There was once a Darning-needle who
thought herself so fine that she believed she was
an embroidery-needle. ’Take great care to
hold me tight!’ said the Darning-needle to the
Fingers who were holding her. ’Don’t
let me fall! If I once fall on the ground I shall
never be found again, I am so fine!’
‘It is all right!’ said
the Fingers, seizing her round the waist.
‘Look, I am coming with my train!’
said the Darning-needle as she drew a long thread
after her; but there was no knot at the end of the
thread.
The Fingers were using the needle
on the cook’s shoe. The upper leather was
unstitched and had to be sewn together.
‘This is common work!’
said the Darning-needle. ’I shall never
get through it. I am breaking! I am breaking!’
And in fact she did break. ‘Didn’t
I tell you so!’ said the Darning-needle.
‘I am too fine!’
‘Now she is good for nothing!’
said the Fingers; but they had to hold her tight while
the cook dropped some sealing-wax on the needle and
stack it in the front of her dress.
‘Now I am a breast-pin!’
said the Darning-needle. ’I always knew
I should be promoted. When one is something,
one will become something!’ And she laughed
to herself; you can never see when a Darning-needle
is laughing. Then she sat up as proudly as if
she were in a State coach, and looked all round her.
‘May I be allowed to ask if
you are gold?’ she said to her neighbour, the
Pin. ’You have a very nice appearance, and
a peculiar head; but it is too small! You must
take pains to make it grow, for it is not everyone
who has a head of sealing-wax.’ And so saying
the Darning-needle raised herself up so proudly that
she fell out of the dress, right into the sink which
the cook was rinsing out.
‘Now I am off on my travels!’
said the Darning-needle. ’I do hope I sha’n’t
get lost!’ She did indeed get lost.
‘I am too fine for this world!’
said she as she lay in the gutter; ‘but I know
who I am, and that is always a little satisfaction!’
’And the Darning-needle kept
her proud bearing and did not lose her good-temper.
All kinds of things swam over her shavings,
bits of straw, and scraps of old newspapers.
‘Just look how they sail along!’
said the Darning-needle. ’They don’t
know what is underneath them! Here I am sticking
fast! There goes a shaving thinking of nothing
in the world but of itself, a mere chip! There
goes a straw well, how it does twist and
twirl, to be sure! Don’t think so much
about yourself, or you will be knocked against a stone.
There floats a bit of newspaper. What is written
on it is long ago forgotten, and yet how proud it
is! I am sitting patient and quiet. I know
who I am, and that is enough for me!’
One day something thick lay near her
which glittered so brightly that the Darning-needle
thought it must be a diamond. But it was a bit
of bottle-glass, and because it sparkled the Darning-needle
spoke to it, and gave herself out as a breast-pin.
‘No doubt you are a diamond?’
‘Yes, something of that kind!’
And each believed that the other was something very
costly; and they both said how very proud the world
must be of them.
‘I have come from a lady’s
work-box,’ said Darning-needle, ’and this
lady was a cook; she had five fingers on each hand;
anything so proud as these fingers I have never seen!
And yet they were only there to take me out of the
work-box and to put me back again!’
‘Were they of noble birth, then?’
asked the bit of bottle-glass.
‘Of noble birth!’ said
the Darning-needle; ’no indeed, but proud!
They were five brothers, all called “Fingers.”
They held themselves proudly one against the other,
although they were of different sizes. The outside
one, the Thumb, was short and fat; he was outside the
rank, and had only one bend in his back, and could
only make one bow; but he said that if he were cut
off from a man that he was no longer any use as a
soldier. Dip-into-everything, the second finger,
dipped into sweet things as well as sour things, pointed
to the sun and the moon, and guided the pen when they
wrote. Longman, the third, looked at the others
over his shoulder. Goldband, the fourth,
had a gold sash round his waist; and little Playman
did nothing at all, and was the more proud. There
was too much ostentation, and so I came away.’
‘And now we are sitting and
shining here!’ said the bit of bottle-glass.
At that moment more water came into
the gutter; it streamed over the edges and washed
the bit of bottle-glass away.
‘Ah! now he has been promoted!’
said the Darning-needle. ’I remain here;
I am too fine. But that is my pride, which is
a sign of respectability!’ And she sat there
very proudly, thinking lofty thoughts.
’I really believe I must have
been born a sunbeam, I am so fine! It seems to
me as if the sunbeams were always looking under the
water for me. Ah, I am so fine that my own mother
cannot find me! If I had my old eye which broke
off, I believe I could weep; but I can’t it
is not fine to weep!’
One day two street-urchins were playing
and wading in the gutter, picking up old nails, pennies,
and such things. It was rather dirty work, but
it was a great delight to them.
‘Oh, oh!’ cried out one,
as he pricked himself with the Darning-needle; ‘he
is a fine fellow though!’
‘I am not a fellow; I am a young
lady!’ said the Darning-needle; but no one heard.
The sealing-wax had gone, and she had become quite
black; but black makes one look very slim, and so she
thought she was even finer than before.
‘Here comes an egg-shell sailing
along!’ said the boys, and they stuck the Darning-needle
into the egg-shell.
‘The walls white and I black what
a pretty contrast it makes!’ said the Darning-needle.
’Now I can be seen to advantage! If only
I am not sea-sick! I should give myself up for
lost!’
But she was not sea-sick, and did not give herself
up.
’It is a good thing to be steeled
against sea-sickness; here one has indeed an advantage
over man! Now my qualms are over. The finer
one is the more one can bear.’
‘Crack!’ said the egg-shell
as a wagon-wheel went over it.
‘Oh! how it presses!’
said the Darning-needle. ’I shall indeed
be sea-sick now. I am breaking!’ But she
did not break, although the wagon-wheel went over
her; she lay there at full length, and there she may
lie.