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Thumbelina
by
Hans Christian Andersen
adaptation by Alessandro Cima
illustrations by Antonia Hollander

Once upon a time there was a woman whose only
wish was to have a tiny little child. She had no idea where
to get one, so she went to an old witch and asked her: "Please,
old witch, tell me where I can get a tiny little child."
"That is not so hard," said the witch. "Plant
this seed in the ground and see what happens."
The woman paid the witch twelve gold coins and went home
to plant the seed. No sooner was it in the ground than it
started to sprout. A big beautiful flower grew up. It became
a tulip that was ready to bloom.
"What a lovely flower," said the woman as she
kissed the red and yellow petals that were closed so tightly.
With a snap they opened and became a real tulip. In the
center of the flower sat a tiny little girl. She was so
beautiful and so delicate, and exactly one inch long.
"I will call her Thumbelina," thought the woman.
The shell of a walnut became Thumbelina's cradle, the blue
petals of violets her mattress, and a rose petal her cover.
Here she slept at night; in the daytime she played on the
table by the window. The woman had put a bowl of water there
with flowers all around it. In the water floated a tulip
petal on which Thumbelina could float from one side of the
bowl to the other.
Thumbelina would float and sing more beautifully than anyone
has ever sung before.
One night as she lay sleeping in her little bed a frog came
through the window. She was big and wet and ugly. She jumped
down onto the table where Thumbelina lay sleeping under
the rose petal.
"She will make a lovely wife for my son," said
the frog. She grabbed the walnut shell in which Thumbelina
slept, leaped out through the window and into the garden.
On the banks of the stream, where it was muddiest, lived
the frog with her son. He was just as ugly as his mother.
"Croak...Croak...Croak!" was all he said when
he saw the beautiful little girl in the walnut shell.
"Don't talk so loud! You'll wake her!" scolded
the mother frog, "She could run away and we would not
be able to catch her, for she is as light as the feather
of a swan. I will put her on a water-lily leaf. It will
seem like an island to her. Then we will get your hole in
the mud ready for your marriage."

Out in the stream grew many water lilies.
All their leaves seemed to float on the water. The biggest
of them was far out from shore. Upon that lily the old frog
put Thumbelina's little bed.
When the poor girl awoke in the morning and saw where she
was she began to cry bitterly. There was no way of getting
to shore at all.
The old frog was very busy down in the mud hole, decorating
the walls with reeds and flowers that grew on shore. She
meant to make a very pretty wedding. After she finished,
she and her ugly son swam out to the water-lily to fetch
Thumbelina's bed. It was to go in the bridal chamber. The
old frog curtsied, and that is not easy while swimming;
then she said, "Meet my son who will be your new husband.
You will both live very happily in the mud hole."
"Croak!...Croak!" was all the son said. Then they
took the walnut shell bed and swam away with it. Poor Thumbelina
sat on the water-leaf and wept, for she did not want to
live with these ugly frogs. The little fishes swimming by
in the water heard what the old frog had said. They poked
their heads out of the water to look at the tiny girl. When
they saw her beauty it made them sad to think of her with
the frogs in the mud. They decided they would do something
and gathered around the stem that went from Thumbelina's
leaf to the bottom of the stream. They nibbled and nibbled
and soon the leaf was free. It drifted down the stream,
carrying Thumbelina far away from the ugly frogs.
As Thumbelina sailed down the stream, little birds sang,
"Oh what a pretty girl." Farther and farther floated
the leaf down the stream, taking its little passenger to
strange new lands.
A white butterfly flew around in a circle and landed on
the leaf. It had taken a fancy to little Thumbelina. The
girl laughed, for she was happy to have escaped from the
frogs. She tied one end of the silk ribbon she wore around
her waist to the butterfly. The other end she tied to her
water-lily. The butterfly flew and pulled Thumbelina quickly
down the stream.
A big May bug flew by. It spied Thumbelina, swooped down
and picked her off the leaf and flew up into a tree with
her. The leaf and butterfly went on down the stream without
Thumbelina.
Thumbelina was terrified of what would happen next. The
May bug put Thumbelina in the tree and gave her honey from
the flowers. He told her she was the prettiest thing he
had ever seen, even though she didn't look like a May bug
at all. Soon all the other May bugs of the tree came calling
on their little visitor. Two young May bugs wiggled their
antennae and said, "Look at her. She has only two legs!
How disgusting!"
All the other lady May bugs agreed. The May bug who had
found Thumbelina still thought she was lovely, but as the
others kept saying how ugly she was, he soon believed it
too. Now he didn't want her anymore, and put her down on
a daisy at the foot of the tree and told her she was free
to go wherever she wanted for all he cared. Poor Thumbelina
cried. The thought it was terrible to be so ugly that not
even a May bug would want her around.
All summer long Thumbelina lived alone in the forest. She
made a hammock out of grass and hung it under a leaf so
it would not rain on her when she slept. She ate honey from
the flowers and drank the dew from the leaves each morning.
Autumn passed. Then came winter. It was long and cold. All
the birds flew away, the flowers died and the trees lost
their leaves. Thumbelina was terribly cold. Her clothes
were in tatters and she became thin and delicate.
Thumbelina was bound to freeze to death. It started to snow
and the snowflakes were big and heavy upon her. She tried
to wrap herself up in a dried old leaf, but it gave her
no warmth. She shivered in the cold.

Not far from the forest was a big field where
the dry stubbles of grain poked up from the frozen ground.
It was a stubble forest to Thumbelina and she wandered into
them and soon came to a hole in the ground. It was the home
of a field mouse. Deep down the mouse lived in warmth and
comfort, with a full larder and a nice kitchen. Like a beggar,
Thumbelina stood by the hole and asked for a grain of barley
to eat. She had not eaten for days.
"Poor little wretch," said the field mouse, for
she had a very kind heart. "Come on down into my warm
house and dine with me."
The field mouse thought Thumbelina a fine little girl. "You
can stay for the whole winter," she said. "But
you must keep the house tidy and tell me a story every day,
for I like a good story." Thumbelina did what the kind
old mouse asked, and lived very happily.
"Soon we shall have a visitor," said the mouse.
"Once a week my neighbor comes. He lives even better
than I do. He has a drawing room and wears the most exquisite
black fur coat. If only he would marry you, then you would
be well taken care of. He won't be able to see you, for
he is blind, so you will have to tell him the very best
of your stories."
But Thumbelina did not want to marry the mouse's neighbor,
for he was a mole. The next day he came visiting dressed
in his fine black coat. The field mouse had said that he
was both rich and wise. His house was twenty times the size
of the mouse's; and learned he was, too. He did not like
the sun or the flowers. "Abominable!" he would
say because he could not see them. Thumbelina sang for him
and he did fall in love with her because of her voice. The
blind mole never showed his feeling though because he was
clear-headed and never made a spectacle of himself.
The mole had recently dug a tunnel from his house to the
field mouse's and he invited Thumbelina and the mouse to
use it as often as they liked. He said not to be afraid
of the dead bird in the tunnel. It had died a few days before
and still had all its feathers.
The mole took a piece of hot glowing coal to light the way
in the tunnel. When they came to the dead bird, the mole
made a hole up through the earth to let the sunlight in.
Now Thumbelina could see that the bird was a dead swallow
with its wings pressed close to its body. Its head was tucked
under one wing. The poor bird had frozen to death. Thumbelina
was very sad. She had loved all the birds that had sung
for her in the forest.
The mole kicked the bird with one of his short legs and
said, "It has ceased its chirping. What a misfortune.
Thank God I am not a bird."
"Yes, that's what all sensible people think,"
said the field mouse. "What does chirping lead to?
Starvation and cold. I suppose birds think it all romantic."
Thumbelina said nothing, but when the mouse and mole turned
their backs, she leaned down and kissed the closed eye of
the swallow. "How much joy you might have given me,"
she thought.
The mole closed up the hole through which the sunlight came
and took the ladies home. That night Thumbelina could not
sleep. She rose and wove a blanket out of hay. She carried
it down the dark tunnel and covered the little bird with
it. She tucked small bits of cotton under the swallow to
protect it from the cold earth.
"Good-by, beautiful bird," she said. "Good-by
and thank you for the songs you sang when it was summer
and the trees were green."
She put her head on the bird's breast. Then she jumped up!
Something was ticking inside. It sounded like a little watch.
Thumbelina tucked the blanket closer around the bird.
The next night Thumbelina sneaked down into the tunnel again
and found the bird had opened its eyes just enough to see
her in the dark.
"Thank you, sweet little child," said the sick
swallow softly. "I feel so much better. I am not cold
now. Soon I shall be strong again and fly in the sunshine."
"Oh no," she said. "It is
cold and snowing outside. You will freeze. Stay here in
your warm bed. I will nurse you."
She brought the swallow water on a leaf. The he told Thumbelina
his story. He told her of how he had torn his wing on a
rosebush and could not fly fast enough to keep up with the
other swallows. He had been left behind and had fainted
from the cold. That was all he could tell her for he had
no memory of how he came to be in the mole's passageway.
The swallow stayed there all winter. Thumbelina took good
care of him and grew very fond of him. She breathed not
a word to the mole or the field mouse. She knew they did
not like the poor swallow.
When spring came and the warm sun could be felt under the
ground, the swallow said goodbye to Thumbelina, who opened
the hole that the mole had made. The sun shone down. The
swallow asked her if she would like to come along; she could
sit on his back and he would fly her out over the great
forest. But Thumbelina knew that the field mouse would be
sad and lonely if she left.
"I cannot," she said sadly.
The bird thanked her once more. "Farewell...Fare thee
well, lovely girl," he sang as he flew out into the
sunshine.
Thumbelina's eyes filled with tears as she watched the swallow
fly away. She knew that soon the grain would be tall and
she would not be able to see the sunshine.
"This summer you must spend getting your trousseau
ready," said the field mouse. For the mole had proposed
to her in his velvet coat. "You must have good woolens
and linen when you become Mrs. Mole."
Thumbelina spun night and day and the field mouse brought
four spiders to help weave. Every evening the mole came
for a visit, but all he said was "Goodness, how nice
it will be when summer is over."
He didn't like the way the sun baked the earth; it was too
hard to dig in. When fall came they would get married. Thumbelina
thought the mole was dull and she did not love him. Every
day, at sunrise and at sunset, she tiptoed to the entrance
of the field mouse's house, so that when the wind blew and
parted the grain, she could see the blue sky. She thought
of how light and beautiful it was out there and she longed
for her friend the swallow. "He is probably far away
in the green forest," she thought.
Autumn came. "In four weeks we shall hold the wedding!"
cried the field mouse.
Thumbelina wept and said she did not want to marry the boring
old mole.
"Fiddlesticks!" squeaked the field mouse. "Don't
be stubborn or I will bite you with my front teeth. The
mole has a fine velvet coat and will make you a splendid
husband."
The day of the wedding arrived and Thumbelina thought she
would never again see the bright sun.
"Farewell, you beautiful sun!" Thumbelina lifted
her hands toward the sky and stepped out upon the field.
She touched a lonely red flower that grew in the hard ground.
A gentle breeze touched her shoulder and she heard a sound
above her.
"Tweet...Tweet"
She looked up. It was the swallow. He chirped with joy at
seeing Thumbelina.
"I am flying to the warm country for the winter,"
he called to her. "Won't you come with me? You can
sit on my back and we will fly far away from the terrible
mole and his dirty house. We will cross the great mountains
and find the land where the sun shines brilliantly and the
loveliest flowers grow. Fly with me, Thumbelina."
"Yes, I will come," cried Thumbelina, and climbed
up on the bird's back. The swallow flew high into the sky,
above forests and lakes and over high mountains that are
always snow-covered. Thumbelina crawled under the swallow's
warm feathers and stuck her head out to see the beauty below.
They came to the warm country. The sun shone brilliantly
and the sky seemed higher. Along the fences grew lovely
green and blue grapes. From the trees in the forest hung
oranges and lemons. Along the roads, beautiful children
ran, chasing many-colored butterflies. As the swallow flew
further south, the landscape became more and more beautiful.
Near a forest, on the shores of a lake, stood the ruins
of an ancient temple. Ivy wound around white pillars. On
top of these were many swallows' nests and one of them belonged
to Thumbelina's swallow.
"This is my house," he said. He then flew over
to a lovely white flower and set Thumbelina down upon it.
"This shall be your house."
As Thumbelina looked into the flower she saw something move.
It was little more than a shimmer of light. To her astonishment,
she saw that it was a little man. He was like glass that
glowed. On his head was a golden crown. On his back were
wings. He was no taller than Thumbelina. In every white
flower all around lived such a tiny angel. This one was
the king of them all.
"Oh, how handsome he is!" whispered Thumbelina
to the swallow.
The little king took off his crown and put it on Thumbelina's
head. "Would you like to be queen of the flowers?"
he asked.
"Yes," said Thumbelina. From every flower all
around came a tiny angel to pay respect to the new queen.
They brought her gifts and the best one was a new pair of
wings.
The swallow sang the best songs he knew.
"You shall not be called Thumbelina any more,"
said the tiny king. "You shall be called Maja."
"Farewell!" called the swallow as he flew back
to the north, away from the warm country. He came to Denmark
and made his nest above the window of a man who could tell
fairy tales.
As the swallow sang, the man listened and wrote down the
whole story.
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