She lighted another match, and then she found
herself sitting under a beautiful Christmas-tree. It was larger
and more beautifully decorated than the one which she had seen
through the glass door at the rich merchant’s. Thousands of tapers
were burning upon the green branches, and colored pictures, like
those she had seen in the show-windows, looked down upon it all.
The little one stretched out her hand towards them, and the match
went out.
The Christmas lights rose higher and higher, till they looked
to her like the stars in the sky. Then she saw a star fall,
leaving behind it a bright streak of fire. “Someone is dying,”
thought the little girl, for her old grandmother, the only one who
had ever loved her, and who was now dead, had told her that when a
star falls, a soul was going up to God.
She again rubbed a match on the wall, and the light shone round
her; in the brightness stood her old grandmother, clear and
shining, yet mild and loving in her appearance. “Grandmother,”
cried the little one, “O take me with you; I know you will go away
when the match burns out; you will vanish like the warm stove, the
roast goose, and the large, glorious Christmas-tree.” And she made
haste to light the whole bundle of matches, for she wished to keep
her grandmother there. And the matches glowed with a light that
was brighter than the noon-day, and her grandmother had never
appeared so large or so beautiful. She took the little girl in her
arms, and they both flew upwards in brightness and joy far above
the earth, where there was neither cold nor hunger nor pain, for
they were with God.
In the dawn of morning there lay the poor little one, with pale
cheeks and smiling mouth, leaning against the wall; she had been
frozen to death on the last evening of the year; and the
New-year’s sun rose and shone upon a little corpse! The child
still sat, in the stiffness of death, holding the matches in her
hand, one bundle of which was burnt. “She tried to warm herself,”
said some. No one imagined what beautiful things she had seen, nor
into what glory she had entered with her grandmother, on
New-year’s day.
|