Anne Lisbeth was like milk and blood,
young and happy, lovely to look at; her teeth were
so dazzlingly white, her eyes were so clear; her foot
was light in the dance, and her head was still lighter.
What did all this lead to? To no good. “The
vile creature!” “She was not pretty!”
She was placed with the grave-digger’s
wife, and from thence she went to the count’s
splendid country-seat, where she lived in handsome
rooms, and was dressed in silks and fineries;
not a breath of wind was to blow on her; no one dared
to say a rough word to her, nothing was to be done
to annoy her; for she nursed the count’s son
and heir, who was as carefully tended as a prince,
and as beautiful as an angel. How she loved that
child! Her own child was away from her he
was in the grave-digger’s house, where there
was more hunger than plenty, and where often there
was no one at home. The poor deserted child cried,
but what nobody hears nobody cares about. He cried
himself to sleep, and in sleep one feels neither hungry
nor thirsty: sleep is, therefore, a great blessing.
In the course of time Anne Lisbeth’s child shot
up. Ill weeds grow apace, it is said: and
this poor weed grew, and seemed a member of the family,
who were paid for keeping him. Anne Lisbeth was
quite free of him. She was a village fine lady,
had everything of the best, and wore a smart bonnet
whenever she went out. But she never went to
the grave-digger’s; it was so far from where
she lived, and she had nothing to do there. The
child was under their charge; he who paid its
board could well afford it, and the child would be
taken very good care of.
The watch-dog at the lord of the manor’s
bleach-field sits proudly in the sunshine outside
of his kennel, and growls at every one that goes past.
In rainy weather he creeps inside, and lies down dry
and sheltered. Anne Lisbeth’s boy sat on
the side of a ditch in the sunshine, amusing himself
by cutting a bit of stick. In spring he saw three
strawberry bushes in bloom: they would surely
bear fruit. This was his pleasantest thought;
but there was no fruit. He sat out in the drizzling
rain, and in the heavy rain was wet to the
skin and the sharp wind dried his clothes
upon him. If he went to the farm-houses near,
he was thumped and shoved about. He was “grim-looking
and ugly,” the girls and the boys said.
What became of Anne Lisbeth’s boy? What
could become of him? It was his fate to
be “never loved.”
At length he was transferred from
his joyless village life to the still worse life of
a sailor boy. He went on board a wretched little
vessel, to stand by the rudder while the skipper drank.
Filthy and disgusting the poor boy looked; starving
and benumbed with cold he was. One would have
thought, from his appearance, that he never had been
well fed; and, indeed, that was the fact.
It was late in the year; it was raw,
wet, stormy weather; the cold wind penetrated even
through thick clothing, especially at sea; and only
two men on board were too few to work the sails; indeed,
it might be said only one man and a half the
master and his boy. It had been black and gloomy
all day; now it became still more dark, and it was
bitterly cold. The skipper took a dram to warm
himself. The flask was old, and so was the glass;
its foot was broken off, but it was inserted into
a piece of wood painted blue, which served as a stand
for it. If one dram was good, two would be better,
thought the master. The boy stood by the helm,
and held on to it with his hard, tar-covered hands.
He looked frightened. His hair was rough, and
he was wrinkled, and stunted in his growth. The
young sailor was the grave-digger’s boy; in
the church register he was called Anne Lisbeth’s
son.
The wind blew as it list; the sail
flapped, then filled; the vessel flew on. It
was wet, chill, dark as pitch; but worse was yet to
come. Hark! What was that? With what
had the boat come in contact? What had burst?
What seemed to have caught it? It shifted round.
Was it a sudden squall? The boy at the helm cried
aloud, “In the name of Jesus!” The little
bark had struck on a large sunken rock, and sank as
an old shoe would sink in a small pool sank
with men and mice on board, as the saying is; and
there certainly were mice, but only one man and a
half the skipper and the grave-digger’s
boy. None witnessed the catastrophe except the
screaming sea-gulls and the fishes below; and even
they did not see much of it, for they rushed aside
in alarm when the water gushed thundering into the
little vessel as it sank. Scarcely a fathom beneath
the surface it stood; yet the two human beings who
had been on board were lost lost forgotten!
Only the glass with the blue-painted wooden foot did
not sink; the wooden foot floated it. But the
glass was broken when it was washed far up on the
beach. How and when? That is of no consequence.
It had served its time, and it had been liked; that
Anne Lisbeth’s child had never been. But
in the kingdom of heaven no soul can say again, “Never
loved!”
Anne Lisbeth resided in the large
market town, and had done so for some years.
She was called “Madam,” and held her head
very high, especially when she spoke of old reminiscences
of the time she had passed at the count’s lordly
mansion, when she used to drive out in a carriage,
and used to converse with countesses and baronesses.
Her sweet nursling, the little count, was a lovely
angel, a darling creature. She was so fond of
him, and he had been so fond of her. How she
used to pet him, and how he used to kiss her!
He was her delight was as dear to her as
herself. He was now quite a big boy; he was fourteen
years of age, and had plenty of learning and accomplishments.
She had not seen him since she carried him in her
arms. It was many years since she had been at
the count’s castle, for it was such a long way
off.
“But I must go over and see
them again,” said Anne Lisbeth. “I
must go to my noble friends, to my darling child,
the young count yes, yes, for he is surely
longing to see me. He thinks of me, he loves me
as he did when he used to throw his little cherub
arms round my neck and lisp, ‘An Lis!’
Oh, it was like a violin! Yes, I must go over
and see him again.”
She went part of the way in the carrier’s
wagon, part of the way on foot. She arrived at
the castle. It looked as grand and imposing as
ever. The gardens were not at all changed; but
the servants were all strangers. Not one of them
knew anything about Anne Lisbeth. They did not
know what an important person she had been in the house
formerly; but surely the countess would tell them
who she was, so would her own boy. How she longed
to see them both!
Well, Anne Lisbeth was there; but
she had to wait a long time, and waiting is always
so tedious. Before the family and their guests
went to dinner she was called in to the countess,
and very kindly spoken to. She was told she should
see her dear boy after dinner, and after dinner she
was sent for again.
How much he had grown! How tall
and thin! But he had the same charming eyes,
and the same angelic mouth. He looked at her,
but he did not say a word. It was evident that
he did not remember her. He turned away, and
was going, but she caught his hand and carried it to
her lips. “Ah! well, that will do!”
he said, and hastily left the room he, the
darling of her soul he on whom her thoughts
had centred for so many years he whom she
had loved the best her greatest earthly
pride!
Anne Lisbeth left the castle, and
turned into the open high road. She was very
sad he had been so cold and distant to her.
He had not a word, not a thought for her who, by day
and by night, had so cherished him in her heart.
At that moment a large black raven
flew across the road before her, screeching harshly.
“Oh!” she exclaimed, “what
do you want, bird of ill omen that you are?”
She passed by the grave-digger’s
house; his wife was standing in the doorway, and they
spoke to each other.
“You are looking very well,”
said the grave-digger’s wife. “You
are stout and hearty. The world goes well with
you apparently.”
“Pretty well,” replied Anne Lisbeth.
“The little vessel has been
lost,” said the grave-digger’s wife.
“Lars the skipper, and the boy, are both drowned;
so there is an end of that matter. I had hoped,
though, that the boy might by and by have helped me
with a shilling now and then. He never cost you
anything, Anne Lisbeth.”
“Drowned are they?” exclaimed
Anne Lisbeth; and she did not say another word on
the subject she was so distressed that her
nursling, the young count, did not care to speak to
her she who loved him so much, and had
taken such a long journey to see him a journey
that had cost her some money too. The pleasure
she had received was not great, but she was not going
to admit this. She would not say one word to the
grave-digger’s wife to lead her to think that
she was no longer a person of consequence at the count’s.
The raven screeched again just over her head.
“That horrid noise!” said
Anne Lisbeth; “it has quite startled me to-day.”
She had brought some coffee-beans
and chicory with her; it would be a kindness to the
grave-digger’s wife to make her a present of
these; and, when she did so, it was agreed that they
should take a cup of coffee together. The mistress
of the house went to prepare it, and Anne Lisbeth
sat down to wait for it. While waiting she fell
asleep, and she dreamed of one of whom she had never
before dreamt: that was very strange. She
dreamed of her own child, who in that very house had
starved and squalled, and never tasted anything better
than cold water, and who now lay in the deep sea,
our Lord only knew where. She dreamed that she
was sitting just where she really was seated, and
that the grave-digger’s wife had gone to make
some coffee, but had first to grind the coffee-beans,
and that a beautiful boy stood in the doorway a
boy as charming as the little count had been; and the
child said,
“The world is now passing away.
Hold fast to me, for thou art my mother. Thy
child is an angel in the kingdom of heaven. Hold
fast to me!”
And he seized her. But there
was a frightful uproar around, as if worlds were breaking
asunder; and the angel raised her up, and held her
fast by the sleeves of her dress so fast,
it seemed to her, that she was lifted from the ground;
but something hung so heavily about her feet, something
lay so heavily on her back: it was as if hundreds
of women were clinging fast to her, and crying, “If
thou canst be saved, so may we. We will hold
on hold on!” and they all appeared
to be holding on by her. Then the sleeves of
her garments gave way, and she fell, overcome with
terror.
The sensation of fear awoke her, and
she found herself on the point of falling off her
chair. Her head was so confused that at first
she could not remember what she had dreamt, though
she knew it had been something disagreeable.
The coffee was drunk, and Anne Lisbeth took her departure
to the nearest village, where she might meet the carrier,
and get him to convey her that evening to the town
where she lived. But the carrier said he was
not going until the following evening; and, on calculating
what it would cost her to remain till then, she determined
to walk home. She would not go by the high road,
but by the beach: that was at least eight or nine
miles shorter. The weather was fine, and it was
full moon. She would be at home the next morning.
The sun had set; the evening bells
that had been chiming were hushed. All was still;
not a bird was to be heard twittering among the leaves they
had all gone to rest: the owls were away.
All was silence in the wood; and on the beach, where
she was walking, she could hear her own foot fall
on the sand. The very sea seemed slumbering; the
waves rolled lazily and noiselessly on the shore, and
away on the open deep there seemed to be a dead calm:
not a line of foam, not a ripple was visible on the
water. All were quiet beneath, the living and
the dead.
Anne Lisbeth walked on, and her thoughts
were not engrossed by anything in particular.
She was not at all lost in thought, but thoughts were
not lost to her. They are never lost to us; they
lie only in a state of torpor, as it were, both the
lately active thoughts that have lulled themselves
to rest, and those which have not yet awoke.
But thoughts come often undesired; they can touch the
heart, they can distract the head, they can at times
overpower us.
“Good actions have their reward,” it is
written.
“The wages of sin is death,”
it is also written. Much is written much
is said. But many give no heed to the words of
truth they remember them not; and so it
was with Anne Lisbeth; but they can force themselves
upon the mind.
All sins and all virtues lie in our
hearts in thine, in mine. They lie
like small invisible seeds. From without fall
upon them a sunbeam, or the contact of an evil hand they
take their bent in their hidden nook, to the right
or to the left. Yes, there it is decided, and
the little grain of seed quivers, swells, springs
up, and pours its juice into your blood, and there
you are, fairly launched. These are thoughts
fraught with anxiety; they do not haunt one when one
is in a state of mental slumber, but they are fermenting.
Anne Lisbeth was slumbering hidden thoughts
were fermenting. From Candlemas to Candlemas
the heart has much on its tablets it has
the year’s account. Much is forgotten sins
in word and deed against God, against our neighbour,
and against our own consciences. We reflect little
upon all this; neither did Anne Lisbeth. She
had not broken the laws of her country, she kept up
good appearances, she did not run in debt, she wronged
no one; and so, well satisfied with herself, she walked
on by the seashore. What was that lying in her
path? She stopped. What was that washed
up from the sea? A man’s old hat lay there.
It might have fallen overboard. She approached
closer to it, stood still, and looked at it.
Heavens! what was lying there? She was almost
frightened; but there was nothing to be frightened
at; it was only a mass of seaweed that lay twined
over a large, oblong, flat rock, that was shaped something
like a human being it was nothing but seaweed.
Still she felt frightened, and hastened on; and as
she hurried on, many things she had heard in her childhood
recurred to her thoughts, especially all the superstitious
tales about “the apparition of the beach” the
spectre of the unburied that lay washed up on the lonely,
deserted shore. The body thrown up from the deep,
the dead body itself, she thought nothing of; but
its ghost followed the solitary wanderer, attached
itself closely to him or her, and demanded to be carried
to the churchyard, to receive Christian burial.
“Hold on hold on!”
it was wont to say; and, as Anne Lisbeth repeated
these words inwardly to herself, she suddenly remembered
her strange dream, in which the women had clung to
her, shrieking, “Hold on hold on!”
how the world had sunk; how her sleeves had given way,
and she had fallen from the grasp of her child, who
wished, in the hour of doom, to save her. Her
child her own flesh and blood the
little one she had never loved, never spared a thought
to that child was now at the bottom of
the sea, and it might come like “the apparition
of the beach,” and cry, “Hold on hold
on! Give me Christian burial!” And as these
thoughts crowded on her mind, terror gave wings to
her feet, and she hurried faster and faster on; but
fear came like a cold, clammy hand, and laid itself
on her beating heart, so that she felt quite faint;
and as she glanced towards the sea, she saw it looked
dark and threatening; a thick mist arose, and soon
spread around, lying heavily over the very trees and
bushes, which assumed strange appearances through
it.
She turned round to look for the moon,
which was behind her: it was like a pale disc,
without any rays. Something seemed to hang heavily
about her limbs as she attempted to hurry on.
She thought of the apparition; and, turning again,
she beheld the white moon as if close to her, while
the mist seemed to hang like a mantle over her shoulders.
“Hold on hold on! Give me Christian
burial!” she expected every moment to hear;
and she did hear a hollow, terrific sound, which seemed
to cry hoarsely, “Bury me bury me!”
Yes, it must be the spectre of her child her
child who was lying at the bottom of the sea, and
who would not rest quietly until the corpse was carried
to the churchyard, and placed like a Christian in
consecrated ground. She would go there she
would dig his grave herself; and she went in the direction
in which the church lay, and as she proceeded she felt
her invisible burden become lighter it
left her; and again she returned to the shore to reach
her home as speedily as possible. But no sooner
did her foot tread the sands than the wild sound seemed
to moan around her, and it seemed ever to repeat,
“Bury me bury me!”
The fog was cold and damp; her hands
and her face were cold and damp. She shivered
in her fright. Without, space seemed to close
up around her; within her there seemed to be endless
room for thoughts that had never before entered her
mind.
During one spring night here in the
north the beech groves can sprout, and the next day’s
early sun can shine on them in all their fresh young
beauty. In one single second within us can the
germ of sin bud forth, swelling by degrees into thoughts,
words, and deeds, though all remorse for them lies
dormant. It is quickened and unfolds itself
in one single second, when conscience awakens; and
our Lord awakens that when we least expect
it. Then there is nothing to be excused; deeds
stand forth and bear witness, thoughts find words,
and words ring out over the world. We are shocked
at what we have permitted to dwell within us, and
not stifled; shocked at what, in our thoughtlessness
or our presumption, we have scattered abroad.
The heart is the depository of all virtues, but also
of all vices; and these can thrive in the most barren
ground.
Anne Lisbeth reviewed in thought what
we have expressed in words. She was overwhelmed
with it all. She sank to the ground, and crawled
a little way over it. “Bury me bury
me!” she still seemed to hear. She would
rather have buried herself, if the grave could be an
eternal forgetfulness of everything. It was the
awakening hour of serious thought, of terrible thoughts,
that made her shudder. Superstition came, too,
by turns heating and chilling her blood; and things
she would scarcely have ventured to mention rushed
on her mind. Noiseless as the clouds that crossed
the sky in the clear moonlight floated past her a
vision she had heard of. Immediately before her
sped four foaming horses, flames flashing from their
eyes and from their distended nostrils; they drew
a fiery chariot, in which sat the evil lord of the
manor, who, more than a hundred years before, had dwelt
in that neighbourhood. Every night, it is said,
he drives to his former home, and then instantly turns
back again. He was not white, as the dead are
said to be: no, he was as black as a coal a
burnt-out coal. He nodded to Anne Lisbeth, and
beckoned to her: “Hold on hold
on! So mayst thou again drive in a nobleman’s
carriage, and forget thine own child!”
In still greater terror, and with
still greater precipitation than before, she fled
in the direction of the church. She reached the
churchyard; but the dark crosses above the graves,
and the dark ravens, seemed to mingle together before
her eyes. The ravens screeched as they had screeched
in the daytime; but she now understood what they said,
and each cried, “I am a raven-mother; I am a
raven-mother!” And Anne Lisbeth thought that
they were taunting her. She fancied that she
might, perhaps, be changed into such a dark bird,
and might have to screech like them, if she could not
get the grave demanded of her dug.
And she threw herself down upon the
ground, and she dug a grave with her hands in the
hard earth, so that blood sprang from her fingers.
“Bury me bury me!”
resounded still about her. She dreaded the crowing
of the cock, and the first red streak in the east,
because, if they came before her labours were ended,
she would be lost. And the cock crowed, and in
the east it began to be light. The grave was but
half dug. An ice-cold hand glided over her head
and her face, down to where her heart was. “Only
half a grave!” sighed a voice near her; and
something seemed to vanish away vanish into
the deep sea. It was “the apparition of
the beach.” Anne Lisbeth sank, terror-stricken
and benumbed, on the ground. She had lost feeling
and consciousness.
It was broad daylight when she came
to herself. Two young men lifted her up.
She was lying, not in the churchyard, but down on the
shore; and she had dug there a deep hole in the sand,
and cut her fingers till they bled with a broken glass,
the stem of which was stuck into a piece of wood painted
blue. Anne Lisbeth was ill. Conscience had
mingled in Superstition’s game, and had imbued
her with the idea that she had only half a soul that
her child had taken the other half away with him down
to the bottom of the sea. Never could she ascend
upwards towards the mercy-seat, until she had again
the half soul that was imprisoned in the depths of
the ocean. Anne Lisbeth was taken to her home,
but she never was the same as she had formerly been.
Her thoughts were disordered like tangled yarn; one
thread alone was straight that was to let
“the apparition of the beach” see that
a grave was dug for him in the churchyard, and thus
to win back her entire soul.
Many a night she was missed from her
home, and she was always found on the seashore, where
she waited for the spectre of the dead. Thus
passed a whole year. Then she disappeared one
night, and was not to be found. The whole of
the next day they searched for her in vain.
Towards the evening, when the bell-ringer
entered the church to ring the evening chimes, he
saw Anne Lisbeth lying before the altar. She
had been there from a very early hour in the morning;
her strength was almost exhausted, but her eyes sparkled,
her face glowed with a sort of rosy tint. The
departing rays of the sun shone in on her, and streamed
over the altar-piece, and on the silver clasps of the
Bible, that lay open at the words of the prophet Joel:
“Rend your heart, and not your garments, and
turn unto the Lord your God.” “It
was a strange occurrence,” people said as
if everything were chance.
On Anne Lisbeth’s countenance,
when lighted up by the sun, were to be read peace
and comfort. “She felt so well,” she
said. “She had won back her soul.”
During the night “the apparition of the beach” her
own child had been with her, and it had
said,
“Thou hast only dug half a grave
for me; but now for a year and a day thou hast entombed
me in thy heart, and there a mother best inters her
child.” And he had restored to her her lost
half soul, and had led her into the church.
“Now I am in God’s house,”
said she, “and in it one is blessed.”
When the sun had sunk entirely Anne
Lisbeth’s spirit had soared far away up yonder,
where there is no more fear when one’s sins are
blotted out; and hers, it might be hoped, had been
blotted out by the Saviour of the world.