Hans Christian Andersen Audio books for children
Adapted by Sue Reid
Once
there were twenty-five tin soldiers. They were all made out of
the same tin kitchen spoon and were all alike
– except for one. This soldier had
only one leg. He was the last to be
moulded and there had not been enough tin to give him two. But
he
stood just as straight and proud as
his brothers, in his smart red and blue uniform, his musket over one shoulder.
The
soldiers were a birthday present for
a little boy. The boy was very
pleased with his soldiers and he took them out of their box and stood them up on a table. The
table
was already covered with toys. The
prettiest toy of all was a paper castle. It had little windows
so you could see into the rooms and
in front of it were tiny trees around
a lake of glass. On its surface were
little swans made out of wax. In the castle’s open doorway stood a
girl.
She
was the prettiest girl the soldier
had ever seen. She was made of paper like the castle, but she wore a skirt of finest muslin and
had a scarf of blue ribbon, which was
fastened by a glittering tinsel rose. Her arms were outstretched and she stood
on one leg, like a dancer. Her other leg was raised so high
behind her that the soldier couldn’t
see it. He thought she had only one leg like
him.
‘Why,
that girl has only one leg like me,’ he thought. ‘What a perfect wife she
would make me. But,’ he sighed sadly, ‘she is too grand
for me. She lives in a castle and my home is a box which I share with twenty-four
soldiers. I can’t ask such a pretty
creature
to live in a box! But I could try and get to know her.
What harm would there be in
that?’
So
the soldier lay down behind a jack in
a box, which was where he could see her best, and gazed and gazed at the
little dancer.
That
evening, when all the other tin
soldiers had been put back in their box
and everyone had gone to bed, the toys
began to play. What a din they made. The tin soldiers rattled in their box. The nutcrackers turned somersaults. The slate pencil
squeaked on the slate. They made such
a noise that the canary woke up and
joined in too. The only two that were
quite still were the soldier and the dancer.
She stood on one toe and he on his one leg – and not once did he take his eyes
off her.
The
clock struck twelve. Suddenly the lid flew off the jack in a box, and out popped a goblin. He looked at the soldier who was still gazing at the dancer. ‘Tin soldier,’ he screeched.
‘Don’t wish for what does not belong
to you.’
The tin soldier pretended
he hadn’t heard.
‘Just you wait
till morning. And don’t say I haven’t warned
you,’
the goblin said.
In
the morning the children came in to play
and the little boy put the tin
soldier on the window sill. But all of a sudden something - maybe it was
a draught or the little goblin - made
the window swing open. And the poor soldier was
knocked right off the sill and out of
the window. Down, down the soldier
fell, spinning like a top all three
storeys to the ground. It was a dreadful
fall. His leg pointed upwards, his
head was down and he came to a halt
at last with his bayonet stuck in
between the paving stones.
The
boy and a servant went outside to try and find him. They looked for him everywhere.
They almost stood on top of him but even
then they didn’t see him. The soldier
was so quiet and still. He was too proud to call for help. Soldiers in uniform don’t call for help, he thought.
While
he was lying there it began to rain. The drops splashed on the soldier. Faster
and faster the rain fell. It ran down the pavement and splashed into the gutter. Soon the poor soldier was
drenched through.
When
the rain stopped at last two boys came out to play on the pavement.
They saw the tin soldier standing there, his bayonet
still stuck in the ground. ‘Look! A tin soldier,’ one of them said. ‘Let’s
put him out to sea.’
They
made him a boat of newspaper, put
the soldier aboard and set the boat down in the gutter, which by now was
full of rainwater. Away
the boat sped, floating down the
gutter. The boys ran alongside,
clapping their hands. But oh, how rough the water
was in that gutter. Up and down the boat rocked and big waves picked the boat
up
and
whirled it about until the poor soldier felt quite giddy. But he stood as steadfast as ever, looking straight ahead, his musket over
his shoulder.
Suddenly
the boat tipped into a tunnel that ran
under the pavement. It was dark in that tunnel, as dark as the box at home. ‘Where am I?’ the soldier
wondered. ‘Where am I going? This must be all the fault of that goblin. Ah, if
only that pretty girl was here in the
boat with me, I wouldn’t care how
dark it was.’
Just then a water rat
rushed out of its home in the tunnel. ‘Where do you think
you’re going,’
it growled. ‘This is my tunnel. Show
me your passport. You can’t
travel
through this tunnel without a passport.’
The
soldier didn’t answer. He gripped his musket even
more tightly and the boat hurtled on. The rat
swam after it, grinding its teeth
angrily. ‘Here. Stop him. Stop him,’ the rat
yelled to the sticks and straws floating
on the water. ‘He hasn’t shown me
his passport. He hasn’t paid his toll.’
But
nothing could stop that boat now. The
stream ran stronger and stronger. Ahead
now the soldier could see glimpses of daylight
where the tunnel came to an end.
He
could hear a strange roaring in his
ears, like the noise a waterfall makes. There, at the end of the tunnel, the stream thundered downwards into a canal. Imagine!
It
must have been as frightening a ride
for the tin soldier as a plunge down a giant waterfall
would be for us.
But
he was so near the edge now that
there was nothing he could do. So he stood stiff and still while the
boat raced on and plunged downwards, over
the edge. Down the boat hurtled on that great tide of water. He didn’t blink an eye…as once, twice, three times the boat whirled round, each time filling
up more with water. Soon the boat was full to the brim and only the tin soldier’s
neck and head could be seen.
Deeper
and deeper the boat sank. Softer and softer the paper grew, until the water closed right over
the tin soldier’s head. And as he sank, he thought about the lovely little dancer who he would never see again. In his ears rang the words of a song.
‘Onward, onward, warrior, Meet your
fate; show no fear.’
The
boat reached the bottom and away
floated the soldier – straight into
the open mouth of a huge fish. And with one great gulp the fish had
swallowed the tin soldier whole.
It wasn’t at all comfortable
inside that fish. It was
dark – even darker than the tunnel
-
and there wasn’t much room to move
about. But the soldier didn’t lose
his courage. He lay there in the fish’s stomach, his musket still over
his shoulder.
Suddenly
he felt the fish jerk, and it began to twist and thrash around in the water. Inside the fish’s stomach
the poor soldier bumped up and down and from side to side. Then just as
suddenly the thrashing stopped and
something flashed through the fish like a streak of lightning.
The
soldier looked up – into the bright
light of a busy kitchen. After the dark the bright light dazzled him. ‘Why! It’s the tin soldier!’ he heard a voice exclaim.
And
how had he come to be there? Well,
the fish that had swallowed
him had been caught, taken to market and sold and then carried into the
kitchen where the cook had cut it open with a large knife.
Now
the cook picked up the soldier, between her finger and thumb, and carried him into the living room so
that all the family could see and admire him. ‘What a remarkable soldier he is,’ he heard the family say.
‘He must be proud of himself.’ But the tin soldier didn’t feel proud. ‘What have I to be proud of?’ he thought.
He was put down on the table – in the very room where all his adventures had begun. And there were all the
toys; there were the children. There was the
fine paper castle. And there
too was the little dancer, still poised just as gracefully on one leg.
‘She
is as steadfast as me’, the soldier
thought. He felt his eyes fill with
tears. He wanted to cry. But soldiers don’t cry. He looked at her and she looked at him. But neither of them said a word
to the other.
And
then something dreadful happened. One of the children picked up the tin soldier and flung him
headfirst into the burning stove. Why
did he do such a thing? It must have
been the goblin’s fault. He must have whispered in the boy’s
ear and guided his hand.
The
soldier stood steadfast, while all around him the flames danced and crackled.
The heat in the stove felt very fierce. But whether such fierce heat came
from the flames or from his burning love he did not know. His bright colours had all gone now, but whether they had faded on his journey or through his sorrow, who could say?
He
looked at the little dancer and she
at him. He felt as if he was melting
in the heat, but he stood as steadfast as ever, his musket still over his
shoulder.
Suddenly
the door of the stove flew open. A gust of air caught the
pretty little paper dancer and she flew
like a fairy right into the stove, straight
to the waiting tin soldier. And there the flames caught her and in
a flash she was gone.
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