It was the North Wind who came in, bringing with
him a cold, piercing blast; large hailstones rattled on the floor,
and snowflakes were scattered around in all directions. He wore a
bearskin dress and cloak. His sealskin cap was drawn over his
ears, long icicles hung from his beard, and one hailstone after
another rolled from the collar of his jacket.
“Don’t go too near the fire,” said the prince, “or your hands
and face will be frost-bitten.”
“Frost-bitten!” said the North Wind, with a loud laugh; “why
frost is my greatest delight. What sort of a little snip are you,
and how did you find your way to the cavern of the Winds?”
“He is my guest,” said the old woman, “and if you are not
satisfied with that explanation you can go into the sack. Do you
understand me?”
That settled the matter. So the North Wind began to relate his
adventures, whence he came, and where he had been for a whole
month. “I come from the polar seas,” he said; “I have been on the
Bear’s Island with the Russian walrus-hunters. I sat and slept at
the helm of their ship, as they sailed away from North Cape.
Sometimes when I woke, the storm-birds would fly about my legs.
They are curious birds; they give one flap with their wings, and
then on their outstretched pinions soar far away.”
“Don’t make such a long story of it,” said the mother of the
winds; “what sort of a place is Bear’s Island?”
“A very beautiful place, with a floor for dancing as smooth and
flat as a plate. Half-melted snow, partly covered with moss, sharp
stones, and skeletons of walruses and polar-bears, lie all about,
their gigantic limbs in a state of green decay. It would seem as
if the sun never shone there. I blew gently, to clear away the
mist, and then I saw a little hut, which had been built from the
wood of a wreck, and was covered with the skins of the walrus, the
fleshy side outwards; it looked green and red, and on the roof sat
a growling bear. Then I went to the sea shore, to look after
birds’ nests, and saw the unfledged nestlings opening their mouths
and screaming for food. I blew into the thousand little throats,
and quickly stopped their screaming. Farther on were the walruses
with pig’s heads, and teeth a yard long, rolling about like great
worms.”
“You relate your adventures very well, my son,” said the
mother, “it makes my mouth water to hear you.
“After that,” continued the North Wind, “the hunting commenced.
The harpoon was flung into the breast of the walrus, so that a
smoking stream of blood spurted forth like a fountain, and
besprinkled the ice. Then I thought of my own game; I began to
blow, and set my own ships, the great icebergs sailing, so that
they might crush the boats. Oh, how the sailors howled and cried
out! but I howled louder than they. They were obliged to unload
their cargo, and throw their chests and the dead walruses on the
ice. Then I sprinkled snow over them, and left them in their
crushed boats to drift southward, and to taste salt water. They
will never return to Bear’s Island.”
“So you have done mischief,” said the mother of the Winds.
“I shall leave others to tell the good I have done,” he
replied. “But here comes my brother from the West; I like him best
of all, for he has the smell of the sea about him, and brings in a
cold, fresh air as he enters.”
“Is that the little Zephyr?” asked the prince.
“Yes, it is the little Zephyr,” said the old woman; “but he is
not little now. In years gone by he was a beautiful boy; now that
is all past.”
He came in, looking like a wild man, and he wore a slouched hat
to protect his head from injury. In his hand he carried a club,
cut from a mahogany tree in the American forests, not a trifle to
carry.
“Whence do you come?” asked the mother.
“I come from the wilds of the forests, where the thorny
brambles form thick hedges between the trees; where the
water-snake lies in the wet grass, and mankind seem to be
unknown.”
“What were you doing there?”
“I looked into the deep river, and saw it rushing down from the
rocks. The water drops mounted to the clouds and glittered in the
rainbow. I saw the wild buffalo swimming in the river, but the
strong tide carried him away amidst a flock of wild ducks, which
flew into the air as the waters dashed onwards, leaving the
buffalo to be hurled over the waterfall. This pleased me; so I
raised a storm, which rooted up old trees, and sent them floating
down the river.”
“And what else have you done?” asked the old woman.
“I have rushed wildly across the savannahs; I have stroked the
wild horses, and shaken the cocoa-nuts from the trees. Yes, I have
many stories to relate; but I need not tell everything I know. You
know it all very well, don’t you, old lady?” And he kissed his
mother so roughly, that she nearly fell backwards. Oh, he was,
indeed, a wild fellow.
Now in came the South Wind, with a turban and a flowing Bedouin
cloak.
“How cold it is here!” said he, throwing more wood on the fire.
“It is easy to feel that the North Wind has arrived here before
me.”
“Why it is hot enough here to roast a bear,” said the North
Wind.
“You are a bear yourself,” said the other.
“Do you want to be put in the sack, both of you?” said the old
woman. “Sit down, now, on that stone, yonder, and tell me where
you have been.”
“In Africa, mother. I went out with the Hottentots, who were
lion-hunting in the Kaffir land, where the plains are covered with
grass the color of a green olive; and here I ran races with the
ostrich, but I soon outstripped him in swiftness. At last I came
to the desert, in which lie the golden sands, looking like the
bottom of the sea. Here I met a caravan, and the travellers had
just killed their last camel, to obtain water; there was very
little for them, and they continued their painful journey beneath
the burning sun, and over the hot sands, which stretched before
them a vast, boundless desert. Then I rolled myself in the loose
sand, and whirled it in burning columns over their heads. The
dromedarys stood still in terror, while the merchants drew their
caftans over their heads, and threw themselves on the ground
before me, as they do before Allah, their god. Then I buried them
beneath a pyramid of sand, which covers them all. When I blow that
away on my next visit, the sun will bleach their bones, and
travellers will see that others have been there before them;
otherwise, in such a wild desert, they might not believe it
possible.”
“So you have done nothing but evil,” said the mother. “Into the
sack with you;” and, before he was aware, she had seized the South
Wind round the body, and popped him into the bag. He rolled about
on the floor, till she sat herself upon him to keep him still.
“These boys of yours are very lively,” said the prince.
“Yes,” she replied, “but I know how to correct them, when
necessary; and here comes the fourth.” In came the East Wind,
dressed like a Chinese.
“Oh, you come from that quarter, do you?” said she; “I thought
you had been to the garden of paradise.”
“I am going there to-morrow,” he replied; “I have not been
there for a hundred years. I have just come from China, where I
danced round the porcelain tower till all the bells jingled again.
In the streets an official flogging was taking place, and bamboo
canes were being broken on the shoulders of men of every high
position, from the first to the ninth grade. They cried, ‘Many
thanks, my fatherly benefactor;’ but I am sure the words did not
come from their hearts, so I rang the bells till they sounded,
‘ding, ding-dong.’”
“You are a wild boy,” said the old woman; “it is well for you
that you are going to-morrow to the garden of paradise; you always
get improved in your education there. Drink deeply from the
fountain of wisdom while you are there, and bring home a bottleful
for me.”
“That I will,” said the East Wind; “but why have you put my
brother South in a bag? Let him out; for I want him to tell me
about the phoenix-bird. The princess always wants to hear of this
bird when I pay her my visit every hundred years. If you will open
the sack, sweetest mother, I will give you two pocketfuls of tea,
green and fresh as when I gathered it from the spot where it
grew.”
“Well, for the sake of the tea, and because you are my own boy,
I will open the bag.”
She did so, and the South Wind crept out, looking quite cast
down, because the prince had seen his disgrace.
“There is a palm-leaf for the princess,” he said. “The old
phoenix, the only one in the world, gave it to me himself. He has
scratched on it with his beak the whole of his history during the
hundred years he has lived. She can there read how the old phoenix
set fire to his own nest, and sat upon it while it was burning,
like a Hindoo widow. The dry twigs around the nest crackled and
smoked till the flames burst forth and consumed the phoenix to
ashes. Amidst the fire lay an egg, red hot, which presently burst
with a loud report, and out flew a young bird. He is the only
phoenix in the world, and the king over all the other birds. He
has bitten a hole in the leaf which I give you, and that is his
greeting to the princess.”
“Now let us have something to eat,” said the mother of the
Winds. So they all sat down to feast on the roasted stag; and as
the prince sat by the side of the East Wind, they soon became good
friends.
“Pray tell me,” said the prince, “who is that princess of whom
you have been talking! and where lies the garden of paradise?”
“Ho! ho!” said the East Wind, “would you like to go there?
Well, you can fly off with me to-morrow; but I must tell you one
thing—no human being has been there since the time of Adam and
Eve. I suppose you have read of them in your Bible.”
“Of course I have,” said the prince.
“Well,” continued the East Wind, “when they were driven out of
the garden of paradise, it sunk into the earth; but it retained
its warm sunshine, its balmy air, and all its splendor. The fairy
queen lives there, in the island of happiness, where death never
comes, and all is beautiful. I can manage to take you there
to-morrow, if you will sit on my back. But now don’t talk any
more, for I want to go to sleep;” and then they all slept.
When the prince awoke in the early morning, he was not a little
surprised at finding himself high up above the clouds. He was
seated on the back of the East Wind, who held him faithfully; and
they were so high in the air that woods and fields, rivers and
lakes, as they lay beneath them, looked like a painted map.
“Good morning,” said the East Wind. “You might have slept on a
while; for there is very little to see in the flat country over
which we are passing unless you like to count the churches; they
look like spots of chalk on a green board.” The green board was
the name he gave to the green fields and meadows.
“It was very rude of me not to say good-bye to your mother and
your brothers,” said the prince.
“They will excuse you, as you were asleep,” said the East Wind;
and then they flew on faster than ever.
The leaves and branches of the trees rustled as they passed.
When they flew over seas and lakes, the waves rose higher, and the
large ships dipped into the water like diving swans. As darkness
came on, towards evening, the great towns looked charming; lights
were sparkling, now seen now hidden, just as the sparks go out one
after another on a piece of burnt paper. The prince clapped his
hands with pleasure; but the East Wind advised him not to express
his admiration in that manner, or he might fall down, and find
himself hanging on a church steeple. The eagle in the dark forests
flies swiftly; but faster than he flew the East Wind. The Cossack,
on his small horse, rides lightly o’er the plains; but lighter
still passed the prince on the winds of the wind.
“There are the Himalayas, the highest mountains in Asia,” said
the East Wind. “We shall soon reach the garden of paradise now.”
Then, they turned southward, and the air became fragrant with
the perfume of spices and flowers. Here figs and pomegranates grew
wild, and the vines were covered with clusters of blue and purple
grapes. Here they both descended to the earth, and stretched
themselves on the soft grass, while the flowers bowed to the
breath of the wind as if to welcome it. “Are we now in the garden
of paradise?” asked the prince.
“No, indeed,” replied the East Wind; “but we shall be there
very soon. Do you see that wall of rocks, and the cavern beneath
it, over which the grape vines hang like a green curtain? Through
that cavern we must pass. Wrap your cloak round you; for while the
sun scorches you here, a few steps farther it will be icy cold.
The bird flying past the entrance to the cavern feels as if one
wing were in the region of summer, and the other in the depths of
winter.”
“So this then is the way to the garden of paradise?” asked the
prince, as they entered the cavern. It was indeed cold; but the
cold soon passed, for the East Wind spread his wings, and they
gleamed like the brightest fire. As they passed on through this
wonderful cave, the prince could see great blocks of stone, from
which water trickled, hanging over their heads in fantastic
shapes. Sometimes it was so narrow that they had to creep on their
hands and knees, while at other times it was lofty and wide, like
the free air. It had the appearance of a chapel for the dead, with
petrified organs and silent pipes. “We seem to be passing through
the valley of death to the garden of paradise,” said the prince.
But the East Wind answered not a word, only pointed forwards to
a lovely blue light which gleamed in the distance. The blocks of
stone assumed a misty appearance, till at last they looked like
white clouds in moonlight. The air was fresh and balmy, like a
breeze from the mountains perfumed with flowers from a valley of
roses. A river, clear as the air itself, sparkled at their feet,
while in its clear depths could be seen gold and silver fish
sporting in the bright water, and purple eels emitting sparks of
fire at every moment, while the broad leaves of the water-lilies,
that floated on its surface, flickered with all the colors of the
rainbow. The flower in its color of flame seemed to receive its
nourishment from the water, as a lamp is sustained by oil. A
marble bridge, of such exquisite workmanship that it appeared as
if formed of lace and pearls, led to the island of happiness, in
which bloomed the garden of paradise.
The East Wind took the prince in his arms, and carried him
over, while the flowers and the leaves sang the sweet songs of his
childhood in tones so full and soft that no human voice could
venture to imitate. Within the garden grew large trees, full of
sap; but whether they were palm-trees or gigantic water-plants,
the prince knew not. The climbing plants hung in garlands of green
and gold, like the illuminations on the margins of old missals or
twined among the initial letters. Birds, flowers, and festoons
appeared intermingled in seeming confusion. Close by, on the
grass, stood a group of peacocks, with radiant tails outspread to
the sun. The prince touched them, and found, to his surprise, that
they were not really birds, but the leaves of the burdock tree,
which shone with the colors of a peacock’s tail.
The lion and the tiger, gentle and tame, were springing about
like playful cats among the green bushes, whose perfume was like
the fragrant blossom of the olive. The plumage of the wood-pigeon
glistened like pearls as it struck the lion’s mane with its wings;
while the antelope, usually so shy, stood near, nodding its head
as if it wished to join in the frolic. The fairy of paradise next
made her appearance. Her raiment shone like the sun, and her
serene countenance beamed with happiness like that of a mother
rejoicing over her child. She was young and beautiful, and a train
of lovely maidens followed her, each wearing a bright star in her
hair. The East Wind gave her the palm-leaf, on which was written
the history of the phoenix; and her eyes sparkled with joy. She
then took the prince by the hand, and led him into her palace, the
walls of which were richly colored, like a tulip-leaf when it is
turned to the sun. The roof had the appearance of an inverted
flower, and the colors grew deeper and brighter to the gazer. The
prince walked to a window, and saw what appeared to be the tree of
knowledge of good and evil, with Adam and Eve standing by, and the
serpent near them. “I thought they were banished from paradise,”
he said.
The princess smiled, and told him that time had engraved each
event on a window-pane in the form of a picture; but, unlike other
pictures, all that it represented lived and moved,—the leaves
rustled, and the persons went and came, as in a looking-glass. He
looked through another pane, and saw the ladder in Jacob’s dream,
on which the angels were ascending and descending with outspread
wings. All that had ever happened in the world here lived and
moved on the panes of glass, in pictures such as time alone could
produce. The fairy now led the prince into a large, lofty room
with transparent walls, through which the light shone. Here were
portraits, each one appearing more beautiful than the
other—millions of happy beings, whose laughter and song mingled in
one sweet melody: some of these were in such an elevated position
that they appeared smaller than the smallest rosebud, or like
pencil dots on paper. In the centre of the hall stood a tree, with
drooping branches, from which hung golden apples, both great and
small, looking like oranges amid the green leaves. It was the tree
of knowledge of good and evil, from which Adam and Eve had plucked
and eaten the forbidden fruit, and from each leaf trickled a
bright red dewdrop, as if the tree were weeping tears of blood for
their sin. “Let us now take the boat,” said the fairy: “a sail on
the cool waters will refresh us. But we shall not move from the
spot, although the boat may rock on the swelling water; the
countries of the world will glide before us, but we shall remain
still.”
It was indeed wonderful to behold. First came the lofty Alps,
snow-clad, and covered with clouds and dark pines. The horn
resounded, and the shepherds sang merrily in the valleys. The
banana-trees bent their drooping branches over the boat, black
swans floated on the water, and singular animals and flowers
appeared on the distant shore. New Holland, the fifth
division of the world, now glided by, with mountains in the
background, looking blue in the distance. They heard the song of
the priests, and saw the wild dance of the savage to the sound of
the drums and trumpets of bone; the pyramids of Egypt rising to
the clouds; columns and sphinxes, overthrown and buried in the
sand, followed in their turn; while the northern lights flashed
out over the extinguished volcanoes of the north, in fireworks
none could imitate.
The prince was delighted, and yet he saw hundreds of other
wonderful things more than can be described. “Can I stay here
forever?” asked he.
“That depends upon yourself,” replied the fairy. “If you do
not, like Adam, long for what is forbidden, you can remain here
always.”
“I should not touch the fruit on the tree of knowledge,” said
the prince; there is abundance of fruit equally beautiful.”
“Examine your own heart,” said the princess, “and if you do not
feel sure of its strength, return with the East Wind who brought
you. He is about to fly back, and will not return here for a
hundred years. The time will not seem to you more than a hundred
hours, yet even that is a long time for temptation and resistance.
Every evening, when I leave you, I shall be obliged to say, ‘Come
with me,’ and to beckon to you with my hand. But you must not
listen, nor move from your place to follow me; for with every step
you will find your power to resist weaker. If once you attempted
to follow me, you would soon find yourself in the hall, where
grows the tree of knowledge, for I sleep beneath its perfumed
branches. If you stooped over me, I should be forced to smile. If
you then kissed my lips, the garden of paradise would sink into
the earth, and to you it would be lost. A keen wind from the
desert would howl around you; cold rain fall on your head, and
sorrow and woe be your future lot.”
“I will remain,” said the prince.
So the East Wind kissed him on the forehead, and said, “Be
firm; then shall we meet again when a hundred years have passed.
Farewell, farewell.” Then the East Wind spread his broad pinions,
which shone like the lightning in harvest, or as the northern
lights in a cold winter.
“Farewell, farewell,” echoed the trees and the flowers.
Storks and pelicans flew after him in feathery bands, to
accompany him to the boundaries of the garden.
“Now we will commence dancing,” said the fairy; “and when it is
nearly over at sunset, while I am dancing with you, I shall make a
sign, and ask you to follow me: but do not obey. I shall be
obliged to repeat the same thing for a hundred years; and each
time, when the trial is past, if you resist, you will gain
strength, till resistance becomes easy, and at last the temptation
will be quite overcome. This evening, as it will be the first
time, I have warned you.”
After this the fairy led him into a large hall, filled with
transparent lilies. The yellow stamina of each flower formed a
tiny golden harp, from which came forth strains of music like the
mingled tones of flute and lyre. Beautiful maidens, slender and
graceful in form, and robed in transparent gauze, floated through
the dance, and sang of the happy life in the garden of paradise,
where death never entered, and where all would bloom forever in
immortal youth. As the sun went down, the whole heavens became
crimson and gold, and tinted the lilies with the hue of roses.
Then the beautiful maidens offered to the prince sparkling
wine; and when he had drank, he felt happiness greater than he had
ever known before. Presently the background of the hall opened and
the tree of knowledge appeared, surrounded by a halo of glory that
almost blinded him. Voices, soft and lovely as his mother’s
sounded in his ears, as if she were singing to him, “My child, my
beloved child.” Then the fairy beckoned to him, and said in sweet
accents, “Come with me, come with me.” Forgetting his promise,
forgetting it even on the very first evening, he rushed towards
her, while she continued to beckon to him and to smile. The
fragrance around him overpowered his senses, the music from the
harps sounded more entrancing, while around the tree appeared
millions of smiling faces, nodding and singing. “Man should know
everything; man is the lord of the earth.” The tree of knowledge
no longer wept tears of blood, for the dewdrops shone like
glittering stars.
“Come, come,” continued that thrilling voice, and the prince
followed the call. At every step his cheeks glowed, and the blood
rushed wildly through his veins. “I must follow,” he cried; “it is
not a sin, it cannot be, to follow beauty and joy. I only want to
see her sleep, and nothing will happen unless I kiss her, and that
I will not do, for I have strength to resist, and a determined
will.”
The fairy threw off her dazzling attire, bent back the boughs,
and in another moment was hidden among them.
“I have not sinned yet,” said the prince, “and I will not;” and
then he pushed aside the boughs to follow the princess. She was
lying already asleep, beautiful as only a fairy in the garden of
paradise could be. She smiled as he bent over her, and he saw
tears trembling out of her beautiful eyelashes. “Do you weep for
me?” he whispered. “Oh weep not, thou loveliest of women. Now do I
begin to understand the happiness of paradise; I feel it to my
inmost soul, in every thought. A new life is born within me. One
moment of such happiness is worth an eternity of darkness and
woe.” He stooped and kissed the tears from her eyes, and touched
her lips with his.
A clap of thunder, loud and awful, resounded through the
trembling air. All around him fell into ruin. The lovely fairy,
the beautiful garden, sunk deeper and deeper. The prince saw it
sinking down in the dark night till it shone only like a star in
the distance beneath him. Then he felt a coldness, like death,
creeping over him; his eyes closed, and he became insensible.
When he recovered, a chilling rain was beating upon him, and a
sharp wind blew on his head. “Alas! what have I done?” he sighed;
“I have sinned like Adam, and the garden of paradise has sunk into
the earth.” He opened his eyes, and saw the star in the distance,
but it was the morning star in heaven which glittered in the
darkness.
Presently he stood up and found himself in the depths of the
forest, close to the cavern of the Winds, and the mother of the
Winds sat by his side. She looked angry, and raised her arm in the
air as she spoke. “The very first evening!” she said. “Well, I
expected it! If you were my son, you should go into the sack.”
“And there he will have to go at last,” said a strong old man,
with large black wings, and a scythe in his hand, whose name was
Death. “He shall be laid in his coffin, but not yet. I will allow
him to wander about the world for a while, to atone for his sin,
and to give him time to become better. But I shall return when he
least expects me. I shall lay him in a black coffin, place it on
my head, and fly away with it beyond the stars. There also blooms
a garden of paradise, and if he is good and pious he will be
admitted; but if his thoughts are bad, and his heart is full of
sin, he will sink with his coffin deeper than the garden of
paradise has sunk. Once in every thousand years I shall go and
fetch him, when he will either be condemned to sink still deeper,
or be raised to a happier life in the world beyond the stars.”
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