[Illustration: Among these
trees lived a nightingale, which sang so deliciously,
that even the poor fisherman, who had plenty of other
things to do, lay still to listen to it, when he was
out at night drawing in his nets.]
In China, as you know, the Emperor
is a Chinaman, and all the people around him are Chinamen
too. It is many years since the story I am going
to tell you happened, but that is all the more reason
for telling it, lest it should be forgotten.
The emperor’s palace was the most beautiful
thing in the world; it was made entirely of the finest
porcelain, very costly, but at the same time so fragile
that it could only be touched with the very greatest
care. There were the most extraordinary flowers
to be seen in the garden; the most beautiful ones had
little silver bells tied to them, which tinkled perpetually,
so that one should not pass the flowers without looking
at them. Every little detail in the garden had
been most carefully thought out, and it was so big,
that even the gardener himself did not know where
it ended. If one went on walking, one came to
beautiful woods with lofty trees and deep lakes.
The wood extended to the sea, which was deep and blue,
deep enough for large ships to sail up right under
the branches of the trees. Among these trees
lived a nightingale, which sang so deliciously, that
even the poor fisherman, who had plenty of other things
to do, lay still to listen to it, when he was out
at night drawing in his nets. ’Heavens,
how beautiful it is!’ he said, but then he had
to attend to his business and forgot it. The
next night when he heard it again he would again exclaim,
‘Heavens, how beautiful it is!’
Travellers came to the emperor’s
capital, from every country in the world; they admired
everything very much, especially the palace and the
gardens, but when they heard the nightingale they all
said, ’This is better than anything!’
When they got home they described
it, and the learned ones wrote many books about the
town, the palace and the garden; but nobody forgot
the nightingale, it was always put above everything
else. Those among them who were poets wrote the
most beautiful poems, all about the nightingale in
the woods by the deep blue sea. These books went
all over the world, and in course of time some of
them reached the emperor. He sat in his golden
chair reading and reading, and nodding his head, well
pleased to hear such beautiful descriptions of the
town, the palace and the garden. ‘But the
nightingale is the best of all,’ he read.
‘What is this?’ said the
emperor. ’The nightingale? Why, I know
nothing about it. Is there such a bird in my
kingdom, and in my own garden into the bargain, and
I have never heard of it? Imagine my having to
discover this from a book?’
Then he called his gentleman-in-waiting,
who was so grand that when any one of a lower rank
dared to speak to him, or to ask him a question, he
would only answer ‘P,’ which means nothing
at all.
‘There is said to be a very
wonderful bird called a nightingale here,’ said
the emperor. ’They say that it is better
than anything else in all my great kingdom! Why
have I never been told anything about it?’
‘I have never heard it mentioned,’
said the gentleman-in-waiting. ’It has
never been presented at court.’
‘I wish it to appear here this
evening to sing to me,’ said the emperor.
’The whole world knows what I am possessed of,
and I know nothing about it!’
‘I have never heard it mentioned
before,’ said the gentleman-in-waiting.
‘I will seek it, and I will find it!’ But
where was it to be found? The gentleman-in-waiting
ran upstairs and downstairs and in and out of all
the rooms and corridors. No one of all those he
met had ever heard anything about the nightingale;
so the gentleman-in-waiting ran back to the emperor,
and said that it must be a myth, invented by the writers
of the books. ’Your imperial majesty must
not believe everything that is written; books are
often mere inventions, even if they do not belong to
what we call the black art!’
’But the book in which I read
it is sent to me by the powerful Emperor of Japan,
so it can’t be untrue. I will hear this
nightingale; I insist upon its being here to-night.
I extend my most gracious protection to it, and if
it is not forthcoming, I will have the whole court
trampled upon after supper!’
‘Tsing-pe!’ said the gentleman-in-waiting,
and away he ran again, up and down all the stairs,
in and out of all the rooms and corridors; half the
court ran with him, for they none of them wished to
be trampled on. There was much questioning about
this nightingale, which was known to all the outside
world, but to no one at court. At last they found
a poor little maid in the kitchen. She said,
’Oh heavens, the nightingale? I know it
very well. Yes, indeed it can sing. Every
evening I am allowed to take broken meat to my poor
sick mother: she lives down by the shore.
On my way back, when I am tired, I rest awhile in the
wood, and then I hear the nightingale. Its song
brings the tears into my eyes; I feel as if my mother
were kissing me!’
‘Little kitchen-maid,’
said the gentleman-in-waiting, ’I will procure
you a permanent position in the kitchen, and permission
to see the emperor dining, if you will take us to
the nightingale. It is commanded to appear at
court to-night.’
Then they all went out into the wood
where the nightingale usually sang. Half the
court was there. As they were going along at their
best pace a cow began to bellow.
‘Oh!’ said a young courtier,
’there we have it. What wonderful power
for such a little creature; I have certainly heard
it before.’
’No, those are the cows bellowing;
we are a long way yet from the place.’
Then the frogs began to croak in the marsh.
‘Beautiful!’ said the
Chinese chaplain, ’it is just like the tinkling
of church bells.’
‘No, those are the frogs!’
said the little kitchen-maid. ’But I think
we shall soon hear it now!’
Then the nightingale began to sing.
‘There it is!’ said the
little girl. ‘Listen, listen, there it sits!’
and she pointed to a little grey bird up among the
branches.
‘Is it possible?’ said
the gentleman-in-waiting. ’I should never
have thought it was like that. How common it
looks! Seeing so many grand people must have
frightened all its colours away.’
‘Little nightingale!’
called the kitchen-maid quite loud, ’our gracious
emperor wishes you to sing to him!’
‘With the greatest of pleasure!’
said the nightingale, warbling away in the most delightful
fashion.
‘It is just like crystal bells,’
said the gentleman-in-waiting. ’Look at
its little throat, how active it is. It is extraordinary
that we have never heard it before! I am sure
it will be a great success at court!’
‘Shall I sing again to the emperor?’
said the nightingale, who thought he was present.
‘My precious little nightingale,’
said the gentleman-in-waiting, ’I have the honour
to command your attendance at a court festival to-night,
where you will charm his gracious majesty the emperor
with your fascinating singing.’
‘It sounds best among the trees,’
said the nightingale, but it went with them willingly
when it heard that the emperor wished it.
[Illustration: ’Is it
possible?’ said the gentleman-in-waiting.
’I should never have thought it was like that.
How common it looks. Seeing so many grand people
must have frightened all its colours away.’]
The palace had been brightened up
for the occasion. The walls and the floors, which
were all of china, shone by the light of many thousand
golden lamps. The most beautiful flowers, all
of the tinkling kind, were arranged in the corridors;
there was hurrying to and fro, and a great draught,
but this was just what made the bells ring; one’s
ears were full of the tinkling. In the middle
of the large reception-room where the emperor sat
a golden rod had been fixed, on which the nightingale
was to perch. The whole court was assembled, and
the little kitchen-maid had been permitted to stand
behind the door, as she now had the actual title of
cook. They were all dressed in their best; everybody’s
eyes were turned towards the little grey bird at which
the emperor was nodding. The nightingale sang
delightfully, and the tears came into the emperor’s
eyes, nay, they rolled down his cheeks; and then the
nightingale sang more beautifully than ever, its notes
touched all hearts. The emperor was charmed,
and said the nightingale should have his gold slipper
to wear round its neck. But the nightingale declined
with thanks; it had already been sufficiently rewarded.
’I have seen tears in the eyes
of the emperor; that is my richest reward. The
tears of an emperor have a wonderful power! God
knows I am sufficiently recompensed!’ and then
it again burst into its sweet heavenly song.
‘That is the most delightful
coquetting I have ever seen!’ said the ladies,
and they took some water into their mouths to try and
make the same gurgling when any one spoke to them,
thinking so to equal the nightingale. Even the
lackeys and the chambermaids announced that they were
satisfied, and that is saying a great deal; they are
always the most difficult people to please. Yes,
indeed, the nightingale had made a sensation.
It was to stay at court now, and to have its own cage,
as well as liberty to walk out twice a day, and once
in the night. It always had twelve footmen, with
each one holding a ribbon which was tied round its
leg. There was not much pleasure in an outing
of that sort.
The whole town talked about the marvellous
bird, and if two people met, one said to the other
‘Night,’ and the other answered ‘Gale,’
and then they sighed, perfectly understanding each
other. Eleven cheesemongers’ children were
called after it, but they had not got a voice among
them.
One day a large parcel came for the
emperor; outside was written the word ‘Nightingale.’
‘Here we have another new book
about this celebrated bird,’ said the emperor.
But it was no book; it was a little work of art in
a box, an artificial nightingale, exactly like the
living one, but it was studded all over with diamonds,
rubies and sapphires.
When the bird was wound up it could
sing one of the songs the real one sang, and it wagged
its tail, which glittered with silver and gold.
A ribbon was tied round its neck on which was written,
’The Emperor of Japan’s nightingale is
very poor compared to the Emperor of China’s.’
Everybody said, ‘Oh, how beautiful!’
And the person who brought the artificial bird immediately
received the title of Imperial Nightingale-Carrier
in Chief.
‘Now, they must sing together; what a duet that
will be.’
Then they had to sing together, but
they did not get on very well, for the real nightingale
sang in its own way, and the artificial one could
only sing waltzes.
‘There is no fault in that,’
said the music-master; ’it is perfectly in time
and correct in every way!’
Then the artificial bird had to sing
alone. It was just as great a success as the
real one, and then it was so much prettier to look
at; it glittered like bracelets and breast-pins.
[Illustration: Then it again
burst into its sweet heavenly song.]
‘That is the most delightful
coquetting I have ever seen!’ said the ladies,
and they took some water into their mouths to try and
make the same gurgling, thinking so to equal the nightingale._
It sang the same tune three and thirty
times over, and yet it was not tired; people would
willingly have heard it from the beginning again,
but the emperor said that the real one must have a
turn now—but where was it? No one
had noticed that it had flown out of the open window,
back to its own green woods.
‘But what is the meaning of this?’ said
the emperor.
All the courtiers railed at it, and said it was a
most ungrateful bird.
‘We have got the best bird though,’
said they, and then the artificial bird had to sing
again, and this was the thirty-fourth time that they
heard the same tune, but they did not know it thoroughly
even yet, because it was so difficult.
The music-master praised the bird
tremendously, and insisted that it was much better
than the real nightingale, not only as regarded the
outside with all the diamonds, but the inside too.
’Because you see, my ladies
and gentlemen, and the emperor before all, in the
real nightingale you never know what you will hear,
but in the artificial one everything is decided beforehand!
So it is, and so it must remain, it can’t be
otherwise. You can account for things, you can
open it and show the human ingenuity in arranging the
waltzes, how they go, and how one note follows upon
another!’
‘Those are exactly my opinions,’
they all said, and the music-master got leave to show
the bird to the public next Sunday. They were
also to hear it sing, said the emperor. So they
heard it, and all became as enthusiastic over it as
if they had drunk themselves merry on tea, because
that is a thoroughly Chinese habit.
Then they all said ‘Oh,’
and stuck their forefingers in the air and nodded
their heads; but the poor fishermen who had heard the
real nightingale said, ’It sounds very nice,
and it is very like the real one, but there is something
wanting, we don’t know what.’ The
real nightingale was banished from the kingdom.
The artificial bird had its place
on a silken cushion, close to the emperor’s
bed: all the presents it had received of gold
and precious jewels were scattered round it.
Its title had risen to be ’Chief Imperial Singer
of the Bed-Chamber,’ in rank number one, on the
left side; for the emperor reckoned that side the
important one, where the heart was seated. And
even an emperor’s heart is on the left side.
The music-master wrote five-and-twenty volumes about
the artificial bird; the treatise was very long and
written in all the most difficult Chinese characters.
Everybody said they had read and understood it, for
otherwise they would have been reckoned stupid, and
then their bodies would have been trampled upon.
[Illustration: The music-master
wrote five-and-twenty volumes about the artificial
bird; the treatise was very long and written in all
the most difficult Chinese characters.]
Things went on in this way for a whole
year. The emperor, the court, and all the other
Chinamen knew every little gurgle in the song of the
artificial bird by heart; but they liked it all the
better for this, and they could all join in the song
themselves. Even the street boys sang ‘zizizi’
and ‘cluck, cluck, cluck,’ and the emperor
sang it too.
But one evening when the bird was
singing its best, and the emperor was lying in bed
listening to it, something gave way inside the bird
with a ‘whizz.’ Then a spring burst,
‘whirr’ went all the wheels, and the music
stopped. The emperor jumped out of bed and sent
for his private physicians, but what good could they
do? Then they sent for the watchmaker, and after
a good deal of talk and examination he got the works
to go again somehow; but he said it would have to be
saved as much as possible, because it was so worn
out, and he could not renew the works so as to be
sure of the tune. This was a great blow!
They only dared to let the artificial bird sing once
a year, and hardly that; but then the music-master
made a little speech, using all the most difficult
words. He said it was just as good as ever, and
his saying it made it so.
Five years now passed, and then a
great grief came upon the nation, for they were all
very fond of their emperor, and he was ill and could
not live, it was said. A new emperor was already
chosen, and people stood about in the street, and
asked the gentleman-in-waiting how their emperor was
going on.
‘P,’ answered he, shaking his head.
The emperor lay pale and cold in his
gorgeous bed, the courtiers thought he was dead, and
they all went off to pay their respects to their new
emperor. The lackeys ran off to talk matters over,
and the chambermaids gave a great coffee-party.
Cloth had been laid down in all the rooms and corridors
so as to deaden the sound of footsteps, so it was very,
very quiet. But the emperor was not dead yet.
He lay stiff and pale in the gorgeous bed with its
velvet hangings and heavy golden tassels. There
was an open window high above him, and the moon streamed
in upon the emperor, and the artificial bird beside
him.
The poor emperor could hardly breathe,
he seemed to have a weight on his chest, he opened
his eyes, and then he saw that it was Death sitting
upon his chest, wearing his golden crown. In one
hand he held the emperor’s golden sword, and
in the other his imperial banner. Round about,
from among the folds of the velvet hangings peered
many curious faces: some were hideous, others
gentle and pleasant. They were all the emperor’s
good and bad deeds, which now looked him in the face
when Death was weighing him down.
‘Do you remember that?’
whispered one after the other; ’Do you remember
this?’ and they told him so many things that
the perspiration poured down his face.
‘I never knew that,’ said
the emperor. ’Music, music, sound the great
Chinese drums!’ he cried, ‘that I may not
hear what they are saying.’ But they went
on and on, and Death sat nodding his head, just like
a Chinaman, at everything that was said.
‘Music, music!’ shrieked
the emperor. ’You precious little golden
bird, sing, sing! I have loaded you with precious
stones, and even hung my own golden slipper round
your neck; sing, I tell you, sing!’
But the bird stood silent; there was
nobody to wind it up, so of course it could not go.
Death continued to fix the great empty sockets of his
eyes upon him, and all was silent, so terribly silent.
Suddenly, close to the window, there
was a burst of lovely song; it was the living nightingale,
perched on a branch outside. It had heard of the
emperor’s need, and had come to bring comfort
and hope to him. As it sang the faces round became
fainter and fainter, and the blood coursed with fresh
vigour in the emperor’s veins and through his
feeble limbs. Even Death himself listened to
the song and said, ’Go on, little nightingale,
go on!’
’Yes, if you give me the gorgeous
golden sword; yes, if you give me the imperial banner;
yes, if you give me the emperor’s crown.’
And Death gave back each of these
treasures for a song, and the nightingale went on
singing. It sang about the quiet churchyard, when
the roses bloom, where the elder flower scents the
air, and where the fresh grass is ever moistened anew
by the tears of the mourner. This song brought
to Death a longing for his own garden, and, like a
cold grey mist, he passed out of the window.
‘Thanks, thanks!’ said
the emperor; ’you heavenly little bird, I know
you! I banished you from my kingdom, and yet you
have charmed the evil visions away from my bed by
your song, and even Death away from my heart!
How can I ever repay you?’
‘You have rewarded me,’
said the nightingale. ’I brought the tears
to your eyes, the very first time I ever sang to you,
and I shall never forget it! Those are the jewels
which gladden the heart of a singer;—but
sleep now, and wake up fresh and strong! I will
sing to you!’
Then it sang again, and the emperor
fell into a sweet refreshing sleep. The sun shone
in at his window, when he woke refreshed and well;
none of his attendants had yet come back to him, for
they thought he was dead, but the nightingale still
sat there singing.
‘You must always stay with me!’
said the emperor. ’You shall only sing
when you like, and I will break the artificial bird
into a thousand pieces!’
[Illustration: Even Death
himself listened to the song and said, ’Go on,
little nightingale, go on!’]
‘Don’t do that!’
said the nightingale, ’it did all the good it
could! keep it as you have always done! I can’t
build my nest and live in this palace, but let me
come whenever I like, then I will sit on the branch
in the evening, and sing to you. I will sing to
cheer you and to make you thoughtful too; I will sing
to you of the happy ones, and of those that suffer
too. I will sing about the good and the evil,
which are kept hidden from you. The little singing
bird flies far and wide, to the poor fisherman, and
the peasant’s home, to numbers who are far from
you and your court. I love your heart more than
your crown, and yet there is an odour of sanctity
round the crown too!—I will come, and I
will sing to you!—But you must promise
me one thing!—
‘Everything!’ said the
emperor, who stood there in his imperial robes which
he had just put on, and he held the sword heavy with
gold upon his heart.
’One thing I ask you! Tell
no one that you have a little bird who tells you everything;
it will be better so!’
Then the nightingale flew away.
The attendants came in to see after their dead emperor,
and there he stood, bidding them ‘Good morning!’