WORLD OF STORIES FOR KIDS
DANISH FOLK TALES
The Tinder-Box
A SOLDIER came marching along the high roadleft, right! A left,
right! He had his knapsack on his back and a sword by his side, for he had been to
the wars and was now returning home.
An old witch met him on the road. She was very ugly to look at: her
under-lip hung down to her breast.
"Good evening, Soldier!" she said. "What a fine sword and knapsack you
have! You are something like a soldier! You ought to have as much money as you
would like to carry!"
"Thank you, old witch," said the soldier.
"Do you see that great tree there?" said the witch, pointing to a tree
beside them. "It is hollow within. You must climb up to the top, and then you will
see a hole through which you can let yourself down into the tree. I will tie a
rope round your waist, so that I may be able to pull you up again when you
call."
"What shall I do down there?" asked the soldier.
"Get money!" answered the witch. "Listen! When you reach the bottom of the
tree you will find yourself in a large hall; it is light there, for there are more
than three hundred lamps burning. Then you will see three doors, which you can
openthe keys are in the locks. If you go into the first room, you will see a
great chest in the middle of the floor with a dog sitting on it; he has eyes as
large as saucers, but you needn't trouble about him. I will give you my blue-check
apron, which you must spread out on the floor, and then go back quickly and fetch
the dog and set him on it; open the chest and take as much money as you like. It
is copper there. If you would rather have silver, you must go into the next room,
where there is a dog with eyes as large as mill-wheels. But don't take any notice
of him; just set him on my apron, and help yourself to the money. If you prefer
gold, you can get that too, if you go into the third room, and as much as you like
to carry. But the dog that guards the chest there has eyes as large as the Round
Tower at Copenhagen! He is a savage dog, I can tell you; but you needn't be afraid
of him either. Only, put him on my apron and he won't touch you, and you can take
out of the chest as much gold as you like!"
"Come, this is not bad!" said the soldier. "But what am I to give you, old
witch; for surely you are not going to do this for nothing?"
"Yes, I am!" replied the witch. "Not a single farthing will I take! For me
you shall bring nothing but an old tinder-box which my grandmother forgot last
time she was down there."
"Well, tie the rope round my waist! 'said the soldier.
"Here it is," said the witch, "and here is my blue-check apron."
Then the soldier climbed up the tree, let himself down through the hole,
and found himself standing, as the witch had said, underground in the large hall,
where the three hundred lamps were burning.
Well, he opened the first door. Ugh! there sat the dog with eyes as big as
saucers glaring at him.
"You are a fine fellow!" said the soldier, and put him on the witch's
apron, took as much copper as his pockets could hold; then he shut the chest, put
the dog on it again, and went into the second room. Sure enough there sat the dog
with eyes as large as mill-wheels.
"You had better not look at me so hard!" said the soldier. "Your eyes will
come out of their sockets!"
And then he set the dog on the apron. When he saw all the silver in the
chest, he threw away the copper he had taken, and filled his pockets and knapsack
with nothing but silver.
Then he went into the third room. Horrors! the dog there had two eyes,
each as large as the Round Tower at Copenhagen, spinning round in his head like
wheels.
"Good evening!" said the soldier and saluted, for he had never seen a dog
like this before. But when he had examined him more closely, he thought to
himself: "Now then, I've had enough of this!" and put him down on the floor, and
opened the chest. Heavens! what a heap of gold there was! With all that he could
buy up the whole town, and all the sugar pigs, all the tin soldiers, whips and
rocking-horses in the whole world. Now he threw away all the silver with which he
had filled his pockets and knapsack, and filled them with gold insteadyes,
all his pockets, his knapsack, cap and boots even, so that he could hardly walk.
Now he was rich indeed. He put the dog back on the chest, shut the door, and then
called up through the tree:
"Now pull me up again, old witch!"
"Have you got the tinder-box also?" asked the witch.
"Botheration!" said the soldier, "I had clean forgotten it!" And then he
went back and fetched it.
The witch pulled him up, and there he stood again on the high road, with
pockets, knapsack, cap and boots filled with gold.
"What do you want to do with the tinder-box?" asked the soldier.
"That doesn't matter to you," replied the witch. "You have got your money,
give me my tinder-box."
"We'll see!" said the soldier. "Tell me at once what you want to do with
it, or I will draw my sword, and cut off your head!"
"No!" screamed the witch.
The soldier immediately cut off her head. That was the end of her! But he
tied up all his gold in her apron, slung it like a bundle over his shoulder, put
the tinder-box in his pocket, and set out towards the town.
It was a splendid town! He turned into the finest inn, ordered the best
chamber and his favourite dinner; for now that he had so much money he was really
rich.
It certainly occurred to the servant who had to clean his boots that they
were astonishingly old boots for such a rich lord. But that was because he had not
yet bought new ones; next day he appeared in respectable boots and fine clothes.
Now, instead of a common soldier he had become a noble lord, and the people told
him about all the grand doings of the town and the king, and what a beautiful
princess his daughter was.
"How can one get to see her?" asked the soldier.
"She is never to be seen at all!" they told him; 'she lives in a great
copper castle, surrounded by many walls and towers! No one except the king may go
in or out, for it is prophesied that she will marry a common soldier, and the king
cannot submit to that."
"I should very much like to see her," thought the soldier; but he could
not get permission.
Now he lived very gaily, went to the theatre, drove in the king's garden,
and gave the poor a great deal of money, which was very nice of him; he had
experienced in former times how hard it is not to have a farthing in the world.
Now he was rich, wore fine clothes, and made many friends, who all said that he
was an excellent man, a real nobleman. And the soldier liked that. But as he was
always spending money, and never made any more, at last the day came when he had
nothing left but two shillings, and he had to leave the beautiful rooms in which
he had been living, and go into a little attic under the roof, and clean his own
boots, and mend them with a darning-needle. None of his friends came to visit him
there, for there were too many stairs to climb.
It was a dark evening, and he could not even buy a light. But all at once
it flashed across him that there was a little end of tinder in the tinder-box,
which he had taken from the hollow tree into which the witch had helped him down.
He found the box with the tinder in it; but just as he was kindling a light, and
had struck a spark out of the tinder-box, the door burst open, and the dog with
eyes as large as saucers, which he had seen down in the tree, stood before him and
said:
"What does my lord command?"
"What's the meaning of this?" exclaimed the soldier. "This is a pretty
kind of tinder-box, if I can get whatever I want like this. Get me money!" he
cried to the dog, and hey, presto! he was off and back again, holding a great
purse full of money in his mouth.
Now the soldier knew what a capital tinder-box this was. If he rubbed
once, the dog that sat on the chest of copper appeared; if he rubbed twice, there
came the dog that watched over the silver chest; and if he rubbed three times, the
one that guarded the gold appeared. Now, the soldier went down again to his
beautiful rooms, and appeared once more in splendid clothes. All his friends
immediately recognised him again, and paid him great court.
One day he thought to himself: "It is very strange that no one can get to
see the princess. They all say she is very pretty, but what's the use of that if
she has to sit for ever in the great copper castle with all the towers? Can I not
manage to see her somehow? Where is my tinder-box?" and so he struck a spark, and,
presto! there came the dog with eyes as large as saucers.
"It is the middle of the night, I know," said the soldier; "but I should
very much like to see the princess for a moment."
The dog was already outside the door, and before the soldier could look
round, in he came with the princess. She was lying asleep on the dog's back, and
was so beautiful that anyone could see she was a real princess. The soldier really
could not refrain from kissing herhe was such a thorough Soldier. Then the
dog ran back with the princess. But when it was morning, and the king and queen
were drinking tea, the princess said that the night before she had had such a
strange dream about a dog and a Soldier: she had ridden on the dog's back, and the
soldier had kissed her.
"That is certainly a fine story," said the queen. But the next night one
of the ladies-in-waiting was to watch at the princess's bed, to see if it was only
a dream, or if it had actually happened.
The soldier had an overpowering longing to see the princess again, and so
the dog came in the middle of the night and fetched her, running as fast as he
could. But the lady-in-waiting slipped on indiarubber shoes and followed them.
When she saw them disappear into a large house, she thought to herself: "Now I
know where it is; "and made a great cross on the door with a piece of chalk. Then
she went home and lay down, and the dog came back also, with the princess. But
when he saw that a cross had been made on the door of the house where the soldier
lived, he took a piece of chalk also, and made crosses on all the doors in the
town; and that was very clever, for now the lady-in-waiting could not find the
right house, as there were crosses on all the doors.
Early next morning the king, queen, ladies-in-waiting, and officers came
out to see where the princess had been.
"There it is!" said the king, when he saw the first door with a cross on
it.
"No, there it is, my dear!" said the queen, when she likewise saw a door
with a cross.
"But here is one, and there is another!" they all exclaimed; wherever they
looked there was a cross on the door. Then they realised that the sign would not
help them at all.
But the queen was an extremely clever woman, who could do a great deal
more than just drive in a coach. She took her great golden scissors, cut up a
piece of silk, and made a pretty little bag of it. This she filled with the finest
buckwheat grains, and tied it round the princess' neck; this done, she cut a
little hole in the bag, so that the grains would strew the whole road wherever the
princess went.
In the night the dog came again, took the princess on his back and ran
away with her to the soldier, who was very much in love with her, and would have
liked to have been a prince, so that he might have had her for his wife.
The dog did not notice how the grains were strewn right from the castle to
the soldier's window, where he ran up the wall with the princess.
In the morning the king and the queen saw plainly where their daughter had
been, and they took the soldier and put him into prison.
There he sat. Oh, how dark and dull it was there! And they told him:
"To-morrow you are to be hanged." Hearing that did not exactly cheer him, and he
had left his tinder-box in the inn.
Next morning he could see through the iron grating in front of his little
window how the people were hurrying out of the town to see him hanged. He heard
the drums and saw the soldiers marching; all the people were running to and fro.
Just below his window was a shoemaker's apprentice, with leather apron and shoes;
he was skipping along so merrily that one of his shoes flew off and fell against
the wall, just where the soldier was sitting peeping through the iron
grating.
"Oh, shoemaker's boy, you needn't be in such a hurry!" said the soldier to
him. "There's nothing going on till I arrive. But if you will run back to the
house where I lived, and fetch me my tinder-box, I will give you four shillings.
But you must put your best foot foremost."
The shoemaker's boy was very willing to earn four shillings, and fetched
the tinder-box, gave it to the soldier, andyesnow you shall
hear.
Outside the town a great scaffold had been erected, and all round were
standing the soldiers, and hundreds of thousands of people. The king and queen
were sitting on a magnificent throne opposite the judges and the whole
council.
The soldier was already standing on the top of the ladder; but when they
wanted to put the rope round his neck, he said that the fulfilment of one innocent
request was always granted to a poor criminal before he underwent his punishment.
He would so much like to smoke a small pipe of tobacco; it would be his last pipe
in this world.
The king could not refuse him this, and so he took out his tinder-box, and
rubbed it once, twice, three times. And lo, and behold I there stood all three
dogsthe one with eyes as large as saucers, the second with eyes as large as
mill-wheels, and the third with eyes each as large as the Round Tower of
Copenhagen.
"Help me now, so that I may not be hanged!" cried the soldier. And
thereupon the dogs fell on the judges and the whole council, seized some by the
legs, others by the nose, and threw them so high into the air that they fell and
were smashed into pieces.
"I won't stand this!" said the king; but the largest dog seized him too,
and the queen as well, and threw them up after the others. This frightened the
soldiers, and all the people cried: "Good Soldier, you shall be our king, and
marry the beautiful princess!"
Then they put the soldier into the king's coach, and the three dogs danced
in front, crying "Hurrah!" And the boys whistled and the soldiers presented
arms.
The princess came out of the copper castle, and became queen; and that
pleased her very much.
The wedding festivities lasted for eight days, and the dogs sat at table
and made eyes at everyone.
[H.C. Andersen]
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