and tormented her, and let her have no rest.
And once when the angels had all gone out, she thought, "Now I am
quite alone, and I could peep in. If I do it, no one will ever know." She
sought out the key, and when she had got it in her hand, she put it in the
lock, and when she had put it in, she turned it round as well. Then the
door sprang open, and she saw there the Trinity sitting in fire and
splendour. She stayed there awhile, and looked at everything in
amazement; then she touched the light a little with her finger, and her
finger became quite golden. Immediately a great fear fell on her. She
shut the door violently, and ran away. Her terror too would not quit her,
let her do what she might, and her heart beat continually and would not
be still; the gold too stayed on her finger, and would not go away, let
her rub it and wash it never so much.
It was not long before the Virgin Mary came back from her journey.
She called the girl before her, and asked to have the keys of heaven
back. When the maiden gave her the bunch, the Virgin looked into her
eyes and said, "Hast thou not opened the thirteenth door also?" "No,"
she replied. Then she laid her hand on the girl's heart, and felt how it
beat and beat, and saw right well that she had disobeyed her order and
had opened the door. Then she said once again, "Art thou certain that
thou hast not done it?" "Yes," said the girl, for the second time. Then
she perceived the finger which had become golden from touching the
fire of heaven, and saw well that the child had sinned, and said for the
third time "Hast thou not done it?" "No," said the girl for the third time.
Then said the Virgin Mary, "Thou hast not obeyed me, and besides that
thou hast lied, thou art no longer worthy to be in heaven."
Then the girl fell into a deep sleep, and when she awoke she lay on the
earth below, and in the midst of a wilderness. She wanted to cry out,
but she could bring forth no sound. She sprang up and wanted to run
away, but whithersoever she turned herself, she was continually held
back by thick hedges of thorns through which she could not break. In
the desert, in which she was imprisoned, there stood an old hollow tree,
and this had to be her dwelling-place. Into this she crept when night
came, and here she slept. Here, too, she found a shelter from storm and
rain, but it was a miserable life, and bitterly did she weep when she
remembered how happy she had been in heaven, and how the angels
had played with her. Roots and wild berries were her only food, and for
these she sought as far as she could go. In the autumn she picked up the
fallen nuts and leaves, and carried them into the hole. The nuts were her
food in winter, and when snow and ice came, she crept amongst the
leaves like a poor little animal that she might not freeze. Before long
her clothes were all torn, and one bit of them after another fell off her.
As soon, however, as the sun shone warm again, she went out and sat
in front of the tree, and her long hair covered her on all sides like a
mantle. Thus she sat year after year, and felt the pain and the misery of
the world. One day, when the trees were once more clothed in fresh
green, the King of the country was hunting in the forest, and followed a
roe, and as it had fled into the thicket which shut in this part of the
forest, he got off his horse, tore the bushes asunder, and cut himself a
path with his sword. When he had at last forced his way through, he
saw a wonderfully beautiful maiden sitting under the tree; and she sat
there and was entirely covered with her golden hair down to her very
feet. He stood still and looked at her full of surprise, then he spoke to
her and said, "Who art thou? Why art thou sitting here in the
wilderness?" But she gave no answer, for she could not open her mouth.
The King continued, "Wilt thou go with me to my castle?" Then she
just nodded her head a little. The King took her in his arms, carried her
to his horse, and rode home with her, and when he reached the royal
castle he caused her to be dressed in beautiful garments, and gave
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