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Switzerland. Gertrude And Rosy

Gertrude And Rosy

Gertrude.

Quick,
daughter, quick! spin off what's on your rock.

'Tis Saturday night, and with the week you know

Our work must end; we shall the more enjoy

To-morrow's rest when all 's done out of hand. [a]

Quick, daughter, quick! spin off what 's on your rock.
Rosy.


True, mother, but every minute sleep

Falls on my eyes as heavy as lead, and I

Must yawn do what I will; and then God knows

I can't help nodding though 'twere for my life;

Or... oh! it might be of some use if you

Would once more, dearest mother, tell about

The wonderful, good-natured little Dwarfs,

What they here round the country used to do,

And how they showed their kindness to the hinds.
Gertrude.


See now! what industry!--your work itself

Should keep you waking. I have told you o'er

A thousand times the stories, and we lose,

If you grow wearied of them, store of joy

Reserved for winter-nights; besides, methinks,

The evening 's now too short for chat like this.
Rosy.


There 's only one thing I desire to hear

Again, and. sure, dear mother, never yet

Have you explained how 'twas the little men

Lived in the hills, and how, all through the year,

They sported round the country here, and gave

Marks of their kindness. For you 'll ne'er persuade

Me to believe that barely, one by one,

They wandered in the valleys, and appeared

Unto the people, and bestowed their gifts:

So, come now, tell at once, how 'twas the Dwarfs

Lived all together in society.
Gertrude.

'Tis plain, however, of itself, and well

Wise folks can see, that such an active race

Would never with their hands before them sit.

Ah! a right merry lively thing, and full

Of roguish tricks, the little Hill-man is,

And quickly too he gets into a rage,

If you behave not toward him mannerly,

And be not frank and delicate in your acts.

But, above all things, they delight to dwell,

Quiet and peaceful, in the secret clefts

Of hills and mountains, evermore concealed.

All through the winter, when with icy rind

The frost doth cover o'er the earth, the wise

And prudent little people keep them warm

By their fine fires, many a fathom down

Within the inmost rocks. Pure native gold,

And the rock-crystals shaped like towers, clear,

Transparent, gleam with colours thousandfold

Through the fair palace, and the Little-folk,

So happy and so gay, amuse themselves

Sometimes with singing--Oh, so sweet! 'twould charm

The heart of any one who heard it sound.

Sometimes with dancing, when they jump and spring

Like the young skipping kids in the Alp-grass.

Then when the spring is come, and in the fields

The flowers are blooming, with sweet May's approach,

They bolts and bars take from their doors and gates,

That early ere the hind or hunter stirs,

In the cool morning, they may sport and play;

Or ramble in the evening, when the moon

Lights up the plains. Seldom hath mortal man

Beheld them with his eyes; but should one chance

To see them, it betokens suffering

And a bad year, if bent in woe they glide

Through woods and thickets; but the sight proclaims

Joy and good luck, when social, in a ring,

On the green meads and fields, their hair adorned

With flowers, they shout and whirl their merry rounds.

Abundance then they joyously announce

For barn, for cellar, and for granary,

And a blest year to men, to herds, and game.

Thus they do constantly foreshow what will

Befall to-morrow and hereafter; now

Sighing, and still, by their lamenting tones,

A furious tempest; and again, with sweet

And smiling lips, and shouting, clear bright skies. [b]

Chief to the poor and good, they love to show

Kindness and favour, often bringing home

At night the straying lambs, and oftener still

In springtime nicely spreading, in the wood,

Brushwood, in noble bundles, in the way

Of needy children gone to fetch home fuel.

Many a good little girl, who well obeyed

Her mother,--or, mayhap, a little boy,--

Has, with surprise, found lying on the hills

Bright dazzling bowls of milk, and baskets too,

Nice little baskets, full of berries, left

By the kind hands of the wood-roaming Dwarfs.

Now be attentive while I tell you one

Out of a hundred and a hundred stories;

'Tis one, however, that concerns us more

Than all the rest, because it was my own

Great-great-grandfather that the thing befell,

In the old time, in years long since agone.

Where from the lofty rocks the boundary runs

Down to the vale, Barthel, of herdsmen first

In all the country round, was ploughing up

A spacious field, where he designed to try

The seed of corn; but with anxiety

His heart was filled, lest by any chance

His venture should miscarry, for his sheep

In the contagion he had lost, now poor

And without skill, he ventures on the plough.

Deliberate and still, at the plough-tail,

In furrows he cuts up the grassy soil,

While with the goad his little boy drives on

The panting ox. When, lo! along the tall

Rocky hill-side, a smoke ascends in clouds

Like snow-flakes, soaring from the summit up

Into the sky. At this the hungry boy

Began to think of food, for the poor child

Had tasted nothing all the live-long day

For lunch, and, looking up, he thus began:

"Ah! there the little Dwarf-folk are so gay

At their grand cooking, roasting, boiling now,

For a fine banquet, while with hunger I

Am dying. Had we here one little dish

Of the nice savoury food, were it but as

A sign that there 's a blessing on our work!"

'Twas thus the boy spake, and his father ploughed

Silently on, bent forwards o'er his work.

They turn the plough; when huzza! lo! behold

A miracle! there gleamed right from the midst

Of the dark furrow, toward them, a bright

Lustre, and there so charming! lay a plate

Heaped up with roast meat; by the plate, a loaf

Of bread upon the outspread table-cloth,

At the disposal of the honest pair.

Hurra! long live the friendly, generous Dwarfs!

Barthel had now enough--so had the boy--

And laughing gratefully and loud, they praise

And thank the givers; then, with strength restored,

They quick return unto their idle plough.

But when again their day's task they resume,

To break more of the field, encouraged now

To hope for a good crop, since the kind Dwarfs

Had given them the sign of luck they asked--

Hush! bread and plate, and crums, and knife and fork,

Were vanished clean; only--just for a sign

For ever of the truth--lay on the ridge

The white, nice-woven, pretty table-cloth.
Rosy.

O
mother! mother! what? the glittering plate

And real? and the cloth with their own hands

Spun by the generous Dwarfs? No, I can ne'er

Believe it!--Was the thread then, real drawn

And. twisted thread, set in it evenly?

And was there too a flower, a pretty figure,

Nicely wrought in with warp and crossing woof?

Did there a handsome border go all round,

Enclosing all the figures?--Sure your great-

Great-grandfather, if really he was

The owner of the curious little cloth,

He would have left it carefully unto

His son and grandson for a legacy,

That, for a lasting witness of the meal

Given by the Dwarfs, it might to distant years,

The praise and wonder of our vale remain.
Gertrude.


Odds me! how wise the child is! what a loss

And pity 'tis that in old times the folk

Were not so thoughtful and so over-knowing!

Ah! our poor simple fathers should rise up

Out of their graves, and come to get advice

And comfort from the brooders that are now,--

As if they knew not what was right and fit!

Have but a little patience, girl, and spin

What's on your rock; to-morrow when 'tis day

I'll let you see the Dwarfs' flowered table-cloth,

Which, in the chest laid safe, inherited

From mother down to daughter, I have, long

Kept treasured under lock and key, for fear

Some little girl, like some one that you know,

Might out of curiosity, and not

Acquainted with its worth, set it astray.
ROSY.
Ah, that is kind, dear mother; and see now

How broad awake I am, and how so smart

I'm finishing my work since you relate

These pretty tales; but I will call you up

Out of your bed to-morrow in the morning

So early I Oh, I wish now it were day

Already, for I 'm sure I shall not get

One wink of sleep for thinking of the cloth. [c]

[a] It is a notion in some parts of Germany, that if a girl leaves any flax or tow on her distaff unspun on Saturday night, none of what remains will make good thread. Grimm, Deut. Mythol. Anhang, p. lxxii.
[b] "Glanz "is the term employed in Switzerland.
[c] This legend was picked up by a friend of Mr. Wyss when on a topographical ramble in the neighbourhood of Bern. It was told to him by a peasant of Belp; "but," says Mr. Wyss, "if I recollect right, this man said it was a nice smoking-hot cake that was on the plate, and it was a servant, not the man's son, who was driving the plough. The circumstance of the table-cloth being handed down from mother to daughter," he adds, "is a fair addition which I have allowed myself."
The writer recollects to have heard this story, when a boy, from an old woman in Ireland; and he could probably point out the very field in the county of Kildare where it occurred. A man and a boy were ploughing: the boy, as they were about in the middle of their furrow, smelled roast beef, and wished for some. As they returned, it was lying on the grass before them. When they had eaten, the boy said "God bless me, and God bless the fairies!" The man did not give thanks, and he met with misfortunes very shortly after.
--The same legend is also in Scotland.
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