The Neighbouring Families
by
Hans Christian Andersen
(1847)
One
would have thought that something important was going on in the duck-pond, but
it was nothing after all. All the ducks lying quietly on the water or standing
on their heads in it—for they could do that—at once swarm to the sides; the
traces of their feet were seen in the wet earth, and their cackling was heard
far and wide. The water, which a few moments before had been as clear and smooth
as a mirror, became very troubled. Before, every tree, every neighbouring bush,
the old farmhouse with the holes in the roof and the swallows’ nest, and
especially the great rose-bush full of flowers, had been reflected in it. The
rose-bush covered the wall and hung out over the water, in which everything was
seen as if in a picture, except that it all stood on its head; but when the
water was troubled everything got mixed up, and the picture was gone. Two
feathers which the fluttering ducks had lost floated up and down; suddenly they
took a rush as if the wind were coming, but as it did not come they had to lie
still, and the water once more became quiet and smooth. The roses were again
reflected; they were very beautiful, but they did not know it, for no one had
told them. The sun shone among the delicate leaves; everything breathed forth
the loveliest fragrance, and all felt as we do when we are filled with joy at
the thought of our happiness.
“How beautiful existence is!” said each rose. “The only thing that I wish for
is to be able to kiss the sun, because it is so warm and bright. I should also
like to kiss those roses down in the water, which are so much like us, and the
pretty little birds down in the nest. There are some up above too; they put out
their heads and pipe softly; they have no feathers like their father and mother.
We have good neighbours, both below and above. How beautiful existence is!”
The young ones above and below—those below were really only shadows in the
water—were sparrows; their parents were sparrows too, and had taken possession
of the empty swallows’ nest of last year, and now lived in it as if it were
their own property.
“Are those the duck’s children swimming here?” asked the young sparrows when
they saw the feathers on the water.
“If you must ask questions, ask sensible ones,” said their mother. “Don’t you
see that they are feathers, such as I wear and you will wear too? But ours are
finer. Still, I should like to have them up in the nest, for they keep one warm.
I am very curious to know what the ducks were so startled about; not about us,
certainly, although I did say ‘peep’ to you pretty loudly. The thick-headed
roses ought to know why, but they know nothing at all; they only look at
themselves and smell. I am heartily tired of such neighbours.”
“Listen to the dear little birds up there,” said the roses; “they begin to
want to sing too, but are not able to manage it yet. But it will soon come. What
a pleasure that must be! It is fine to have such cheerful neighbours.”
Suddenly two horses came galloping up to be watered. A peasant boy rode on
one, and he had taken off all his clothes except his large broad black hat. The
boy whistled like a bird, and rode into the pond where it was deepest, and as he
passed the rose-bush he plucked a rose and stuck it in his hat. Now he looked
dressed, and rode on. The other roses looked after their sister, and asked each
other, “Where can she be going to?” But none of them knew.
“I should like to go out into the world for once,” said one; “but here at
home among our green leaves it is beautiful too. The whole day long the sun
shines bright and warm, and in the night the sky shines more beautifully still;
we can see that through all the little holes in it.”
They meant the stars, but they knew no better.
“We make it lively about the house,” said the sparrow-mother; “and people say
that a swallows’ nest brings luck; so they are glad of us. But such neighbours
as ours! A rose-bush on the wall like that causes damp. I daresay it will be
taken away; then we shall, perhaps, have some corn growing here. The roses are
good for nothing but to be looked at and to be smelt, or at most to be stuck in
a hat. Every year, as I have been told by my mother, they fall off. The farmer’s
wife preserves them and strews salt among them; then they get a French name
which I neither can pronounce nor care to, and are put into the fire to make a
nice smell. You see, that’s their life; they exist only for the eye and the
nose. Now you know.”
In the evening, when the gnats were playing about in the warm air and in the
red clouds, the nightingale came and sang to the roses that the beautiful was
like sunshine to the world, and that the beautiful lived for ever. The roses
thought that the nightingale was singing about itself, and that one might easily
have believed; they had no idea that the song was about them. But they were very
pleased with it, and wondered whether all the little sparrows could become
nightingales.
“I understand the song of that bird very well,” said the young sparrows.
“There was only one word that was not clear to me. What does ‘the beautiful’
mean?”
“Nothing at all,” answered their mother; “that’s only something external. Up
at the Hall, where the pigeons have their own house, and corn and peas are
strewn before them every day—I have dined with them myself, and that you shall
do in time, too; for tell me what company you keep and I’ll tell you who you
are—up at the Hall they have two birds with green necks and a crest upon their
heads; they can spread out their tails like a great wheel, and these are so
bright with various colours that it makes one’s eyes ache. These birds are
called peacocks, and that is ‘the beautiful.’ If they were only plucked a little
they would look no better than the rest of us. I would have plucked them already
if they had not been so big.”
“I’ll pluck them,” piped the young sparrow, who had no feathers yet.
In the farmhouse lived a young married couple; they loved each other dearly,
were industrious and active, and everything in their home looked very nice. On
Sundays the young wife came down early, plucked a handful of the most beautiful
roses, and put them into a glass of water, which she placed upon the cupboard.
“Now I see that it is Sunday,” said the husband, kissing his little wife.
They sat down, read their hymn-book, and held each other by the hand, while the
sun shone down upon the fresh roses and upon them.
“This sight is really too tedious,” said the sparrow-mother, who could see
into the room from her nest; and she flew away.
The same thing happened on the following Sunday, for every Sunday fresh roses
were put into the glass; but the rose-bush bloomed as beautifully as ever. The
young sparrows now had feathers, and wanted very much to fly with their mother;
but she would not allow it, and so they had to stay at home. In one of her
flights, however it may have happened, she was caught, before she was aware of
it, in a horse-hair net which some boys had attached to a tree. The horse-hair
was drawn tightly round her leg—as tightly as if the latter were to be cut off;
she was in great pain and terror. The boys came running up and seized her, and
in no gentle way either.
“It’s only a sparrow,” they said; they did not, however, let her go, but took
her home with them, and every time she cried they hit her on the beak.
In the farmhouse was an old man who understood making soap into cakes and
balls, both for shaving and washing. He was a merry old man, always wandering
about. On seeing the sparrow which the boys had brought, and which they said
they did not want, he asked, “Shall we make it look very pretty?”
At these words an icy shudder ran through the sparrow-mother.
Out of his box, in which were the most beautiful colours, the old man took a
quantity of shining leaf-gold, while the boys had to go and fetch some white of
egg, with which the sparrow was to be smeared all over; the gold was stuck on to
this, and the sparrow-mother was now gilded all over. But she, trembling in
every limb, did not think of the adornment. Then the soap-man tore off a small
piece from the red lining of his old jacket, and cutting it so as to make it
look like a cock’s comb, he stuck it to the bird’s head.
“Now you will see the gold-jacket fly,” said the old man, letting the sparrow
go, which flew away in deadly fear, with the sun shining upon her. How she
glittered! All the sparrows, and even a crow—and an old boy he was too—were
startled at the sight; but still they flew after her to learn what kind of
strange bird she was.
Driven by fear and horror, she flew homeward; she was almost sinking fainting
to the earth, while the flock of pursuing birds increased, some even attempting
to peck at her.
“Look at her! Look at her!” they all cried.
“Look at her! Look at her” cried her little ones. as she approached the nest.
“That is certainly a young peacock, for it glitters in all colours; it makes
one’s eyes ache, as mother told us. Peep! that’s ‘the beautiful’.” And then they
pecked at the bird with their little beaks so that it was impossible for her to
get into the nest; she was so exhausted that she couldn’t even say “Peep!” much
less “I am your own mother!” The other birds, too, now fell upon the sparrow and
plucked off feather after feather until she fell bleeding into the rose-bush.
“Poor creature!” said all the roses; “only be still, and we will hide you.
Lean your little head against us.”
The sparrow spread out her wings once more, then drew them closely to her,
and lay dead near the neighbouring family, the beautiful fresh roses.
“Peep!” sounded from the nest. “Where can mother be so long? It’s more than I
can understand. It cannot be a trick of hers, and mean that we are now to take
care of ourselves. She has left us the house as an inheritance; but to which of
us is it to belong when we have families of our own?”
“Yes, it won’t do for you to stay with me when I increase my household with a
wife and children,” said the smallest.
“I daresay I shall have more wives and children than you,” said the second.
“But I am the eldest!” exclaimed the third. Then they all got excited; they
hit out with their wings, pecked with their beaks, and flop! one after another
was thrown out of the nest. There they lay with their anger, holding their heads
on one side and blinking the eye that was turned upwards. That was their way of
looking foolish.
They could fly a little; by practice they learned to improve, and at last
they agreed upon a sign by which to recognise each other if they should meet in
the world later on. It was to be one “Peep!” and three scratches on the ground
with the left foot.
The young one who had remained behind in the nest made himself as broad as he
could, for he was the proprietor. But this greatness did not last long. In the
night the red flames burst through the window and seized the roof, the dry straw
blazed up high, and the whole house, together with the young sparrow, was
burned. The two others, who wanted to marry, thus saved their lives by a stroke
of luck.
When the sun rose again and everything looked as refreshed as if it had had a
quiet sleep, there only remained of the farmhouse a few black charred beams
leaning against the chimney, which was now its own master. Thick smoke still
rose from the ruins, but the rose-bush stood yonder, fresh, blooming, and
untouched, every flower and every twig being reflected in the clear water.
“How beautifully the roses bloom before the ruined house,” exclaimed a
passer-by. “A pleasanter picture cannot be imagined. I must have that.” And the
man took out of his portfolio a little book with white leaves: he was a painter,
and with his pencil he drew the smoking house, the charred beams and the
overhanging chimney, which bent more and more; in the foreground he put the
large, blooming rose-bush, which presented a charming view. For its sake alone
the whole picture had been drawn.
Later in the day the two sparrows who had been born there came by. “Where is
the house?” they asked. “Where is the nest? Peep! All is burned and our strong
brother too. That’s what he has now for keeping the nest. The roses got off very
well; there they still stand with their red cheeks. They certainly do not mourn
at their neighbours’ misfortunes. I don’t want to talk to them, and it looks
miserable here—that’s my opinion.” And away they went.
On a beautiful sunny autumn day—one could almost have believed it was still
the middle of summer—there hopped about in the dry clean-swept courtyard before
the principal entrance of the Hall a number of black, white, and gaily-coloured
pigeons, all shining in the sunlight. The pigeon-mothers said to their young
ones: “Stand in groups, stand in groups! for that looks much better.”
“What kind of creatures are those little grey ones that run about behind us?”
asked an old pigeon, with red and green in her eyes. “Little grey ones! Little
grey ones!” she cried.
“They are sparrows, and good creatures. We have always had the reputation of
being pious, so we will allow them to pick up the corn with us; they don’t
interrupt our talk, and they scrape so prettily when they bow.”
Indeed they were continually making three foot-scrapings with the left foot
and also said “Peep!” By this means they recognised each other, for they were
the sparrows from the nest on the burned house.
“Here is excellent fare!” said the sparrow. The pigeons strutted round one
another, puffed out their chests mightily, and had their own private views and
opinions.
“Do you see that pouter pigeon?” said one to the other. “Do you see how she
swallows the peas? She eats too many, and the best ones too. Curoo! Curoo! How
she lifts her crest, the ugly, spiteful creature! Curoo! Curoo!” And the eyes of
all sparkled with malice. “Stand in groups! Stand in groups! Little grey ones,
little grey ones! Curoo, curoo, curoo!”
So their chatter ran on, and so it will run on for thousands of years. The
sparrows ate lustily; they listened attentively, and even stood in the ranks
with the others, but it did not suit them at all. They were full, and so they
left the pigeons, exchanging opinions about them, slipped in under the garden
palings, and when they found the door leading into the house open, one of them,
who was more than full, and therefore felt brave, hopped on to the threshold.
“Peep!” said he; “I may venture that.”
“Peep!” said the other; “so may I, and something more too!” and he hopped
into the room. No one was there; the third sparrow, seeing this, flew still
farther into the room, exclaiming, “All or nothing! It is a curious man’s nest
all the same; and what have they put up here? What is it?”
Close to the sparrows the roses were blooming; they were reflected in the
water, and the charred beams leaned against the overhanging chimney. “Do tell me
what this is. How comes this in a room at the Hall?” And all three sparrows
wanted to fly over the roses and the chimney, but flew against a flat wall. It
was all a picture, a great splendid picture, which the artist had painted from a
sketch.
“Peep!” said the sparrows, “it’s nothing. It only looks like something. Peep!
that is ‘the beautiful.’ Do you understand it? I don’t.”
And they flew away, for some people came into the room.
Days and years went by. The pigeons had often cooed, not to say growled—the
spiteful creatures; the sparrows had been frozen in winter and had lived merrily
in summer: they were all betrothed, or married, or whatever you like to call it.
They had little ones, and of course each one thought his own the handsomest and
cleverest; one flew this way, another that, and when they met they recognised
each other by their “Peep!” and the three scrapes with the left foot. The eldest
had remained an old maid and had no nest nor young ones. It was her pet idea to
see a great city, so she flew to Copenhagen.
There was a large house painted in many gay colours standing close to the
castle and the canal, upon which latter were to be seen many ships laden with
apples and pottery. The windows of the house were broader at the bottom than at
the top, and when the sparrows looked through them, every room appeared to them
like a tulip with the brightest colours and shades. But in the middle of the
tulip stood white men, made of marble; a few were of plaster; still, looked at
with sparrows’ eyes, that comes to the same thing. Up on the roof stood a metal
chariot drawn by metal horses, and the goddess of Victory, also of metal, was
driving. It was Thorwaldsen’s Museum.
“How it shines! how it shines!” said the maiden sparrow. “I suppose that is
‘the beautiful.’ Peep! But here it is larger than a peacock.” She still
remembered what in her childhood’s days her mother had looked upon as the
greatest among the beautiful. She flew down into the courtyard: there everything
was extremely fine. Palms and branches were painted on the walls, and in the
middle of the court stood a great blooming rose-tree spreading out its fresh
boughs, covered with roses, over a grave. Thither flew the maiden sparrow, for
she saw several of her own kind there. A “peep” and three foot-scrapings—in this
way she had often greeted throughout the year, and no one here had responded,
for those who are once parted do not meet every day; and so this greeting had
become a habit with her. But to-day two old sparrows and a young one answered
with a “peep” and the thrice-repeated scrape with the left foot.
“Ah! Good-day! good-day!” They were two old ones from the nest and a little
one of the family. “Do we meet here? It’s a grand place, but there’s not much to
eat. This is ‘the beautiful.’ Peep!”
Many people came out of the side rooms where the beautiful marble statues
stood and approached the grave where lay the great master who had created these
works of art. All stood with enraptured faces round Thorwaldsen’s grave, and a
few picked up the fallen rose-leaves and preserved them. They had come from
afar: one from mighty England, others from Germany and France. The fairest of
the ladies plucked one of the roses and hid it in her bosom. Then the sparrows
thought that the roses reigned here, and that the house had been built for their
sake. That appeared to them to be really too much, but since all the people
showed their love for the roses, they did not wish to be behindhand. “Peep!”
they said sweeping the ground with their tails, and blinking with one eye at the
roses, they had not looked at them long before they were convinced that they
were their old neighbours. And so they really were. The painter who had drawn
the rose-bush near the ruined house, had afterwards obtained permission to dig
it up, and had given it to the architect, for finer roses had never been seen.
The architect had planted it upon Thorwaldsen’s grave, where it bloomed as an
emblem of ‘the beautiful’ and yielded fragrant red rose-leaves to be carried as
mementoes to distant lands.
“Have you obtained an appointment here in the city?” asked the sparrows. The
roses nodded; they recognized their grey neighbours and were pleased to see them
again. “How glorious it is to live and to bloom, to see old friends again, and
happy faces every day. It is as if every day were a festival.” “Peep!” said the
sparrows. “Yes, they are really our old neighbours; we remember their origin
near the pond. Peep! how they have got on. Yes, some succeed while they are
asleep. Ah! there’s a faded leaf; I can see that quite plainly.” And they pecked
at it till it fell off. But the tree stood there fresher and greener than ever;
the roses bloomed in the sunshine on Thorwaldsen’s grave and became associated
with his immortal name.