Before very long the dainty form of
a little maiden advanced toward him. Her name
was Elisabeth, and she might have been five years old.
He himself was twice that age. Round her neck
she wore a red silk kerchief which was very becoming
to her brown eyes.
“Reinhard!” she cried,
“we have a holiday, a holiday! No school
the whole day and none to-morrow either!”
Reinhard was carrying his slate under
his arm, but he flung it behind the front door, and
then both the children ran through the house into
the garden and through the garden gate out into the
meadow. The unexpected holiday came to them at
a most happily opportune moment.
It was in the meadow that Reinhard,
with Elisabeth’s help, had built a house out
of sods of grass. They meant to live in it during
the summer evenings; but it still wanted a bench.
He set to work at once; nails, hammer, and the necessary
boards were already to hand.
While he was thus engaged, Elisabeth
went along the dyke, gathering the ring-shaped seeds
of the wild mallow in her apron, with the object of
making herself chains and necklaces out of them; so
that when Reinhard had at last finished his bench
in spite of many a crookedly hammered nail, and came
out into the sunlight again, she was already wandering
far away at the other end of the meadow.
“Elisabeth!” he called,
“Elisabeth!” and then she came, her hair
streaming behind her.
“Come here,” he said;
“our house is finished now. Why, you have
got quite hot! Come in, and let us sit on the
new bench. I will tell you a story.”
So they both went in and sat down
on the new bench. Elisabeth took the little seed-rings
out of her apron and strung them on long threads.
Reinhard began his tale: “There were once
upon a time three spinning-women..."
The beginning of one of the best
known of Grimm’s fairy tales.
“Oh!” said Elisabeth,
“I know that off by heart; you really must not
always tell me the same story.”
Accordingly Reinhard had to give up
the story of the three spinning-women and tell instead
the story of the poor man who was cast into the den
of lions.
“It was now night,” he
said, “black night, you know, and the lions
were asleep. But every now and then they would
yawn in their sleep and shoot out their red tongues.
And then the man would shudder and think it was morning.
All at once a bright light fell all about him, and
when he looked up an angel was standing before him.
The angel beckoned to him with his hand and then went
straight into the rocks.”
Elisabeth had been listening attentively.
“An angel?” she said. “Had
he wings then?”
“It is only a story,”
answered Reinhard; “there are no angels, you
know.”
“Oh, fie! Reinhard!”
she said, staring him straight in the face.
He looked at her with a frown, and
she asked him hesitatingly: “Well, why
do they always say there are? mother, and aunt, and
at school as well?”
“I don’t know,” he answered.
“But tell me,” said Elisabeth, “are
there no lions either?”
“Lions? Are there lions?
In India, yes. The heathen priests harness them
to their carriages, and drive about the desert with
them. When I’m big, I mean to go out there
myself. It is thousands of times more beautiful
in that country than it is here at home; there’s
no winter at all there. And you must come with
me. Will you?”
“Yes,” said Elisabeth;
“but mother must come with us, and your mother
as well.”
“No,” said Reinhard, “they
will be too old then, and cannot come with us.”
“But I mayn’t go by myself.”
“Oh, but you may right enough;
you will then really be my wife, and the others will
have no say in the matter.”
“But mother will cry!”
“We shall come back again of
course,” said Reinhard impetuously. “Now
just tell me straight out, will you go with me?
If not, I will go all alone, and then I shall never
come back again.”
The little girl came very near to
crying. “Please don’t look so angry,”
said she; “I will go to India with you.”
Reinhard seized both her hands with
frantic glee, and rushed out with her into the meadow.
“To India, to India!”
he sang, and swung her round and round, so that her
little red kerchief was whirled from off her neck.
Then he suddenly let her go and said solemnly:
“Nothing will come of it, I’m
sure; you haven’t the pluck.”
“Elisabeth! Reinhard!”
some one was now calling from the garden gate.
“Here we are!” the children answered, and
raced home hand in hand.