SELIGOR'S CASTLE,

From DEE DOT'S
FavouritesA translation of Hans Christian
Andersen's
"Der er Forskjel"
by Jean
Hersholt.
"There is a
Difference."
It was in the month of May. The
wind was still cold, but
spring had come, said the trees and the bushes, the
fields and
the meadows. Everywhere flowers were budding into
blossom; even
the hedges were alive with them. Here spring spoke
about herself;
it spoke from a little apple tree, from which hung
a single
branch so fresh and blooming, and fairly weighed
down by a
glorious mass of rosy buds just ready to
open.
Now this
bran
ch knew how lovely it was, for
that knowledge
lies in the leaf as well as in the flesh, so it
wasn't a
bit surprised when one day a grand carriage stopped
in the road
beside it, and the young Countess in the carriage
said that this
apple branch was the most beautiful she had ever
seen-it was
spring itself in its loveliest form. So she broke
off the apple
branch and carried it in her own dainty hand,
shading it from the
sun with her silk parasol, as they drove on to her
castle, in
which there were lofty halls and beautifully
decorated rooms.
Fleecy-white curtains fluttered at its open
windows, and there
were many shining, transparent vases full of
beautiful flowers.
In one of these vases, which looked as if it were
carved of
new-fallen snow, she placed the apple branch, among
fresh green
beech leaves-a lovely sight indeed.
And so it happened that the
apple branch grew proud, and
that's quite human.
All sorts of people passed
through the rooms, and according
to their rank expressed their admiration in
different ways; some
said too much, some said too little, and some said
nothing at
all. And the apple branch began to realize that
there were
differences in people as well as in
plants.
"Some are used for nourishment,
some are for ornament, and
some you could very well do without," thought the apple
branch.
From its position at the open
window the apple branch could
look down over the gardens and meadows below, and
consider the
differences among the flowers and plants beneath.
Some were rich,
some were poor, and some were very
poor.
"Miserable, rejected plants,"
said the apple branch. "There
is a difference indeed! It's quite proper and just that
distinctions should be made. Yet how unhappy they
must feel, if
indeed a creature like that is capable of feeling
anything, as I
and my equals do; but it must be that way,
otherwise everybody
would be treated as though they were just
alike."
And the apple branch looked down
with especial pity on one
kind of flower that grew everywhere in meadows and
ditches. They
were much too common ever to be gathered into
bouquets; they
could be found between the paving stones; they shot
up like the
rankest and most worthless of weeds. They were
dandelions, but
people have given them the ugly name, "the devil's milk
pails."
"Poor wretched outcasts," said
the apple branch. "I suppose
you can't help being as common as you are, and
having such
a vulgar name! It's the same with plants as with
men-there
must be a difference."
"A difference?" repeated the
sunbeam, as it kissed the apple
branch; but it kissed the golden "devil's milk
pails," too.
And all the other sunbeams did the same, kissing
all the flowers
equally, poor as well as rich.
The apple branch had never
thought about our Lord's
infinite love for everything that lives and moves
in Him, had
never thought how much that it is good and
beautiful can lie
hidden but still not be forgotten; and that, too,
was human.
But the sunbeam, the ray of
light, knew better. "You
don't see very clearly; you are not very
farsighted. Who
are these outcast flowers that you pity so
much?"
"Those devil's milk pails down
there," replied the
apple branch. "Nobody ever ties them up in bouquets;
they're trodden under foot, because there are too
many of
them. And when they go to seed they fly about along
the road like
little bits of wool and hang on people's clothes.
They're just weeds! I suppose there must be weeds
too, but
I'm certainly happy and grateful that I'm not like
one of them!"
Now a whole flock of children
ran out into the meadow to
play. The youngest of them was so tiny that he had
to be carried
by the others. When they set him down in the grass
among the
golden blossoms, he laughed and gurgled with joy,
kicked his
little legs, rolled over and over, and plucked only
the yellow
dandelions. These he kissed in innocent
delight.

The bigger children broke off
the flowers of the dandelions
and joined the hollow stalks link by link into
chains. First they
would make one for a necklace, then a longer one to
hang across
the shoulders and around the waist, and finally one
to go around
their heads; it was a beautiful wreath of splendid
green links
and chains.
But the biggest of the children
carefully gathered the
stalks that had gone to seed, those loose, aerial,
woolly
blossoms, those wonderfully perfect balls of dainty
white plumes,
and held them to their lips, trying to blow away
all the white
feathers with one breath. Granny had told them that
whoever could
do that would receive new clothes before the year
was out. The
poor, despised dandelion was considered quite a
prophet on such
occasions.
"Now do you see?" asked the
sunbeam. "Do you see its beauty
and power?"
"Oh, it's all right-for
children," replied the apple
branch.
Now an old woman came into the
meadow. She stooped and dug
up the roots of the dandelion with a blunt knife
that had lost
its handle. Some of the roots she would roast
instead of coffee
berries, others she would sell to the apothecary to
be used as
drugs.
"Beauty is something higher than
this," said the apple
branch. "Only the chosen few can really be allowed
into the
kingdom of the beautiful; there's as much difference
between plants as between men."
Then the sunbeam spoke of the
infinite love of the Creator
for all His creatures, for everything that has
life, and of the
equal distribution of all things in time and
eternity.
"That's just your opinion,"
replied the apple
branch.
Now some people came into the
room, and among them was the
young Countess who had placed the apple branch in
the transparent
vase. She was carrying a flower-or whatever it
was-that was
protecte
d by three or four large leaves
around it like a cap, so
that no breath of air or gust of wind could injure
it. She
carried it more carefully and tenderly than she had
the apple
branch when she had brought it to the castle. Very
gently she
removed the leaves, and then the apple branch could
see what she
carried. It was a delicate, feathery crown of
starry seeds borne
by the despised dandelion!
This was what she had plucked so
carefully and carried so
tenderly, so that no single one of the loose,
dainty, feathered
arrows that rounded out its downy form should be
blown away.
There it was, whole and perfect. With delight she
admired the
beautiful form, the airy lightness, the marvelous
mechanism of a
thing that was destined so soon to be scattered by
the wind.
"Look how wonderfully beautiful
our Lord made this!" she
cried. "I'll paint it, together with the apple branch.
Everybody thinks it is so extremely beautiful, but
this poor
flower is lovely, too; it has received as much from
our Lord in
another way. They are very different, yet both are
children in
the kingdom of the beautiful!"
The sunbeam kissed the poor
dandelion, and then kissed the
blooming apple branch, whose petals seemed to blush
a deeper
red.