By the Almshouse Window
by
Hans Christian Andersen
(1847)
Near the grass-covered rampart which
encircles Copenhagen lies a great red house. Balsams and other flowers greet us
from the long rows of windows in the house, whose interior is sufficiently
poverty-stricken; and poor and old are the people who inhabit it. The building
is the Warton Almshouse.
Look! at the window there leans an old maid. She plucks
the withered leaf from the balsam, and looks at the grass-covered rampart, on
which many children are playing. What is the old maid thinking of? A whole life
drama is unfolding itself before her inward gaze.
“The poor little children, how happy they are—how merrily
they play and romp together! What red cheeks and what angels’ eyes! but they
have no shoes nor stockings. They dance on the green rampart, just on the place
where, according to the old story, the ground always sank in, and where a
sportive, frolicsome child had been lured by means of flowers, toys and
sweetmeats into an open grave ready dug for it, and which was afterwards closed
over the child; and from that moment, the old story says, the ground gave way no
longer, the mound remained firm and fast, and was quickly covered with the green
turf. The little people who now play on that spot know nothing of the old tale,
else would they fancy they heard a child crying deep below the earth, and the
dewdrops on each blade of grass would be to them tears of woe. Nor do they know
anything of the Danish King who here, in the face of the coming foe, took an
oath before all his trembling courtiers that he would hold out with the citizens
of his capital, and die here in his nest; they know nothing of the men who have
fought here, or of the women who from here have drenched with boiling water the
enemy, clad in white, and ’biding in the snow to surprise the city.
“No! the poor little ones are playing with light, childish
spirits. Play on, play on, thou little maiden! Soon the years will come—yes,
those glorious years. The priestly hands have been laid on the candidates for
confirmation; hand in hand they walk on the green rampart. Thou hast a white
frock on; it has cost thy mother much labor, and yet it is only cut down for
thee out of an old larger dress! You will also wear a red shawl; and what if it
hang too far down? People will only see how large, how very large it is. You are
thinking of your dress, and of the Giver of all good—so glorious is it to wander
on the green rampart!
“And the years roll by; they have no lack of dark days,
but you have your cheerful young spirit, and you have gained a friend—you know
not how. You met, oh, how often! You walk together on the rampart in the fresh
spring, on the high days and holidays, when all the world come out to walk upon
the ramparts, and all the bells of the church steeples seem to be singing a song
of praise for the coming spring.
“Scarcely have the violets come forth, but there on the
rampart, just opposite the beautiful Castle of Rosenberg, there is a tree bright
with the first green buds. Every year this tree sends forth fresh green shoots.
Alas! It is not so with the human heart! Dark mists, more in number than those
that cover the northern skies, cloud the human heart. Poor child! thy friend’s
bridal chamber is a black coffin, and thou becomest an old maid. From the
almshouse window, behind the balsams, thou shalt look on the merry children at
play, and shalt see thine own history renewed.”
And that is the life drama that passes before the old maid
while she looks out upon the rampart, the green, sunny rampart, where the
children, with their red cheeks and bare shoeless feet, are rejoicing merrily,
like the other free little birds.