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The Tin Soldier
Once upon a time... there lived a child
who had a lot of toys.
The child kept his toys in his room and
spent many happy hours everyday playing with them. One of his
favourite games was the battle with the tin soldiers. He arranged
the little toy soldiers in their respective ranks and fought
imaginary battles.
When the boy received the soldiers, as
a present, he noticed that one of them had been made, by mistake,
with just one leg. Despite the missing limb, the boy placed the
little mutilated soldier in the front lines, encouraging him
to be the most valorous of all the little soldiers.
The child did not know that, at night,
the toys became animated and talked between themselves. It often
happened that, when lining up the soldiers after playing with
them, the little boy would forget about the little tin soldier
without a leg and left him with all the other toys.
It was thus that the little metal soldier
got to talk to a pretty tin ballerina. A great friendship was
born between the two, and pretty soon the little soldier fell
in love with the ballerina.
But the nights went by quickly, and he
did not find the courage to declare his love to her. When the
child played with the soldiers and positioned him in the front
lines, the little soldier hoped that the ballerina would notice
his courage in battle.
And in the evening, when the ballerina
asked the soldier if he had been afraid, he proudly answered,
"No."
But the loving stares and sighs of the
little soldier did not go unnoticed by the jack-in-the-box.
One night, the jack-in-the-box said to
the little soldier: "Hey you! Don't look at the ballerina
like that!"
The poor little soldier was confused and
he blushed, but the kind ballerina cheered him up.
"Don't listen to him, he is ugly
and jealous. I am very happy to talk to you," she said blushing
too.
The two little tin figurines were both
too shy to speak of their love.
One day they were separated. The boy picked
up the tin soldier and placed him on the window-sill.
"You stay here and watch for the
enemy," he said.
Then the boy played inside with the other
soliders. It was summer and in the days that followed the soldier
remained on the window-sill.
But one afternoon there was a sudden storm
and a strong wind shook the windows. The little soldier fell
head first off the window-sill. His bayonet stuck into the ground.
It kept raining and storming and pretty
soon the rain formed big puddles and the gutters were full. A
group of boys in the nearby school waited for the storm to end
and when it stopped raining hard they ran outdoors.
Joking and laughing, the boys hopped over
the bigger puddles while two of them cautiously walked next to
the wall so that the sprinkling rain wouldn't wet them. These
two boys noticed the little tin soldier stuck in the sodden earth.
"Too bad he has just one leg. Otherwise, I'd take him home
with me," one of the boys said.
The other boy picked him up and put him
in his pocket. "Let's take him anyway," he said. "We
could use him for something."
On the other side of the street, the gutter
was overflowing and the current carried a little paper boat.
"Let's put the little soldier in
the boat and make him a sailor," said the boy who had picked
up the tin soldier.
And so the little soldier became a sailor.
The whirling gutter flowed into a sewer and the little boat was
carried down the drain.
The water in the underground sewage was
deep and muddy. Big rats gnashed their teeth as the vessel and
its unusual passenger flowed by. The boat was soaked and about
to sink. But the little soldier, who had faced far greater dangers
in battle, was not afraid.
The water of the sewer then flowed into
the river and the little boat, now overturned, was swept by the
high waves.
The little tin soldier realized his end
was near. After the paper boat was wrecked, he sank in deep waters.
A thousand thoughts went through the little soldier's mind, but
one in particular anguished him: "I will never see my sweet
little ballerina again!"
But a huge mouth swallowed the little
tin soldier and, once again, his destiny took an unexpected turn.
The little soldier found himself in the
stomach of a large fish who had been lured by the glittering
colours of his uniform.
The fish, however, did not even have time
to digest his meal because, shortly after having swallowed the
soldier, he was caught in the net of a fisherman.
Shortly after, the gasping fish ended
up in a big basket and was brought to the market.
Meanwhile, a cook was on her way to the
market. She worked in the very same house where the little soldier
used to live. "This fish will be perfect for tonight's guests,"
the cook said when she saw the big fish on the fish market's
counter.
The fish ended up in the kitchen and when
the cook slit its belly to clean it she found the little tin
soldier. "This looks like one of our boy's toy soldiers..."
she thought, and ran to the boy to show him her discovery.
"That's right, it's my soldier!"
the little boy cheered, when he recognized the soldier with the
missing leg.
"I wonder how he got into the fish's
belly? Poor soldier, he must have gone through a lot of trouble
since he fell off the window-sill!"
The little boy placed the soldier on the
mantle, right next to his sister's ballerina. The amazing ways
of destiny had once again reunited the two lovers. The little
soldier and the ballerina were very happy to be close to each
other.
At night they talked about what had happened
after their separation. But the ill disposition of fate had another
surprise in store for them.
One day a sudden gust of wind lifted the
heavy drape of the window and hit the ballerina, who fell into
the fireplace.
The little soldier saw his friend fall
into the fireplace and he was frightened. He knew a fire was
lit because he could feel its warmth.
He was desperate, conscious of not being
able to do anything to save the ballerina. In fact, fire is the
greatest enemy of tin figurines because it melts metals.
Rocking back and forth on his one leg,
the little soldier tried to move the metal base under his feet
that held him in place.
He kept trying to move until he fell into
the fire as well. The two figurines were reunited in their misfortune.
They were so close to each other now, that their metal bases
began melting together.
The tin of one base melted with the metal
of the other, and the metal strangely moulded into the shape
of a heart. As their bodies were about to begin melting as well,
the little boy went by the fireplace and saw the two little figurines
enveloped by the flames and moved them away from the blaze with
his foot.
Ever since then the soldier and the ballerina
have been melted close to each other, sharing their destiny and
a common base shaped like a heart.
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