THE STORY OF THE SNOW QUEEN, KAI, AND GERDA
Adapted by Mary Macgregor and Sandra Dermark
The First Story: A Young Boy and a Young Girl
Once upon a time there was a little boy called Kai. And there was a little girl; her name was Gerda.
They were not brother and sister by blood, this little boy and girl, but they lived in tiny attics or garrets next door to one another, and went to school together, in a garrison town in southern Sweden.
When they were not playing together, Gerda spent her time peeping at Kai, through one of the little panes in her skylight window. And Kai peeped back at Gerda.
Outside each attic was a tiny balcony, just big enough to hold two little stools and a windowsill planter-box. Often Gerda would step out of her skylight attic window into the balcony, carrying with her a three-legged wooden stool. Then she would climb over the low fence that separated her from Kai.
And there in Kai’s balcony the two children would sit and play together, or tell fairy tales, or tend the flowers that bloomed so gaily in the planter-box.
At other times it was Kai who would bound over the low wall into Gerda’s balcony, and there, too, the little boy and girl were as happy as though they had been in Fairyland.
In each little window-box grew a rose bush, and the bloom and the scent of the red and white roses they bore gave Kai and Gerda more delight than you can imagine; and all her life long a red rose remained little Gerda’s favorite flower, while Kai preferred his blossoms white.
But it was not always springtime or summertime, and when cold, frosty winter came, and the Snow Queen sailed down on the large white snowflakes from a gray sky, then no flowers bloomed in the window-boxes. And the balcony was so slippery that the children dared not venture to step out of their attic windows, but had to run down one long flight of stairs and up another to be able to play together.
Sometimes, though, Kai stayed in his own little room and Gerda stayed in hers, gazing and gazing at the lovely pictures of castles, and mountains, and rough seas, and flowers that the Snow Queen had drawn on the window-panes as she passed.
But now that the little panes of glass were covered with frost pictures, how could Kai and Gerda peep at each other from the attic windows?
Ah, they had a plan, and a very good plan, too. Kai would heat a penny on the stove, and then press it against the windowpane, and so make little round peepholes. Then he would put his eye to one of these little rounds and—what did he see? A bright green eye peeping from Gerda’s attic, for she, too, had heated a penny the same size and made peepholes in her window, looking at a bright blue eye, Kai's, from across.
It was in winter, too, when the children could not play together on the balcony, that Gerda’s grandmother told them stories of the Snow Queen by the fireside.
One night, as Kai was undressing to go to bed, he climbed on a chair and peeped out of one of his little round holes, and there, on the edge of the window box, were a few big snowflakes. And as the little boy watched them, the biggest grew bigger and bigger, until it grew into a white lady of glittering, dazzling ice. Her icy blue eyes shone like two bright stars, but there was no feeling in them.
“It must be the Snow Queen,” thought Kai, and at that moment the white lady nodded to him, and waved her hand, and as he jumped from his chair, he fancied she flew past the window. “It must be the Snow Queen.” Would he ever see her again?
At last the white winter melted away and green spring burst upon the earth—warm, bright, beautiful springtime.
It was at five o’clock, one sunny afternoon, that Kai and Gerda sat together on their little stools in the balcony, looking at a picture book and reading the following rhyme: "Roses bloom in valleys green, where love is spoken and seen."
“Oh!” cried Kai suddenly, clutching his chest and wincing, “oh, there is something sharp in my eye, and I have such a pain in my heart!”
Gerda put her arms round Kai’s neck and looked into his eyes.
“I can see nothing, Kai dear.”
“Oh! it is gone now,” said the boy, and they turned again to the picture book.
But something had flown into Kai’s eye, and it was not gone; a little bit had reached his heart, and it was still there. Listen, and I will tell you what had happened.
The Second Story: A Frozen Heart
There was about this time a most marvellous mirror in the world. It belonged to the worst hobgoblin that ever lived, and had been made by his wicked little demons.
Those who looked into this mirror saw reflected there all the mean and ugly people and things in the world, and not one beautiful sight could they see. And the thoughts of those who looked into this mirror became as mean and ugly as the people and things they saw.
This delighted the hobgoblin, who ordered all little demons to carry the mirror all over the world and to do as much mischief with it as they could.
But one day, when they had travelled far, the mirror slipped from the hands of the little imps, and fell to earth, shivered into hundreds of thousands of millions of bits. Then it did more harm than ever, for the tiny pieces, some no bigger than a grain of pollen, were blown all over the world, and often flew in people’s eyes, and sometimes even found their way into their hearts.
And when an adult person or a child had a little bit of this magic mirror in their eye, that person saw only what was mean and ugly; and if the tiniest grain of the glass reached that person's heart, alas! alas! it froze all the kindness and gentleness and love that was there, and the heart became like a lump of ice.
This is what had happened to poor little Kai. One tiny bit of the magic mirror had flown into his eye; another had entered his heart.
“How horrid you look, Gerda. Why are you crying? And oh, see the hideous caterpillar in that rose. And that one's petals are wilting! Roses are ugly, and so are the boxes they grow in.” And Kai kicked the window-box, and knocked two roses from the bush, squashing the poor caterpillar underfoot.
“Kai dear, what is the matter?” asked Gerda.
The little boy did not answer, but broke off another rose, and then, without saying goodbye, stepped in at his own window, leaving Gerda alone.
The next time the little girl brought out the picture book, Kai tore off pages, saying it was for babies, and when the grandmother told them a story, he interrupted her and made ugly faces. And he would tread on Gerda’s toes and pull her hair, and make faces at her, too.
“How cruel little Kai grows,” said his friends; for he mocked the old people and ill-treated those who were weak. And all through the green springtime and the blue summer and the yellow autumn Kai teased little Gerda, or left her that he might play with the bigger children in the town, especially the local bullies.
But it was when winter came, and the big white snowflakes once more fell from a gray sky, that Gerda felt loneliest, for Kai now drew on his thick gloves, slung his little sled across his back, and marched off alone. “I am going to ride in the main square,” he shouted in her ear as he passed. But Gerda could not answer; she could only think of the winters that had gone, when she and Kai always sat side by side in that same little sled. How happy they had been! Oh, why, why had he not taken her with him?
Kai walked briskly to the main square, and there he watched the bolder of the bad boys tie their sledges to the farmers’ carts or the strangers' sleighs. With what glee they felt themselves being drawn over the snow-covered ground! When they reached the town gates they would jump out, unfasten their sleds, and return to the square to begin the fun all over again.
Kai was thinking how much he would like to tie his little sled behind a cart, when a big sleigh, painted white and icy blue, drove by. In it sat someone muffled in a white fur coat and shapka. Twice the sleigh drove round the square.
As it passed Kai the second time, he quickly fastened on his little sled behind, and in a moment found himself flying through the streets, as if shot out of a cannon. What fun! On and on through snowdrifts, bounding over ditches, rushing down hills, faster and faster they flew.
Little Kai grew frightened. Twice he tried to unfasten the string that tied his sled to the sleigh, but both times the white driver turned round and nodded to him to sit still. At last they had driven through the town gates. The snow fell so heavily that it blinded him. Now he could not see where they were going, and Kai grew more frightened still. He tried to say his prayers, but could only remember the nine times table. Bigger and bigger grew the snowflakes, till they seemed like large white birds, literal snow geese. Then, suddenly, the sleigh stopped in the white countryside. The driver stood up. She was a tall lady, dazzlingly white. Her eyes shone like two stars. She was the Snow Queen.
“It is cold,” said the white lady; “come into my sleigh. Now, creep inside my furs.”
Kai did as he was told, but he felt as if he had fallen into a snowdrift.
“You are still cold,” said the Snow Queen, and she kissed his forehead. Her lips were like ice, and Kai shivered and felt the cold pain at his heart, as if he were stabbed with an icicle once more. But only for a minute, for the Snow Queen kissed him again, and then he forgot the pain, and he forgot Gerda, and he forgot his grandmother and his old home, and had not a thought for anything or anyone but the Snow Queen. She was the loveliest sight he'd ever seen, his mind wiped to a blank slate.
He had no fear of her now, no, not although they flew up and up and away on a dark cloud, away over woods and lakes, over rivers, islands, and seas. No, he was not afraid, although the cold wind whistled around them, and beneath the wild wolves howled. Kai did not care.
Above them the moon shone bright and clear. All night long the boy would gaze at it and the twinkling stars, but by day he slept at the feet of the Snow Queen.
The Third Story: A Bewitched Garden
But what of little Gerda?
Poor child, she watched and she waited and she wondered, but Kai did not come, and nobody could tell her where he was. The other boys had seen him drive out of the town gates behind a big sleigh painted white. But no one had heard of him since.
Little Gerda cried bitterly. Perhaps Kai was drowned in the river, or rather frozen to death before he could drown. Oh, what a long, cold winter that was! But springtime came at last, bright spring with its golden sunshine and its birds of passage and all its greenery.
“Kai is dead,” said Gerda.
“Kai dead? It is not true,” said the sun.
“Kai dead? We do not believe it,” twittered the swallows.
"Kai dead? That is a lie!" came from the roses and the peaseblossoms in the balcony garden.
And neither did little Gerda believe it.
“I will put on my new red shoes,” said the child one morning, “and go to the river and ask it about Kai.” So she put on her little red shoes, and kissed her old grandmother who was still asleep, wrote Granny a letter of farewell and wandered alone, out beyond the town gates, and down to the river bank.
“Have you taken my little playfellow?” she asked. “I will give you these if you will bring him back to me,” and she flung her little shoes into the river.
They fell close to the bank and the little waves tossed them back on to the dry pebbles at her feet. “We do not want you, we will keep Kai,” they seemed to say.
“Perhaps I did not throw them far enough,” thought Gerda; and, stepping into a rowboat that lay among the rushes, she flung the red shoes with all her might into the middle of the river.
But the boat was not fastened and its prow glided out from among the rushes. Soon the coracle was drifting faster and faster down the river. The little shoes floated behind.
“Perhaps I am going to little Kai,” thought Gerda, as she was carried farther and farther downriver. How pretty it was! Trees waved and flowers nodded on its banks. Sheep grazed and cattle browsed, but not one human soul, big or little, was to be seen.
After a long time Gerda came to a cherry orchard which stretched down to the river bank. At the end of this garden stood a tiny cottage with a thatched roof, and with red, blue, and yellow stainglass windows. A pier led from this picturesque country scene to the river.
On either side of the door stood a life-sized wooden nutcracker soldier. Gerda thought the soldiers were alive, and shouted to them.
The wooden soldiers, of course, did not hear, but an old, old woman, who lived in the tiny house, wondered who it could be that called. She hobbled out, leaning on her hooked walking stick. On her head she wore a big straw sun-hat, and on it were beautiful fresh flowers.
“You poor child,” said the old, old lady, walking straight down the pier into the river, and catching hold of the boat with her hooked stick; “you poor dear!” And she pulled the boat ashore and lifted out little Gerda on to the green grass.
Gerda was delighted to be on dry land again, but she was a little bit afraid of the old, old woman, who now asked her who she was and where she came from.
“I am looking for Kai, little Kai. Have you seen him?” began Gerda, and she went on to tell the old, old lady the whole story of her playmate and his strange disappearance. When she had finished, she asked again, “Have you seen him?”
“No,” said the old lady, “but I expect him. Come in,” and she took little Gerda by the hand. “Come to my house and taste my cherries.” And when they had gone into the cottage, the old, old woman locked the door. Then she gave Gerda a plate of the most delicious cherries, and while the little girl ate them, her aged host combed her hair with a golden comb inlaid with ruby cherries.
Now this old, old, old, centuries-old lady was a witch, and the comb was a magic comb, for as soon as it touched the scalp of her hair, Gerda forgot all about Kai. And this was just what the witch wished, for, though not the wicked kind of witch, she was a lonely old soul, and would have liked Gerda to become her own little girl and stay with her always.
Gerda did enjoy the juicy red cherries, and, while she was still eating them, the old, old woman stole out to the garden and waved her hooked stick, which was actually her wand, over the white and red rose bushes and they quickly sank beneath the brown soil. For Gerda had told her how fond Kai had once been of their little rose bushes in the balcony, and the witch was afraid the sight of roses of either colour would remind the little girl of her lost playmate. But now that the red and white roses had vanished, Gerda might come into the garden.
How the child danced for joy past the lilies and bluebells, how she suddenly fell on her knees to smell the pinks and mignonettes, and then danced off again, in and out among the sunflowers and hollyhocks!
Gerda was perfectly happy now, and played among the flowers and blooming cherry trees until the sun sank behind the treetops. Then the old, old lady again took her by the hand, and led her to the little house. And she undressed her and put her into a little bed of white violets, and there the little girl dreamed sweet dreams.
The next day and the next again and for many more Gerda played among the flowers in the garden. But she had the feeling that one particular kind of flower was missing, she could not put a finger on which it was.
One morning, as the old witch sat near, Gerda looked at her hat with the wonderful flowers. Prettiest of all was a white rose.
“A white rose! Why, surely I have seen none in the garden,” thought Gerda, and she danced off in search.
But she could find none, and in her disappointment hot tears fell. And they fell on the very spot where the roses had grown, and as soon as the warm drops moistened the earth, the rose bushes sprang up to the surface.
“You are beautiful, beautiful,” she said; but in a moment the tears fell again, for she thought of the rose bushes in the balcony, and she remembered Kai.
“Oh Kai, dear, dear Kai, is he dead?” she asked the roses.
“No, he is not dead,” they answered, “for we have been beneath the brown soil, and he is not there.”
“Then where, oh, where is he?” and she went from flower to flower whispering, “Have you seen little Kai?”
But the other flowers all stood in the sunshine, dreaming their own dreams, and these they told the little maiden gladly, but of Kai they could not tell her, for they knew nothing.
Then the little girl ran down the garden path until she came to the garden gate. She pressed the rusty latch. The gate flew open, and Gerda ran out on her little bare feet into the green fields. And she ran, and she ran, until she could run no longer. Then she sat down on a big stone of grey granite to rest.
“Why, it must be autumn,” she said sorrowfully, as she looked around. And little Gerda felt sorry that she had stayed so long in the magic garden, where it was always springtime.
“Why have I not been seeking little Kai?” she asked herself, and she jumped up and trudged along, on and on, out into the great wide world.
The Fourth Story: A Prince and a Princess
At last the cold white winter came again, and still little Gerda was wandering alone through the wide world, for she had not found little Kai.
“Caw, caw,” said a big raven that hopped on the stone in front of her. “Caw, caw.”
“Have you seen little Kai?” asked Gerda, and she told her sad story.
“It may have been Kai,” said the raven, “I cannot tell. But if it was, he will have forgotten you now that he lives with the princess.”
“Does he live with a princess?” asked Gerda.
“Yes, he does. If you care to listen, I will tell you how it came about. In this kingdom lives a princess so clever that she has read all the newspapers in the world, and forgotten them again. Last winter she made up her mind to marry. Her husband, she said, must speak well. He must know the proper thing to say, and say it prettily. Otherwise she would not marry. I assure you what I say is perfectly true, for I have a tame sweetheart who lives at court, and she told me the whole story.
“One day it was published in the newspapers that any handsome young man might go to the palace to speak to the princess. The one who spoke most prettily and answered most wisely should be chosen as her husband. What a stir there was! Young men flocked to the palace in crowds, chattering as they came. But when they saw the great staircase, and the soldiers in their silver and blue uniform, and the grand ladies in velvet and lace, they could only talk in whispers. And when they were led before the beautiful princess, who was seated on a throne with a pearl as big as a spinning wheel, they were silent. She spoke to them, but they could think of nothing to say, so they repeated her last words over and over again. The princess did not like that, and she——”
“But Kai, little Kai, did he come?” interrupted Gerda.
“You are in too great a hurry,” said the raven; “I am just coming to that. She sent them away one right after the other, knowing what to expect from first impressions of her suitors. Until... On the third day came a boy with sparkling eyes and golden hair, but his clothes were shabby. He——”
“Oh, that would be Kai. Dear, dear Kai, I have found him at last.”
“He had a knapsack on his back, and——”
“No, it must have been a sled,” again interrupted Gerda.
“I said he had a knapsack on his back, and he wore boots that creaked, but——”
“Oh, then it must be Kai, for he had new boots. I heard them creak through our attic wall when——”
“Little girl, do not interrupt, but listen to me. He wore boots that creaked, but even that did not frighten him. He creaked up the great staircase, he passed and saluted the soldiers in silver and blue uniform, he bowed to the ladies in velvet and lace, and still he was quite at his ease. And when he was led before the beautiful princess who was seated on a throne with a pearl as big as a spinning wheel, he answered so prettily and spoke so wisely that she chose him as her husband.”
“Indeed, indeed it was Kai,” said little Gerda. “He was so clever. He could do arithmetic up to long division. Oh, take me to him.”
“I will see what can be done,” said the raven. “I will talk about it to my sweetheart. She will certainly be able to advise us. Wait here by the stile,” and the raven wagged his head and flew off.
It was growing dark before he returned. “Here is a roll of bread my tame sweetheart sent you. ‘The little maiden must be hungry,’ she said. As for your going to the palace with those bare feet—the thing is impossible. The soldiers in silver and blue uniform would not let you go up the great stair. But do not cry. My sweetheart knows a little back staircase. She will take you to the prince and princess. Follow me.”
On tiptoe little Gerda followed the raven, as he hopped across the snow-covered field and up the long tree-lined promenade that led to the palace garden. And in the garden they waited silently until the last light had gone out. Then they turned along the bare walk that led to the back door. It stood wide open.
Oh, how little Gerda’s heart beat, as on the tips of her little bare toes she followed the raven up the dimly lighted back staircase!
On the landing at the top burned a small lamp. Beside it stood a female raven, obviously the wild male's tame sweetheart.
Gerda curtsied as her grandmother had taught her.
“He,” said the tame female, nodding to the raven of the woods, “he has told me your story. It has made me sad. But if you carry the lamp, I will lead the way, and then we shall see——”
“We shall see little Kai,” murmured Gerda.
“Hush! we shall see what we shall see,” said the tame sweetheart.
Through room after room Gerda followed her strange guides, her heart thumping and thumping so loudly that she was afraid someone in the palace would hear it and wake.
At last they came to a room in which stood two little beds, one lily white and one scarlet red. The tame raven nodded to the little girl.
Poor Gerda! she was trembling all over, as she peeped at the little head that rested on the pillow of the white bed.
Oh! that was the princess.
Gerda turned to the little red bed. The prince was lying on his face, but the hair, surely it was Kai’s hair. She drew down the scarlet coverlet until she saw a sunburned neck. Yes! it was Kai’s neck, she felt sure.
“Kai, Kai, it is I, little Gerda, wake up, wake up.”
And the prince awoke. He turned his head. He opened his eyes—and—alas! alas! it was not little Kai.
Then Gerda cried and cried as if her heart would break. She cried until she awoke the princess, who started up bewildered.
“Who are you, little maiden, and where do you come from, and what do you want?”
“Oh, I want my Kai, little Kai, do you know where he is?” And Gerda told the princess all her story, and of what the ravens had done to help her.
“Poor little child,” said the princess, “how sad you must feel!”
“And how tired,” said the prince, and he jumped out of his little red bed, and made Gerda lie down.
The little girl was grateful indeed. She folded her hands and was soon fast asleep.
And Gerda dreamed of Kai. She saw him sitting in his little sled, and it was dragged by snow fairies. But it was only a dream, and, when she awoke, her little playmate was as far away as ever.
The ravens were now very happy, for the princess said that, although they must never again lead anyone to the palace by the back staircase, this time they should be rewarded. They should for the rest of their lives live together in the palace garden, and be known as the court ravens, and be fed from the royal kitchen.
When little Gerda awoke from her dreams, she saw the sunbeams stealing across her bed. It was time to get up.
The court ladies dressed the little girl in silk and velvet, and the prince and princess asked her to stay with them at the palace. But Gerda begged for a little carriage, and a horse, and a pair of boots, that she might again go out into the great wide world to seek little Kai.
So they gave her a pair of boots and a fur muff, and when she was dressed, there before the door stood a carriage covered pure gold. The prince himself helped Gerda to step in, and the princess waved to her as she drove off, she and her prince drying up their tears.
But although Gerda was now a grand little maiden, she was very lonely. The coachman and footman in the scarlet and gold livery did not speak a word. She was glad when the wild raven flew to the carriage and perched by her side. He explained that his wife, for he was now married, would have come also, but she had eaten too much breakfast and was not well. But at the end of three miles the male raven said goodbye, and flapping his shiny black wings, flew into an elm. There he watched the golden carriage till it could no longer be seen.
Poor Gerda was lonely as ever! There were gingersnaps and sugar biscuits and candied fruit in the carriage, but these could not comfort the little maiden.
When would she find Kai?
The Fifth Story: A Robber Maiden
In a dark forest lived a band of wild robbers. Their leader was an old robber woman, with shaggy eyebrows and no teeth. She had one little daughter.
“Look, look! what is that?” cried the little robber maiden one afternoon, as something like a moving torch gleamed through the forest. It was Gerda’s golden carriage. The dazzled robbers rushed toward it, drove away the coachman and the footman, and dragged out the little blond lady inside.
“How plump she is! You will taste nice, my dear,” the robber woman said to Gerda, as she drew out her long, sharp Bowie knife. It glittered horribly. “Now, just stand still, so, and—oh! stop, I say, stop,” screamed the old woman, for at that moment her daughter sprang upon her back and bit her left ear. And there she hung, arms clasped round her mother's neck, like some savage little animal. “Oh, my ear, my ear, you bad, wicked child!” But the woman did not now try to kill Gerda.
Then the robber maiden said, “Little lady, I want you myself, and I want to ride beside you.” So together they stepped into the golden carriage and drove deep into the woods. “No one will hurt you now, unless I get angry with you,” said the robber girl, putting her arm round Gerda. “Are you a princess?”
“No,” said Gerda, and she told the robber-girl all her story. “Have you seen little Kai?” she ended.
“Never,” said the robber maiden, “never.” Then she looked at Gerda and added, “No one shall kill you even if I am angry with you. I shall do it myself.” And she dried Gerda’s eyes. “Now this is nice,” and she lay back, her rough hands in Gerda’s warm, soft muff. She was as dark as Gerda was fair, as muscular as the other girl was slender, her eyes deep black holes harder to probe than Gerda's clover orbs.
At last the carriage stopped at a robber’s castle. It was a ruin, with cracks that ran all the way down from towers to dungeons. The robber maiden led Gerda into a large, old hall and gave her a basin of hot soup. “You shall sleep there tonight,” she said, “with me and my pets.”
Gerda looked where the robber girl pointed, and saw that in one corner of the room straw was scattered on the stone floor.
“Yes, you shall see my pets. Come, lie down now.”
And little Gerda and the robber girl lay down together on their straw bed. Above, caged and perched on poles, were dozens of mourning doves.
“Mine, all mine,” said the little robber maiden. Jumping up, she seized the dove nearest her by the feet and shook it till its wings flapped. Then she slung it against Gerda’s face. “Kiss it,” she said. “Yes, all mine; and look,” she went on, “he is mine, too;” and she caught by the horn a reindeer that was tied to the wall. He had a bright brass collar round his neck. “We have to keep him tied or he would run away. I tickle him every night with my sharp knife, and then he is afraid;” and the robber girl drew from a hole in the wall a long Bowie knife just like her mother's, and gently ran it across the reindeer’s neck. The poor deer kicked, but the robber maiden laughed, and then again lay down on her bed of straw.
“But,” said Gerda, with terror in her eyes, “you are not going to sleep with that long, sharp knife in your hand?”
“Yes, I always do,” replied the robber girl; “one never knows what may happen. But tell me again all about Kai, and about your journey through the wide world.”
And Gerda told all her story over again. Then the little robber maiden put one arm round Gerda’s neck, and with her long knife in the other, she fell sound asleep, her snores being heard throughout the keep. The adult robbers drank and sang and played cards; the robber woman turned somersaults.
But Gerda could not sleep. How could she, with that sharp knife close beside her? She would try not to think of it. She would listen to the mourning doves. “Coo, coo,” they said. Then they came nearer.
“We have seen little Kai,” they whispered. “He floated by above our nest in the Snow Queen’s sleigh. She blew upon us as she passed, and her icy breath killed many of us.”
“But where was little Kai going? Where does the Snow Queen live?” asked Gerda.
“The reindeer can tell you everything,” said the mourning doves.
“Yes,” said the reindeer, “I can tell you. Little Kai was going to the Snow Queen’s palace, a splendid palace of glittering ice, away in Lapland.”
“Oh, Kai, little Kai!” sighed Gerda.
“Lie still, or I shall stick my knife into you,” said the little robber maiden.
And little Gerda lay still, but she did not sleep. In the morning she told the robber girl what the mourning doves and the reindeer had said.
The robber girl looked very solemn and thoughtful. Then she nodded her head importantly. At last she spoke, not to Gerda, but to the reindeer.
“I should like to keep you here always, tied by your brass collar to that wall. Then I should still tickle you with my knife, and have the fun of seeing you kick and struggle. But never mind. Do you know where Lapland is?”
Lapland! Sápmi! of course the reindeer knew. Had he not been born there? Had he not played in the tundra's snow-covered fields? As the reindeer thought of his happy childhood, his eyes danced.
“Would you like to go back to your old home?” asked the robber maiden.
The reindeer leaped into the air for joy.
“Very well, I will soon untie your chain. Mother is still asleep. Come along, Gerda. Now, I am going to put this little girl on your back, and you are to carry her safely to the Snow Queen’s palace. She must find her little playfellow.” And the robber maiden lifted Gerda up and tied her on the reindeer’s back, having first put a little cushion beneath her. “I must keep your muff, Gerda, but you can have mother’s big, black mittens. Come, put your hands in. Oh, they do look ugly.”
“I am going to Kai, little Kai,” and Gerda cried for joy.
“There is nothing to whimper about,” said the robber girl. “Look! here are two loaves of ration bread and a ham.” Then she opened wide the door, loosened the reindeer’s chain, and said, “Now run.”
And the reindeer darted through the open door, Gerda waving her black-mittened hands, and the little robber-girl calling after the reindeer, “Take care of my little girl.”
On and on they sped, over briers and bushes, through fields and forests and swamps. The wolves howled and the ravens screamed. But Gerda was happy. She was going to Kai.
The loaves and the ham were finished, and Gerda and the reindeer were in Lapland.
The Sixth Story: A Pair of Wise Old Crones
They stopped in front of a little hut. Its roof sloped down almost to the ground, and the door was so low that to get into the hut one had to creep on hands and knees. How the reindeer squeezed through I cannot tell, but there he was in the little hut, telling an old Lapp woman who was frying fish over a whale oil lamp, first his own story and then the sad story of Gerda and little Kai.
“Oh, you poor creatures,” said the Lapp woman, “the Snow Queen is not in Lapland at present. She is hundreds of miles away at her other palace in Finmark. But I will give you a note to a Finnwoman, and she will direct you better than I can.” And the Lapp woman wrote a letter in runes on a dried codfish, as she had no paper.
Then, when Gerda had warmed herself by the lamp, the Lapp woman tied her on to the reindeer again, and they squeezed through the little door and were once more out in the wide world.
On and on they sped through the long night, while the blue northern lights flickered in the sky overhead, and the crisp snow crackled beneath their feet.
At last they reached Finmark and knocked on the Finnwoman’s chimney, for she had no door at all. Then they squeezed down the chimney and found themselves in a very hot little room.
The old woman at once loosened Gerda’s things, and took off her mittens and boots. Then she put ice on the reindeer’s head. Now that her visitors were more comfortable she could look at the letter they brought. She read it three times and then put it in the fish-pot, for this old woman never wasted anything.
There was silence for five minutes, and then the reindeer again told his story first, and afterward the sad story of Gerda and little Kai.
Once more there was silence for five minutes, and then the Finnwoman whispered to the reindeer. This is what she whispered: “Yes, little Kai is with the Snow Queen, and thinks himself the happiest boy in the world. But that is because a little bit of the magic mirror is still in his eye, and another tiny grain remains in his heart. Until they come out, he can never be the old Kai. As long as they are there, the Snow Queen will have him in her power.”
“But cannot you give Gerda power to overcome the Snow Queen?” whispered the reindeer.
“I cannot give her greater power than she has already. Her own loving heart has won the help of royalty and robber girl, and it is that loving heart that will conquer the Snow Queen. But this you can do. Carry little Gerda to the palace garden. It is only two miles from here. You will see a holly bush covered with red berries. Leave Gerda there and hurry back to me.”
Off sped the reindeer.
“Oh, my boots and my mittens!” cried Gerda.
But the reindeer would not stop. On he rushed through the snow until he came to the holly bush with the red berries. There he put Gerda down and kissed her, while tears trickled down his face. Then off he bounded, leaving the little girl standing barefoot on the crisp snow, bareheaded and barehanded and barefooted.
Gerda stepped forward. Huge snowflakes were coming to meet her. They did not fall from the sky. No, they were marching along the ground. And what strange shapes they took! Some looked like white hydras, some like polar bears. They were the Snow Queen’s soldiers.
Gerda grew frightened. But she did not run away. She folded her hands and closed her eyes. “Roses bloom in valleys green,” she began, but she could get no further. The cold was so great that she could not go on. She opened her eyes, and there, surrounding her, was a legion of bright little warriors. They had been formed from her breath, as she prayed, “Roses bloom in valleys green, where love is spoken and seen.” And the bright little warriors shivered into a hundred pieces the monster snowflake army, and Gerda walked on fearlessly toward the palace of the Snow Queen.
The Seventh Story: A Heartfelt Reunion
Little Kai sits alone in the great ice hall, before an empty throne of ice. He does not know that he is blue with cold, for the Snow Queen has kissed away the icy shiverings and left his heart with no more feeling than a lump of ice.
And this morning she has flown off to visit the countries of the south, where the grapes and the citrus fruits grow.
“It is all so blue there,” she had said, “I must go and cast my veil of white across their hills and meadows.” And away she flew.
So Kai sits in the great ice hall alone before the throne. Chips of ice are his only playthings, and now he leaves them on the ice floor and goes to the window to gaze at the snowdrifts in the empty palace garden. Great gusts of wind swirl the snow past the windows. Kai can see nothing. He turns again to his ice toys.
Outside, little Gerda struggles through the biting wind, then, saying an old nursery rhyme for courage, she enters the vast hall. At a glance she sees the lonely boy. In a twinkling she knows it is Kai. Her little bare feet carry her like wings across the ice floor. Her arms are round his neck.
“Kai, dear, dear Kai!”
But Kai does not move. He is as still and cold as the palace walls.
Little Gerda bursts into tears, hot, scalding tears. Her arms are yet round Kai’s neck, and her tears fall upon his heart of ice. They thaw it. They reach the grain of glass, and it melts away.
And now Kai’s tears fall hot and fast, and as they pour, the tiny bit of glass passes out of his eye, and he sees, he knows, his long-lost playmate.
“Little Gerda, little Gerda!” he cries, “where have you been, where have you been, where are we now?” and he shivers as he looks round the vast cold hall.
But Gerda kisses his white cheeks, and they grow rosy; she kisses his eyes, and they shine like stars; she kisses his hands and feet, and he is strong and glad.
Hand in hand they wander out of the ice palace. The winds hush, the sun bursts forth. They talk of their grandmother, of their rose trees.
The reindeer has come back, and with him there waits another reindeer, a doe. They stand by the holly bush with the red berries.
The children bound on to their backs, and are carried first to the hut of the Finnwoman, and then on to Lapland. The Lapp woman has new clothes ready for them, and brings out her sledge. Once more Kai and Gerda are sitting side by side. The Lapp woman drives, and the two reindeer follow. On and on they speed through the white-robed land. But now they leave it behind. The earth wears her mantle of green.
“Goodbye,” they say to the kind Lapp woman; “goodbye” to the gentle reindeer.
Together the children enter a forest. How strange and how sweet the song of the robin birds!
A dark young girl on horseback comes galloping toward them. She wears a scarlet cap, and has pistols in her belt. It is the robber maiden.
“So you have found little Kai.”
Gerda smiles a radiant smile, and asks for the prince and princess.
“They are travelling far away.”
“And the ravens?”
“Oh, the male raven is dead. His tame widow is in mourning. But tell me what you have been doing, and where you found little Kai.”
The three children sit down under a fir tree, and Gerda tells of her journey through Lapland and Finmark, and how at last she had found little Kai in the palace of the Snow Queen.
“Snipp, snapp, snut!” shouts the robber maiden, which is her way of saying “Hurrah! All's well that ends well!” Then, promising that if ever she is near their town, she will pay them a visit, off she gallops into the wide world.
On wander the two children, on and on and on, always southward. At last they see the tall towers of the old town where they had lived together. Soon they come to the narrow street they remember so well. They climb the long, long staircase, and burst into the little attic.
The rose bushes are in bloom, and the sun pours in upon the old grandmother, who reads her Bible by the open window.
Kai and Gerda take their two little stools and sit down one on either side of her, and listen to the words from the Gospel of Matthew. "Unless you become as little children you shall never enter the kingdom of heaven!" As they listen, a great peace steals into their souls.
And outside it is midsummer—warm, bright, beautiful midsummer.
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