The Conceited Apple Branch
by
Hans Christian Andersen
(1852)
It was the month of May. The wind still
blew cold; but from bush and tree, field and flower, came the welcome sound,
“Spring is come.” Wild-flowers in profusion covered the hedges. Under the little
apple-tree, Spring seemed busy, and told his tale from one of the branches which
hung fresh and blooming, and covered with delicate pink blossoms that were just
ready to open. The branch well knew how beautiful it was; this knowledge exists
as much in the leaf as in the blood; I was therefore not surprised when a
nobleman’s carriage, in which sat the young countess, stopped in the road just
by. She said that an apple-branch was a most lovely object, and an emblem of
spring in its most charming aspect. Then the branch was broken off for her, and
she held it in her delicate hand, and sheltered it with her silk parasol. Then
they drove to the castle, in which were lofty halls and splendid drawing-rooms.
Pure white curtains fluttered before the open windows, and beautiful flowers
stood in shining, transparent vases; and in one of them, which looked as if it
had been cut out of newly fallen snow, the apple-branch was placed, among some
fresh, light twigs of beech. It was a charming sight. Then the branch became
proud, which was very much like human nature.
People of every description entered the room, and,
according to their position in society, so dared they to express their
admiration. Some few said nothing, others expressed too much, and the
apple-branch very soon got to understand that there was as much difference in
the characters of human beings as in those of plants and flowers. Some are all
for pomp and parade, others have a great deal to do to maintain their own
importance, while the rest might be spared without much loss to society. So
thought the apple-branch, as he stood before the open window, from which he
could see out over gardens and fields, where there were flowers and plants
enough for him to think and reflect upon; some rich and beautiful, some poor and
humble indeed.
“Poor, despised herbs,” said the apple-branch; “there is
really a difference between them and such as I am. How unhappy they must be, if
they can feel as those in my position do! There is a difference indeed, and so
there ought to be, or we should all be equals.”
And the apple-branch looked with a sort of pity upon them,
especially on a certain little flower that is found in fields and in ditches. No
one bound these flowers together in a nosegay; they were too common; they were
even known to grow between the paving-stones, shooting up everywhere, like bad
weeds; and they bore the very ugly name of “dog-flowers” or “dandelions.”
“Poor, despised plants,” said the apple-bough, “it is not
your fault that you are so ugly, and that you have such an ugly name; but it is
with plants as with men,—there must be a difference.”
“A difference!” cried the sunbeam, as he kissed the
blooming apple-branch, and then kissed the yellow dandelion out in the fields.
All were brothers, and the sunbeam kissed them—the poor flowers as well as the
rich.
The apple-bough had never thought of the boundless love of
God, which extends over all the works of creation, over everything which lives,
and moves, and has its being in Him; he had never thought of the good and
beautiful which are so often hidden, but can never remain forgotten by Him,—not
only among the lower creation, but also among men. The sunbeam, the ray of
light, knew better.
“You do not see very far, nor very clearly,” he said to
the apple-branch. “Which is the despised plant you so specially pity?”
“The dandelion,” he replied. “No one ever places it in a
nosegay; it is often trodden under foot, there are so many of them; and when
they run to seed, they have flowers like wool, which fly away in little pieces
over the roads, and cling to the dresses of the people. They are only weeds; but
of course there must be weeds. O, I am really very thankful that I was not made
like one of these flowers.”
There came presently across the fields a whole group of
children, the youngest of whom was so small that it had to be carried by the
others; and when he was seated on the grass, among the yellow flowers, he
laughed aloud with joy, kicked out his little legs, rolled about, plucked the
yellow flowers, and kissed them in childlike innocence. The elder children broke
off the flowers with long stems, bent the stalks one round the other, to form
links, and made first a chain for the neck, then one to go across the shoulders,
and hang down to the waist, and at last a wreath to wear round the head, so that
they looked quite splendid in their garlands of green stems and golden flowers.
But the eldest among them gathered carefully the faded flowers, on the stem of
which was grouped together the seed, in the form of a white feathery coronal.
These loose, airy wool-flowers are very beautiful, and look like fine snowy
feathers or down. The children held them to their mouths, and tried to blow away
the whole coronal with one puff of the breath. They had been told by their
grandmothers that who ever did so would be sure to have new clothes before the
end of the year. The despised flower was by this raised to the position of a
prophet or foreteller of events.
“Do you see,” said the sunbeam, “do you see the beauty of
these flowers? do you see their powers of giving pleasure?”
“Yes, to children,” said the apple-bough.
By-and-by an old woman came into the field, and, with a
blunt knife without a handle, began to dig round the roots of some of the
dandelion-plants, and pull them up. With some of these she intended to make tea
for herself; but the rest she was going to sell to the chemist, and obtain some
money.
“But beauty is of higher value than all this,” said the
apple-tree branch; “only the chosen ones can be admitted into the realms of the
beautiful. There is a difference between plants, just as there is a difference
between men.”
Then the sunbeam spoke of the boundless love of God, as
seen in creation, and over all that lives, and of the equal distribution of His
gifts, both in time and in eternity.
“That is your opinion,” said the apple-bough.
Then some people came into the room, and, among them, the
young countess,—the lady who had placed the apple-bough in the transparent vase,
so pleasantly beneath the rays of the sunlight. She carried in her hand
something that seemed like a flower. The object was hidden by two or three great
leaves, which covered it like a shield, so that no draught or gust of wind could
injure it, and it was carried more carefully than the apple-branch had ever
been. Very cautiously the large leaves were removed, and there appeared the
feathery seed-crown of the despised dandelion. This was what the lady had so
carefully plucked, and carried home so safely covered, so that not one of the
delicate feathery arrows of which its mist-like shape was so lightly formed,
should flutter away. She now drew it forth quite uninjured, and wondered at its
beautiful form, and airy lightness, and singular construction, so soon to be
blown away by the wind.
“See,” she exclaimed, “how wonderfully God has made this
little flower. I will paint it with the apple-branch together. Every one admires
the beauty of the apple-bough; but this humble flower has been endowed by Heaven
with another kind of loveliness; and although they differ in appearance, both
are the children of the realms of beauty.”
Then the sunbeam kissed the lowly flower, and he kissed
the blooming apple-branch, upon whose leaves appeared a rosy blush.