My favorite ever. It feels like one big middle finger cynical smirk Andersen gave us who for accusing him of only capable of writing sad, tragic, piteous stories. This one has a euphoric ending, so tears and wails no more! Without further ado, here’s one of Andersen’s best and most popular tales, “Den Grimme Ælling” a.k.a “The Ugly Duckling.”

It was so beautiful out on the country, it was summer- the wheat fields were golden, the oats were green, and down among the green meadows the hay was stacked. There the stork minced about on his red legs, clacking away in Egyptian, which was the language his mother had taught him. Round about the field and meadow lands rose vast forests, in which deep lakes lay hidden. Yes, it was indeed lovely out there in the country.
In the midst of the sunshine there stood an old manor house that had a deep moat around it. From the walls of the manor right down to the water’s edge great burdock leaves grew, and there were some so tall that little children could stand upright beneath the biggest of them. In this wilderness of leaves, which was as dense as the forests itself, a duck sat on her nest, hatching her ducklings. She was becoming somewhat weary, because sitting is such a dull business and scarcely anyone came to see her. The other ducks would much rather swim in the moat than waddle out and squat under the burdock leaf to gossip with her.
But at last the eggshells began to crack, one after another. "Peep, peep!" said the little things, as they came to life and poked out their heads.
"Quack, quack!" said the duck, and quick as quick can be they all waddled out to have a look at the green world under the leaves. Their mother let them look as much as they pleased, because green is good for the eyes.
"How wide the world is," said all the young ducks, for they
certainly had much more room now than they had when they were in
their eggshells.
"Do you think this is the whole world?" their mother asked.
"Why it extends on and on, clear across to the other side of the
garden and right on into the parson’s field, though that is
further than I have ever been. I do hope you are all hatched,"
she said as she got up. "No, not quite all. The biggest egg still
lies here. How much longer is this going to take? I am really
rather tired of it all," she said, but she settled back on her
nest.
"Well, how goes it?" asked an old duck who came to pay her a
call.
"It takes a long time with that one egg," said the duck on
the nest. "It won’t crack, but look at the others. They are
the cutest little ducklings I've ever seen. They look
exactly like their father, the wretch! He hasn’t come to
see me at all."
"Let's have a look at the egg that won't crack,"
the old duck said. "It's a turkey egg, and you can take my
word for it. I was fooled like that once myself. What trouble and
care I had with those turkey children, for I may as well tell
you, they are afraid of the water. I simply could not get them
into it. I quacked and snapped at them, but it wasn't a bit
of use. Let me see the egg. Certainly, it's a turkey egg.
Let it lie, and go teach your other children to swim."
"Oh, I'll sit a little longer. I've been at it
so long already that I may as well sit here half the summer."
"Suit yourself," said the old duck, and away she
waddled.
At last the big egg did crack. "Peep," said the young one,
and out he tumbled, but he was so big and ugly.
The duck took a look at him. "That's a frightfully big
duckling," she said. "He doesn't look the least like the
others. Can he really be a turkey baby? Well, well! I'll
soon find out. Into the water he shall go, even if I have to
shove him in myself."
Next day the weather was perfectly splendid, and the sun
shone down on all the green burdock leaves. The mother duck led
her whole family down to the moat. Splash! she took to the water.
"Quack, quack," said she, and one duckling after another plunged
in. The water went over their heads, but they came up in a flash,
and floated to perfection. Their legs worked automatically, and
they were all there in the water. Even the big, ugly gray one was
swimming along.
Why, that's no turkey," she said. "See how nicely he
uses his legs, and how straight he holds himself. He's my
very own son after all, and quite good-looking if you look at him
properly. Quack, quack come with me. I'll lead you out into
the world and introduce you to the duck yard. But keep close to
me so that you won't get stepped on, and watch out for the
cat!"
Thus they sallied into the duck yard, where all was in an
uproar because two families were fighting over the head of an
eel. But the cat got it, after all.
"You see, that’s the way of the world." The mother
duck licked her bill because she wanted the eel's head for
herself. "Stir your legs. Bustle about, and mind that you bend
your necks to that old duck over there. She’s the noblest
of us all, and has Spanish blood in her. That's why
she's so fat. See that red rag around her leg? That’s
a wonderful thing, and the highest distinction a duck can get. It
shows that they don’t want to lose her, and that
she’s to have special attention from man and beast. Shake
yourselves! Don't turn your toes in. A well-bred duckling
turns his toes way out, just as his father and mother do-this
way. So then! Now duck your necks and say quack!"
They did as she told them, but the other ducks around them
looked on and said right out loud, "See here! Must we have this
brood too, just as if there weren’t enough of us already?
And-fie! what an ugly-looking fellow that duckling is! We
won't stand for him." One duck charged up and bit his
neck.
"Let him alone," his mother said. "He isn't doing any
harm."
"Possibly not," said the duck who bit him, "but he’s
too big and strange, and therefore he needs a good whacking."
"What nice-looking children you have, Mother," said the old
duck with the rag around her leg. "They are all pretty except
that one. He didn't come out so well. It’s a pity you
can't hatch him again."
"That can't be managed, your ladyship," said the
mother. "He isn’t so handsome, but he’s as good as
can be, and he swims just as well as the rest, or, I should say,
even a little better than they do. I hope his looks will improve
with age, and after a while he won't seem so big. He took
too long in the egg, and that's why his figure isn’t
all that it should be." She pinched his neck and preened his
feathers.
"Moreover, he’s a drake, so it won’t matter
so much. I think he will be quite strong, and I'm sure he
will amount to something."
"The other ducklings are pretty enough," said the old duck.
"Now make yourselves right at home, and if you find an
eel's head you may bring it to me."
So they felt quite at home. But the poor duckling who had
been the last one out of his egg, and who looked so ugly, was
pecked and pushed about and made fun of by the ducks, and the
chickens as well. "He's too big," said they all. The turkey
gobbler, who thought himself an emperor because he was born
wearing spurs, puffed up like a ship under full sail and bore
down upon him, gobbling and gobbling until he was red in the
face. The poor duckling did not know where he dared stand or
where he dared walk. He was so sad because he was so desperately
ugly, and because he was the laughing stock of the whole
barnyard.
So it went on the first day, and after that things went from
bad to worse. The poor duckling was chased and buffeted about by
everyone. Even his own brothers and sisters abused him. "Oh,"
they would always say, "how we wish the cat would catch you, you
ugly thing." And his mother said, "How I do wish you were miles
away." The ducks nipped him, and the hens pecked him, and the
girl who fed them kicked him with her foot.
So he ran away; and he flew over the fence. The little birds
in the bushes darted up in a fright. "That's because
I'm so ugly," he thought, and closed his eyes, but he ran
on just the same until he reached the great marsh where the wild
ducks lived. There he lay all night long, weary and
disheartened.
When morning came, the wild ducks flew up to have a look at
their new companion. "What sort of creature are you?" they asked,
as the duckling turned in all directions, bowing his best to them
all. "You are terribly ugly," they told him, "but that’s
nothing to us so long as you don't marry into our
family."
Poor duckling! Marriage certainly had never entered his
mind. All he wanted was for them to let him lie among the reeds
and drink a little water from the marsh.
There he stayed for two whole days. Then he met two wild
geese, or rather wild ganders-for they were males. They had not
been out of the shell very long, and that's what made them
so sure of themselves.
"Say there, comrade," they said, "you’re so ugly that
we have taken a fancy to you. Come with us and be a bird of
passage. In another marsh near-by, there are some fetching wild
geese, all nice young ladies who know how to quack. You are so
ugly that you'll completely turn their heads."
Bing! Bang! Shots rang in the air, and these two
ganders fell dead among the reeds. The water was red with their
blood. Bing! Bang! the shots rang, and as whole flocks of
wild geese flew up from the reeds another volley crashed. A great
hunt was in progress. The hunters lay under cover all around the
marsh, and some even perched on branches of trees that overhung
the reeds. Blue smoke rose like clouds from the shade of the
trees, and drifted far out over the water.
he bird dogs came splash, splash! through the swamp,
bending down the reeds and the rushes on every side. This gave
the poor duckling such a fright that he twisted his head about to
hide it under his wing. But at that very moment a fearfully big
dog appeared right beside him. His tongue lolled out of his mouth
and his wicked eyes glared horribly. He opened his wide jaws,
flashed his sharp teeth, and - splash, splash - on he went
without touching the duckling.
"Thank heavens," he sighed, "I'm so ugly that the dog
won't even bother to bite me."
He lay perfectly still, while the bullets splattered through
the reeds as shot after shot was fired. It was late in the day
before things became quiet again, and even then the poor duckling
didn't dare move. He waited several hours before he
ventured to look about him, and then he scurried away from that
marsh as fast as he could go. He ran across field and meadows.
The wind was so strong that he had to struggle to keep his
feet.
Late in the evening he came to a miserable little hovel, so
ramshackle that it did not know which way to tumble, and that was
the only reason it still stood. The wind struck the duckling so
hard that the poor little fellow had to sit down on his tail to
withstand it. The storm blew stronger and stronger, but the
duckling noticed that one hinge had come loose and the door hung
so crooked that he could squeeze through the crack into the room,
and that's just what he did.
Here lived an old woman with her cat and her hen. The cat,
whom she called "Sonny," could arch his back, purr, and even
make sparks, though for that you had to stroke his fur the wrong
way. The hen had short little legs, so she was called "Chickey
Shortleg." She laid good eggs, and the old woman loved her as if
she had been her own child.
In the morning they were quick to notice the strange
duckling. The cat began to purr, and the hen began to cluck.
"What on earth!" The old woman looked around, but she was
short-sighted, and she mistook the duckling for a fat duck that
had lost its way. "That was a good catch," she said. "Now I shall
have duck eggs-unless it's a drake. We must try it out." So
the duckling was tried out for three weeks, but not one egg did
he lay.
In this house the cat was master and the hen was mistress.
They always said, "We and the world," for they thought themselves
half of the world, and much the better half at that. The duckling
thought that there might be more than one way of thinking, but
the hen would not hear of it.
"Can you lay eggs?" she asked
"No."
"Then be so good as to hold your tongue."
The cat asked, "Can you arch your back, purr, or make
sparks?"
"No."
"Then keep your opinion to yourself when sensible people are
talking."
The duckling sat in a corner, feeling most despondent. Then
he remembered the fresh air and the sunlight. Such a desire to go
swimming on the water possessed him that he could not help
telling the hen about it.
"What on earth has come over you?" the hen cried. "You
haven't a thing to do, and that's why you get such
silly notions. Lay us an egg, or learn to purr, and you'll
get over it."
"But it's so refreshing to float on the water," said
the duckling, "so refreshing to feel it rise over your head as
you dive to the bottom."
"Yes, it must be a great pleasure!" said the hen. "I think
you must have gone crazy. Ask the cat, who's the wisest
fellow I know, whether he likes to swim or dive down in the
water. Of myself I say nothing. But ask the old woman, our
mistress. There's no one on earth wiser than she is. Do you
imagine she wants to go swimming and feel the water rise over her
head?"
"You don't understand me," said the duckling.
"Well, if we don't, who would? Surely you don't
think you are cleverer than the cat and the old woman-to say
nothing of myself. Don't be so conceited, child. Just thank
your Maker for all the kindness we have shown you. Didn't
you get into this snug room, and fall in with people who can tell
you what's what? But you are such a numbskull that
it's no pleasure to have you around. Believe me, I tell you
this for your own good. I say unpleasant truths, but that's
the only way you can know who are your friends. Be sure now that
you lay some eggs. See to it that you learn to purr or to make
sparks."
"I think I'd better go out into the wide world," said
the duckling.
"Suit yourself," said the hen.
So off went the duckling. He swam on the water, and dived
down in it, but still he was slighted by every living creature
because of his ugliness.
Autumn came on. The leaves in the forest turned yellow and
brown. The wind took them and whirled them about. The heavens
looked cold as the low clouds hung heavy with snow and hail.
Perched on the fence, the raven screamed, "Caw, caw!" and
trembled with cold. It made one shiver to think of it. Pity the
poor little duckling!
One evening, just as the sun was setting in splendor, a
great flock of large, handsome birds appeared out of the reeds.
The duckling had never seen birds so beautiful. They were
dazzling white, with long graceful necks. They were swans. They
uttered a very strange cry as they unfurled their magnificent
wings to fly from this cold land, away to warmer countries and to
open waters. They went up so high, so very high, that the ugly
little duckling felt a strange uneasiness come over him as he
watched them. He went around and round in the water, like a
wheel. He craned his neck to follow their course, and gave a cry
so shrill and strange that he frightened himself. Oh! He could
not forget them-those splendid, happy birds. When he could no
longer see them he dived to the very bottom. and when he came up
again he was quite beside himself. He did not know what birds
they were or whither they were bound, yet he loved them more than
anything he had ever loved before. It was not that he envied
them, for how could he ever dare dream of wanting their marvelous
beauty for himself? He would have been grateful if only the ducks
would have tolerated him-the poor ugly creature.
The winter grew cold - so bitterly cold that the duckling
had to swim to and fro in the water to keep it from freezing
over. But every night the hole in which he swam kept getting
smaller and smaller. Then it froze so hard that the duckling had
to paddle continuously to keep the crackling ice from closing in
upon him. At last, too tired to move, he was frozen fast in the
ice.
Early that morning a farmer came by, and when he saw how
things were he went out on the pond, broke away the ice with his
wooden shoe, and carried the duckling home to his wife. There the
duckling revived, but when the children wished to play with him
he thought they meant to hurt him. Terrified, he fluttered into
the milk pail, splashing the whole room with milk. The woman
shrieked and threw up her hands as he flew into the butter tub,
and then in and out of the meal barrel. Imagine what he looked
like now! The woman screamed and lashed out at him with the fire
tongs. The children tumbled over each other as they tried to
catch him, and they laughed and they shouted. Luckily the door
was open, and the duckling escaped through it into the bushes,
where he lay down, in the newly fallen snow, as if in a daze.
But it would be too sad to tell of all the hardships and
wretchedness he had to endure during this cruel winter. When the
warm sun shone once more, the duckling was still alive among the
reeds of the marsh. The larks began to sing again. It was
beautiful springtime.
Then, quite suddenly, he lifted his wings. They swept
through the air much more strongly than before, and their
powerful strokes carried him far. Before he quite knew what was
happening, he found himself in a great garden where apple trees
bloomed. The lilacs filled the air with sweet scent and hung in
clusters from long, green branches that bent over a winding
stream. Oh, but it was lovely here in the freshness of
spring!
From the thicket before him came three lovely white swans.
They ruffled their feathers and swam lightly in the stream. The
duckling recognized these noble creatures, and a strange feeling
of sadness came upon him.
"I shall fly near these royal birds, and they will peck me
to bits because I, who am so very ugly, dare to go near them. But
I don't care. Better be killed by them than to be nipped by
the ducks, pecked by the hens, kicked about by the hen-yard girl,
or suffer such misery in winter."
So he flew into the water and swam toward the splendid
swans. They saw him, and swept down upon him with their rustling
feathers raised. "Kill me!" said the poor creature, and he bowed
his head down over the water to wait for death. But what did he
see there, mirrored in the clear stream? He beheld his own image,
and it was no longer the reflection of a clumsy, dirty, gray
bird, ugly and offensive. He himself was a swan! Being born in a
duck yard does not matter, if only you are hatched from a
swan's egg.
He felt quite glad that he had come through so much trouble
and misfortune, for now he had a fuller understanding of his own
good fortune, and of beauty when he met with it. The great swans
swam all around him and stroked him with their bills.
Several little children came into the garden to throw grain
and bits of bread upon the water. The smallest child cried,
"Here's a new one," and the others rejoiced, "yes, a new
one has come." They clapped their hands, danced around, and ran
to bring their father and mother.
And they threw bread and cake upon the water, while they all
agreed, "The new one is the most handsome of all. He's so
young and so good-looking." The old swans bowed in his honor.
Then he felt very bashful, and tucked his head under his
wing. He did not know what this was all about. He felt so very
happy, but he wasn't at all proud, for a good heart never
grows proud. He thought about how he had been persecuted and
scorned, and now he heard them all call him the most beautiful of
all beautiful birds. The lilacs dipped their clusters into the
stream before him, and the sun shone so warm and so heartening.
He rustled his feathers and held his slender neck high, as he
cried out with full heart: "I never dreamed there could be so
much happiness, when I was the ugly duckling."







