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THE DARNING-NEDDLE THERE was once a
Darning-needle, who thought herself so fine, she imagined she was an "Take care, and mind you hold me tight!" she
said to the Fingers that took her out. "Don't let me fall ! If I fall on the ground I
shall certainly never be found again, for I am so fine!" "That's as it may be," said the Fingers; and
they grasped her round the body. "See, I'm coming with a train!" said the Darning-needle, and she drew a long thread after her, but there was no knot in the thread. The Fingers pointed the needle just at the cook's
slipper, in which the upper leather had burst, and was to be sewn together. "That's vulgar work," said the Darning-needle.
"I shall never get through. I'm breaking! I'm breaking!" And she really broke.
"Did I not say so?" said the Darning-needle; "I'm too fine!" "Now it's quite useless," said the Fingers; but
they were obliged to hold her fast, all the same; for the cook dropped some sealing-wax
upon the needle, and pinned her handkerchief together with it in front. "So, now I'm a breast-pin!" said the
Darning-needle. "I knew very well that I should come to honor; when one is something,
one comes to something" And she laughed quietly to herself--and one can never see
when a darning-needle laughs. There she sat, as proud as if she were in a state coach, and
looked all about her. "May I be permitted to ask if you are of gold
?" she inquired of the pin, her neighbor. "You have a very pretty appearance and
a peculiar head, but it is only little. You must take pains to grow, for it's not every
one that has sealing-wax dropped upon him." And the Darning-needle drew herself up so proudly that
she fell out of the handkerchief right into the sink, which the cook was rinsing out. "Now we're going on a journey," said the
Darning-needle. "If I only don't get lost!" "I'm too fine for this world," she observed, as
she lay in the gutter. "But I know who I am, and there's always something in
that!" So the Darning-needle kept her proud behavior, and did
not lose her good humor. And things of many kinds swam over her, chips and straws and
pieces of old newspapers. "Only look how they sail!" said the Darning-needle. "They don't know what is under them! I'm here, I
remain firmly here. See, there goes a chip thinking of nothing in the world but of
himself--of a chip! There's a straw going by now. How he turns! how he twirls about! Don't
think only of yourself, you might easily run up against a stone. There swims a bit of
newspaper. What's wrltten upon it has long been forgotten, and yet One day something lay close beside her that glittered
splendidly; then the Darning-needle believed that it was a diamond; but it was a bit of
broken bottle; and because it shone the Darning-needle spoke to it, introducing herself as
a. breast-pin. "I suppose you are a diamond ?" she observed. "Why, yes, something of that kind." And then each believed the other to be a very valuable
thing; and they began speaking about the world, and how very conceited it was. "I have been in a lady's box," said the
Darning-needle,"and this lady was a cook. She had five fingers on each hand, and I
never saw anything so conceited as those five fingers. And yet they were only there that
they might take me out of the box and put me back into it." "Were they of good birth ?" asked the Bit of
Bottle. "No, indeed," replied the Darning-needle:
"but very haughty. 'There were five brothers, all of the finger family. They kept
very proudly together though they were of different lengths: the outermost, the thumbling,
was short and fat; he walked out in front of the ranks, and only had one joint in his
back, and could only make a single bow; but he said that if he were hacked off a man, that
man was useless for service in war. Dainty-mouth, the second finger, thrust himself into
sweet and sour, pointed to sun and moon, and gave the impression when they wrote. Longman,
the third, looked at all the others over his shoulder. Goldborder, the fourth, went about
with a golden belt round his waist; and little Playman did nothing at all, and was proud
of it. There was nothing but bragging among them, and therefore I went away." "And now we sit here and glitter!" said the Bit
of Bottle. At that moment more water came into the gutter, so that it overflowed, and the
Bit of Bottle was carried away. "So he is disposed of," observed the
Darning-needle. "I remain here. I am too fine. But that's my pride, and my pride is
honorable." And proudly she sat there, and had many great thoughts. "I could
almost believe I had been born of a sunbeam, I'm so fine! It really appears as if the
sunbeams were always seeking for me under the water. Ah! I'm so fine that my mother cannot
find me. If I had my old eye, which broke off, I think I should cry; but, no, I should not
do that; it's not genteel to cry." One day a couple of street boys lay grubbing in the
gutter, where they sometimes found old nails, farthings, and similar treasures. It was
dirty work, but they took great delight in it. "Oh!" cried one, who had pricked himself with
the Darning needle, "there's a fellow for you!" "l'm not a fellow; I'm a young lady!" said the
Darning-needle. But nobody listened to her: The sealing-wax had come off,
and she had turned black; but black makes one look slender, and she thought herself finer
even than before. "Here comes an eggshell sailing along!" said
the boys; and they stuck the Darning-needle fast in the eggshell. "White walls, and black myself! that looks
well," remarked the Darning-needler "Now one can see me. I only hope I shall not
be seasick!" But she was not seasick at all. "It is good against seasickness, if
one has a steel stomach, and does not forget that one is a little more than an ordinary
person! Now my seasickness is over. The finer one is, the more one can bear." "Crack!" went the eggshell, for a wagon went
over her. "Good Heavens, how. it crushes one!" said the
Darning-needle. ',I'm getting seasick now--I'm quite sick." But she was not really sick, though the wagon went over her; she lay there at full length, and there she may lie.
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HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
FROM THE BOOK:
<THE YOUNG FOLKS TREASURY>
VOLUME 1
THE UNIVERSITY SOCIETY INC.
1909