Everybody knows that there are twelve months in a year and each month follows
the last and that they never meet. It has never happened that February has come
before January is finished, nor that May is over before April. But the old folks
say that long ago there was a little girl who saw all twelve months at one
time!
In a small village there lived a greedy and wicked woman. She had one daughter
of her own whom she loved very much, and a stepdaughter whom she didn't love.
What ever this girl did, it was wrong. Her own daughter slept the day away on a
feather bed and ate honey-cakes. The stepdaughter worked for days on end and
even hadn't time to rest. She brought water, gathered brushwood in the forest,
laundered and weeded the garden. The poor girl worked every day, no matter what
the weather was like outside. Maybe that is why she was so lucky to see all
twelve months at the same time.
One day in January there was so much snow that it had to be removed from the
doors of the cottages with shovels. The trees in the forest were completely
covered with snow and that is why they couldn't even rock from the wind. In all
the cottages of the village the peasants kept fires in the stoves trying to
keep themselves warm and nobody would dare to go out. In the evening the greedy
woman opened the door, peered out at the bitter cold night and said to her
stepdaughter, "Go to the forest! Tomorrow is your sister's birthday and I
want to give her a present of flowers. Go to the forest and bring snowdrops for
us!"
The little girl looked at her stepmother in amazement. "How can I possibly
find any snowdrops in the winter? Snowdrops will appear only at the end of
March."
Her sister said: "Well go out anyway. If you freeze that will be no loss.
Here is a basket. Do not return until it is filled with flowers." There
was nothing to do and the little girl cried bitterly, wrapped herself as
closely as she could in her shabby coat and went out into the harsh winter
night. The wind was blowing violently in the forest and the girl could hardly
walk. All was dark around her; the heavens were black. She sat on a stump. What
difference would it make where she froze to death.
Suddenly she saw a light that resembled a brilliant star hanging low in the
heavens. She walked slowly toward the light and as she walked it became
brighter and clearer. She began to smell wood smoke and to hear the cracking of
burning logs. The girl hastened her steps and found herself in an open glade.
There was a campfire in the middle of the glade. The bright campfire
illuminated everything around and the girl noticed a group of people who were
sitting around the fire and quietly talking. Who were those men? They bore
little resemblance to hunters or woodcutters. The men were beautifully dressed,
some of them were dressed in vestment embroidered with gold and silver, another
were dressed in green velvet clothes and rich furs. The girl counted them and
saw that there were twelve in all. Three of the men were quite old, three were
middle-aged, three were young men and the last three were boys.
One of the oldest men saw the little girl and turned towards her. The girl was
very frightened and wanted to run away but it was too late. The old man said
loudly: "Who are you, where have you come from and what do you want
here?"
The little girl bowed low to him, showed him her empty basket and said: "I
must fill this basket with snowdrops."
The old man laughed. "You must be joking! Snowdrops don't grow in
January!"
The little girl replied: "I don't joke; I was sent here by my stepmother
who told me that I must fill the basket with snowdrops or else never return
home."
The twelve men looked at each other and started to talk together. The girl
couldn't understand their speech; their voices resembled the murmur of the
forest. They talked and talked and then the oldest of them asked her:
"What will you do if you do not find snowdrops? You know that they do not
come out from the ground until the end of March."
"I will stay in the forest and wait for March. It's better to die in the
forest than to return home without flowers." And so saying she burst into
bitter tears.
Suddenly one of the young men, with a fur cape on one shoulder came to the
oldest man and said to him: "Let me take your place for few minutes, brother
January."
The old man replied: "But that is impossible. You cannot come before
February."
At this, another of the old men said: "All right! We must help this girl.
All of us are familiar with her. We saw her in the forest carrying a cord of
wood or picking mushrooms and berries in the summer, we met her at an ice-hole
carrying heavy pails of water in the winter. Take my place, March, with my
blessing!"
January, the eldest, then struck his stave into the ground. Everything around
them became quiet; the snowflakes began to fall on the ground. He turned to
February and said: "It is now your turn, brother February," and
stepped aside.
February struck the ground with his stave; the wind began to blow furiously and
the snowstorm began. He turned to March and said: "Now it is your
turn."
The girl clasped her hands from amazement. Snowdrifts and icicles disappeared
completely. The ground became soft and slushy. Then, before her eyes, fresh
green leaves burst out on the branches of the trees around them and flowers
pushed up through the earth in front of her. The little girl stood there in
utter disbelief.
"What are you waiting for, little one. Go and pick your snowdrops. You
have but an hour to do so." She came to herself and ran in the forest.
Everywhere she looked the snowdrops were peering out from the ground, - under
the trees, in the glade, under the old logs. She picked a full basket of
snowdrops and then she filled her apron as well with the fragrant little
flowers. She ran back to the glade and bowed low to each month in turn,
thanking each one most sincerely and then she ran home.
At home the stepmother and the stepsister asked the little girl: "Where
are the flowers?"
The girl said nothing to them, but simply put the basket, which was full of
snowdrops and opened her apron from which hundreds of the lovely little flowers
fell and put them next to the basket. "Where did you get them?" cried
the stepmother.
The little girl told them of her adventures. The stepmother looked at her and
asked, "Didn't the months give you anything else?"
"I didn't ask them for anything else" replied the girl.
"What a fool!" exclaimed her sister "I would have known what to
ask for in your place! I would have asked for apples and pears from August, for
berries from June, for fresh cucumbers and mushrooms from July! Can you just
imagine what money we could make if we could sell strawberries and fresh apples
and pears in January?"
The stepmother said: "You are a clever girl. Go to the forest and find the
Twelve months. You will know what to ask for." The girl put a warm
kerchief over her head, took three large empty baskets with her and rushed out
into the night. It was so miserably cold and dark around her in the forest and
the girl was thinking that she had been foolish to leave her warm cozy house
when suddenly she saw the fire ahead of her, just as her stepsister had
described. The girl walked directly up to the campfire. The brothers noticed
the girl at once, looked at each other and stopped talking. It became quiet in
the forest.
January asked the girl: "Who are you and what do you want in the forest in
the dark of night?"
"My stepsister told me that you gave her the snowdrops that she brought
home today."
"We know your sister," said January. "But we do not know you at
all. What do you want from us?"
"I want you to give me presents. You, June, fill my basket with
strawberries and raspberries, but make sure that they are large and juicy!
July, I want pure white mushrooms from you and also fresh cucumbers. From you,
August, I want apples and pears and from September I want a basket full of
nuts. And from October, I want..."
"Just a moment," said January. "Spring does not come before the
end of winter. Summer can not come before the end of Spring. It is a far way
yet before June. I am still king for 30 days!"
"You are so angry!" said the girl roughly. "I have not come to
ask anything of you at all, for all you can give is ice and snow. I am talking
only with the summer months! Saying this, she turned away from him.
"Very well, look for summer in winter!" cried out January. And saying
this, he waved his arms and a dreadful storm began. The snow covered everything
from the ground to the skies. Nothing was to be seen. Not the glade, not the
brothers, not the fire. The girl was very frightened.
"Stop," she screamed. "Enough!" But no one answered.
A huge whirlwind of snow became higher and higher and covered her completely
from head to foot.
At home, the stepmother waited and waited for her daughter's return. She peered
out of the window; she peered out of the door. But her daughter was nowhere to
be seen. Finally, she bundled herself up as warmly as she could and went out to
look for her daughter. She went into the forest and looked in all directions,
but to no avail.
Suddenly a tremendous cloud of snow and ice engulfed her and she froze to
death.
So both the cruel stepmother and her spiteful daughter waited, frozen in the
forest, for spring to arrive.
The little orphan girl remained in the house. Years passed and she grew up to
be a beautiful young lady. She married and had many children. It is told that
she had a marvelous garden near her house. The flowers in her garden bloomed
earlier than those in any other garden. The strawberries and raspberries in her
garden ripened long before any others in the area; the apples and pears were
juiciest and sweetest to be found. In the summer time, it was always cooler in
her house and garden than anywhere else. In the winter, the worst of the storms
and blizzards seemed to miss her house.
It was said that the Twelve Months were guests in her home from time to time.
No one knows for sure - but could it really have happened?
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