The ice maiden
The walnut and chestnut trees, which extend from the bridge of St. Maurice,
by the river Rhone, to the shores of the lake of Geneva, were already covered
with the delicate green garlands of early spring, just bursting into bloom,
while the Rhone rushed wildly from its source among the green glaciers
which form the ice palace of the Ice Maiden. She sometimes allows herself
to be carried by the keen wind to the lofty snow-fields, where she stretches
herself in the sunshine on the soft snowy-cushions. From thence she throws
her far-seeing glance into the deep valley beneath, where human beings
are busily moving about like ants on a stone in the sun. "Spirits of strength,
as the children of the sun call you," cried the Ice Maiden, "ye are but
worms! Let but a snow-ball roll, and you and your houses and your towns
are crushed and swept away." And she raised her proud head, and looked
around her with eyes that flashed death from their glance. From the valley
came a rumbling sound; men were busily at work blasting the rocks to form
tunnels, and laying down roads for the railway. "They are playing at work
underground, like moles," said she. "They are digging passages beneath
the earth, and the noise is like the reports of cannons. I shall throw
down my palaces, for the clamor is louder than the roar of thunder." Then
there ascended from the valley a thick vapor, which waved itself in the
air like a fluttering veil. It rose, as a plume of feathers, from a steam
engine, to which, on the lately-opened railway, a string of carriages was
linked, carriage to carriage, looking like a winding serpent. The train
shot past with the speed of an arrow. "They play at being masters down
there, those spirits of strength!" exclaimed the Ice Maiden; "but the powers
of nature are still the rulers." And she laughed and sang till her voice
sounded through the valley, and people said it was the rolling of an avalanche.
But the children of the sun sang in louder strains in praise of the mind
of man, which can span the sea as with a yoke, can level mountains, and
fill up valleys. It is the power of thought which gives man the mastery
over nature. Just at this moment there came across the snow-field, where
the Ice Maiden sat, a party of travellers. They had bound themselves fast
to each other, so that they looked like one large body on the slippery
plains of ice encircling the deep abyss. "Worms!" exclaimed the Ice Maiden.
"You, the lords of the powers of nature!" And she turned away and looked
maliciously at the deep valley where the railway train was rushing by.
"There they sit, these thoughts!" she exclaimed. "There they sit in their
power over nature's strength. I see them all. One sits proudly apart, like
a king; others sit together in a group; yonder, half of them are asleep;
and when the steam dragon stops, they will get out and go their way. The
thoughts go forth into the world," and she laughed. "There goes another
avalanche," said those in the valley beneath. "It will not reach us," said
two who sat together behind the steam dragon. "Two hearts and one beat,"
as people say. They were Rudy and Babette, and the miller was with them.
"I am like the luggage," said he; "I am here as a necessary appendage."
"There sit those two," said the Ice Maiden. "Many a chamois have I crushed.
Millions of Alpine roses have I snapped and broken off; not a root have
I spared. I know them all, and their thoughts, those spirits of strength!"
and again she laughed. "There rolls another avalanche," said those in the
valley.