PROSERPINA.
It was harvest-time and the grain was ready to be gathered.
Mother Ceres was very busy, for she had the care of every seed that grows.
She put on her hat made of poppies. Then she stepped into a chariot drawn by a pair of winged dragons.
“Dear Mother,” said Proserpina, “may I go down to the shore and play with the sea-maids?”
“Yes, child,” answered Mother Ceres, “but you must not go alone into the fields.”
The sea-maids heard Proserpina calling. Soon she saw them coming up out of the water. They made a chain of beautiful shells and hung it around Proserpina’s neck.
“How pretty it is!” said Proserpina. “Wait for me here while I run into the fields. I want to make each of you a chain of flowers.”
Proserpina’s hands were soon full of flowers. She was turning to go back, when she saw a beautiful plant near her.
“I will put it in my garden,” said Proserpina. She pulled and pulled. Soon Proserpina held the plant in her hands. She was surprised to see the deep hole which its roots left in the ground.
The hole grew deeper and wider, and Proserpina heard a loud noise under the ground.
Four black horses jumped out of the hole, drawing a golden chariot. In it sat a very dark man, with a crown of diamonds on his head.
The man caught Proserpina in his arms, and shouted to his horses. They went so fast that they seemed to fly through the air.
Proserpina was frightened and called out, “Mother! Mother Ceres! Come quickly and help me!”
But Mother Ceres was a great way off, and could not hear her cry.
“I will not harm you,” said the man. “I am King Pluto. All the gold and silver under the ground belong to me.
“I will give you a garden full of prettierflowers than those in your hand. Where I live all the flowers are made of pearls and rubies.”
Just then Proserpina saw Mother Ceres in a field far away. She gave a loud cry, but King Pluto only made the horses go faster.
As they went under the earth it grew darker and darker. By and by they came to his castle. It was made of gold and lighted with lanterns made of diamonds. There was no sunshine in King Pluto’s country.
“Try to be happy, little Proserpina,” he said. “You may have my crown to play with. If you like, you may sit beside me and be my little queen.”
“I do not want golden castles and crowns,” sobbed Proserpina. “Please carry me back to my mother.”
Dinner was ready for them but Proserpina would eat nothing. She knew that if she ate the food or drank the water of King Pluto’s country, she could never see her mother again.
Mother Ceres heard Proserpina’s loud cry. She looked all around but could not see her. Then she drove home quickly, but she could not find her in the house.
She heard the sea-maids singing, and ran down to ask them about Proserpina.
“She left us this morning to gather flowers,” said one of them. “We have not seen her since.”
It was now almost dark. Mother Ceres lighted her torch, and went from house to house asking every one about her child.
Day and night for six long months she hunted for her little girl. Her torch burned dimly by day but at night it lighted her path.
At last some one told her that Proserpina had been carried off by King Pluto.
Then Mother Ceres said, “The grain shall not grow, nor the flowers bloom, until my little girl is given back to me.”
The earth turned brown, and there was no food for men nor animals. So they asked King Pluto to make the earth green by sending Proserpina home.
Proserpina had grown very hungry. She had just begun to eat some fruit when King Pluto told her she could go back to her mother.
As she walked along, everything turned green. Beautiful flowers grew in her path. The cowsand the sheep began to eat the grass and the birds to sing in the trees.
Mother Ceres was sitting on the door-step when she heard Proserpina say, “Here I am, Mother dear.”
How happy Mother Ceres was, to hold her little girl in her arms once more. Proserpina told her all about King Pluto’s castle.
“I was so unhappy, Mother dear,” she said, “that I did not eat anything until to-day. Then King Pluto gave me some fruit that had grown in one of your gardens.”
“Oh, my little Proserpina!” said Mother Ceres. “Why did you eat it?”
“I did not eat all of it,” said the little girl. “I swallowed only six seeds.”
“My child,” said Mother Ceres sadly, “you ate those six seeds in King Pluto’s castle. So you will have to spend six months of every year under the ground with him. While you are gone nothing shall grow. But when you come back to me in the spring, we will make the world beautiful.”
Nathaniel Hawthorne(Adapted).