The Old Grave Stone
by
Hans Christian Andersen
(1852)
In a house, with a large courtyard, in a
provincial town, at that time of the year in which people say the evenings are
growing longer, a family circle were gathered together at their old home. A lamp
burned on the table, although the weather was mild and warm, and the long
curtains hung down before the open windows, and without the moon shone brightly
in the dark-blue sky.
But they were not talking of the moon, but of a large, old
stone that lay below in the courtyard not very far from the kitchen door. The
maids often laid the clean copper saucepans and kitchen vessels on this stone,
that they might dry in the sun, and the children were fond of playing on it. It
was, in fact, an old grave-stone.
“Yes,” said the master of the house, “I believe the stone
came from the graveyard of the old church of the convent which was pulled down,
and the pulpit, the monuments, and the grave-stones sold. My father bought the
latter; most of them were cut in two and used for paving-stones, but that one
stone was preserved whole, and laid in the courtyard.”
“Any one can see that it is a grave-stone,” said the
eldest of the children; “the representation of an hour-glass and part of the
figure of an angel can still be traced, but the inscription beneath is quite
worn out, excepting the name ‘Preben,’ and a large ‘S’ close by it, and a little
farther down the name of ‘Martha’ can be easily read. But nothing more, and even
that cannot be seen unless it has been raining, or when we have washed the
stone.”
“Dear me! how singular. Why that must be the grave-stone
of Preben Schwane and his wife.”
The old man who said this looked old enough to be the
grandfather of all present in the room.
“Yes,” he continued, “these people were among the last who
were buried in the churchyard of the old convent. They were a very worthy old
couple, I can remember them well in the days of my boyhood. Every one knew them,
and they were esteemed by all. They were the oldest residents in the town, and
people said they possessed a ton of gold, yet they were always very plainly
dressed, in the coarsest stuff, but with linen of the purest whiteness. Preben
and Martha were a fine old couple, and when they both sat on the bench, at the
top of the steep stone steps, in front of their house, with the branches of the
linden-tree waving above them, and nodded in a gentle, friendly way to passers
by, it really made one feel quite happy. They were very good to the poor; they
fed them and clothed them, and in their benevolence there was judgment as well
as true Christianity. The old woman died first; that day is still quite vividly
before my eyes. I was a little boy, and had accompanied my father to the old
man’s house. Martha had fallen into the sleep of death just as we arrived there.
The corpse lay in a bedroom, near to the one in which we sat, and the old man
was in great distress and weeping like a child. He spoke to my father, and to a
few neighbors who were there, of how lonely he should feel now she was gone, and
how good and true she, his dead wife, had been during the number of years that
they had passed through life together, and how they had become acquainted, and
learnt to love each other. I was, as I have said, a boy, and only stood by and
listened to what the others said; but it filled me with a strange emotion to
listen to the old man, and to watch how the color rose in his cheeks as he spoke
of the days of their courtship, of how beautiful she was, and how many little
tricks he had been guilty of, that he might meet her. And then he talked of his
wedding-day; and his eyes brightened, and he seemed to be carried back, by his
words, to that joyful time. And yet there she was, lying in the next room,
dead—an old woman, and he was an old man, speaking of the days of hope, long
passed away. Ah, well, so it is; then I was but a child, and now I am old, as
old as Preben Schwane then was. Time passes away, and all things changed. I can
remember quite well the day on which she was buried, and how Old Preben walked
close behind the coffin.
“A few years before this time the old couple had had their
grave-stone prepared, with an inscription and their names, but not the date. In
the evening the stone was taken to the churchyard, and laid on the grave. A year
later it was taken up, that Old Preben might be laid by the side of his wife.
They did not leave behind them wealth, they left behind them far less than
people had believed they possessed; what there was went to families distantly
related to them, of whom, till then, no one had ever heard. The old house, with
its balcony of wickerwork, and the bench at the top of the high steps, under the
lime-tree, was considered, by the road-inspectors, too old and rotten to be left
standing. Afterwards, when the same fate befell the convent church, and the
graveyard was destroyed, the grave-stone of Preben and Martha, like everything
else, was sold to whoever would buy it. And so it happened that this stone was
not cut in two as many others had been, but now lies in the courtyard below, a
scouring block for the maids, and a playground for the children. The paved
street now passes over the resting place of Old Preben and his wife; no one
thinks of them any more now.”
And the old man who had spoken of all this shook his head
mournfully, and said, “Forgotten! Ah, yes, everything will be forgotten!” And
then the conversation turned on other matters.
But the youngest child in the room, a boy, with large,
earnest eyes, mounted upon a chair behind the window curtains, and looked out
into the yard, where the moon was pouring a flood of light on the old
gravestone,—the stone that had always appeared to him so dull and flat, but
which lay there now like a great leaf out of a book of history. All that the boy
had heard of Old Preben and his wife seemed clearly defined on the stone, and as
he gazed on it, and glanced at the clear, bright moon shining in the pure air,
it was as if the light of God’s countenance beamed over His beautiful world.
“Forgotten! Everything will be forgotten!” still echoed
through the room, and in the same moment an invisible spirit whispered to the
heart of the boy, “Preserve carefully the seed that has been entrusted to thee,
that it may grow and thrive. Guard it well. Through thee, my child, shall the
obliterated inscription on the old, weather-beaten grave-stone go forth to
future generations in clear, golden characters. The old pair shall again wander
through the streets arm-in-arm, or sit with their fresh, healthy cheeks on the
bench under the lime-tree, and smile and nod at rich and poor. The seed of this
hour shall ripen in the course of years into a beautiful poem. The beautiful and
the good are never forgotten, they live always in story or in song.”