THUMBELINA
Adapted by Sue Reid
Once
there was a woman who longed for a
child of her own. So she went to a witch to ask for help. ‘Old witch,’ she
said. ‘I would dearly like to have a child of my own. Can you help
me?’
‘Ah, that’s easy,’ said the witch. ‘Here’s a barleycorn
for you. Take it home and plant
it in a pot. Then wait and see what
happens.’
‘Oh
thank you,’ said the woman. She hurried home and planted the grain in a pot. At once a flower began to grow.
‘What
a pretty flower,’
exclaimed the woman and she bent down
to kiss the petals. As she did, the petals burst open.
There,
sitting in the middle of the flower, was
a little girl. ‘How tiny and delicate
she is,’ said the woman. ‘Why,
she is no bigger than the tip of my
thumb. I will call her Thumbelina.’
Thumbelina
was very
contented. At night she slept under a
rose petal in a polished walnut
shell. By day she rowed herself
across a bowl of water the woman had
put out for her.
As she rowed she sang. She had
the sweetest voice you’ve
ever heard.
One night, while Thumbelina
was asleep, a toad hopped through the window.
‘Now there be a handsome
wife for my son,’ the big wet toad croaked, thumping down onto the table where
Thumbelina lay.
She
picked up the walnut shell and hopped with it back to her home in the mud by
the edge of a stream.
But ‘Croak croak, brek-kek-kex,’ was
all the toad’s son said when he saw
Thumbelina.
‘Shhh!
Don’t speak so loudly. You
might wake her,’ his mother said. ‘We must put her somewhere where she cannot
escape. I know,’ she said, when she had thought for a time. ‘I’ll put her on
a water lily out in the stream.’
So Toad swam
out to the centre of the stream and set the walnut
shell down on the leaf of the biggest water
lily. When Thumbelina woke and saw where she was, she began to cry. All she could see around her was water. ‘How will I ever get back to land,’
she said sadly.
Back
on the bank the toad was very busy,
carrying rushes and yellow water flowers
from the stream to decorate the room
where her son and his bride would live.
‘How happy my son and his new bride will be,’ she thought.
Then
the toads swam out to the leaf in the
stream where Thumbelina was perched.
The old toad made a deep bow to Thumbelina. ‘This is my son,’ she said. ‘You are to marry him and live with him in our fine house under the
mud.’
‘Croak croak. Brek-kek-kex,’ was
all that her son could say.
After
the toads had swum away Thumbelina
sat and cried on the leaf. ‘I do not want to marry a big ugly toad and live in a house with him under the mud,’ she said.
Below
the lily the fishes heard her and
popped up their heads to look at her.
‘What a pretty little girl,’ they
said to each other. ‘We cannot let her marry an ugly creature like that.’
So they swam up to the stalk that
held the leaf and gnawed away at it
until at last the lily
floated free.
Down
the stream the lily glided. Thumbelina was
happy. ‘The toads will never catch me now,’ she thought. The
sun shone brightly and the water
glittered like gold. She did not see
the beetle fly overhead. Then all of
a sudden she felt a pair of claws
grip
her around the waist and lift her off
the lily leaf. Up the beetle flew into a tree, Thumbelina still clasped
tightly in its claws.
Thumbelina
was very
frightened but there was nothing she
could do. The beetle put her down on
a large leaf. ‘You are very
pretty,’ it said.
The other beetles who lived in the tree came to look at her.
‘Why,
she has only got two legs,’ scoffed
one. ‘And she hasn’t got any
feelers,’ snorted another, waving
his about proudly. ‘And look how thin her waist is. Ugh! She is not pretty – not
pretty at all,’ they said. The
beetle who found her decided that they were right and so Thumbelina was put back down on the ground.
All
summer Thumbelina lived alone in the
forest. She wove herself a bed out of
blades of grass and hung it like a hammock under a dock leaf to shelter
from the rain. When she was hungry she ate honey and pollen from
the flowers. And when she was thirsty she drank the early morning dew off the leaves. But summer passed and the days grew colder.
The
birds who had sung in the trees flew
away.
The leaves withered and dropped and Thumbelina
shivered with cold. Snow began to
fall. Every snowflake
that fell felt like a shovelful on tiny Thumbelina. She wrapped
herself in a dry leaf but that did not warm
her.
Wandering about, Thumbelina found herself at last outside
the forest, in a cornfield. The corn
had been cut and only stubby stalks were left in the frozen ground. There among them she saw a door. Behind it, in a cosy little house, lived a field-mouse.
‘Please, may I have
a piece of barleycorn to eat,’ Thumbelina begged the field-mouse.
‘I have had nothing to eat for two days.’
‘You poor thing,’ said the field-mouse, who
had a kind heart. ‘Come inside! Come inside!’
The field-mouse so enjoyed Thumbelina’s company that she
told her she could stay. ‘But you
must clean my house and tell me
stories,’ she said.’ I like
to listen to stories.’
One
day the field-mouse told Thumbelina that her neighbour – a
mole - was coming to visit them. ‘He
is very rich and clever,’ she told Thumbelina. ‘He would make you
a fine husband. He cannot see very well, but he lives in a big house and wears a black velvet coat.’
Thumbelina
didn’t care how rich and clever he was.
She didn’t want to marry a mole. But when the mole came to visit, she sang
so sweetly that the mole fell in love
with her.
But he was cautious and said nothing to
Thumbelina.
He
told them he had dug a passage that linked
their houses together. ‘You may
go along it whenever you like,’ he said. ‘Follow me, and I will show you
the way.’ He took a piece
of rotten wood which glowed in the dark, and led them along the tunnel.
‘There
is a bird in the passage,’ he told
them. ‘But don’t be afraid, for it is dead.’ When they reached the place where the bird lay,
the mole thrust his nose up through the ceiling to let in the daylight.
Now
they could see the bird clearly. It was a swallow, its beautiful wings pressed close
against its sides, its legs and head huddled into its feathers. Thumbelina felt
so sorry for it, but the mole shoved
the bird aside with his stubby legs. ‘There’s
one we won’t have to listen to any
more,’ he said. ‘I don’t like
birds. They make an awful din!’
‘Quite
right,’ said the field-mouse. ‘Yet
everyone
thinks so highly of them. I cannot think why.’
Thumbelina
said nothing, but as soon as their backs were turned, she bent down and gently
parted the feathers on the swallow’s head and kissed its closed eyes. ‘Perhaps
this is the bird that sang so sweetly to me in the summer,’ she thought.
‘How happy its song made me.’
That
night Thumbelina could not sleep. So
she got out of bed and plaited a small blanket
of hay. Then she crept back down the passage and spread it over the bird.
‘Farewell, pretty bird,’ she said. ‘Thank you for singing to me in the summer, when the trees were green and the sun
shone all day.’ Then she laid
her head on its heart. Knock! She heard. Knock. Knock. She jumped back,
startled. The bird’s heart was beating.
It was alive.
Thumbelina was frightened. The bird was so big and she so small. But she tucked the little blanket closer over the
bird’s head to warm it. The next night she came back to
see the bird again. It opened its eyes.
‘Thank you,’ it said faintly.
‘You have saved my life. Soon I will be able to fly away.’
‘No!’ insisted Thumbelina. ‘It is too cold
outside for you to leave. Stay
here. I will look after you.’
All
winter long the bird stayed in the
passage. Then spring came and it flew
out of the hole in the roof.
Thumbelina
was very
sad as she watched it fly away. She had grown very fond of the bird. And the sight of the sun saddened her, for she rarely saw it now.
‘You are to marry the mole,’ the
field-mouse told her one day.
Thumbelina felt very sad. She did not
like the mole at all. He did not care
for the things she did. He liked the
dark and she liked the sun. She did
not want to live under the ground in the dark.
The
day of the wedding arrived. Thumbelina stood in the doorway to look at the sunshine one last time.
She heard a bird sing in
the sky overhead. It was the swallow. How happy they were
to
see each other again. ‘Come away with
me,’ the swallow said when Thumbelina had told him her sad tale. ‘I will take you
to a land where the sun always shines.’
Thumbelina
climbed up on to the swallow’s back, and tied her sash to one of his
feathers, and away they flew,
up over trees and lakes and snowy mountains where the air was so cold that Thumbelina shivered and crept under the swallow’s
feathers for warmth.
Then
she felt the air grow warmer. Below her now she could see waving palms and the air was sweet and full of butterflies. Down the swallow flew and landed on the ground near the pillars of a marble
palace. Vines twisted up its columns. Swallows
flew back and forth.
One
of the columns had fallen and lay on the
ground, in pieces. In between the broken
pieces, beautiful white flowers grew.
‘My
nest is high up on a marble column, but you
will be better down here, on one of these flowers,’ the swallow told
Thumbelina.
‘I should like that,’
Thumbelina said.
The
swallow set her down gently on one of
the flowers. There, in the middle of
its petals, stood a little prince, a gold crown on his head.
He was as fine and delicate as Thumbelina herself. Shining wings sprouted from his shoulders. He was the king of the flower people. In every flower a tiny person lived, and he
was the king of them all.
‘He’s very beautiful,’ Thumbelina thought.
‘Isn’t she lovely,’
thought the prince. ‘I would like to
marry her.’ He took the crown from his head and put it on hers. ‘Marry
me and be queen of all the flowers,’ he said.
Thumbelina
was so happy. All the flower people brought her presents. One of them fixed wings
to her back so that she could fly
from flower to flower like them. ‘You shall not be called Thumbelina any more,’
the prince said to her. ‘Your name will be Maia.’
That
summer the swallow bid a sad farewell
to Thumbelina and flew back to his
nest under the window of a teller of fairy tales. ‘Listen,’ he said to him, ‘I have a tale to tell you.’
And that is how we come to
know the story of Thumbelina.
------------
Download free auiobook Thumbelina
No comments:
Post a Comment