Quote from "Under The Willow Tree" (1852)

The Alps seemed to him like the folded wings of the earth; what if they were to unfold themselves and display their varied pictures of black woods, foaming waters, clouds, and great masses of snow! On the last day, he thought, the world will lift up its mighty wings and mount upward to God, to burst like a soap bubble before the glance of the Highest.

"Ah," he sighed, "that that last day were here now!"

Registered motifs in this quote:

  1. Divine light
  2. God
  3. Transformation

Keywords: Nature, wish for death, judgment day

Comment: Judgment Day is a rare motif in Andersens oeuvre, and it is in this case only Knud's wish. A wish for death and being freed from this cruel world (he suffers from heartache over a woman). The thought of the world rising to God on wings and its bubble-like bursting in the light of God is significant. It resembles especially The Old Oak Tree's Last Dream (1858), but also The Comet (the "future bubbles" of soap and later on the old man's "bubbles of memories") and The Little Mermaid's transformation via 'death' in foam on the sea.