"Well, Tylette?... You know me, I see, but you have stopped talking."
Then Tyltyl put his hand up to his forehead:
"Hullo!" he cried. "The diamond"s gone!... Who"s taken my little green hat?... Never mind, I don"t want it any more!... Ah, there"s Fire!
Good-morning, sir! He"ll be crackling to make Water angry!" He ran to the tap, turned it on and bent down over the water. "Good-morning, Water, good-morning!... What does she say?... She still talks, but I don"t understand her as well as I did.... Oh, how happy I am, how happy I am!..."
"So am I, so am I!" cried Mytyl.
And our two young friends took each other"s hands and began to scamper round the kitchen.
Mummy Tyl felt a little relieved at seeing them so full of life and spirits. Besides, Daddy Tyl was so calm and placid. He sat eating his porridge and laughing:
"You see, they are _playing_ at being happy!" he said.
Of course, the poor dear man did not know that a wonderful dream had taught his little children not to play at being happy, but to _be_ happy, which is the greatest and most difficult of lessons.
"I like Light best of all," said Tyltyl to Mytyl, standing on tip-toe by the window. "You can see her over there, through the trees of the forest. To-night, she will be in the lamp. Dear, oh, dear, how lovely it all is and how glad I feel, how glad I...."
He stopped and listened. Everybody lent an ear. They heard laughter and merry voices; and the sounds came nearer.
"It"s her voice!" cried Tyltyl. "Let me open the door!"
As a matter of fact, it was the little girl, with her mother, Neighbor Berlingot.
"Look at her," said Goody Berlingot, quite overcome with joy. "She can run, she can dance, she can fly! It"s a miracle! When she saw the bird, she jumped, just like that...."
And Goody Berlingot hopped from one leg to the other at the risk of falling and breaking her long, hooked nose.
The Children clapped their hands and everybody laughed.
The little girl was there, in her long white night-dress, standing in the middle of the kitchen, a little surprised to find herself on her feet after so many months" illness. She smiled and pressed Tyltyl"s dove to her heart.
Tyltyl looked first at the child and then at Mytyl:
"Don"t you think she"s very like Light?" he asked.
"She is much smaller," said Mytyl.
"Yes, indeed!" said Tyltyl. "But she will grow!..."
And the three Children tried to put a little food down the Bird"s beak, while the parents began to feel easier in their minds and looked at them and smiled.
Tyltyl was radiant. I will not conceal from you, my dear little readers, that the Dove had hardly changed colour at all and that it was joy and happiness that decked him with a magnificent bright blue plumage in our hero"s eyes. No matter! Tyltyl, without knowing it, had discovered Light"s great secret, which is _that we draw nearer to happiness by trying to give it to others_.
But now something happened. Everybody became excited, the Children screamed, the parents threw up their arms and rushed to the open door: the Bird had suddenly escaped! He was flying away as fast as he could.
"My bird! My bird!" sobbed the little girl.
But Tyltyl was the first to run to the staircase and he returned in triumph:
"It"s all right!" he said. "Don"t cry! He is still in the house and we shall find him again."
And he gave a kiss to the little girl, who was already smiling through her tears:
"You"ll be sure to catch him again, won"t you?" she asked.
"Trust me," replied our friend, confidentially. "I now know where he is."
You also, my dear little readers, now know where the Blue Bird is.
Dear Light revealed nothing to the woodcutter"s Children, but she showed them the road to happiness by teaching them to be good and kind and generous.
Suppose that, at the beginning of this story, she had said to them:
"Go straight back home. The Blue Bird is there, in the humble cottage, in the wicker cage, with your dear father and mother who love you."
The Children would never have believed her:
"What!" Tyltyl would have answered. "The Blue Bird, my dove? Nonsense: my dove is grey!... Happiness, in the cottage? With Daddy and Mummy?
Oh, I say! There are no toys at home and it"s awfully boring there: we want to go ever so far and meet with tremendous adventures and have all sorts of fun...."
That is what he would have said; and he and Mytyl would have set out in spite of everything, without listening to Light"s advice, for the most certain truths are good for nothing if we do not put them to the test ourselves. It only takes a moment to tell a child all the wisdom in the world, but our whole lives are not long enough to help us understand it, because our own experience is our only light.
Each of us must seek out happiness for himself; and he has to take endless pains and undergo many a cruel disappointment before he learns to become happy by appreciating the simple and perfect pleasures that are always within easy reach of his mind and heart.
THE END