Snowflake Slavonic
story.
Contes Populaires
Slaves, traduits par Louis Leger. Paris: Leroux, Editeur.
Once upon a time
there lived a peasant called Ivan, and he had a wife whose name was Marie. They
would have been quite happy except for one thing: they had no children to play
with, and as they were now old people they did not find that watching the children
of their neighbours at all made up to them for having one of their own.
One winter, which
nobody living will ever forget, the snow lay so deep that it came up to the
knees of even the tallest man. When it had all fallen, and the sun was shining
again, the children ran out into the street to play, and the old man and his
wife sat at their window and gazed at them. The children first made a sort of
little terrace, and stamped it hard and firm, and then they began to make a
snow woman. Ivan and Marie watched them, the while thinking about many things.
Suddenly Ivan's face
brightened, and, looking at his wife, he said, 'Wife, why shouldn't we make a
snow woman too?'
'Why not?' replied
Marie, who happened to be in a very good temper; 'it might amuse us a little.
But there is no use making a woman. Let us make a little snow child, and
pretend it is a living one.'
'Yes, let us do
that,' said Ivan, and he took down his cap and went into the garden with his
old wife.
Then the two set to
work with all their might to make a doll out of the snow. They shaped a little
body and two little hands and two little feet. On top of all they placed a ball
of snow, out of which the head was to be.
'What in the world
are you doing?' asked a passer-by.
'Can't you guess?'
returned Ivan.
'Making a
snow-child,' replied Marie.
They had finished
the nose and the chin. Two holes were left for the eyes, and Ivan carefully
shaped out the mouth. No sooner had he done so than he felt a warm breath upon
his cheek. He started back in surprise and looked--and behold! the eyes of the
child met his, and its lips, which were as red as raspberries, smiled at him!
'What is it?' cried
Ivan, crossing himself. 'Am I mad, or is the thing bewitched?'
The snow-child bent
its head as if it had been really alive. It moved its little arms and its
little legs in the snow that lay about it just as the living children did
theirs.
'Ah! Ivan, Ivan,'
exclaimed Marie, trembling with joy, 'heaven has sent us a child at last!' And
she threw herself upon Snowflake (for that was the snow-child's name) and
covered her with kisses. And the loose snow fell away from Snowflake as an egg
shell does from an egg, and it was a little girl whom Marie held in her arms.
'Oh! my darling
Snowflake!' cried the old woman, and led her into the cottage.
And Snowflake grew
fast; each hour as well as each day made a difference, and every day she became
more and more beautiful. The old couple hardly knew how to contain themselves
for joy, and thought of nothing else. The cottage was always full of village
children, for they amused Snowflake, and there was nothing in the world they
would not have done to amuse her. She was their doll, and they were continually
inventing new dresses for her, and teaching her songs or playing with her.
Nobody knew how clever she was! She noticed everything, and could learn a
lesson in a moment. Anyone would have taken her for thirteen at least! And,
besides all that, she was so good and obedient; and so pretty, too! Her skin
was as white as snow, her eyes as blue as forget-me-nots, and her hair was long
and golden. Only her cheeks had no colour in them, but were as fair as her
forehead.
So the winter went
on, till at last the spring sun mounted higher in the heavens and began to warm
the earth. The grass grew green in the fields, and high in the air the larks
were heard singing. The village girls met and danced in a ring, singing, 'Beautiful
spring, how came you here? How came you here? Did you come on a plough, or was
it a harrow?' Only Snowflake sat quite still by the window of the cottage.
'What is the matter,
dear child?' asked Marie. 'Why are you so sad? Are you ill? or have they treated
you unkindly?'
'No,' replied
Snowflake, 'it is nothing, mother; no one has hurt me; I am well.'
The spring sun had
chased away the last snow from its hiding place under the hedges; the fields
were full of flowers; nightingales sang in the trees, and all the world was
gay. But the gayer grew the birds and the flowers the sadder became Snowflake.
She hid herself from her playmates, and curled herself up where the shadows
were deepest, like a lily amongst its leaves. Her only pleasure was to lie amid
the green willows near some sparkling stream. At the dawn and at twilight only
she seemed happy. When a great storm broke, and the earth was white with hail,
she became bright and joyous as the Snowflake of old; but when the clouds
passed, and the hail melted beneath the sun, Snowflake would burst into tears
and weep as a sister would weep over her brother.
The spring passed,
and it was the eve of St. John, or Midsummer Day. This was the greatest holiday
of the year, when the young girls met in the woods to dance and play. They went
to fetch Snowflake, and said to Marie: 'Let her come and dance with us.'
But Marie was
afraid; she could not tell why, only she could not bear the child to go.
Snowflake did not wish to go either, but they had no excuse ready. So Marie
kissed the girl and said: 'Go, my Snowflake, and be happy with your friends,
and you, dear children, be careful of her. You know she is the light of my eyes
to me.'
'Oh, we will take
care of her,' cried the girls gaily, and they ran off to the woods. There they
wore wreaths, gathered nosegays, and sang songs some sad, some merry. And
whatever they did Snowflake did too.
When the sun set
they lit a fire of dry grass, and placed themselves in a row, Snowflake being
the last of all. 'Now, watch us,' they said, 'and run just as we do.'
And they all began
to sing and to jump one after another across the fire.
Suddenly, close
behind them, they heard a sigh, then a groan. 'Ah!' They turned hastily and
looked at each other. There was nothing. They looked again. Where was
Snowflake? She has hidden herself for fun, they thought, and searched for her
everywhere. 'Snowflake! Snowflake!' But there was no answer. 'Where can she be?
Oh, she must have gone home.' They returned to the village, but there was no
Snowflake.
For days after that
they sought her high and low. They examined every bush and every hedge, but
there was no Snowflake. And long after everyone else had given up hope Ivan and
Marie would wander through the woods crying 'Snowflake, my dove, come back,
come back!' And sometimes they thought they heard a call, but it was never the
voice of Snowflake.
And what had become
of her? Had a fierce wild beast seized her and dragged her into his lair in the
forest? Had some bird carried her off across the wide blue sea?
No, no beast had
touched her, no bird had borne her away. With the first breath of flame that
swept over her when she ran with her friends Snowflake had melted away, and a
little soft haze floating upwards was all that remained of her.
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