The Loveliest Rose in the World
by
Hans Christian Andersen
(1852)
There lived once a great queen, in whose garden were found
at all seasons the most splendid flowers, and from every land in the world. She
specially loved roses, and therefore she possessed the most beautiful varieties
of this flower, from the wild hedge-rose, with its apple-scented leaves, to the
splendid Provence rose. They grew near the shelter of the walls, wound
themselves round columns and window-frames, crept along passages and over the
ceilings of the halls. They were of every fragrance and color.
But care and sorrow dwelt within these halls; the queen lay upon a sick bed,
and the doctors declared that she must die. “There is still one thing that could
save her,” said one of the wisest among them. “Bring her the loveliest rose in
the world; one which exhibits the purest and brightest love, and if it is
brought to her before her eyes close, she will not die.”
Then from all parts came those who brought roses that bloomed in every
garden, but they were not the right sort. The flower must be one from the garden
of love; but which of the roses there showed forth the highest and purest love?
The poets sang of this rose, the loveliest in the world, and each named one
which he considered worthy of that title; and intelligence of what was required
was sent far and wide to every heart that beat with love; to every class, age,
and condition.
“No one has yet named the flower,” said the wise man. “No one has pointed out
the spot where it blooms in all its splendor. It is not a rose from the coffin
of Romeo and Juliet, or from the grave of Walburg, though these roses will live
in everlasting song. It is not one of the roses which sprouted forth from the
blood-stained fame of Winkelreid. The blood which flows from the breast of a
hero who dies for his country is sacred, and his memory is sweet, and no rose
can be redder than the blood which flows from his veins. Neither is it the magic
flower of Science, to obtain which wondrous flower a man devotes many an hour of
his fresh young life in sleepless nights, in a lonely chamber.”
“I know where it blooms,” said a happy mother, who came with her lovely child
to the bedside of the queen. “I know where the loveliest rose in the world is.
It is seen on the blooming cheeks of my sweet child, when it expresses the pure
and holy love of infancy; when refreshed by sleep it opens its eyes, and smiles
upon me with childlike affection.”
“This is a lovely rose,” said the wise man; “but there is one still more
lovely.”
“Yes, one far more lovely,” said one of the women. “I have seen it, and a
loftier and purer rose does not bloom. But it was white, like the leaves of a
blush-rose. I saw it on the cheeks of the queen. She had taken off her golden
crown, and through the long, dreary night, she carried her sick child in her
arms. She wept over it, kissed it, and prayed for it as only a mother can pray
in that hour of her anguish.”
“Holy and wonderful in its might is the white rose of grief, but it is not
the one we seek.”
“No; the loveliest rose in the world I saw at the Lord’s table,” said the
good old bishop. “I saw it shine as if an angel’s face had appeared. A young
maiden knelt at the altar, and renewed the vows made at her baptism; and there
were white roses and red roses on the blushing cheeks of that young girl. She
looked up to heaven with all the purity and love of her young spirit, in all the
expression of the highest and purest love.”
“May she be blessed!” said the wise man: “but no one has yet named the
loveliest rose in the world.”
Then there came into the room a child—the queen’s little son. Tears stood in
his eyes, and glistened on his cheeks; he carried a great book and the binding
was of velvet, with silver clasps. “Mother,” cried the little boy; “only hear
what I have read.” And the child seated himself by the bedside, and read from
the book of Him who suffered death on the cross to save all men, even who are
yet unborn. He read, “Greater love hath no man than this,” and as he read a
roseate hue spread over the cheeks of the queen, and her eyes became so
enlightened and clear, that she saw from the leaves of the book a lovely rose
spring forth, a type of Him who shed His blood on the cross.
“I see it,” she said. “He who beholds this, the loveliest rose on earth,
shall never die.”