双语安徒生童话:Two Brothers两兄弟

发布时间:2017-08-03 编辑:tyl

  ON one of the Danish islands, where oldThingstones, the seats of justice of ourforefathers, still stand in the cornfields, and hugetrees rise in the forests of beech, there lies a littletown whose low houses are covered with red tiles. Inone of these houses strange things were brewingover the glowing coals on the open hearth; therewas a boiling going on in glasses, and a mixing anddistilling, while herbs were being cut up and pounded in mortars. An elderly man looked after itall.

  “One must only do the right thing,” he said; “yes, the right—the correct thing. Onemust find out the truth concerning every created particle, and keep to that.”

  In the room with the good housewife sat her two sons; they were still small, but hadGREat thoughts. Their mother, too, had always spoken to them of right and justice, andexhorted them to keep to the truth, which she said was the countenance of the Lord in thisworld.

  the elder of the boys looked roguish and enterprising. He took a delight in reading of theforces of nature, of the sun and the moon; no fairy tale pleased him so much. Oh, howbeautiful it must be, he thought, to go on voyages of discovery, or to find out how toimitate the wings of birds and then to be able to fly! Yes, to find that out was the rightthing. Father was right, and mother was right—truth holds the world together.

  the younger brother was quieter, and buried himself entirely in his books. When he readabout Jacob dressing himself in sheep-skins to personify Esau, and so to usurp his brother'sbirthright, he would clench his little fist in anger against the deceiver; when he read of tyrantsand of the injustice and wickedness of the world, tears would come into his eyes, and he wasquite filled with the thought of the justice and truth which must and would triumph.

  One evening he was lying in bed, but the curtains were not yet drawn close, and the lightstreamed in upon him; he had taken his book into bed with him, for he wanted to finishreading the story of Solon. His thoughts lifted and carried him away a wonderful distance; itseemed to him as if the bed had become a ship flying along under full sail. Was he dreaming,or what was happening? It glided over the rolling waves and across the ocean of time, and tohim came the voice of Solon; spoken in a strange tongue, yet intelligible to him, he heardthe Danish motto: “By law the land is ruled.”

  the genius of the human race stood in the humble room, bent down over the bed andimprinted a kiss on the boy's forehead: “Be thou strong in fame and strong in the battle oflife! With truth in thy heart fly toward the land of truth!”

  the elder brother was not yet in bed; he was standing at the window looking out at themist which rose from the meadows. They were not elves dancing out there, as their old nursehad told him; he knew better—they were vapours which were warmer than the air, and that iswhy they rose. A shooting star lit up the sky, and the boy's thoughts passed in a second fromthe vapours of the earth up to the shining meteor. The stars gleamed in the heavens, and itseemed as if long golden threads hung down from them to the earth.

  “Fly with me,” sang a voice, which the boy heard in his heart. And the mighty genius ofmankind, swifter than a bird and than an arrow—swifter than anything of earthly origin—carried him out into space, where the heavenly bodies are bound together by the rays thatpass from star to star. Our earth revolved in the thin air, and the cities upon it seemed to lieclose to each other. Through the spheres echoed the words:

  “What is near, what is far, when thou art lifted by the mighty genius of mind?”

  And again the boy stood by the window, gazing out, whilst his younger brother lay inbed. Their mother called them by their names: “Anders Sandoe” and “Hans Christian.”

  Denmark and the whole world knows them—the two brothers Orsted.