Once there reigned a queen, in
whose garden were found the most glorious flowers at all seasons and
from all the lands of the world. But more than all others she
loved the roses, and she had many kinds of this flower, from the
wild dog-rose with its apple-scented green leaves to the most
splendid, large, crimson roses. They grew against the garden
walls, wound themselves around the pillars and wind-frames, and
crept through the windows into the rooms, and all along the ceilings
in the halls. And the roses were of many colors, and of every
fragrance and form.
But care and sorrow dwelt in those halls. The queen lay upon a
sick-bed, and the doctors said she must die.
``There is still one thing that can save her,'' said the wise man.
``Bring her the loveliest rose in the world, the rose that is the
symbol of the purest, the brightest love. If that is held
before her eyes ere they close, she will not die.''
Then old and young came from every side with roses, the loveliest
that bloomed in each garden, but they were not of the right sort.
The flower was to be plucked from the Garden of Love. But what
rose in all that garden expressed the highest and purest love?
And the poets sang of the loveliest rose in the world,--of the love
of maid and youth, and of the love of dying heroes.
``But they have not named the right flower,'' said the wise man.
``They have not pointed out the place where it blooms in its
splendor. It is not the rose that springs from the hearts of
youthful lovers, though this rose will ever be fragrant in song.
It is not the bloom that sprouts from the blood flowing from the
breast of the hero who dies for his country, though few deaths are
sweeter than his, and no rose is redder than the blood that flows
then. Nor is it the wondrous flower to which man devotes many
a sleepless night and much of his fresh life,--the magic flower of
science.''
``But I know where it blooms,'' said a happy mother,
who came with her pretty child to the bedside of the dying queen.
``I know where the loveliest rose of love may be found. It springs
in the blooming cheeks of my sweet child, when, waking from sleep,
it opens its eyes and smiles tenderly at me.''
``Lovely is this rose, but there is a lovelier still,''
said the wise man.
``I have seen the loveliest, purest rose that blooms,'' said a woman.
``I saw it on the cheeks of the queen. She had taken off her
golden crown. And in the long, dreary night she carried her sick
child in her arms. She wept, kissed it, and prayed for her
child.''
``Holy and wonderful is the white rose of a mother's
grief,'' answered the wise man, ``but it is not the one we seek.''
``The loveliest rose in the world I saw at the altar of
the Lord,'' said the good Bishop, ``the young maidens went to the
Lord's Table. Roses were blushing and pale roses shining on
their fresh cheeks. A young girl stood there. She looked
with all the love and purity of her spirit up to heaven. That
was the expression of the highest and purest love.''
``May she be blessed,'' said the wise man, ``but not
one of you has yet named the loveliest rose in the world.''
Then there came into the room a child, the queen's
little son.
``Mother,'' cried the boy, ``only hear what I have
read.''
And the child sat by the bedside and read from the Book
of Him who suffered death upon the cross to save men, and even those
who were not yet born. ``Greater love there is not.''
And a rosy glow spread over the cheeks of the queen,
and her eyes gleamed, for she saw that from the leaves of the Book
there bloomed the loveliest rose, that sprang from the blood of
Christ shed on the cross.
``I see it!'' she said, ``he who beholds this, the
loveliest rose on earth, shall never die.''