A Norwegian Story.
It was a room at the top of a rough
wooden house in Norway. Though it was only a
garret, it was all very white and clean; and little
Erik Svenson lay in the small bed facing the barred
window, through which the moonbeams streamed till
they seemed to turn the walls into polished silver.
As Erik tossed about, he heard his
mother working in the room below.
The thump, thump, of her iron,
as she wearily finished the last of the clothes, that
must be sent home to the rich family at the farmhouse,
early next morning.
“Poor mother! how hard she works,”
thought Erik, “and I can’t do more than
mind Farmer Torvald’s boat on the fiord.
If I could only be employed in the town, I might be
able to help her!”
Thump, thump, went the
iron. The clock chimed twelve, and still the
poor washerwoman smoothed and folded, though her heavy
eyes almost refused to keep open, and the room began
to feel the chill of the frosty air outside.
“Erik sha’n’t want
for anything while I have two arms to work for him,”
she said to herself; and went on until the iron fell
from her tired hand, and she sank back in her chair
in a deep sleep.
Erik, too, had closed his eyes, and
was dreaming happily, when he was awakened by the
brush of something light and soft, across his pillow.
Starting up, he saw that the moon
was still brilliant, and in its clearest rays stood
a faint white figure, with shadowy wings outstretched
behind it.
A vapoury garment enveloped it, and
the face seemed young and beautiful.
“Oh, how wonderful! How
wonderful you are!” cried Erik. “Why
have I never seen you before?”
“I am Vanda, the Spirit of the
Moon,” said the Angel gently. “Only
to those who are in need of help can I become visible.
Your mother knows me well. Winter and summer,
I have soothed her to sleep; and to-night, as you
looked from the window, your thoughts joined mine,
and I was able to come to you. What will you
ask of me?”
“Oh, Vanda, dear Vanda!
Show me how to help my mother; I ask nothing else!”
cried Erik.
He jumped from his bed, and threw
himself at the feet of the shadowy Angel.
“Do you see that window?”
said the Moon-Spirit, pointing to the small panes
that were now covered with a delicate tracery of glittering
frost-work. “Of what do those patterns remind
you?”
“Of flowers!” cried Erik.
“I have often thought so. Sometimes I can
see grasses, and boughs, and roses, but always
lilies, because they are so white and spotless.”
The Angel smiled softly.
“To-night I shall shine upon
them, and make them live,” she said. “Take
what you will find upon the window sill at sunrise,
and sell them in the town. Bring the money back
to your mother at night-time.”
With the last words the Moon-Spirit
melted into the white light, leaving Erik with a feeling
of the happiest expectation.
Long before daybreak he was awake,
and his first thought was of the wonderful ice-flowers.
Would the Angel have kept her promise? What would
he see awaiting him?
As the rays of the sun shot over the
fiord, he sprang out of bed and ran to the window.
There lay a bunch of beautiful white lilies, nestling
in a mass of delicate moss-like green.
“They are the frost-flowers!”
cried Erik, and wild with joy he rushed into his mother’s
room, and held the bunch up for her to look at.
“Look, look, mother! See
what we have had given us. We shall soon have
enough money to rent the little farm you have always
been longing for!”
Erik’s visit to the town was
very successful. He sold his flowers directly,
although he had some difficulty in answering all the
questions of the townspeople, who wanted to know where
he had grown such delicate things in the middle of
a severe winter. To everyone he replied that
it was a secret; and they were obliged to be contented.
He returned home in good time for
his work upon the fiord, and if it had not been for
the store of silver pieces he poured into his mother’s
work-box, he would almost have imagined that he had
only been dreaming.
That night, as he laid his curly head
upon the pillow, his mind was full of thoughts about
the Moon-Angel. He wondered if she would appear
again, and whether she would once more leave him her
gift of the white frost-flowers.
The moon shone with silvery clearness
into the garret; and as the boy strained his eyes
towards the window, the bright form slowly floated
through the bars and stretched a pale hand towards
him.
“You have done well, to-day,
Erik. Look to-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,
until my light has waned and faded; and every day you
will find the lilies waiting for you.”
Again Erik felt the soft brush of
Vanda’s wings, and she disappeared in the path
of the moonbeams.
The next morning the flowers lay fresh
and fair upon the window-sill, and for days the frost-lilies
were always blooming.
But each time the bunch grew smaller
and smaller, until at last, when the moon was nothing
more than a thread of brightness, Erik found one single
blossom lying half drooping on the window-frame.
“Vanda’s gifts have ended,”
thought Erik, “but she has been a good true
friend to us! We have gained enough money for
my mother to put away her iron, and take the little
farmhouse by the fiord. How happy we shall be
together.”
The winter was nearly over, and Erik
and his mother had settled down to their happy life
in the farmhouse.
Frost-flowers, with delicate fantastic
groupings, still bloomed upon the window-panes; but
the Moon-Angel was not there to give them her fairy-like
gifts of life and beauty.
She had gone to console other struggling workers.