be able to visit our dear native
country. Only once in the year is this visit to the
home of our fathers permitted. We require two of the
longest days for our flight, and can remain here only
eleven days, during which time we fly over the large
forest whence we can see the palace in which we were
born, where our father dwells, and the tower of the
church in which our mother was buried. "Here
even the trees and bushes seemed of kin to us; here
the wild horses still race over the plains, as in the
days of our childhood; here the charcoal burner still
sings the same old tunes to which we used to dance in
our youth; here we are still drawn, and here we have
found thee, thou dear little sister! We have yet two
days longer to stay here; then we must fly over the
sea to a land beautiful indeed, but not our
fatherland. How shall we take thee with us? We have
neither ship nor boat!" "How
shall I be able to release you?" said the
sister. And they went on talking the whole of the
night. They slumbered only for a few hours. Elise
was awakened by the rustling of swans' wings which
were fluttering above her. Her brothers were again
transformed, and for some time flew around in large
circles. At last they flew far, far away; one of them
remained behind; it was the youngest, and he laid his
head in her lap and she stroked his white wings. They
remained the whole day together. Towards evening the
others came back, and when the sun set they stood
again on the firm ground in their natural form. "Tomorrow
we shall fly away, and may not return for a year, but
we cannot leave thee; hast thou courage to accompany
us? My arm is strong enough to bear thee through the
forest; shall we not have strength enough in our
wings to carry thee over the sea?" "Yes,
take me with you," said Elise. They spent the
whole night in weaving a mat of the pliant willow
bark and the tough rushes, and their mat was thick
and strong. Elise lay down upon it, and when the sun
rose, and the brothers were again transformed into
wild swans, they seized the mat with their beaks and
flew up high among the clouds with their dear sister,
who was still sleeping. The sunbeams shone full upon
her face; so one of the swans flew over her head, and
shaded her with his broad wings. They
were already far from land when Elise woke; she
thought she was still dreaming, so strange did it
appear to her to be travelling through the air, and
over the sea. By her side lay a cluster of pretty
berries, and a handful of delicious roots. Her
youngest brother had laid them there; and she thanked
him with a smile, for she knew him as the swan who
flew over her head and shaded her with his wings. They
flew so high that the first ship they saw beneath
them seemed like a white seagull hovering over the
water. Elise saw behind her a large cloud, which
looked like a mountain, and on it she saw the shadows
of herself and the eleven swans. It formed a picture
more splendid than any she had ever yet seen. Soon,
however, the sun rose higher, the cloud remained far
behind, and then the floating shadowy picture
disappeared. The
whole day they continued to fly with a whizzing
noise, somewhat like an arrow; but yet they went
slower than usual - they had their sister to carry. A
heavy tempest gathered as the evening approached;
Elise anxiously watched the sun. It was setting;
still the solitary rock could not be seen; it
appeared to her that the swans plied their wings with
increasing vigour. Alas!
It would be her fault if her brothers did not arrive
at the place in time! they would become human beings
when the sun set, and if this happened before they
reached the rocks, they must fall into the sea and be
drowned. She prayed to God most fervently; still no
rock was to be seen; the black clouds drew nearer,
violent gusts of wind announced the approach of a
tempest, the clouds rested upon a huge wave which
rolled quickly forwards, and one flash of lightning
rapidly succeeded another. The
sun was now on the rim of the sea. Elise's heart beat
violently; the swans shot downwards so swiftly that
she thought she must fall. But again they began to
hover; the sun was half sunk beneath the water, and
at that moment she saw the little rock below her; it
looked like a seal's head when he raises it just
above the water. And the sun was sinking fast - it
seemed scarcely larger than a star - her foot touched
the hard ground, and the sun vanished like the last
spark on a burnt piece of paper. Arm
in arm stood her brothers around her; there was only
just room for her and them - the sea beat
tempestuously against the rock, flinging over them a
shower of foam. The sky seemed in a blaze, with the
fast succeeding flashes of fire that lightened it,
and peal after peal rolled on the thunder, but sister
and brothers kept firm hold of each other's hands.
They sang a psalm, and their psalm gave them comfort
and courage. By
daybreak the air was pure and still, and, as soon as
the sun rose, the swans flew away with Elise from the
rock. The waves rose higher and higher, and when they
looked from the clouds down upon the blackish-green
sea, covered with white foam, they might have fancied
that millions of swans were swimming on its surface. As
day advanced, Elise saw floating in the air before
her a land of mountains with glaciers, and in the
centre, a palace a mile in length, with splendid
colonnades, surrounded by palm-trees and
gorgeous-looking flowers as large as mill-wheels. She
asked if this was the country to which they were
flying, but the swans shook their heads, for what she
saw was the beautiful airy castle of the fairy
Morgana, where no human being was admitted. Whilst
Elise still bent her eyes upon it, mountains, trees,
and castle all disappeared, and in their place stood
twelve churches with high towers and pointed windows
- she fancied she heard the organ play, but it was
only the murmur of the sea. She was now close to
these churches, but behold! they changed into a large
fleet sailing under them; she looked down and saw it
was only a sea-mist passing rapidly over the water.
An endless variety floated before her eyes, till at
last the land to which she was going appeared in
sight. Beautiful blue mountains, cedar woods, towns,
and castles rose in view. Long before sunset Elise
sat down among the mountains, in front of a large
cavern; delicate young creepers grew thickly around,
so that it appeared covered with gay embroidered
carpets. "Now
we shall see what thou wilt dream of tonight!"
said her youngest brother, as he showed her the
sleeping-chamber destined for her. "Oh,
that I could dream how you might be freed from the
spell!" said she; and this thought filled her
mind. She prayed for God's help, nay, even in her
dreams she continued praying, and it appeared to her
that she was flying up high in the air towards the
castle of the fairy Morgana. The fairy came forward
to meet her, radiant and beautiful, and yet she
fancied she resembled the old woman who had given her
berries in the forest, and told her of the swans with
golden crowns. "Thou
canst free thy brothers," said she; "but
hast thou courage and patience enough? The water is
indeed softer than thy delicate hands, and yet can
mould the hard stones to its will, but then it cannot
feel the pain which thy tender fingers will feel; it
has no heart and cannot suffer the anxiety and grief
which thou must suffer. Dost thou see these
stinging-nettles which I have in my hand? There are
many of the same kind growing round the cave where
thou art sleeping; only those that grow there or on
the graves in the churchyard are of use, remember
that! "Thou
must pluck them, although they will sting thy hand,
thou must trample on the nettles with thy feet, and
get yarn from them, and with this yarn thou must
weave eleven shirts with long sleeves; throw them
over the eleven wild swans and the spell is broken.
But mark this: from the moment that thou beginnest
thy work till it is completed, even should it take
thee years, thou must not speak a word; the first
syllable that escapes thy lips will fall like a
dagger into the hearts of thy brothers; on thy tongue
depends their life. Mark well all this!" And
at the same moment the fairy touched Elise's hands
with a nettle, which made them burn like fire, and
Elise awoke. It was broad daylight, and close to her
lay a nettle like the one she had seen in her dream.
She fell upon her knees, thanked God, and then went
out of the cave in order to begin her work. She
plucked with her own delicate hands the
stinging-nettles; they burned large blisters on her
hands and arms, but she bore the pain willingly in
the hope of releasing her dear brothers. She trampled
on the nettles with her naked feet, and spun the
green yarn. At
sunset came her brothers. Elise's silence quite
frightened them; they thought it must be the effect
of some fresh spell of their wicked stepmother. But
when they saw her blistered hands, they found out
what their sister was doing for their sakes. The
youngest brother wept, and, when his tears fell upon
her hands, Elise felt no more pain, and the blisters
disappeared. The
whole night she spent in her work, for she could not
rest till she had released her brothers. All the
following day she sat in her solitude, for the swans
had flown away; but never had time passed so quickly.
One shirt was ready; she now began the second. Suddenly
a hunting horn resounded among the mountains. Elise
was frightened. The noise came nearer, she heard the
hounds barking; in great terror she fled into the
cave, bound up the nettles which she had gathered and
combed into a bundle, and sat down upon it. In
the same moment a large dog sprang out from the
bushes. Two others immediately followed, they barked
loudly, ran away, and then returned. It was not long
before the hunters stood in front of the cave; the
handsomest among them was the King of that country;
he stepped up to Elise. Never had he seen a lovelier
maiden. "How
camest thou here, thou beautiful child?" said
he. Elise
shook her head; she dared not speak, for a word might
have cost the life of her brothers, and she hid her
hands under her apron lest the King should see how
she was suffering. "Come
with me," said he, "thou must not stay
here! If thou art good as thou art beautiful, I will
dress thee in velvet and silk, I will put a gold
crown upon thy head, and thou shalt dwell in my
palace!" So he lifted her upon his horse, while
she wept and wrung her hands; but the King said,
"I only desire thy happiness! thou shalt thank
me for this some day!" and away he rode over
mountains and valleys, holding her on his horse in
front, whilst the other hunters followed. When
the sun set, the King's magnificent capital with its
churches and domes lay before them, and the King led
Elise into the palace, where, in a marble hall,
fountains were playing, and the walls and ceilings
displayed the most beautiful paintings. But Elise
cared not for all this splendour; she wept and
mourned in silence, even whilst some female
attendants dressed her in royal robes, wove costly
pearls in her hair, and drew soft gloves over her
blistered hands. And
now she was full dressed, and. as she stood in her
splendid attire, her beauty was so dazzling that the
courtiers all bowed low before her; and the King
chose her for his bride, although the Archbishop
shook his head, and whispered that the
"beautiful lady of the wood must certainly be a
witch, who had blinded their eyes, and infatuated the
King's heart." But
the King did not listen; he ordered that music should
be played. A sumptuous banquet was served up, and the
loveliest maidens danced round their bride; she was
led through fragrant gardens into magnificent halls,
but not a smile was seen to play upon her lips, or
beam from her eyes. The King then ordered a small
room to be kept next to her sleeping apartment; it
was adorned with costly green tapestry, and exactly
resembled the cave in which she had been found; upon
the ground lay the bundle of yarn which she had spun
from the nettles, and by the wall hung the shirt she
had completed. One of the hunters had brought all
this, thinking there must be something wonderful in
it. "Here
thou mayst dream of thy former home," said the
King; "here is the work which employed thee;
amidst all thy present splendour it may sometimes
give thee pleasure to fancy thyself there
again." When
Elise saw what was so dear to her heart, she smiled,
and the blood returned to her cheeks; she thought her
brothers might still be freed, and she kissed the
King's hand. He pressed her to his heart, and ordered
the bells of all the churches in the city to be rung,
to announce the celebration of their wedding. The
beautiful dumb maiden of the wood was to become Queen
of the land. The
Archbishop whispered evil words in the King's ear,
but they made no impression upon him; the marriage
was solemnised, and the Archbishop himself was
obliged to put the crown upon her head. In his rage
he pressed the narrow rim so firmly upon her forehead
that it hurt her; but a heavier weight - sorrow for
her brothers - lay upon her heart, and she did not
feel bodily pain. She
was still silent, a single word would have killed her
brothers; her eyes, however, beamed with love to the
King, so good and handsome, who had done so much to
make her happy. She
became more warmly attached to him every day. Oh! how
much she wished she might confide to him all her
sorrows. But she was forced to remain silent; she
could not speak until her work was completed. To this
end she stole away every night, and went into the
little room that was fitted up in imitation of the
cave; there she worked at her shirts, but by the time
she had begun the seventh, all her yarn was spent. She
knew that the nettles she needed grew in the
churchyard, but she must gather them herself; how was
she to get them? "Oh,
what is the pain in my fingers compared to the
anguish my heart suffers?" thought she. "I
must venture to the churchyard; the good God will
protect me!" Fearful,
as though she were about to do something wrong, one
moonlit night, she crept down to the garden, and
through the long avenues into the lonely road leading
to the churchyard. She saw sitting on one of the
broadest tombstones a number of ugly old witches.
They took off their ragged clothes as if they were
going to bathe, and digging with their long lean
fingers into the fresh grass, drew up the dead bodies
and devoured the flesh. Elise
was obliged to pass close by them, and the witches
fixed their wicked eyes upon her; but she repeated
her prayer, gathered the stinging-nettles, and took
them back with her into the palace. One person only
had seen her; it was the Archbishop, who was awake
when others slept. Now he was convinced that all was
not right about the Queen; she must be a witch, who
had, through her enchantments, infatuated the King
and all the people. In
the Confessional he told the King what he had seen,
and what he feared; and, when the words came from his
lips, the images of saints shook their heads, as
though they would say, "It is untrue; Elise is
innocent!" But the Archbishop explained the omen
otherwise; he thought it was a testimony against her
that the holy images shook their heads at hearing of
her sin.Two large tears rolled down the King's
cheeks; he returned home in doubt; he pretended to
sleep at night, though sleep never visited him; and
he noticed that Elise rose from her bed every night,
and every time he followed her secretly and saw her
enter her little room. His
countenance became darker every day; Elise perceived
it, though she knew not the cause. She was much
pained, and besides, what did she not suffer in her
heart for her brothers! Her bitter tears ran down on
the royal velvet and purple; they looked like bright
diamonds, and all who saw the magnificence that
surrounded her wished themselves in her place. She
had now nearly finished her work, only one shirt was
wanting; unfortunately, yarn was wanting also; she
had not a single nettle left. Once more, only this
one time, she must go to the churchyard and gather a
few handfuls. She shuddered when she thought of the
solitary walk and of the horrid witches, but her
resolution was as firm as her trust in God. Elise
went, the King and Archbishop followed her; they saw
her disappear at the churchyard door, and, when they
came nearer, they saw the witches sitting on the
tombstones as Elise had seen them, and the King
turned away, for he believed her whose head had
rested on his bosom that very evening to be amongst
them. "Let the people judge her!" said he.
And the people condemned her to be burned. She
was now dragged from the King's apartments into a
dark damp prison, where the wind whistled through the
grated window. Instead of velvet and silk, they gave
her the bundle of nettles she had gathered; on that
she must lay her head, and the shirts she had woven
must serve her as mattress and counterpane. But they
could not have given her anything she valued so much;
and she continued her work, at the same time praying
earnestly to her God. The boys sang scandalous songs
about her in front of her prison; not a soul
comforted her with one word of love. Towards
evening she heard the rustling of swans' wings at the
grating. It was the youngest of her brothers who had
at last found his sister, and she sobbed aloud for
joy, although she knew that the coming night would
probably be the last of her life; but then her work
was almost finished, and her brother was near. The
Archbishop came in order to spend the last hour with
her; he had promised the King he would; but she shook
her head, and entreated him with her eyes and
gestures to go. This night she must finish her work,
or all she had suffered - her pain, her anxiety, her
sleepless nights - would be all in vain. The
Archbishop went away with many angry words, but the
unfortunate Elise knew herself to be innocent, and
went on with her work. Little
mice ran busily about and dragged the nettles to her
feet wishing to help her; and the thrush perched on
the iron bars of the window, and sang all night as
merrily as he could, that Elise might not lose
courage. It
was still twilight, just one hour before sunrise,
when the eleven brothers stood before the palace
gates, requesting an audience with the King. But it
could not be, they were told; it was still night, the
King was asleep, and they dared not wake him. They
entreated, they threatened; the guard came up, and
the King himself at last stepped out to ask what was
the matter. At that moment the sun rose, the brothers
could be seen no longer, and eleven white swans flew
away over the palace. The
people poured forth from the gates of the city; they
wished to see the witch burned. One wretched horse
drew the cart in which Elise was placed, a coarse
frock of sackcloth had been put on her, her beautiful
long hair hung loosely over her shoulders, her cheeks
were of a deadly paleness, her lips moved gently, and
her fingers wove the green yarn. Even on her way to
her cruel death she did not give up her work; the ten
shirts lay at her feet, and she was now labouring to
complete the eleventh. The rabble insulted her. "Look
at the witch, how she mutters! She has not a
hymn-book in her hand; no, there she sits with her
accursed hocus-pocus. Tear it from her; tear it into
a thousand pieces!" And
they all crowded about her, and were on the point of
snatching away the shirts, when eleven white swans
came flying towards the cart; they settled all around
her, and flapped their wings. The crowd gave way in
terror. "It
is a sign from Heaven! She is certainly
innocent!" whispered some; they dared not say so
aloud. The
Sheriff now seized her by the hand; in a moment she
threw the eleven shirts over the swans, and eleven
handsome princes appeared in their place. The
youngest had, however, only one arm, and a wing
instead of the other, for one sleeve was deficient in
his shirt - it had not been quite finished. "Now
I may speak," said she: "I am
innocent!" And
the people who had seen what had happened bowed
before her as a saint. She, however, sank lifeless in
her brothers' arms; suspense, fear, and grief had
quite exhausted her. "Yes,
she is innocent," said her eldest brother, and
he now related their wonderful history. Whilst he
spoke a fragrance as delicious as though it came from
millions of roses diffused itself around, for every
piece of wood on the funeral pile had taken root and
sent forth branches. A hedge of blooming red roses
surrounded Elise, and above all the others blossomed
a flower of dazzling white colour, bright as a star.
The King plucked it and laid it on Elise's bosom,
whereupon she awoke from her trance with peace and
joy in her heart. And
all the church-bells began to ring of their own
accord; and birds flew to the spot in swarms; and
there was a festive procession back to the palace,
such as no king has ever seen equalled.
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