The Steadfast Tin Soldier
Hans christian anderson
There were once five-and-twenty tin soldiers. They were all
brothers, born of the same old tin spoon. They shouldered their muskets and
looked straight ahead of them, splendid in their uniforms, all red and blue.
The very first thing in the world that they heard was, "Tin
soldiers!" A small boy shouted it and clapped his hands as the lid was
lifted off their box on his birthday. He immediately set them up on the table.
All the soldiers looked exactly alike except one. He looked a
little different as he had been cast last of all. The tin was short, so he had
only one leg. But there he stood, as steady on one leg as any of the other
soldiers on their two. But just you see, he'll be the remarkable one.
On the table with the soldiers were many other playthings, and one
that no eye could miss was a marvelous castle of cardboard. It had little
windows through which you could look right inside it. And in front of the
castle were miniature trees around a little mirror supposed to represent a
lake. The wax swans that swam on its surface were reflected in the mirror. All
this was very pretty but prettiest of all was the little lady who stood in the
open doorway of the castle. Though she was a paper doll, she wore a dress of
the fluffiest gauze. A tiny blue ribbon went over her shoulder for a scarf, and
in the middle of it shone a spangle that was as big as her face. The little
lady held out both her arms, as a ballet dancer does, and one leg was lifted so
high behind her that the tin soldier couldn't see it at all, and he supposed
she must have only one leg, as he did.
"That would be a wife for me," he thought. "But
maybe she's too grand. She lives in a castle. I have only a box, with
four-and-twenty roommates to share it. That's no place for her. But I must try
to make her acquaintance." Still as stiff as when he stood at attention,
he lay down on the table behind a snuffbox, where he could admire the dainty
little dancer who kept standing on one leg without ever losing her balance.
When the evening came the other tin soldiers were put away in
their box, and the people of the house went to bed. Now the toys began to play
among themselves at visits, and battles, and at giving balls. The tin soldiers
rattled about in their box, for they wanted to play too, but they could not get
the lid open. The nutcracker turned somersaults, and the slate pencil squeaked
out jokes on the slate. The toys made such a noise that they woke up the canary
bird, who made them a speech, all in verse. The only two who stayed still were
the tin soldier and the little dancer. Without ever swerving from the tip of
one toe, she held out her arms to him, and the tin soldier was just as
steadfast on his one leg. Not once did he take his eyes off her.
Then the clock struck twelve and - clack! - up popped the lid of
the snuffbox. But there was no snuff in it, no-out bounced a little black
bogey, a jack-in-the-box.
"Tin soldier," he said. "Will you please keep your
eyes to yourself?" The tin soldier pretended not to hear.
The bogey said, "Just you wait till tomorrow."
But when morning came, and the children got up, the soldier was
set on the window ledge. And whether the bogey did it, or there was a gust of
wind, all of a sudden the window flew open and the soldier pitched out headlong
from the third floor. He fell at breathtaking speed and landed cap first, with
his bayonet buried between the paving stones and his one leg stuck straight in
the air. The housemaid and the little boy ran down to look for him and, though
they nearly stepped on the tin soldier, they walked right past without seeing
him. If the soldier had called, "Here I am!" they would surely have
found him, but he thought it contemptible to raise an uproar while he was
wearing his uniform.
Soon it began to rain. The drops fell faster and faster, until
they came down by the bucketful. As soon as the rain let up, along came two
young rapscallions.
"Hi, look!" one of them said, "there's a tin
soldier. Let's send him sailing."
They made a boat out of newspaper, put the tin soldier in the
middle of it, and away he went down the gutter with the two young rapscallions
running beside him and clapping their hands. High heavens! How the waves
splashed, and how fast the water ran down the gutter. Don't forget that it had
just been raining by the bucketful. The paper boat pitched, and tossed, and
sometimes it whirled about so rapidly that it made the soldier's head spin. But
he stood as steady as ever. Never once flinching, he kept his eyes front, and
carried his gun shoulder-high. Suddenly the boat rushed under a long plank
where the gutter was boarded over. It was as dark as the soldier's own box.
"Where can I be going?" the soldier wondered. "This
must be that black bogey's revenge. Ah! if only I had the little lady with me,
it could be twice as dark here for all that I would care."
Out popped a great water rat who lived under the gutter plank.
"Have you a passport?" said the rat. "Hand it
over."
The soldier kept quiet and held his musket tighter. On rushed the
boat, and the rat came right after it, gnashing his teeth as he called to the
sticks and straws:
"Halt him! Stop him! He didn't pay his toll. He hasn't shown
his passport. "But the current ran stronger and stronger. The soldier
could see daylight ahead where the board ended, but he also heard a roar that
would frighten the bravest of us. Hold on! Right at the end of that gutter
plank the water poured into the great canal. It was as dangerous to him as a
waterfall would be to us.
He was so near it he could not possibly stop. The boat plunged
into the whirlpool. The poor tin soldier stood as staunch as he could, and no
one can say that he so much as blinked an eye. Thrice and again the boat spun
around. It filled to the top - and was bound to sink. The water was up to his
neck and still the boat went down, deeper, deeper, deeper, and the paper got
soft and limp. Then the water rushed over his head. He thought of the pretty
little dancer whom he'd never see again, and in his ears rang an old, old song:
"Farewell, farewell, O warrior brave,
Nobody can from Death thee save."
And now the paper boat broke beneath him, and the soldier sank
right through. And just at that moment he was swallowed by a most enormous
fish.
My! how dark it was inside that fish. It was darker than under the
gutter-plank and it was so cramped, but the tin soldier still was staunch. He
lay there full length, soldier fashion, with musket to shoulder.
Then the fish flopped and floundered in a most unaccountable way.
Finally it was perfectly still, and after a while something struck through him
like a flash of lightning. The tin soldier saw daylight again, and he heard a
voice say, "The Tin Soldier!" The fish had been caught, carried to
market, bought, and brought to a kitchen where the cook cut him open with her
big knife.
She picked the soldier up bodily between her two fingers, and
carried him off upstairs. Everyone wanted to see this remarkable traveler who
had traveled about in a fish's stomach, but the tin soldier took no pride in
it. They put him on the table and-lo and behold, what curious things can happen
in this world-there he was, back in the same room as before. He saw the same
children, the same toys were on the table, and there was the same fine castle
with the pretty little dancer. She still balanced on one leg, with the other
raised high. She too was steadfast. That touched the soldier so deeply that he
would have cried tin tears, only soldiers never cry. He looked at her, and she
looked at him, and never a word was said. Just as things were going so nicely
for them, one of the little boys snatched up the tin soldier and threw him into
the stove. He did it for no reason at all. That black bogey in the snuffbox
must have put him up to it.
The tin soldier stood there dressed in flames. He felt a terrible
heat, but whether it came from the flames or from his love he didn't know. He'd
lost his splendid colors, maybe from his hard journey, maybe from grief, nobody
can say.
He looked at the little lady, and she looked at him, and he felt
himself melting. But still he stood steadfast, with his musket held trim on his
shoulder.
Then the door blew open. A puff of wind struck the dancer. She
flew like a sylph, straight into the fire with the soldier, blazed up in a
flash, and was gone. The tin soldier melted, all in a lump. The next day, when
a servant took up the ashes she found him in the shape of a little tin heart.
But of the pretty dancer nothing was left except her spangle, and it was burned
as black as a coal.
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