The brassy knobs on the railings shone more
brightly than ever, as if they had been polished on account of his
visit; and on the door were carved trumpeters standing in tulips,
and it seemed as if they were blowing with all their might, their
cheeks were so puffed out. “Tanta-ra-ra, the little boy is coming;
Tanta-ra-ra, the little boy is coming.”
Then the door opened. All round the hall hung old portraits of
knights in armor, and ladies in silk gowns; and the armor rattled,
and the silk dresses rustled. Then came a staircase which went up
a long way, and then came down a little way and led to a balcony,
which was in a very ruinous state. There were large holes and long
cracks, out of which grew grass and leaves, indeed the whole
balcony, the courtyard, and the walls were so overgrown with green
that they looked like a garden. In the balcony stood flower-pots,
on which were heads having asses’ ears, but the flowers in them
grew just as they pleased. In one pot pinks were growing all over
the sides, at least the green leaves were shooting forth stalk and
stem, and saying as plainly as they could speak, “The air has
fanned me, the sun has kissed me, and I am promised a little
flower for next Sunday—really for next Sunday.”
Then they entered a room in which the walls were covered with
leather, and the leather had golden flowers stamped upon it.
“Gilding will fade in damp weather,
To endure, there is nothing like leather,”
said the walls. Chairs handsomely carved, with elbows on each
side, and with very high backs, stood in the room, and as they
creaked they seemed to say, “Sit down. Oh dear, how I am creaking.
I shall certainly have the gout like the old cupboard. Gout in my
back, ugh.”
And then the little boy entered the room where the old man sat.
“Thank you for the tin soldier my little friend,” said the old
man, “and thank you also for coming to see me.”
“Thanks, thanks,” or “Creak, creak,” said all the furniture.
There was so much that the pieces of furniture stood in each
other’s way to get a sight of the little boy.
On the wall near the centre of the room hung the picture of a
beautiful lady, young and gay, dressed in the fashion of the olden
times, with powdered hair, and a full, stiff skirt. She said
neither “thanks” nor “creak,” but she looked down upon the little
boy with her mild eyes; and then he said to the old man,
“Where did you get that picture?”
“From the shop opposite,” he replied. “Many portraits hang
there that none seem to trouble themselves about. The persons they
represent have been dead and buried long since. But I knew this
lady many years ago, and she has been dead nearly half a century.”
Under a glass beneath the picture hung a nosegay of withered
flowers, which were no doubt half a century old too, at least they
appeared so.
And the pendulum of the old clock went to and fro, and the
hands turned round; and as time passed on, everything in the room
grew older, but no one seemed to notice it.
“They say at home,” said the little boy, “that you are very
lonely.”
“Oh,” replied the old man, “I have pleasant thoughts of all
that has passed, recalled by memory; and now you are come to visit
me, and that is very pleasant.”
Then he took from the book-case, a book full of pictures
representing long processions of wonderful coaches, such as are
never seen at the present time. Soldiers like the knave of clubs,
and citizens with waving banners. The tailors had a flag with a
pair of scissors supported by two lions, and on the shoemakers’
flag there were not boots, but an eagle with two heads, for the
shoemakers must have everything arranged so that they can say,
“This is a pair.” What a picture-book it was; and then the old man
went into another room to fetch apples and nuts. It was very
pleasant, certainly, to be in that old house.
“I cannot endure it,” said the tin soldier, who stood on a
shelf, “it is so lonely and dull here. I have been accustomed to
live in a family, and I cannot get used to this life. I cannot
bear it. The whole day is long enough, but the evening is longer.
It is not here like it was in your house opposite, when your
father and mother talked so cheerfully together, while you and all
the dear children made such a delightful noise. No, it is all
lonely in the old man’s house. Do you think he gets any kisses? Do
you think he ever has friendly looks, or a Christmas tree? He will
have nothing now but the grave. Oh, I cannot bear it.”
“You must not look only on the sorrowful side,” said the little
boy; “I think everything in this house is beautiful, and all the
old pleasant thoughts come back here to pay visits.”
“Ah, but I never see any, and I don’t know them,” said the tin
soldier, “and I cannot bear it.”
“You must bear it,” said the little boy. Then the old man came
back with a pleasant face; and brought with him beautiful
preserved fruits, as well as apples and nuts; and the little boy
thought no more of the tin soldier. How happy and delighted the
little boy was; and after he returned home, and while days and
weeks passed, a great deal of nodding took place from one house to
the other, and then the little boy went to pay another visit. The
carved trumpeters blew “Tanta-ra-ra. There is the little boy.
Tanta-ra-ra.” The swords and armor on the old knight’s pictures
rattled. The silk dresses rustled, the leather repeated its rhyme,
and the old chairs had the gout in their backs, and cried,
“Creak;” it was all exactly like the first time; for in that
house, one day and one hour were just like another.
“I cannot bear it any longer,” said the tin soldier; “I have
wept tears of tin, it is so melancholy here. Let me go to the
wars, and lose an arm or a leg, that would be some change; I
cannot bear it. Now I know what it is to have visits from one’s
old recollections, and all they bring with them. I have had visits
from mine, and you may believe me it is not altogether pleasant. I
was very nearly jumping from the shelf. I saw you all in your
house opposite, as if you were really present. It was Sunday
morning, and you children stood round the table, singing the hymn
that you sing every morning. You were standing quietly, with your
hands folded, and your father and mother. You were standing
quietly, with your hands folded, and your father and mother were
looking just as serious, when the door opened, and your little
sister Maria, who is not two years old, was brought into the room.
You know she always dances when she hears music and singing of
any sort; so she began to dance immediately, although she ought
not to have done so, but she could not get into the right time
because the tune was so slow; so she stood first on one leg and
then on the other, and bent her head very low, but it would not
suit the music. You all stood looking very grave, although it was
very difficult to do so, but I laughed so to myself that I fell
down from the table, and got a bruise, which is there still; I
know it was not right to laugh. So all this, and everything else
that I have seen, keeps running in my head, and these must be the
old recollections that bring so many thoughts with them. Tell me
whether you still sing on Sundays, and tell me about your little
sister Maria, and how my old comrade is, the other tin soldier.
Ah, really he must be very happy; I cannot endure this life.”
“You are given away,” said the little boy; “you must stay.
Don’t you see that?” Then the old man came in, with a box
containing many curious things to show him. Rouge-pots,
scent-boxes, and old cards, so large and so richly gilded, that
none are ever seen like them in these days. And there were smaller
boxes to look at, and the piano was opened, and inside the lid
were painted landscapes. But when the old man played, the piano
sounded quite out of tune. Then he looked at the picture he had
bought at the broker’s, and his eyes sparkled brightly as he
nodded at it, and said, “Ah, she could sing that tune.”
“I will go to the wars! I will go to the wars!” cried the tin
soldier as loud as he could, and threw himself down on the floor.
Where could he have fallen? The old man searched, and the little
boy searched, but he was gone, and could not be found. “I shall
find him again,” said the old man, but he did not find him. The
boards of the floor were open and full of holes. The tin soldier
had fallen through a crack between the boards, and lay there now
in an open grave. The day went by, and the little boy returned
home; the week passed, and many more weeks. It was winter, and the
windows were quite frozen, so the little boy was obliged to
breathe on the panes, and rub a hole to peep through at the old
house. Snow drifts were lying in all the scrolls and on the
inscriptions, and the steps were covered with snow as if no one
were at home. And indeed nobody was home, for the old man was
dead.
In the evening, a hearse stopped at the door, and the old man
in his coffin was placed in it. He was to be taken to the country
to be buried there in his own grave; so they carried him away; no
one followed him, for all his friends were dead; and the little
boy kissed his hand to the coffin as the hearse moved away with
it. A few days after, there was an auction at the old house, and
from his window the little boy saw the people carrying away the
pictures of old knights and ladies, the flower-pots with the long
ears, the old chairs, and the cup-boards. Some were taken one way,
some another. Her portrait, which had been bought at the picture
dealer’s, went back again to his shop, and there it remained, for
no one seemed to know her, or to care for the old picture. In the
spring; they began to pull the house itself down; people called it
complete rubbish. From the street could be seen the room in which
the walls were covered with leather, ragged and torn, and the
green in the balcony hung straggling over the beams; they pulled
it down quickly, for it looked ready to fall, and at last it was
cleared away altogether.
“What a good riddance,” said the neighbors’ houses. Very
shortly, a fine new house was built farther back from the road; it
had lofty windows and smooth walls, but in front, on the spot
where the old house really stood, a little garden was planted, and
wild vines grew up over the neighboring walls; in front of the
garden were large iron railings and a great gate, which looked
very stately. People used to stop and peep through the railings.
The sparrows assembled in dozens upon the wild vines, and
chattered all together as loud as they could, but not about the
old house; none of them could remember it, for many years had
passed by, so many indeed, that the little boy was now a man, and
a really good man too, and his parents were very proud of him. He
was just married, and had come, with his young wife, to reside in
the new house with the garden in front of it, and now he stood
there by her side while she planted a field flower that she
thought very pretty. She was planting it herself with her little
hands, and pressing down the earth with her fingers. “Oh dear,
what was that?” she exclaimed, as something pricked her.
Out of the soft earth something was sticking up. It was—only
think!—it was really the tin soldier, the very same which had been
lost up in the old man’s room, and had been hidden among old wood
and rubbish for a long time, till it sunk into the earth, where it
must have been for many years. And the young wife wiped the
soldier, first with a green leaf, and then with her fine
pocket-handkerchief, that smelt of such beautiful perfume. And the
tin soldier felt as if he was recovering from a fainting fit. “Let
me see him,” said the young man, and then he smiled and shook his
head, and said, “It can scarcely be the same, but it reminds me of
something that happened to one of my tin soldiers when I was a
little boy.” And then he told his wife about the old house and the
old man, and of the tin soldier which he had sent across, because
he thought the old man was lonely; and he related the story so
clearly that tears came into the eyes of the young wife for the
old house and the old man. “It is very likely that this is really
the same soldier,” said she, and I will take care of him, and
always remember what you have told me; but some day you must show
me the old man’s grave.”
“I don’t know where it is,” he replied; “no one knows. All his
friends are dead; no one took care of him, and I was only a little
boy.”
“Oh, how dreadfully lonely he must have been,” said she.
“Yes, terribly lonely,” cried the tin soldier; “still it is
delightful not to be forgotten.”
“Delightful indeed,” cried a voice quite near to them; no one
but the tin soldier saw that it came from a rag of the leather
which hung in tatters; it had lost all its gilding, and looked
like wet earth, but it had an opinion, and it spoke it thus:—
“Gilding will fade in damp weather,
To endure, there is nothing like leather.”
But the tin soldier did not believe any such thing. |