There was none other in the quiet
valley so happy as the rose-tree,-none
other so happy unless perchance it was the thrush who
made his home in the linden yonder. The thrush
loved the rose-tree’s daughter, and he was happy
in thinking that some day she would be his bride.
Now the rose-tree had many daughters, and each was
beautiful; but the rose whom the thrush loved was
more beautiful than her sisters, and all the wooers
came wooing her until at last the fair creature’s
head was turned, and the rose grew capricious and disdainful.
Among her many lovers were the south wind and the
fairy Dewlove and the little elf-prince Beambright
and the hoptoad, whom all the rest called Mr. Roughbrown.
The hoptoad lived in the stone-wall several yards
away; but every morning and evening he made a journey
to the rose-tree, and there he would sit for hours
gazing with tender longings at the beautiful rose,
and murmuring impassioned avowals. The rose’s
disdain did not chill the hoptoad’s ardor.
“See what I have brought you, fair rose,”
he would say. “A beautiful brown beetle
with golden wings and green eyes! Surely there
is not in all the world a more delicious morsel than
a brown beetle! Or, if you but say the word,
I will fetch you a tender little fly, or a young gnat,-see,
I am willing to undergo all toils and dangers for
your own sweet sake.”
Poor Mr. Roughbrown! His wooing
was very hopeless. And all the time he courted
the imperious rose, who should be peeping at him from
her home in the hedge but as plump and as sleek a
little Miss Dormouse as ever you saw, and her eyes
were full of envy.
“If Mr. Roughbrown had any sense,”
she said to herself, “he would waste no time
on that vain and frivolous rose. He is far too
good a catch for her.”
The south wind was forever sighing
and sobbing about. He lives, you know, very
many miles from here. His home is beyond a great
sea; in the midst of a vast desert there is an oasis,
and it is among the palm-trees and the flowers of
this oasis that the south wind abides. When spring
calls from the North, “O south wind, where are
you? Come hither, my sunny friend!” the
south wind leaps from his couch in the far-off oasis,
and hastens whither the spring-time calls. As
he speeds across the sea the mermaids seek to tangle
him in their tresses, and the waves try to twine their
white arms about him; but he shakes them off and laughingly
flies upon his way. Wheresoever he goes he is
beloved. With their soft, solemn music the pine-trees
seek to detain him; the flowers of earth lift up their
voices and cry, “Abide with us, dear spirit,”-but
to all he answers: “The spring-time calls
me in the North, and I must hasten whither she calls.”
But when the south wind came to the rose-tree he
would go no farther; he loved the rose, and he lingered
about her with singing and sighing and protestations.
It was not until late in the evening
that Dewlove and the elf-prince appeared. Just
as the moon rolled up in the horizon and poured a broad
streak of silver through the lake the three crickets
went “Chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp,”
and then out danced Dewlove and Beambright from their
hiding-places. The cunning little fairy lived
under the moss at the foot of the oak-tree; he was
no bigger than a cambric needle,-but he
had two eyes, and in this respect he had quite the
advantage of the needle. As for the elf-prince,
his home was in the tiny, dark subterranean passage
which the mole used to live in; he was plump as a
cupid, and his hair was long and curly, although if
you force me to it I must tell you that the elf-prince
was really no larger than your little finger,-so
you will see that so far as physical proportions were
concerned Dewlove and Beambright were pretty well
matched. Merry, merry fellows they were, and
I should certainly fail most lamentably did I attempt
to tell you how prettily they danced upon the greensward
of the meadowlands throughout the summer nights.
Sometimes the other fairies and elves joined them,-delicate
little lady fairies with gossamer wings, and chubby
little lady elves clad in filmy spider webs,-and
they danced and danced and danced, while the three
crickets went “Chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp,”
all night long. Now it was very strange-was
it not?-that instead of loving one of these
delicate little lady fairies, or one of these chubby
little lady elves, both Dewlove and Beambright loved
the rose. Yet, she was indeed very beautiful.
The thrush did not pester the rose
with his protestations of love. He was not a
particularly proud fellow, but he thought too much
of the rose to vex her with his pleadings. But
all day long he would perch in the thicket and sing
his songs as only a thrush can sing to the beautiful
rose he loves. He sung, we will say, of the forests
he had explored, of the famous river he had once seen,
of the dew which the rose loved, of the storm-king
that slew the old pine and made his cones into a crown,-he
sung of a thousand things which we might not understand,
but which pleased the rose because she understood them.
And one day the thrush swooped down from the linden
upon a monstrous devil’s darning-needle that
came spinning along and poised himself to stab the
beautiful rose. Yes, like lightning the thrush
swooped down on this murderous monster, and he bit
him in two, and I am glad of it, and so are you if
your heart be not wholly callous.
“How comes it,” said the
rose-tree to the thrush that day,-“how
comes it that you do not woo my daughter? You
have shown that you love her; why not speak to her?”
“No, I will wait,” answered
the thrush. “She has many wooers, and each
wooes her in his own way. Let me show her by
my devotion that I am worthy of her, and then perchance
she will listen kindly to me when I speak to her.”
The rose-tree thought very strange
of this; in all her experience of bringing out her
fair daughters into society she had never before had
to deal with so curious a lover as the thrush.
She made up her mind to speak for him.
“My daughter,” said she
to the rose, “the thrush loves you; of all your
wooers he is the most constant and the most amiable.
I pray that you will hear kindly to his suit.”
The rose laughed carelessly,-yes,
merrily,-as if she heeded not the heartache
which her indifference might cause the honest thrush.
“Mother,” said the rose,
“these suitors are pestering me beyond all endurance.
How can I have any patience with the south wind, who
is forever importuning me with his sentimental sighs
and melancholy wheezing? And as for that old
hoptoad, Mr. Roughbrown,-why, it is a husband
I want, not a father!”
“Prince Beambright pleases you,
then?” asked the rose-tree.
“He is a merry, capering fellow,”
said the daughter, “and so is his friend Dewlove;
but I do not fancy either. And as for the thrush
who sends you to speak for him,-why, he
is quite out of the question, I assure you.
The truth is, mother, that I am to fill a higher station
than that of bride to any of these simple rustic folk.
Am I not more beautiful than any of my companions,
and have I not ambitions above all others of my kind?”
“Whom have you seen that you
talk so vain-gloriously?” cried the rose-tree
in alarm. “What flattery has instilled
into you this fatal poison?”
“Have you not seen the poet
who comes this way every morning?” asked the
rose. “His face is noble, and he sings
grandly to the pictures Nature spreads before his
eyes. I should be his bride. Some day he
will see me; he will bear me away upon his bosom; he
will indite to me a poem that shall live forever!”
These words the thrush heard, and
his heart sank within him. If his songs that
day were not so blithe as usual it was because of the
words that the rose had spoken. Yet the thrush
sang on, and his song was full of his honest love.
It was the next morning that the poet
came that way. He lived in the city, but each
day he stole away from the noise and crowd of the city
to commune with himself and with Nature in the quiet
valley where bloomed the rose-tree, where the thrush
sung, and where dwelt the fays and the elves of whom
it has been spoken. The sun shone fiercely;
withal the quiet valley was cool, and the poet bared
his brow to the breeze that swept down the quiet valley
from the lake over yonder.
“The south wind loves the rose!
Aha, aha, foolish brother to love the rose!”
This was what the breeze said, and
the poet heard it. Then his eyes fell upon the
rose-tree and upon her blooming daughters.
“The hoptoad loves the rose!
Foolish old Roughbrown to love the rose, aha, aha!”
There was a malicious squeakiness
in this utterance,-of course it came from
that envious Miss Dormouse, who was forever peeping
out of her habitation in the hedge.
“What a beautiful rose!”
cried the poet, and leaping over the old stone-wall
he plucked the rose from the mother-tree,-yes,
the poet bore away this very rose who had hoped to
be the poet’s bride.
Then the rose-tree wept bitterly,
and so did her other daughters; the south wind wailed,
and the old hoptoad gave three croaks so dolorous
that if you had heard them you would have said that
his heart was truly broken. All were sad,-all
but the envious dormouse, who chuckled maliciously,
and said it was no more than they deserved.
The thrush saw the poet bearing the
rose away, yet how could the fluttering little creature
hope to prevail against the cruel invader? What
could he do but twitter in anguish? So there
are tragedies and heartaches in lives that are not
human.
As the poet returned to the city he
wore the rose upon his breast. The rose was
happy, for the poet spoke to her now and then, and
praised her loveliness, and she saw that her beauty
had given him an inspiration.
“The rose despised my brother!
Aha, aha, foolish rose,-but she shall
wither!”
It was the breeze that spake; far
away from the lake in the quiet valley its voice was
very low, but the rose heard and trembled.
“It’s a lie,” cried
the rose. “I shall not die. The poet
loves me, and I shall live forever upon his bosom.”
Yet a singular faintness-a
faintness never felt before-came upon the
rose; she bent her head and sighed. The heat-that
was all-was very oppressive, and here at
the entrance to the city the tumult aroused an aggravating
dust. The poet seemed suddenly to forget the
rose. A carriage was approaching, and from the
carriage leaned a lady, who beckoned to the poet.
The lady was very fair, and the poet hastened to
answer her call. And as he hastened the rose
fell from his bosom into the hot highway, and the
poet paid no heed. Ascending into the carriage
with the lady (I am sure she must have been a princess!)
the poet was whirled away, and there in the stifling
dust lay the fainting rose, all stained and dying.
The sparrows flew down and pecked
at her inquisitively; the cruel wagons crushed her
beneath their iron wheels; careless feet buffeted
her hither and thither. She was no longer a beautiful
rose; no, nor even a reminiscence of one,-simply
a colorless, scentless, ill-shapen mass.
But all at once she heard a familiar
voice, and then she saw familiar eyes. The voice
was tender and the eyes were kindly.
“O honest thrush,” cried
the rose, “is it you who have come to reproach
me for my folly?”
“No, no, dear rose,” said
the thrush, “how should I speak ill to you?
Come, rest your poor head upon my breast, and let me
bear you home.”
“Let me rather die here,”
sighed the rose, “for it was here that my folly
brought me. How could I go back with you whom
I never so much as smiled upon? And do they
not hate and deride me in the valley? I would
rather die here in misery than there in shame!”
“Poor, broken flower, they love
you,” urged the thrush. “They grieve
for you; let me bear you back where the mother-tree
will shade you, and where the south wind will nurse
you-for-for he loves you.”
So the thrush bore back the withering
rose to her home in the quiet valley.
“So she has come back, has she?”
sneered the dormouse. “Well, she has impudence,
if nothing else!”
“She was pretty once,”
said the old hoptoad; “but she lost her opportunity
when I made up my mind to go wooing a certain glossy
damsel in the hedge.”
The rose-tree reached out her motherly
arms to welcome her dying daughter, and she said:
“Rest here, dear one, and let me rock you to
repose.”
It was evening in the quiet valley
now. Where was the south wind that he came not
with his wooing? He had flown to the North, for
that day he had heard the spring-time’s voice
a-calling, and he went in answer to its summons.
Everything was still. “Chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp,
chirp-chirp,” piped the three crickets, and forthwith
the fairy boy and the elf-prince danced from their
habitations. Their little feet tinkled over
the clover and the daisies.
“Hush, little folk,” cried
the rose-tree. “Do not dance to-night,-the
rose is dying.”
But they danced on. The rose
did not hear them; she heard only the voice of the
thrush, who perched in the linden yonder, and, with
a breaking heart, sung to the dying flower.