The Drop of Water
by
Hans Christian Andersen
(1848)
Of course you know what is meant by a
magnifying glass—one of those round spectacle-glasses that make everything look
a hundred times bigger than it is? When any one takes one of these and holds it
to his eye, and looks at a drop of water from the pond yonder, he sees above a
thousand wonderful creatures that are otherwise never discerned in the water.
But there they are, and it is no delusion. It almost looks like a great plateful
of spiders jumping about in a crowd. And how fierce they are! They tear off each
other’s legs. and arms and bodies, before and behind; and yet they are merry and
joyful in their way.
Now, there once was an old man whom all the people called
Kribble-Krabble, for that was his name. He always wanted the best of everything,
and when he could not manage it otherwise, he did it by magic.
There he sat one day, and held his magnifying-glass to his
eye, and looked at a drop of water that had been taken out of a puddle by the
ditch. But what a kribbling and krabbling was there! All the thousands of little
creatures hopped and sprang and tugged at one another, and ate each other up.
“That is horrible!” said old Kribble-Krabble. “Can one not
persuade them to live in peace and quietness, so that each one may mind his own
business?”
And he thought it over and over, but it would not do, and
so he had recourse to magic.
“I must give them color, that they may be seen more
plainly,” said he; and he poured something like a little drop of red wine into
the drop of water, but it was witches’ blood from the lobes of the ear, the
finest kind, at ninepence a drop. And now the wonderful little creatures were
pink all over. It looked like a whole town of naked wild men.
“What have you there?” asked another old magician, who had
no name—and that was the best thing about him.
“Yes, if you can guess what it is,” said Kribble-Krabble,
“I’ll make you a present of it.”
But it is not so easy to find out if one does not know.
And the magician who had no name looked through the
magnifying-glass.
It looked really like a great town reflected there, in
which all the people were running about without clothes. It was terrible! But it
was still more terrible to see how one beat and pushed the other, and bit and
hacked, and tugged and mauled him. Those at the top were being pulled down, and
those at the bottom were struggling upwards.
“Look! look! his leg is longer than mine! Bah! Away with
it! There is one who has a little bruise. It hurts him, but it shall hurt him
still more.”
And they hacked away at him, and they pulled at him, and
ate him up, because of the little bruise. And there was one sitting as still as
any little maiden, and wishing only for peace and quietness. But now she had to
come out, and they tugged at her, and pulled her about, and ate her up.
“That’s funny!” said the magician.
“Yes; but what do you think it is?” said Kribble-Krabble.
“Can you find that out?”
“Why, one can see that easily enough,” said the other.
“That’s Paris, or some other great city, for they’re all alike. It’s a great
city!”
“It’s a drop of puddle water!” said Kribble-Krabble.