<h3><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>3 Our Lady’s Child</h3>
<p>Hard by a great forest dwelt a wood-cutter with his wife, who had an only
child, a little girl three years old. They were so poor, however, that they no
longer had daily bread, and did not know how to get food for her. One morning
the wood-cutter went out sorrowfully to his work in the forest, and while he
was cutting wood, suddenly there stood before him a tall and beautiful woman
with a crown of shining stars on her head, who said to him, “I am the
Virgin Mary, mother of the child Jesus. Thou art poor and needy, bring thy
child to me, I will take her with me and be her mother, and care for
her.” The wood-cutter obeyed, brought his child, and gave her to the
Virgin Mary, who took her up to heaven with her. There the child fared well,
ate sugar-cakes, and drank sweet milk, and her clothes were of gold, and the
little angels played with her. And when she was fourteen years of age, the
Virgin Mary called her one day and said, “Dear child, I am about to make
a long journey, so take into thy keeping the keys of the thirteen doors of
heaven. Twelve of these thou mayest open, and behold the glory which is within
them, but the thirteenth, to which this little key belongs, is forbidden thee.
Beware of opening it, or thou wilt bring misery on thyself.” The girl
promised to be obedient, and when the Virgin Mary was gone, she began to
examine the dwellings of the kingdom of heaven. Each day she opened one of
them, until she had made the round of the twelve. In each of them sat one of
the Apostles in the midst of a great light, and she rejoiced in all the
magnificence and splendour, and the little angels who always accompanied her
rejoiced with her. Then the forbidden door alone remained, and she felt a great
desire to know what could be hidden behind it, and said to the angels, “I
will not quite open it, and I will not go inside it, but I will unlock it so
that we can just see a little through the opening.” “Oh no,”
said the little angels, “that would be a sin. The Virgin Mary has
forbidden it, and it might easily cause thy unhappiness.” Then she was
silent, but the desire in her heart was not stilled, but gnawed there and
tormented her, and let her have no rest. And once when the angels had all gone
out, she thought, “Now I am quite alone, and I could peep in. If I do it,
no one will ever know.” She sought out the key, and when she had got it
in her hand, she put it in the lock, and when she had put it in, she turned it
round as well. Then the door sprang open, and she saw there the Trinity sitting
in fire and splendour. She stayed there awhile, and looked at everything in
amazement; then she touched the light a little with her finger, and her finger
became quite golden. Immediately a great fear fell on her. She shut the door
violently, and ran away. Her terror too would not quit her, let her do what she
might, and her heart beat continually and would not be still; the gold too
stayed on her finger, and would not go away, let her rub it and wash it never
so much.</p>
<p>It was not long before the Virgin Mary came back from her journey. She called
the girl before her, and asked to have the keys of heaven back. When the maiden
gave her the bunch, the Virgin looked into her eyes and said, “Hast thou
not opened the thirteenth door also?” “No,” she replied. Then
she laid her hand on the girl’s heart, and felt how it beat and beat, and
saw right well that she had disobeyed her order and had opened the door. Then
she said once again, “Art thou certain that thou hast not done it?”
“Yes,” said the girl, for the second time. Then she perceived the
finger which had become golden from touching the fire of heaven, and saw well
that the child had sinned, and said for the third time “Hast thou not
done it?” “No,” said the girl for the third time. Then said
the Virgin Mary, “Thou hast not obeyed me, and besides that thou hast
lied, thou art no longer worthy to be in heaven.”</p>
<p>Then the girl fell into a deep sleep, and when she awoke she lay on the earth
below, and in the midst of a wilderness. She wanted to cry out, but she could
bring forth no sound. She sprang up and wanted to run away, but whithersoever
she turned herself, she was continually held back by thick hedges of thorns
through which she could not break. In the desert, in which she was imprisoned,
there stood an old hollow tree, and this had to be her dwelling-place. Into
this she crept when night came, and here she slept. Here, too, she found a
shelter from storm and rain, but it was a miserable life, and bitterly did she
weep when she remembered how happy she had been in heaven, and how the angels
had played with her. Roots and wild berries were her only food, and for these
she sought as far as she could go. In the autumn she picked up the fallen nuts
and leaves, and carried them into the hole. The nuts were her food in winter,
and when snow and ice came, she crept amongst the leaves like a poor little
animal that she might not freeze. Before long her clothes were all torn, and
one bit of them after another fell off her. As soon, however, as the sun shone
warm again, she went out and sat in front of the tree, and her long hair
covered her on all sides like a mantle. Thus she sat year after year, and felt
the pain and the misery of the world. One day, when the trees were once more
clothed in fresh green, the King of the country was hunting in the forest, and
followed a roe, and as it had fled into the thicket which shut in this part of
the forest, he got off his horse, tore the bushes asunder, and cut himself a
path with his sword. When he had at last forced his way through, he saw a
wonderfully beautiful maiden sitting under the tree; and she sat there and was
entirely covered with her golden hair down to her very feet. He stood still and
looked at her full of surprise, then he spoke to her and said, “Who art
thou? Why art thou sitting here in the wilderness?” But she gave no
answer, for she could not open her mouth. The King continued, “Wilt thou
go with me to my castle?” Then she just nodded her head a little. The
King took her in his arms, carried her to his horse, and rode home with her,
and when he reached the royal castle he caused her to be dressed in beautiful
garments, and gave her all things in abundance. Although she could not speak,
she was still so beautiful and charming that he began to love her with all his
heart, and it was not long before he married her.</p>
<p>After a year or so had passed, the Queen brought a son into the world.
Thereupon the Virgin Mary appeared to her in the night when she lay in her bed
alone, and said, “If thou wilt tell the truth and confess that thou didst
unlock the forbidden door, I will open thy mouth and give thee back thy speech,
but if thou perseverest in thy sin, and deniest obstinately, I will take thy
new-born child away with me.” Then the queen was permitted to answer, but
she remained hard, and said, “No, I did not open the forbidden
door;” and the Virgin Mary took the new-born child from her arms, and
vanished with it. Next morning when the child was not to be found, it was
whispered among the people that the Queen was a man-eater, and had killed her
own child. She heard all this and could say nothing to the contrary, but the
King would not believe it, for he loved her so much.</p>
<p>When a year had gone by the Queen again bore a son, and in the night the Virgin
Mary again came to her, and said, “If thou wilt confess that thou
openedst the forbidden door, I will give thee thy child back and untie thy
tongue; but if you continuest in sin and deniest it, I will take away with me
this new child also.” Then the Queen again said, “No, I did not
open the forbidden door;” and the Virgin took the child out of her arms,
and away with her to heaven. Next morning, when this child also had
disappeared, the people declared quite loudly that the Queen had devoured it,
and the King’s councillors demanded that she should be brought to
justice. The King, however, loved her so dearly that he would not believe it,
and commanded the councillors under pain of death not to say any more about it.</p>
<p>The following year the Queen gave birth to a beautiful little daughter, and for
the third time the Virgin Mary appeared to her in the night and said,
“Follow me.” She took the Queen by the hand and led her to heaven,
and showed her there her two eldest children, who smiled at her, and were
playing with the ball of the world. When the Queen rejoiced thereat, the Virgin
Mary said, “Is thy heart not yet softened? If thou wilt own that thou
openedst the forbidden door, I will give thee back thy two little sons.”
But for the third time the Queen answered, “No, I did not open the
forbidden door.” Then the Virgin let her sink down to earth once more,
and took from her likewise her third child.</p>
<p>Next morning, when the loss was reported abroad, all the people cried loudly,
“The Queen is a man-eater. She must be judged,” and the King was no
longer able to restrain his councillors. Thereupon a trial was held, and as she
could not answer, and defend herself, she was condemned to be burnt alive. The
wood was got together, and when she was fast bound to the stake, and the fire
began to burn round about her, the hard ice of pride melted, her heart was
moved by repentance, and she thought, “If I could but confess before my
death that I opened the door.” Then her voice came back to her, and she
cried out loudly, “Yes, Mary, I did it;” and straight-way rain fell
from the sky and extinguished the flames of fire, and a light broke forth above
her, and the Virgin Mary descended with the two little sons by her side, and
the new-born daughter in her arms. She spoke kindly to her, and said, “He
who repents his sin and acknowledges it, is forgiven.” Then she gave her
the three children, untied her tongue, and granted her happiness for her whole
life.</p>
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