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The Little
Match Girl
By Hans Christian Anderson
December 8, 2011
It
was New Year’s Eve and the snowclad
streets were deserted. From brightly lit windows came the tinkle of
laughter
and the sound of singing. People were getting ready to bring in the New
Year.
But the poor little matchseller sat sadly beside the fountain. Her
ragged dress
and worn shawl did not keep out the cold and she tried to keep her bare
feet
from touching the frozen ground. She hadn’t sold one box of matches all
day and
she was frightened to go home, for her father would certainly be angry.
It
wouldn’t be much warmer anyway, in the draughty attic that was her
home. The
little girl’s fingers were stiff with cold. If only she could light a
match!
But what would her father say at such a waste! Falteringly she took out
a match
and lit it. What a nice warm flame! The little matchseller cupped her
hand over
it, and as she did so, she magically saw in its light a big brightly
burning
stove.
She
held out her hands to the heat,
but just then the match went out and the vision faded. The night seemed
blacker
than before and it was getting colder. A shiver ran through the little
girl’s
thin body.
After
hesitating for a long time, she
struck another match on the wall, and this time, the glimmer turned the
wall
into a great sheet of crystal. Beyond that stood a fine table laden
with food
and lit by a candlestick. Holding out her arms towards the plates, the
little
matchseller seemed to pass through the glass, but then the match went
out and
the magic faded. Poor thing: in just a few seconds she had caught a
glimpse of
everything that life had denied her: warmth and good things to eat. Her
eyes
filled with tears and she lifted her gaze to the lit windows, praying
that she
too might know a little of such happiness.
She
lit the third match and an even
more wonderful thing happened. There stood a Christmas tree hung with
hundreds
of candles, glittering with tinsel and coloured balls. “Oh, how
lovely!”
exclaimed the little matchseller, holding up the match. Then, the match
burned
her finger and flickered out. The light from the Christmas candles rose
higher
and higher, then one of the lights fell, leaving a trail behind it.
“Someone is
dying,” murmured the little girl, as she remembered her beloved Granny
who used
to say: “When a star falls, a heart stops beating!”
Scarcely
aware of what she was doing,
the little matchseller lit another match. This time, she saw her
grandmother.
“Granny,
stay with me!” she pleaded,
as she lit one match after the other, so that her grandmother could not
disappear like all the other visions. However, Granny did not vanish,
but gazed
smilingly at her. Then she opened her arms and the little girl hugged
her
crying: “Granny, take me away with you!”
A
cold day dawned and a pale sun shone
on the fountain and the icy road. Close by lay the lifeless body of a
little
girl surrounded by spent matches. “Poor little thing!” exclaimed the
passersby.
“She was trying to keep warm!”
But
by that time, the little matchseller
was far away where there is neither cold, hunger nor pain.
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