“When you have reached your fifteenth year,” said
the grand-mother, “you will have permission to rise up out of the
sea, to sit on the rocks in the moonlight, while the great ships
are sailing by; and then you will see both forests and towns.”
In the following year, one of the sisters would be fifteen: but
as each was a year younger than the other, the youngest would have
to wait five years before her turn came to rise up from the bottom
of the ocean, and see the earth as we do. However, each promised
to tell the others what she saw on her first visit, and what she
thought the most beautiful; for their grandmother could not tell
them enough; there were so many things on which they wanted
information. None of them longed so much for her turn to come as
the youngest, she who had the longest time to wait, and who was so
quiet and thoughtful. Many nights she stood by the open window,
looking up through the dark blue water, and watching the fish as
they splashed about with their fins and tails. She could see the
moon and stars shining faintly; but through the water they looked
larger than they do to our eyes. When something like a black cloud
passed between her and them, she knew that it was either a whale
swimming over her head, or a ship full of human beings, who never
imagined that a pretty little mermaid was standing beneath them,
holding out her white hands towards the keel of their ship.
As soon as the eldest was fifteen, she was allowed to rise to
the surface of the ocean. When she came back, she had hundreds of
things to talk about; but the most beautiful, she said, was to lie
in the moonlight, on a sandbank, in the quiet sea, near the coast,
and to gaze on a large town nearby, where the lights were
twinkling like hundreds of stars; to listen to the sounds of the
music, the noise of carriages, and the voices of human beings, and
then to hear the merry bells peal out from the church steeples;
and because she could not go near to all those wonderful things,
she longed for them more than ever. Oh, did not the youngest
sister listen eagerly to all these descriptions? and afterwards,
when she stood at the open window looking up through the dark blue
water, she thought of the great city, with all its bustle and
noise, and even fancied she could hear the sound of the church
bells, down in the depths of the sea.
In another year the second sister received permission to rise
to the surface of the water, and to swim about where she pleased.
She rose just as the sun was setting, and this, she said, was the
most beautiful sight of all. The whole sky looked like gold, while
violet and rose-colored clouds, which she could not describe,
floated over her; and, still more rapidly than the clouds, flew a
large flock of wild swans towards the setting sun, looking like a
long white veil across the sea. She also swam towards the sun; but
it sunk into the waves, and the rosy tints faded from the clouds
and from the sea.
The third sister’s turn followed; she was the boldest of them
all, and she swam up a broad river that emptied itself into the
sea. On the banks she saw green hills covered with beautiful
vines; palaces and castles peeped out from amid the proud trees of
the forest; she heard the birds singing, and the rays of the sun
were so powerful that she was obliged often to dive down under the
water to cool her burning face. In a narrow creek she found a
whole troop of little human children, quite naked, and sporting
about in the water; she wanted to play with them, but they fled in
a great fright; and then a little black animal came to the water;
it was a dog, but she did not know that, for she had never before
seen one. This animal barked at her so terribly that she became
frightened, and rushed back to the open sea. But she said she
should never forget the beautiful forest, the green hills, and the
pretty little children who could swim in the water, although they
had not fish’s tails.
The fourth sister was more timid; she remained in the midst of
the sea, but she said it was quite as beautiful there as nearer
the land. She could see for so many miles around her, and the sky
above looked like a bell of glass. She had seen the ships, but at
such a great distance that they looked like sea-gulls. The
dolphins sported in the waves, and the great whales spouted water
from their nostrils till it seemed as if a hundred fountains were
playing in every direction.
The fifth sister’s birthday occurred in the winter; so when her
turn came, she saw what the others had not seen the first time
they went up. The sea looked quite green, and large icebergs were
floating about, each like a pearl, she said, but larger and
loftier than the churches built by men. They were of the most
singular shapes, and glittered like diamonds. She had seated
herself upon one of the largest, and let the wind play with her
long hair, and she remarked that all the ships sailed by rapidly,
and steered as far away as they could from the iceberg, as if they
were afraid of it. Towards evening, as the sun went down, dark
clouds covered the sky, the thunder rolled and the lightning
flashed, and the red light glowed on the icebergs as they rocked
and tossed on the heaving sea. On all the ships the sails were
reefed with fear and trembling, while she sat calmly on the
floating iceberg, watching the blue lightning, as it darted its
forked flashes into the sea.
When first the sisters had permission to rise to the surface,
they were each delighted with the new and beautiful sights they
saw; but now, as grown-up girls, they could go when they pleased,
and they had become indifferent about it. They wished themselves
back again in the water, and after a month had passed they said it
was much more beautiful down below, and pleasanter to be at home.
Yet often, in the evening hours, the five sisters would twine
their arms round each other, and rise to the surface, in a row.
They had more beautiful voices than any human being could have;
and before the approach of a storm, and when they expected a ship
would be lost, they swam before the vessel, and sang sweetly of
the delights to be found in the depths of the sea, and begging the
sailors not to fear if they sank to the bottom. But the sailors
could not understand the song, they took it for the howling of the
storm. And these things were never to be beautiful for them; for
if the ship sank, the men were drowned, and their dead bodies
alone reached the palace of the Sea King.
When the sisters rose, arm-in-arm, through the water in this
way, their youngest sister would stand quite alone, looking after
them, ready to cry, only that the mermaids have no tears, and
therefore they suffer more. “Oh, were I but fifteen years old,”
said she: “I know that I shall love the world up there, and all
the people who live in it.”
At last she reached her fifteenth year. “Well, now, you are
grown up,” said the old dowager, her grandmother; “so you must let
me adorn you like your other sisters;” and she placed a wreath of
white lilies in her hair, and every flower leaf was half a pearl.
Then the old lady ordered eight great oysters to attach themselves
to the tail of the princess to show her high rank.
“But they hurt me so,” said
the little mermaid.
“Pride must suffer pain,” replied the old lady. Oh, how gladly
she would have shaken off all this grandeur, and laid aside the
heavy wreath! The red flowers in her own garden would have suited
her much better, but she could not help herself: so she said,
“Farewell,” and rose as lightly as a bubble to the surface of the
water. The sun had just set as she raised her head above the
waves; but the clouds were tinted with crimson and gold, and
through the glimmering twilight beamed the evening star in all its
beauty. The sea was calm, and the air mild and fresh. A large
ship, with three masts, lay becalmed on the water, with only one
sail set; for not a breeze stiffed, and the sailors sat idle on
deck or amongst the rigging.
There was music and song on board; and, as darkness came on, a
hundred colored lanterns were lighted, as if the flags of all
nations waved in the air.
The little mermaid swam close to the cabin
windows; and now and then, as the waves lifted her up, she could
look in through clear glass window-panes, and see a number of
well-dressed people within. Among them was a young prince, the
most beautiful of all, with large black eyes; he was sixteen years
of age, and his birthday was being kept with much rejoicing. The
sailors were dancing on deck, but when the prince came out of the
cabin, more than a hundred rockets rose in the air, making it as
bright as day. The little mermaid was so startled that she dived
under water; and when she again stretched out her head, it
appeared as if all the stars of heaven were falling around her,
she had never seen such fireworks before. Great suns spurted fire
about, splendid fireflies flew into the blue air, and everything
was reflected in the clear, calm sea beneath. The ship itself was
so brightly illuminated that all the people, and even the smallest
rope, could be distinctly and plainly seen. And how handsome the
young prince looked, as he pressed the hands of all present and
smiled at them, while the music resounded through the clear night
air.
It was very late; yet the little mermaid could not take her
eyes from the ship, or from the beautiful prince. The colored
lanterns had been extinguished, no more rockets rose in the air,
and the cannon had ceased firing; but the sea became restless, and
a moaning, grumbling sound could be heard beneath the waves: still
the little mermaid remained by the cabin window, rocking up and
down on the water, which enabled her to look in. After a while,
the sails were quickly unfurled, and the noble ship continued her
passage; but soon the waves rose higher, heavy clouds darkened the
sky, and lightning appeared in the distance. A dreadful storm was
approaching; once more the sails were reefed, and the great ship
pursued her flying course over the raging sea. The waves rose
mountains high, as if they would have overtopped the mast; but the
ship dived like a swan between them, and then rose again on their
lofty, foaming crests.
To the little mermaid this appeared pleasant sport; not so to
the sailors. At length the ship groaned and creaked; the thick
planks gave way under the lashing of the sea as it broke over the
deck; the mainmast snapped asunder like a reed; the ship lay over
on her side; and the water rushed in. The little mermaid now
perceived that the crew were in danger; even she herself was
obliged to be careful to avoid the beams and planks of the wreck
which lay scattered on the water. At one moment it was so pitch
dark that she could not see a single object, but a flash of
lightning revealed the whole scene; she could see every one who
had been on board excepting the prince; when the ship parted, she
had seen him sink into the deep waves, and she was glad, for she
thought he would now be with her; and then she remembered that
human beings could not live in the water, so that when he got down
to her father’s palace he would be quite dead.
But he must not die. So she swam about among the beams and
planks which strewed the surface of the sea, forgetting that they
could crush her to pieces. Then she dived deeply under the dark
waters, rising and falling with the waves, till at length she
managed to reach the young prince, who was fast losing the power
of swimming in that stormy sea. His limbs were failing him, his
beautiful eyes were closed, and he would have died had not the
little mermaid come to his assistance. She held his head above the
water, and let the waves drift them where they would.
In the morning the storm had ceased; but of the ship not a
single fragment could be seen. The sun rose up red and glowing
from the water, and its beams brought back the hue of health to
the prince’s cheeks; but his eyes remained closed. The mermaid
kissed his high, smooth forehead, and stroked back his wet hair;
he seemed to her like the marble statue in her little garden, and
she kissed him again, and wished that he might live. Presently
they came in sight of land; she saw lofty blue mountains, on which
the white snow rested as if a flock of swans were lying upon them.
Near the coast were beautiful green forests, and close by stood a
large building, whether a church or a convent she could not tell.
Orange and citron trees grew in the garden, and before the door
stood lofty palms.
The sea here formed a little bay, in which the water was quite
still, but very deep; so she swam with the handsome prince to the
beach, which was covered with fine, white sand, and there she laid
him in the warm sunshine, taking care to raise his head higher
than his body. Then bells sounded in the large white building, and
a number of young girls came into the garden. The little mermaid
swam out farther from the shore and placed herself between some
high rocks that rose out of the water; then she covered her head
and neck with the foam of the sea so that her little face might
not be seen, and watched to see what would become of the poor
prince. She did not wait long before she saw a young girl approach
the spot where he lay. She seemed frightened at first, but only
for a moment; then she fetched a number of people, and the mermaid
saw that the prince came to life again, and smiled upon those who
stood round him. But to her he sent no smile; he knew not that she
had saved him.
This made her very unhappy, and when he was led away into the
great building, she dived down sorrowfully into the water, and
returned to her father’s castle. She had always been silent and
thoughtful, and now she was more so than ever. Her sisters asked
her what she had seen during her first visit to the surface of the
water; but she would tell them nothing. Many an evening and
morning did she rise to the place where she had left the prince.
She saw the fruits in the garden ripen till they were gathered,
the snow on the tops of the mountains melt away; but she never saw
the prince, and therefore she returned home, always more sorrowful
than before. It was her only comfort to sit in her own little
garden, and fling her arm round the beautiful marble statue which
was like the prince; but she gave up tending her flowers, and they
grew in wild confusion over the paths, twining their long leaves
and stems round the branches of the trees, so that the whole place
became dark and gloomy. At length she could bear it no longer, and
told one of her sisters all about it. Then the others heard the
secret, and very soon it became known to two mermaids whose
intimate friend happened to know who the prince was. She had also
seen the festival on board ship, and she told them where the
prince came from, and where his palace stood.
“Come, little sister,” said the other princesses; then they
entwined their arms and rose up in a long row to the surface of
the water, close by the spot where they knew the prince’s palace
stood. It was built of bright yellow shining stone, with long
flights of marble steps, one of which reached quite down to the
sea. Splendid gilded cupolas rose over the roof, and between the
pillars that surrounded the whole building stood life-like statues
of marble. Through the clear crystal of the lofty windows could be
seen noble rooms, with costly silk curtains and hangings of
tapestry; while the walls were covered with beautiful paintings
which were a pleasure to look at. In the centre of the largest
saloon a fountain threw its sparkling jets high up into the glass
cupola of the ceiling, through which the sun shone down upon the
water and upon the beautiful plants growing round the basin of the
fountain.
Now that she knew where he lived, she spent many an evening and
many a night on the water near the palace. She would swim much
nearer the shore than any of the others ventured to do; indeed
once she went quite up the narrow channel under the marble
balcony, which threw a broad shadow on the water. Here she would
sit and watch the young prince, who thought himself quite alone in
the bright moonlight. She saw him many times of an evening sailing
in a pleasant boat, with music playing and flags waving. She
peeped out from among the green rushes, and if the wind caught her
long silvery-white veil, those who saw it believed it to be a
swan, spreading out its wings. On many a night, too, when the
fishermen, with their torches, were out at sea, she heard them
relate so many good things about the doings of the young prince,
that she was glad she had saved his life when he had been tossed
about half-dead on the waves. And she remembered that his head had
rested on her bosom, and how heartily she had kissed him; but he
knew nothing of all this, and could not even dream of her. She
grew more and more fond of human beings, and wished more and more
to be able to wander about with those whose world seemed to be so
much larger than her own.
They could fly over the sea in ships, and mount the high hills
which were far above the clouds; and the lands they possessed,
their woods and their fields, stretched far away beyond the reach
of her sight. There was so much that she wished to know, and her
sisters were unable to answer all her questions. Then she applied
to her old grandmother, who knew all about the upper world, which
she very rightly called the lands above the sea.
“If human beings are not drowned,” asked the little mermaid,
“can they live forever? do they never die as we do here in the
sea?”
“Yes,” replied the old lady, “they must also die, and their
term of life is even shorter than ours. We sometimes live to three
hundred years, but when we cease to exist here we only become the
foam on the surface of the water, and we have not even a grave
down here of those we love. We have not immortal souls, we shall
never live again; but, like the green sea-weed, when once it has
been cut off, we can never flourish more. Human beings, on the
contrary, have a soul which lives forever, lives after the body
has been turned to dust. It rises up through the clear, pure air
beyond the glittering stars. As we rise out of the water, and
behold all the land of the earth, so do they rise to unknown and
glorious regions which we shall never see.”
“Why have not we an immortal soul?” asked the little mermaid
mournfully; “I would give gladly all the hundreds of years that I
have to live, to be a human being only for one day, and to have
the hope of knowing the happiness of that glorious world above the
stars.”
“You must not think of that,” said the old woman; “we feel
ourselves to be much happier and much better off than human
beings.”
“So I shall die,” said the little mermaid, “and as the foam of
the sea I shall be driven about never again to hear the music of
the waves, or to see the pretty flowers nor the red sun. Is there
anything I can do to win an immortal soul?”
“No,” said the old woman, “unless a man were to love you so
much that you were more to him than his father or mother; and if
all his thoughts and all his love were fixed upon you, and the
priest placed his right hand in yours, and he promised to be true
to you here and hereafter, then his soul would glide into your
body and you would obtain a share in the future happiness of
mankind. He would give a soul to you and retain his own as well;
but this can never happen. Your fish’s tail, which amongst us is
considered so beautiful, is thought on earth to be quite ugly;
they do not know any better, and they think it necessary to have
two stout props, which they call legs, in order to be handsome.”
Then the little mermaid sighed, and looked sorrowfully at her
fish’s tail. “Let us be happy,” said the old lady, “and dart and
spring about during the three hundred years that we have to live,
which is really quite long enough; after that we can rest
ourselves all the better. This evening we are going to have a
court ball.”
It is one of those splendid sights which we can never see on
earth. The walls and the ceiling of the large ball-room were of
thick, but transparent crystal. May hundreds of colossal shells,
some of a deep red, others of a grass green, stood on each side in
rows, with blue fire in them, which lighted up the whole saloon,
and shone through the walls, so that the sea was also illuminated.
Innumerable fishes, great and small, swam past the crystal walls;
on some of them the scales glowed with a purple brilliancy, and on
others they shone like silver and gold. Through the halls flowed a
broad stream, and in it danced the mermen and the mermaids to the
music of their own sweet singing. No one on earth has such a
lovely voice as theirs. The little mermaid sang more sweetly than
them all.
The whole court applauded her with hands and tails; and for a
moment her heart felt quite gay, for she knew she had the
loveliest voice of any on earth or in the sea. But she soon
thought again of the world above her, for she could not forget the
charming prince, nor her sorrow that she had not an immortal soul
like his; therefore she crept away silently out of her father’s
palace, and while everything within was gladness and song, she sat
in her own little garden sorrowful and alone. Then she heard the
bugle sounding through the water, and thought—“He is certainly
sailing above, he on whom my wishes depend, and in whose hands I
should like to place the happiness of my life. I will venture all
for him, and to win an immortal soul, while my sisters are dancing
in my father’s palace, I will go to the sea witch, of whom I have
always been so much afraid, but she can give me counsel and help.”
And then the little mermaid went out from her garden, and took
the road to the foaming whirlpools, behind which the sorceress
lived. She had never been that way before: neither flowers nor
grass grew there; nothing but bare, gray, sandy ground stretched
out to the whirlpool, where the water, like foaming mill-wheels,
whirled round everything that it seized, and cast it into the
fathomless deep. Through the midst of these crushing whirlpools
the little mermaid was obliged to pass, to reach the dominions of
the sea witch; and also for a long distance the only road lay
right across a quantity of warm, bubbling mire, called by the
witch her turfmoor. Beyond this stood her house, in the centre of
a strange forest, in which all the trees and flowers were polypi,
half animals and half plants; they looked like serpents with a
hundred heads growing out of the ground. The branches were long
slimy arms, with fingers like flexible worms, moving limb after
limb from the root to the top.
All that could be reached in the sea they seized upon, and held
fast, so that it never escaped from their clutches. The little
mermaid was so alarmed at what she saw, that she stood still, and
her heart beat with fear, and she was very nearly turning back;
but she thought of the prince, and of the human soul for which she
longed, and her courage returned. She fastened her long flowing
hair round her head, so that the polypi might not seize hold of
it. She laid her hands together across her bosom, and then she
darted forward as a fish shoots through the water, between the
supple arms and fingers of the ugly polypi, which were stretched
out on each side of her. She saw that each held in its grasp
something it had seized with its numerous little arms, as if they
were iron bands. The white skeletons of human beings who had
perished at sea, and had sunk down into the deep waters, skeletons
of land animals, oars, rudders, and chests of ships were lying
tightly grasped by their clinging arms; even a little mermaid,
whom they had caught and strangled; and this seemed the most
shocking of all to the little princess.
She now came to a space of marshy ground in the wood, where
large, fat water-snakes were rolling in the mire, and showing
their ugly, drab-colored bodies. In the midst of this spot stood a
house, built with the bones of shipwrecked human beings. There sat
the sea witch, allowing a toad to eat from her mouth, just as
people sometimes feed a canary with a piece of sugar. She called
the ugly water-snakes her little chickens, and allowed them to
crawl all over her bosom.
“I know what you want,” said the sea witch; “it is very stupid
of you, but you shall have your way, and it will bring you to
sorrow, my pretty princess. You want to get rid of your fish’s
tail, and to have two supports instead of it, like human beings on
earth, so that the young prince may fall in love with you, and
that you may have an immortal soul.” And then the witch laughed so
loud and disgustingly, that the toad and the snakes fell to the
ground, and lay there wriggling about. “You are but just in time,”
said the witch; “for after sunrise to-morrow I should not be able
to help you till the end of another year. I will prepare a draught
for you, with which you must swim to land tomorrow before sunrise,
and sit down on the shore and drink it. Your tail will then
disappear, and shrink up into what mankind calls legs, and you
will feel great pain, as if a sword were passing through you. But
all who see you will say that you are the prettiest little human
being they ever saw. You will still have the same floating
gracefulness of movement, and no dancer will ever tread so
lightly; but at every step you take it will feel as if you were
treading upon sharp knives, and that the blood must flow. If you
will bear all this, I will help you.”
“Yes, I will,” said the little princess in a trembling voice,
as she thought of the prince and the immortal soul.
“But think again,” said the witch; “for when once your shape
has become like a human being, you can no more be a mermaid. You
will never return through the water to your sisters, or to your
father’s palace again; and if you do not win the love of the
prince, so that he is willing to forget his father and mother for
your sake, and to love you with his whole soul, and allow the
priest to join your hands that you may be man and wife, then you
will never have an immortal soul. The first morning after he
marries another your heart will break, and you will become foam on
the crest of the waves.”
“I will do it,” said the little mermaid, and she became pale as
death.
“But I must be paid also,” said the witch, “and it is not a
trifle that I ask. You have the sweetest voice of any who dwell
here in the depths of the sea, and you believe that you will be
able to charm the prince with it also, but this voice you must
give to me; the best thing you possess will I have for the price
of my draught. My own blood must be mixed with it, that it may be
as sharp as a two-edged sword.”
“But if you take away my voice,” said the little mermaid, “what
is left for me?”
“Your beautiful form, your graceful walk, and your expressive
eyes; surely with these you can enchain a man’s heart. Well, have
you lost your courage? Put out your little tongue that I may cut
it off as my payment; then you shall have the powerful draught.”
“It shall be,” said the little mermaid.
Then the witch placed her cauldron on the fire, to prepare the
magic draught.
“Cleanliness is a good thing,” said she, scouring the vessel
with snakes, which she had tied together in a large knot; then she
pricked herself in the breast, and let the black blood drop into
it. The steam that rose formed itself into such horrible shapes
that no one could look at them without fear. Every moment the
witch threw something else into the vessel, and when it began to
boil, the sound was like the weeping of a crocodile. When at last
the magic draught was ready, it looked like the clearest water.
“There it is for you,” said the witch. Then she cut off the
mermaid’s tongue, so that she became dumb, and would never again
speak or sing. “If the polypi should seize hold of you as you
return through the wood,” said the witch, “throw over them a few
drops of the potion, and their fingers will be torn into a
thousand pieces.” But the little mermaid had no occasion to do
this, for the polypi sprang back in terror when they caught sight
of the glittering draught, which shone in her hand like a
twinkling star.
So she passed quickly through the wood and the marsh, and
between the rushing whirlpools. She saw that in her father’s
palace the torches in the ballroom were extinguished, and all
within asleep; but she did not venture to go in to them, for now
she was dumb and going to leave them forever, she felt as if her
heart would break. She stole into the garden, took a flower from
the flower-beds of each of her sisters, kissed her hand a thousand
times towards the palace, and then rose up through the dark blue
waters. The sun had not risen when she came in sight of the
prince’s palace, and approached the beautiful marble steps, but
the moon shone clear and bright. Then the little mermaid drank the
magic draught, and it seemed as if a two-edged sword went through
her delicate body: she fell into a swoon, and lay like one dead.
When the sun arose and shone over the sea, she recovered, and
felt a sharp pain; but just before her stood the handsome young
prince. He fixed his coal-black eyes upon her so earnestly that
she cast down her own, and then became aware that her fish’s tail
was gone, and that she had as pretty a pair of white legs and tiny
feet as any little maiden could have; but she had no clothes, so
she wrapped herself in her long, thick hair. The prince asked her
who she was, and where she came from, and she looked at him mildly
and sorrowfully with her deep blue eyes; but she could not speak.
Every step she took was as the witch had said it would be, she
felt as if treading upon the points of needles or sharp knives;
but she bore it willingly, and stepped as lightly by the prince’s
side as a soap-bubble, so that he and all who saw her wondered at
her graceful-swaying movements. She was very soon arrayed in
costly robes of silk and muslin, and was the most beautiful
creature in the palace; but she was dumb, and could neither speak
nor sing.
Beautiful female slaves, dressed in silk and gold, stepped
forward and sang before the prince and his royal parents: one sang
better than all the others, and the prince clapped his hands and
smiled at her. This was great sorrow to the little mermaid; she
knew how much more sweetly she herself could sing once, and she
thought, “Oh if he could only know that! I have given away my
voice forever, to be with him.”
The slaves next performed some pretty fairy-like dances, to the
sound of beautiful music. Then the little mermaid raised her
lovely white arms, stood on the tips of her toes, and glided over
the floor, and danced as no one yet had been able to dance. At
each moment her beauty became more revealed, and her expressive
eyes appealed more directly to the heart than the songs of the
slaves. Every one was enchanted, especially the prince, who called
her his little foundling; and she danced again quite readily, to
please him, though each time her foot touched the floor it seemed
as if she trod on sharp knives.
The prince said she should remain with him always, and she
received permission to sleep at his door, on a velvet cushion. He
had a page’s dress made for her, that she might accompany him on
horseback. They rode together through the sweet-scented woods,
where the green boughs touched their shoulders, and the little
birds sang among the fresh leaves. She climbed with the prince to
the tops of high mountains; and although her tender feet bled so
that even her steps were marked, she only laughed, and followed
him till they could see the clouds beneath them looking like a
flock of birds travelling to distant lands. While at the prince’s
palace, and when all the household were asleep, she would go and
sit on the broad marble steps; for it eased her burning feet to
bathe them in the cold sea-water; and then she thought of all
those below in the deep.
Once during the night her sisters came up arm-in-arm, singing
sorrowfully, as they floated on the water. She beckoned to them,
and then they recognized her, and told her how she had grieved
them. After that, they came to the same place every night; and
once she saw in the distance her old grandmother, who had not been
to the surface of the sea for many years, and the old Sea King,
her father, with his crown on his head. They stretched out their
hands towards her, but they did not venture so near the land as
her sisters did.
As the days passed, she loved the prince more fondly, and he
loved her as he would love a little child, but it never came into
his head to make her his wife; yet, unless he married her, she
could not receive an immortal soul; and, on the morning after his
marriage with another, she would dissolve into the foam of the
sea.
“Do you not love me the best of them all?” the eyes of the
little mermaid seemed to say, when he took her in his arms, and
kissed her fair forehead.
“Yes, you are dear to me,” said the prince; “for you have the
best heart, and you are the most devoted to me; you are like a
young maiden whom I once saw, but whom I shall never meet again. I
was in a ship that was wrecked, and the waves cast me ashore near
a holy temple, where several young maidens performed the service.
The youngest of them found me on the shore, and saved my life. I
saw her but twice, and she is the only one in the world whom I
could love; but you are like her, and you have almost driven her
image out of my mind. She belongs to the holy temple, and my good
fortune has sent you to me instead of her; and we will never
part.”
“Ah, he knows not that it was I who saved his life,” thought
the little mermaid. “I carried him over the sea to the wood where
the temple stands: I sat beneath the foam, and watched till the
human beings came to help him. I saw the pretty maiden that he
loves better than he loves me;” and the mermaid sighed deeply, but
she could not shed tears. “He says the maiden belongs to the holy
temple, therefore she will never return to the world. They will
meet no more: while I am by his side, and see him every day. I
will take care of him, and love him, and give up my life for his
sake.”
Very soon it was said that the prince must marry, and that the
beautiful daughter of a neighboring king would be his wife, for a
fine ship was being fitted out. Although the prince gave out that
he merely intended to pay a visit to the king, it was generally
supposed that he really went to see his daughter. A great company
were to go with him. The little mermaid smiled, and shook her
head. She knew the prince’s thoughts better than any of the
others.
“I must travel,” he had said to her; “I must see this beautiful
princess; my parents desire it; but they will not oblige me to
bring her home as my bride. I cannot love her; she is not like the
beautiful maiden in the temple, whom you resemble. If I were
forced to choose a bride, I would rather choose you, my dumb
foundling, with those expressive eyes.” And then he kissed her
rosy mouth, played with her long waving hair, and laid his head on
her heart, while she dreamed of human happiness and an immortal
soul. “You are not afraid of the sea, my dumb child,” said he, as
they stood on the deck of the noble ship which was to carry them
to the country of the neighboring king. And then he told her of
storm and of calm, of strange fishes in the deep beneath them, and
of what the divers had seen there; and she smiled at his
descriptions, for she knew better than any one what wonders were
at the bottom of the sea.
In the moonlight, when all on board were asleep, excepting the
man at the helm, who was steering, she sat on the deck, gazing
down through the clear water. She thought she could distinguish
her father’s castle, and upon it her aged grandmother, with the
silver crown on her head, looking through the rushing tide at the
keel of the vessel. Then her sisters came up on the waves, and
gazed at her mournfully, wringing their white hands. She beckoned
to them, and smiled, and wanted to tell them how happy and well
off she was; but the cabin-boy approached, and when her sisters
dived down he thought it was only the foam of the sea which he
saw.
The next morning the ship sailed into the harbor of a beautiful
town belonging to the king whom the prince was going to visit. The
church bells were ringing, and from the high towers sounded a
flourish of trumpets; and soldiers, with flying colors and
glittering bayonets, lined the rocks through which they passed.
Every day was a festival; balls and entertainments followed one
another.
But the princess had not yet appeared. People said that she was
being brought up and educated in a religious house, where she was
learning every royal virtue. At last she came. Then the little
mermaid, who was very anxious to see whether she was really
beautiful, was obliged to acknowledge that she had never seen a
more perfect vision of beauty. Her skin was delicately fair, and
beneath her long dark eye-lashes her laughing blue eyes shone with
truth and purity.
“It was you,” said the prince, “who saved my life when I lay
dead on the beach,” and he folded his blushing bride in his arms.
“Oh, I am too happy,” said he to the little mermaid; “my fondest
hopes are all fulfilled. You will rejoice at my happiness; for
your devotion to me is great and sincere.”
The little mermaid kissed his hand, and felt as if her heart
were already broken. His wedding morning would bring death to her,
and she would change into the foam of the sea. All the church
bells rung, and the heralds rode about the town proclaiming the
betrothal. Perfumed oil was burning in costly silver lamps on
every altar. The priests waved the censers, while the bride and
bridegroom joined their hands and received the blessing of the
bishop. The little mermaid, dressed in silk and gold, held up the
bride’s train; but her ears heard nothing of the festive music,
and her eyes saw not the holy ceremony; she thought of the night
of death which was coming to her, and of all she had lost in the
world. On the same evening the bride and bridegroom went on board
ship; cannons were roaring, flags waving, and in the centre of the
ship a costly tent of purple and gold had been erected. I
t contained elegant couches, for the reception of the bridal
pair during the night. The ship, with swelling sails and a
favorable wind, glided away smoothly and lightly over the calm
sea. When it grew dark a number of colored lamps were lit, and the
sailors danced merrily on the deck. The little mermaid could not
help thinking of her first rising out of the sea, when she had
seen similar festivities and joys; and she joined in the dance,
poised herself in the air as a swallow when he pursues his prey,
and all present cheered her with wonder. She had never danced so
elegantly before. Her tender feet felt as if cut with sharp
knives, but she cared not for it; a sharper pang had pierced
through her heart. She knew this was the last evening she should
ever see the prince, for whom she had forsaken her kindred and her
home; she had given up her beautiful voice, and suffered
unheard-of pain daily for him, while he knew nothing of it. This
was the last evening that she would breathe the same air with him,
or gaze on the starry sky and the deep sea; an eternal night,
without a thought or a dream, awaited her: she had no soul and now
she could never win one.
All was joy and gayety on board ship till long after midnight;
she laughed and danced with the rest, while the thoughts of death
were in her heart. The prince kissed his beautiful bride, while
she played with his raven hair, till they went arm-in-arm to rest
in the splendid tent. Then all became still on board the ship; the
helmsman, alone awake, stood at the helm. The little mermaid
leaned her white arms on the edge of the vessel, and looked
towards the east for the first blush of morning, for that first
ray of dawn that would bring her death. She saw her sisters rising
out of the flood: they were as pale as herself; but their long
beautiful hair waved no more in the wind, and had been cut off.
“We have given our hair to the witch,” said they, “to obtain
help for you, that you may not die to-night. She has given us a
knife: here it is, see it is very sharp. Before the sun rises you
must plunge it into the heart of the prince; when the warm blood
falls upon your feet they will grow together again, and form into
a fish’s tail, and you will be once more a mermaid, and return to
us to live out your three hundred years before you die and change
into the salt sea foam. Haste, then; he or you must die before
sunrise. Our old grandmother moans so for you, that her white hair
is falling off from sorrow, as ours fell under the witch’s
scissors. Kill the prince and come back; hasten: do you not see
the first red streaks in the sky? In a few minutes the sun will
rise, and you must die.” And then they sighed deeply and
mournfully, and sank down beneath the waves.
The little mermaid drew back the crimson curtain of the tent,
and beheld the fair bride with her head resting on the prince’s
breast. She bent down and kissed his fair brow, then looked at the
sky on which the rosy dawn grew brighter and brighter; then she
glanced at the sharp knife, and again fixed her eyes on the
prince, who whispered the name of his bride in his dreams. She was
in his thoughts, and the knife trembled in the hand of the little
mermaid: then she flung it far away from her into the waves; the
water turned red where it fell, and the drops that spurted up
looked like blood. She cast one more lingering, half-fainting
glance at the prince, and then threw herself from the ship into
the sea, and thought her body was dissolving into foam.
The sun rose above the waves, and his warm rays fell on the
cold foam of the little mermaid, who did not feel as if she were
dying. She saw the bright sun, and all around her floated hundreds
of transparent beautiful beings; she could see through them the
white sails of the ship, and the red clouds in the sky; their
speech was melodious, but too ethereal to be heard by mortal ears,
as they were also unseen by mortal eyes. The little mermaid
perceived that she had a body like theirs, and that she continued
to rise higher and higher out of the foam. “Where am I?” asked
she, and her voice sounded ethereal, as the voice of those who
were with her; no earthly music could imitate it.
“Among the daughters of the air,” answered one of them. “A
mermaid has not an immortal soul, nor can she obtain one unless
she wins the love of a human being. On the power of another hangs
her eternal destiny. But the daughters of the air, although they
do not possess an immortal soul, can, by their good deeds, procure
one for themselves. We fly to warm countries, and cool the sultry
air that destroys mankind with the pestilence. We carry the
perfume of the flowers to spread health and restoration. After we
have striven for three hundred years to all the good in our power,
we receive an immortal soul and take part in the happiness of
mankind. You, poor little mermaid, have tried with your whole
heart to do as we are doing; you have suffered and endured and
raised yourself to the spirit-world by your good deeds; and now,
by striving for three hundred years in the same way, you may
obtain an immortal soul.”
The little mermaid lifted her glorified eyes towards the sun,
and felt them, for the first time, filling with tears. On the
ship, in which she had left the prince, there were life and noise;
she saw him and his beautiful bride searching for her; sorrowfully
they gazed at the pearly foam, as if they knew she had thrown
herself into the waves. Unseen she kissed the forehead of her
bride, and fanned the prince, and then mounted with the other
children of the air to a rosy cloud that floated through the
aether.
“After three hundred years, thus shall we float into the
kingdom of heaven,” said she. “And we may even get there sooner,”
whispered one of her companions. “Unseen we can enter the houses
of men, where there are children, and for every day on which we
find a good child, who is the joy of his parents and deserves
their love, our time of probation is shortened. The child does not
know, when we fly through the room, that we smile with joy at his
good conduct, for we can count one year less of our three hundred
years. But when we see a naughty or a wicked child, we shed tears
of sorrow, and for every tear a day is added to our time of
trial!” |