The Last Dream of Old Oak by Hans Christian Andersen IN the forest, high up on the steep shore, and not far from the open seacoast, stood a very old oak-tree. It was just three hundred and sixty-five years old, but that long time was to the tree as the same number of days might be to us; we wake by day and sleep by night, and then we have our dreams. It is different with the tree; it is obliged to keep awake through three seasons of the year, and does not get any sleep till winter comes. Winter is its time for rest; its night after the long day of spring, summer, and autumn. On many a warm summer, the Ephemera, the flies that exist for only a day, had fluttered about the old oak, enjoyed life and felt happy and if, for a moment, one of the tiny creatures rested on one of his large fresh leaves, the tree would always say, “ Poor little creature! your whole life consists only of a single day. How very short. It must be quite melancholy. ”
“ Melancholy! what do you mean? ” the little creature would always reply. “ Everything around me is so wonderfully bright and warm, and beautiful, that it makes me joyous. ”
“ But only for one day, and then it is all over. ”
“ Over! ” repeated the fly; “ what is the meaning of all over? Are you all over too? ”
“ No; I shall very likely live for thousands of your days, and my day is whole seasons long; indeed it is so long that you could never reckon it out. ”
“ No? then I don ’ t understand you. You may have thousands of my days, but I have thousands of moments in which I can be merry and happy. Does all the beauty of the world cease when you die? ”
“ No, ” replied the tree; “ it will certainly last much longer, — infinitely longer than I can even think of. ” “ Well, then, ” said the little fly, “ we have the same time to live; only we reckon differently. ” And the little creature danced and floated in the air, rejoicing in her delicate wings of gauze and velvet, rejoicing in the balmy breezes, laden with the fragrance of clover-fields and wild roses, elder-blossoms and honeysuckle, from the garden hedges, wild thyme, primroses, and mint, and the scent of all these was so strong that the perfume almost intoxicated the little fly. The long and beautiful day had been so full of joy and sweet delights, that when the sun sank low it felt tired of all its happiness and enjoyment. Its wings could sustain it no longer, and gently and slowly it glided down upon the soft waving blades of grass, nodded its little head as well as it could nod, and slept peacefully and sweetly. The fly was dead.
“ Poor little Ephemera! ” said the oak; “ what a terribly short life! ” And so, on every summer day the dance was repeated, the same questions asked, and the same answers given. The same thing was continued through many generations of Ephemera; all of them felt equally merry and equally happy.
The oak remained awake through the morning of spring, the noon of summer, and the evening of autumn; its time of rest, its night drew nigh — winter was coming. Already the storms were singing, “ Good-night, good-night. ” Here fell a leaf and there fell a leaf. “ We will rock you and lull you.