“THE children stood under an archway. Behind them
was the blue sky; in front of them the clear, still lake that wandered
and wound about the garden; above their heads the leaves of a tree
whispered and told strange stories to the breeze.
“Poor tree! It is sighing for the
blossoms the wind has carried away," they said to each other, and they
looked back at the garden. "And, poor flowers, too," they said, "all
your bright colours are gone, and your petals lie scattered on the
ground; to-morrow they will be dead." "Ah, no," the flowers sighed,
"the rainbow-maker will gather them up, and once more they will see the
sun." Before the children could answer, a tall fair maiden came down
the pathway. They could see her plainly in the twilight. Her eyes were
dim with gathering tears, but on her lips there was a smile that came
and went and flickered round her mouth. All down her back hung her pale
golden hair; round her neck was a kerchief of many colours ; her dress
was soft and white, and her snowy apron was gathered up in one hand.
She looked neither to the right nor to the left. She did not utter a
single word; and the children could hear no sound of her footstep, no
rustling from her dress. She stooped, and picking up the fading petals,
looked at them tenderly for a moment, while the tears fell slowly down
her cheeks ; but the smile hovered round her mouth; for she knew that
they would shine again in the sight of their beloved sun. When her
apron was quite full, she turned round and left the garden.
Hand-in-hand the children followed. She went slowly on by the side of
the lake, far, far away across the meadows and up the farthest hill,
until at last she found her home behind a cloud just opposite the sun.
There she sat all through the summer days making rainbows. When the
children had watched her for a long long time, they went softly back to
their own home. The rainbowmaker had not even seen them.
"Mother," they said one day, "we know now
where the colours go from the flowers. See, they are there," and as
they spoke they thought of the maiden sitting silently at work in her
cloud-home. They knew that she was weeping at sending forth her most
beautiful one, and yet smiling as she watched the soft archway she had
made. “See, they are all there, dear mother," the children repeated,
looking at the falling rain and the shining sun, and pointing to the
rainbow that spanned the river.
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