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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44630 ***
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+
+
+
+ _From a SWEDISH_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ _By_
+
+ SELMA LAGERLÖF
+
+ _Translated by_
+
+ JESSIE BROCHNER
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ 1916
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1901, by_
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+_A_ LIST _of the_ STORIES
+
+
+ _Page_
+
+ _The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE 1
+
+ _Queens at_ KUNGAHÄLLA 135
+
+ _On the_ SITE _of the Great_ KUNGAHÄLLA 135
+
+ _The Forest_ QUEEN 141
+
+ SIGRID STORRÄDE 157
+
+ ASTRID 172
+
+ _Old_ AGNETE 219
+
+ _The Fisherman's_ RING 231
+
+ _Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA 257
+
+ _The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST 277
+
+ _The_ PEACE _of_ GOD 291
+
+ _A_ STORY _from_ HALSTANÄS 309
+
+ _The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE 323
+
+ _The_ BROTHERS 339
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ I
+
+ _The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+_The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE
+
+
+I
+
+It was a beautiful autumn day towards the end of the thirties. There was
+in Upsala at that time a high, yellow, two-storied house, which stood
+quite alone in a little meadow on the outskirts of the town. It was a
+rather desolate and dismal-looking house, but was rendered less so by
+the Virginia-creepers which grew there in profusion, and which had crept
+so high up the yellow wall on the sunny side of the house that they
+completely surrounded the three windows on the upper story.
+
+At one of these windows a student was sitting, drinking his morning
+coffee. He was a tall, handsome fellow, of distinguished appearance. His
+hair was brushed back from his forehead; it curled prettily, and a lock
+was continually falling into his eyes. He wore a loose, comfortable
+suit, but looked rather smart all the same.
+
+His room was well furnished. There was a good sofa and comfortable
+chairs, a large writing-table, a capital bookcase, but hardly any books.
+
+Before he had finished his coffee another student entered the room. The
+new-comer was a totally different-looking man. He was a short,
+broad-shouldered fellow, squarely built and strong, ugly, with a large
+head, thin hair, and coarse complexion.
+
+'Hede,' he said, 'I have come to have a serious talk with you.'
+
+'Has anything unpleasant happened to you?'
+
+'Oh no, not to me,' the other answered; 'it is really you it concerns.'
+He sat silent for a while, and looked down. 'It is so awfully unpleasant
+having to tell you.'
+
+'Leave it alone, then,' suggested Hede.
+
+He felt inclined to laugh at his friend's solemnity.
+
+'I can't leave it alone any longer,' said his visitor. 'I ought to have
+spoken to you long ago, but it is hardly my place. You understand? I
+can't help thinking you will say to yourself: "There's Gustaf Alin, son
+of one of our cottagers, thinks himself such a great man now that he can
+order me about."'
+
+'My dear fellow,' Hede said, 'don't imagine I think anything of the
+kind. My father's father was a peasant's son.'
+
+'Yes, but no one thinks of that now,' Alin answered. He sat there,
+looking awkward and stupid, resuming every moment more and more of his
+peasant manners, as if that could help him out of his difficulty. 'When
+I think of the difference there is between your family and mine, I feel
+as if I ought to keep quiet; but when I remember that it was your father
+who, by his help in days gone by, enabled me to study, then I feel that
+I must speak.'
+
+Hede looked at him with a pleasant smile.
+
+'You had better speak out and have done with it,' he said.
+
+'The thing is,' Alin said, 'I have heard people say that you don't do
+any work. They say you have hardly opened a book during the four terms
+you have been at the University. They say you don't do anything but play
+on the violin the whole day; and that I can quite believe, for you never
+wanted to do anything else when you were at school in Falu, although
+there you were obliged to work.'
+
+Hede straightened himself a little in his chair. Alin grew more and more
+uncomfortable, but he continued with stubborn resolution:
+
+'I suppose you think that anyone owning an estate like Munkhyttan ought
+to be able to do as he likes--work if he likes, or leave it alone. If he
+takes his exam., good; if he does not take his exam., what does it
+matter? for in any case you will never be anything but a landed
+proprietor and iron-master. You will live at Munkhyttan all your life. I
+understand quite well that is what you must think.'
+
+Hede was silent, and Alin seemed to see him surrounded by the same wall
+of distinction which in Alin's eyes had always surrounded his father,
+the Squire, and his mother.
+
+'But, you see, Munkhyttan is no longer what it used to be when there was
+iron in the mine,' he continued cautiously. 'The Squire knew that very
+well, and that was why it was arranged before his death that you should
+study. Your poor mother knows it, too, and the whole parish knows it.
+The only one who does not know anything is you, Hede.'
+
+'Don't you think I know,' Hede said a little irritably, 'that the
+iron-mine cannot be worked any longer?'
+
+'Oh yes,' Alin said, 'I dare say you know that much, but you don't know
+that it is all up with the property. Think the matter over, and you will
+understand that one cannot live from farming alone at Vesterdalarne. I
+cannot understand why your mother has kept it a secret from you. But, of
+course, she has the sole control of the estate, so she need not ask your
+advice about anything. Everybody at home knows that she is hard up. They
+say she drives about borrowing money. I suppose she did not want to
+disturb you with her troubles, but thought that she could keep matters
+going until you had taken your degree. She will not sell the estate
+before you have finished, and made yourself a new home.'
+
+Hede rose, and walked once or twice up and down the floor. Then he
+stopped opposite Alin.
+
+'But what on earth are you driving at, Alin? Do you want to make me
+believe that we are not rich?'
+
+'I know quite well that, until lately, you have been considered rich
+people at home,' Alin said. 'But you can understand that things must
+come to an end when it is a case of always spending and never earning
+anything. It was a different thing when you had the mine.'
+
+Hede sat down again.
+
+'My mother would surely have told me if there were anything the matter,'
+he said. 'I am grateful to you, Alin; but you have allowed yourself to
+be frightened by some silly stories.'
+
+'I thought that you did not know anything,' Alin continued obstinately.
+'At Munkhyttan your mother saves and works in order to get the money to
+keep you at Upsala, and to make it cheerful and pleasant for you when
+you are at home in the vacations. And in the meantime you are here doing
+nothing, because you don't know there is trouble coming. I could not
+stand any longer seeing you deceiving each other. Her ladyship thought
+you were studying, and you thought she was rich. I could not let you
+destroy your prospects without saying anything.'
+
+Hede sat quietly for a moment, and meditated. Then he rose and gave Alin
+his hand with rather a sad smile.
+
+'You understand that I feel you are speaking the truth, even if I _will_
+not believe you? Thanks.'
+
+Alin joyfully shook his hand.
+
+'You must know, Hede, that if you will only work no harm is done. With
+your brains, you can take your degree in three or four years.'
+
+Hede straightened himself.
+
+'Do not be uneasy, Alin,' he said; 'I am going to work hard now.'
+
+Alin rose and went towards the door, but hesitated. Before he reached it
+he turned round.
+
+'There was something else I wanted,' he said. He again became
+embarrassed. 'I want you to lend me your violin until you have commenced
+reading in earnest.'
+
+'Lend you my violin?'
+
+'Yes; pack it up in a silk handkerchief, and put it in the case, and let
+me take it with me, or otherwise you will read to no purpose. You will
+begin to play as soon as I am out of the room. You are so accustomed to
+it now you cannot resist if you have it here. One cannot get over that
+kind of thing unless someone helps one; it gets the mastery over one.'
+
+Hede appeared unwilling.
+
+'This is madness, you know,' he said.
+
+'No, Hede, it is not. You know you have inherited it from the Squire. It
+runs in your blood. Ever since you have been your own master here in
+Upsala you have done nothing else but play. You live here in the
+outskirts of the town simply not to disturb anyone by your playing. You
+cannot help yourself in this matter. Let me have the violin.'
+
+'Well,' said Hede, 'before I could not help playing, but now Munkhyttan
+is at stake; I am more fond of my home than of my violin.'
+
+But Alin was determined, and continued to ask for the violin.
+
+'What is the good of it?' Hede said. 'If I want to play, I need not go
+many steps to borrow another violin.'
+
+'I know that,' Alin replied, 'but I don't think it would be so bad with
+another violin. It is your old Italian violin which is the greatest
+danger for you. And besides, I would suggest your locking yourself in
+for the first few days--only until you have got fairly started.'
+
+He begged and begged, but Hede resisted; he would not stand anything so
+unreasonable as being a prisoner in his own room.
+
+Alin grew crimson.
+
+'I must have the violin with me,' he said, 'or it is no use at all.' He
+spoke eagerly and excitedly. 'I had not intended to say anything about
+it, but I know that it concerns more than Munkhyttan. I saw a young girl
+at the Promotion Ball in the spring who, people said, was engaged to
+you. I don't dance, you know, but I liked to watch her when she was
+dancing, looking radiant like one of the lilies of the field. And when I
+heard that she was engaged to you, I felt sorry for her.'
+
+'Why?'
+
+'Because I knew that you would never succeed if you continued as you had
+begun. And then I swore that she should not have to spend her whole life
+waiting for one who never came. She should not sit and wither whilst
+waiting for you. I did not want to meet her in a few years with
+sharpened features and deep wrinkles round her mouth----'
+
+He stopped suddenly; Hede's glance had rested so searchingly upon him.
+
+But Gunnar Hede had already understood that Alin was in love with his
+_fiancée_. It moved him deeply that Alin under these circumstances tried
+to save him, and, influenced by this feeling, he yielded and gave him
+the violin.
+
+When Alin had gone, Hede read desperately for a whole hour, but then he
+threw away his book.
+
+It was not of much good his reading. It would be three or four years
+before he could be finished, and who could guarantee that the estate
+would not be sold in the meantime?
+
+He felt almost with terror how deeply he loved the old home. It was like
+witchery. Every room, every tree, stood clearly before him. He felt he
+could not part with any of it if he were to be happy. And he was to sit
+quietly with his books whilst all this was about to pass away from him.
+
+He became more and more restless; he felt the blood beating in his
+temples as if in a fever. And then he grew quite beside himself because
+he could not take his violin and play himself calm again.
+
+'My God!' he said, 'Alin will drive me mad. First to tell me all this,
+and then to take away my violin! A man like I must feel the bow between
+his fingers in sorrow and in joy. I must do something; I must get money,
+but I have not an idea in my head. I cannot think without my violin.'
+
+He could not endure the feeling of being locked in. He was so angry with
+Alin, who had thought of this absurd plan, that he was afraid he might
+strike him the next time he came.
+
+Of course he would have played, if he had had the violin, for that was
+just what he needed. His blood rushed so wildly, that he was nearly
+going out of his mind.
+
+Just as Hede was longing most for his violin a wandering musician began
+to play outside. It was an old blind man. He played out of tune and
+without expression, but Hede was so overcome by hearing a violin just at
+this moment that he listened with tears in his eyes and with his hands
+folded.
+
+The next moment he flung open the window and climbed to the ground by
+the help of the creepers. He had no compunction at leaving his work. He
+thought the violin had simply come to comfort him in his misfortune.
+
+Hede had probably never before begged so humbly for anything as he did
+now, when he asked the old blind man to lend him his violin. He stood
+the whole time with his cap in his hand, although the old man was blind.
+
+The musician did not seem to understand what he wanted. He turned to the
+young girl who was leading him. Hede bowed to the poor girl and repeated
+his request. She looked at him, as if she must have eyes for them both.
+The glance from her big eyes was so steady that Hede thought he could
+feel where it struck him. It began with his collar, and it noticed that
+the frills of his shirt were well starched, then it saw that his coat
+was brushed, next that his boots were polished.
+
+Hede had never before been subjected to such close scrutiny. He saw
+clearly that he would not pass muster before those eyes.
+
+But it was not so, all the same. The young girl had a strange way of
+smiling. Her face was so serious, that one had the impression when she
+smiled that it was the first and only time she had ever looked happy;
+and now one of these rare smiles passed over her lips. She took the
+violin from the old man and handed it to Hede.
+
+'Play the waltz from "Freischütz," then,' she said.
+
+Hede thought it was strange that he should have to play a waltz just at
+that moment, but, as a matter of fact, it was all the same to him what
+he played, if he could only have a bow in his hand. That was all he
+wanted. The violin at once began to comfort him; it spoke to him in
+faint, cracked tones.
+
+'I am only a poor man's violin,' it said; 'but such as I am, I am a
+comfort and help to a poor blind man. I am the light and the colour and
+the brightness in his life. It is I who must comfort him in his poverty
+and old age and blindness.'
+
+Hede felt that the terrible depression that had cowed his hopes began to
+give way.
+
+'You are young and strong,' the violin said to him. 'You can fight and
+strive; you can hold fast that which tries to escape you. Why are you
+downcast and without courage?'
+
+Hede had played with lowered eyes; now he threw back his head and looked
+at those who stood around him. There was quite a crowd of children and
+people from the street, who had come into the yard to listen to the
+music. It appeared, however, that they had not come solely for the sake
+of the music. The blind man and his companion were not the only ones in
+the troupe.
+
+Opposite Hede stood a figure in tights and spangles, and with bare arms
+crossed over his chest. He looked old and worn, but Hede could not help
+thinking that he looked a devil of a fellow with his high chest and long
+moustaches. And beside him stood his wife, little and fat, and not so
+very young either, but beaming with joy over her spangles and flowing
+gauze skirts.
+
+During the first bars of the music they stood still and counted, then a
+gracious smile passed over their faces, and they took each other's hands
+and began to dance on a small carpet. And Hede saw that during all the
+equilibristic tricks they now performed the woman stood almost still,
+whilst her husband did all the work. He sprang over her, and twirled
+round her, and vaulted over her. The woman scarcely did anything else
+but kiss her hand to the spectators.
+
+But Hede did not really take much notice of them. His bow began to fly
+over the strings. It told him that there was happiness in fighting and
+overcoming. It almost deemed him happy because everything was at stake
+for him. Hede stood there, playing courage and hope into himself, and
+did not think of the old tight-rope dancers.
+
+But suddenly he saw that they grew restless. They no longer smiled; they
+left off kissing their hands to the spectators; the acrobat made
+mistakes, and his wife began to sway to and fro in waltz time.
+
+Hede played more and more eagerly. He left off 'Freischütz' and rushed
+into an old 'Nixie Polka,' one which generally sent all the people mad
+when played at the peasant festivals.
+
+The old tight-rope dancers quite lost their heads. They stood in
+breathless astonishment, and at last they could resist no longer. They
+sprang into each other's arms, and then they began to dance a waltz in
+the middle of the carpet.
+
+How they danced! dear me, how they danced! They took small, tripping
+steps, and whirled round in a small circle; they hardly went outside the
+carpet, and their faces beamed with joy and delight. There was the
+happiness of youth and the rapture of love over these two old people.
+
+The whole crowd was jubilant at seeing them dance. The serious little
+companion of the blind man smiled all over her face, and Hede grew much
+excited.
+
+Just fancy what an effect his violin could have! It made people quite
+forget themselves. It was a great power to have at his disposal. Any
+moment he liked he could take possession of his kingdom. Only a couple
+of years' study abroad with a great master, and he could go all over the
+world, and by his playing earn riches and honour and fame.
+
+It seemed to Hede that these acrobats must have come to tell him this.
+That was the road he should follow; it lay before him clear and smooth.
+He said to himself: 'I will--I _will_ become a musician! I _must_ be
+one! This is better than studying. I can charm my fellow-men with my
+violin; I can become rich.'
+
+Hede stopped playing. The acrobats at once came up and complimented him.
+The man said his name was Blomgren. That was his real name; he had other
+names when he performed. He and his wife were old circus people. Mrs.
+Blomgren in former days had been called Miss Viola, and had performed on
+horseback; and although they had now left the circus, they were still
+true artists--artists body and soul. That he had probably already
+noticed; that was why they could not resist his violin.
+
+Hede walked about with the acrobats for a couple of hours. He could not
+part with the violin, and the old artists' enthusiasm for their
+profession appealed to him. He was simply testing himself. 'I want to
+find out whether there is the proper stuff for an artist in me. I want
+to see if I can call forth enthusiasm. I want to see whether I can make
+children and idlers follow me from house to house.'
+
+On their way from house to house Mr. Blomgren threw an old threadbare
+mantle around him, and Mrs. Blomgren enveloped herself in a brown cloak.
+Thus arrayed, they walked at Hede's side and talked.
+
+Mr. Blomgren would not speak of all the honour he and Mrs. Blomgren had
+received during the time they had performed in a real circus; but the
+_directeur_ had given Mrs. Blomgren her dismissal under the pretence
+that she was getting too stout. Mr. Blomgren had not been dismissed: he
+had himself resigned his position. Surely no one could think that Mr.
+Blomgren would remain with a _directeur_ who had dismissed his wife!
+
+Mrs. Blomgren loved her art, and for her sake Mr. Blomgren had made up
+his mind to live as a free artist, so that she could still continue to
+perform. During the winter, when it was too cold to give performances in
+the street, they performed in a tent. They had a very comprehensive
+repertoire. They gave pantomimes, and were jugglers and conjurers.
+
+The circus had cast them off, but Art had not, said Mr. Blomgren. They
+served Art always. It was well worth being faithful to Art, even unto
+death. Always artists--always. That was Mr. Blomgren's opinion, and it
+was also Mrs. Blomgren's.
+
+Hede walked quietly and listened. His thoughts flew restlessly from plan
+to plan. Sometimes events happen which become like symbols, like signs,
+which one must obey. There must be some meaning in what had now happened
+to him. If he could only understand it rightly, it might help him
+towards arriving at a wise resolution.
+
+Mr. Blomgren asked the student to notice the young girl who was leading
+the blind man. Had he ever before seen such eyes? Did he not think that
+such eyes must mean something? Could one have those eyes without being
+intended for something great?
+
+Hede turned round and looked at the little pale girl. Yes, she had eyes
+like stars, set in a sad and rather thin face.
+
+'Our Lord knows always what He is about,' said Mrs. Blomgren; 'and I
+also believe that He has some reason for letting such an artist as Mr.
+Blomgren perform in the street. But what was He thinking about when He
+gave that girl those eyes and that smile?'
+
+'I will tell you something,' said Mr. Blomgren; 'she has not the
+slightest talent for Art. And with those eyes!'
+
+Hede had a suspicion that they were not talking to him, but simply for
+the benefit of the young girl. She was walking just behind them, and
+could hear every word.
+
+'She is not more than thirteen years old, and not by any means too old
+to learn something; but, impossible--impossible, without the slightest
+talent! If one does not want to waste one's time, sir, teach her to sew,
+but not to stand on her head. Her smile makes people quite mad about
+her,' Mr. Blomgren continued. 'Simply on account of her smile she has
+had many offers from families wishful to adopt her. She could grow up in
+a well-to-do home if she would only leave her grandfather. But what does
+she want with a smile that makes people mad about her, when she will
+never appear either on horseback or on a trapeze?'
+
+'We know other artists,' said Mrs. Blomgren, 'who pick up children in
+the street and train them for the profession when they cannot perform
+any longer themselves. There is more than one who has been lucky enough
+to create a star and obtain immense salaries for her. But Mr. Blomgren
+and I have never thought of the money; we have only thought of some day
+seeing Ingrid flying through a hoop whilst the whole circus resounded
+with applause. For us it would have been as if we were beginning life
+over again.'
+
+'Why do we keep her grandfather?' said Mr. Blomgren. 'Is he an artist
+fit for us? We could, no doubt, have got a previous member of a
+Hofkapell if we had wished. But we love that child; we cannot do without
+her; we keep the old man for her sake.'
+
+'Is it not naughty of her that she will not allow us to make an artist
+of her?' they said.
+
+Hede turned round. The little girl's face wore an expression of
+suffering and patience. He could see that she knew that anyone who could
+not dance on the tight-rope was a stupid and contemptible person.
+
+At the same moment they came to another house, but before they began
+their performance Hede sat down on an overturned wheelbarrow and began
+to preach. He defended the poor little girl. He reproached Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren for wishing to hand her over to the great, cruel public, who
+would love and applaud her for a time, but when she grew old and worn
+out, they would let her trudge along the streets in rain and cold. No;
+he or she was artist enough, who made a fellow-being happy. Ingrid
+should only have eyes and smiles for one, should keep them for one only;
+and this one should never leave her, but give her a safe home as long as
+he lived.
+
+Tears came into Hede's eyes whilst he spoke. He spoke more to himself
+than to the others. He felt it suddenly as something terrible to be
+thrust out into the world, to be severed from the quiet home-life. He
+saw that the great, star-like eyes of the girl began to sparkle. It
+seemed as if she had understood every single word. It seemed as if she
+again felt the right to live.
+
+But Mr. Blomgren and his wife had become very serious. They pressed
+Hede's hand and promised him that they would never again try and
+persuade the little girl to become an artist. She should be allowed to
+lead the life she wished. He had touched them. They were
+artists--artists body and soul; they understood what he meant when he
+spoke of love and faithfulness.
+
+Then Hede parted from them and went home. He no longer tried to find any
+secret meaning in his adventure. After all, it had meant nothing more
+than that he should save this poor sorrowful child from always grieving
+over her incapacity.
+
+
+II
+
+Munkhyttan, the home of Gunnar Hede, was situated in a poor parish in
+the forests of Vesterdalarne. It was a large, thinly-populated parish,
+with which Nature had dealt very stingily. There were stony,
+forest-covered hills, and many small lakes. The people could not
+possibly have earned a livelihood there had they not had the right to
+travel about the country as pedlars. But to make up for it, the whole of
+this poor district was full of old tales of how poor peasant lads and
+lassies had gone into the world with a pack of goods on their backs, to
+return in gilded coaches, with the boxes under the seats filled with
+money.
+
+One of the very best stories was about Hede's grandfather. He was the
+son of a poor musician, and had grown up with his violin in his hand,
+and when he was seventeen years old he had gone out into the world with
+his pack on his back. But wherever he went his violin had helped him in
+his business. He had by turns gathered people together by his music and
+sold them silk handkerchiefs, combs, and pins. All his trading had been
+brought about with music and merriment, and things had gone so well with
+him that he had at last been able to buy Munkhyttan, with its mine and
+ironworks, from the poverty-stricken Baron who then owned the property.
+Then he became the Squire, and the pretty daughter of the Baron became
+his wife.
+
+From that time the old family, as they were always called, had thought
+of nothing else but beautifying the place. They removed the main
+building on to the beautiful island which lay on the edge of a small
+lake, round which lay their fields and their mines. The upper story had
+been added in their time, for they wanted to have plenty of room for
+their numerous guests; and they had also added the two large flights of
+steps outside. They had planted ornamental trees all over the
+fir-covered island. They had made small winding pathways in the stony
+soil, and on the most beautiful spots they had built small pavilions,
+hanging like large birds'-nests over the lake. The beautiful French
+roses that grew on the terrace, the Dutch furniture, the Italian violin,
+had all been brought to the house by them. And it was they who had built
+the wall protecting the orchard from the north wind, and the
+conservatory.
+
+The old family were merry, kind-hearted, old-fashioned people. The
+Squire's wife certainly liked to be a little aristocratic; but that was
+not at all in the old Squire's line. In the midst of all the luxury
+which surrounded him he never forgot what he had been, and in the room
+where he transacted his business, and where people came and went, the
+pack and the red-painted, home-made violin were hung right above the old
+man's desk.
+
+Even after his death the pack and the violin remained in the same place.
+And every time the old man's son and grandson saw them their hearts
+swelled with gratitude. It was these two poor implements that had
+created Munkhyttan, and Munkhyttan was the best thing in the world.
+
+Whatever the reason might be--and it was probably because it seemed
+natural to the place that one lived a good, genial life there, free from
+trouble--Hede's family clung to the place with greater love than was
+good for it. And more especially Gunnar Hede was so strongly attached to
+it that people said that it was incorrect to say of him that he owned an
+estate. On the contrary, it was an old estate in Vesterdalarne that
+owned Gunnar Hede.
+
+If he had not made himself a slave of an old rambling manor-house and
+some acres of land and forest, and some stunted apple-trees, he would
+probably have continued his studies, or, better still, gone abroad to
+study music, which, after all, was no doubt his proper vocation in this
+world. But when he returned from Upsala, and it became clear to him that
+they really would have to sell the estate if he could not soon earn a
+lot of money, he decided upon giving up all his other plans, and made up
+his mind to go out into the world as a pedlar, as his grandfather before
+him had done.
+
+His mother and his _fiancée_ besought him rather to sell the place than
+to sacrifice himself for it in this manner, but he was not to be moved.
+He put on peasant's attire, bought goods, and began to travel about the
+country as a pedlar. He thought that if he only traded a couple of years
+he could earn enough to pay the debt and save the estate.
+
+And as far as the latter was concerned he was successful enough. But he
+brought upon himself a terrible misfortune.
+
+When he had walked about with his pack for a year or so he thought that
+he would try and earn a large sum of money at one stroke. He went far
+north and bought a large flock of goats, about a couple of hundred. And
+he and a comrade intended to drive them down to a large fair in
+Vermland, where goats cost twice as much as in the north. If he
+succeeded in selling all his goats, he would do a very good business.
+
+It was in the beginning of November, and there had not yet been any
+snow, when Hede and his comrade set out with their goats. The first day
+everything went well with them, but the second day, when they came to
+the great Fifty-Mile Forest, it began to snow. Much snow fell, and it
+stormed and blew severely. It was not long before it became difficult
+for the animals to make their way through the snow. Goats are certainly
+both plucky and hardy animals, and the herd struggled on for a
+considerable time; but the snow-storm lasted two days and two nights,
+and it was terribly cold.
+
+Hede did all he could to save the animals, but after the snow began to
+fall he could get them neither food nor water. And when they had worked
+their way through deep snow for a whole day they became very footsore.
+Their feet hurt them, and they would not go any longer. The first goat
+that threw itself down by the roadside and would not get up again and
+follow the herd Hede lifted on to his shoulder so as not to leave it
+behind. But when another and again another lay down he could not carry
+them. There was nothing to do but to look the other way and go on.
+
+Do you know what the Fifty-Mile Forest is like? Not a farmhouse, not a
+cottage, mile after mile, only forest; tall-stemmed fir-trees, with bark
+as hard as wood, and high branches; no young trees with soft bark and
+soft twigs that the animals could eat. If there had been no snow, they
+could have got through the forest in a couple of days; now they could
+not get through it at all. All the goats were left there, and the men
+too nearly perished. They did not meet a single human being the whole
+time. No one helped them.
+
+Hede tried to throw the snow to one side so that the goats could eat the
+moss; but the snow fell so thickly, and the moss was frozen fast to the
+ground. And how could he get food for two hundred animals in this way?
+
+He bore it bravely until the goats began to moan. The first day they
+were a lively, rather noisy herd. He had had hard work to make them all
+keep together, and prevent them from butting each other to death. But
+when they seemed to understand that they could not be saved their
+nature changed, and they completely lost their courage. They all began
+to bleat and moan, not faintly and peevishly, as goats usually do, but
+loudly, louder and louder as the danger increased. And when Hede heard
+their cries he felt quite desperate.
+
+They were in the midst of the wild, desolate forest; there was no help
+whatever obtainable. Goat after goat dropped down by the roadside. The
+snow gathered round them and covered them. When Hede looked back at this
+row of drifts by the wayside, each hiding the body of an animal, of
+which one could still see the projecting horns and the hoofs, then his
+brain began to give way.
+
+He rushed at the animals, which allowed themselves to be covered by the
+snow, swung his whip over them, and hit them. It was the only way to
+save them, but they did not stir. He took them by the horns and dragged
+them along. They allowed themselves to be dragged, but they did not move
+a foot themselves. When he let go his hold of their horns, they licked
+his hands, as if beseeching him to help them. As soon as he went up to
+them they licked his hands.
+
+All this had such a strong effect upon Hede that he felt he was on the
+point of going out of his mind.
+
+It is not certain, however, that things would have gone so badly with
+him had he not, after it was all over in the forest, gone to see one
+whom he loved dearly. It was not his mother, but his sweetheart. He
+thought himself that he had gone there because he ought to tell her at
+once that he had lost so much money that he would not be able to marry
+for many years. But no doubt he went to see her solely to hear her say
+that she loved him quite as much in spite of his misfortunes. He thought
+that she could drive away the memory of the Fifty-Mile Forest.
+
+She could, perhaps, have done this, but she would not. She was already
+displeased because Hede went about with a pack and looked like a
+peasant; she thought that for that reason alone it was difficult to love
+him as much as before. Now, when he told her that he must still go on
+doing this for many years, she said that she could no longer wait for
+him. This last blow was too much for Hede; his mind gave way.
+
+He did not grow quite mad, however; he retained so much of his senses
+that he could attend to his business. He even did better than others,
+for it amused people to make fun of him; he was always welcome at the
+peasants' houses. People plagued and teased him, but that was in a way
+good for him, as he was so anxious to become rich. And in the course of
+a few years he had earned enough to pay all his debts, and he could have
+lived free from worry on his estate. But this he did not understand; he
+went about half-witted and silly from farm to farm, and he had no longer
+any idea to what class of people he really belonged.
+
+
+III
+
+Raglanda was the name of a parish in the north of East Vermland, near
+the borders of Dalarne, where the Dean had a large house, but the pastor
+only a small and poor one. But poor as they were at the small parsonage,
+they had been charitable enough to adopt a poor girl. She was a little
+girl, Ingrid by name, and she had come to the parsonage when she was
+thirteen years old.
+
+The pastor had accidentally seen her at a fair, where she sat crying
+outside the tent of some acrobats. He had stopped and asked her why she
+was crying, and she had told him that her blind grandfather was dead,
+and that she had no relatives left. She now travelled with a couple of
+acrobats, and they were good to her, but she cried because she was so
+stupid that she could never learn to dance on the tight-rope and help to
+earn any money.
+
+There was a sorrowful grace over the child which touched the pastor's
+heart. He said at once to himself that he could not allow such a little
+creature to go to the bad amongst these wandering tramps. He went into
+the tent, where he saw Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren, and offered to take the
+child home with him. The old acrobats began to weep, and said that
+although the girl was entirely unfitted for the profession, they would
+so very much like to keep her; but at the same time they thought she
+would be happier in a real home with people who lived in the same place
+all the year round, and therefore they were willing to give her up to
+the pastor if he would only promise them that she should be like one of
+his own children.
+
+This he had promised, and from that time the young girl had lived at the
+parsonage. She was a quiet, gentle child, full of love and tender care
+for those around her. At first her adopted parents loved her very
+dearly, but as she grew older she developed a strong inclination to lose
+herself in dreams and fancies. She lived in a world of visions, and in
+the middle of the day she could let her work fall and be lost in dreams.
+But the pastor's wife, who was a clever and hard-working woman, did not
+approve of this. She found fault with the young girl for being lazy and
+slow, and tormented her by her severity so that she became timid and
+unhappy.
+
+When she had completed her nineteenth year, she fell dangerously ill.
+They did not quite know what was the matter with her, for this happened
+long ago, when there was no doctor at Raglanda, but the girl was very
+ill. They soon saw she was so ill that she could not live.
+
+She herself did nothing but pray to God that He would take her away from
+this world. She would so like to die, she said.
+
+Then it seemed as if our Lord would try whether she was in earnest. One
+night she felt that she grew stiff and cold all over her body, and a
+heavy lethargy fell upon her. 'I think this must be death,' she said to
+herself.
+
+But the strange thing was that she did not quite lose consciousness. She
+knew that she lay as if she were dead, knew that they wrapped her in
+her shroud and laid her in her coffin, but she felt no fear of being
+buried, although she was still alive. She had but the one thought that
+she was happy because she was about to die and leave this troublesome
+life.
+
+The only thing she was uneasy about was lest they should discover that
+she was not really dead and would not bury her. Life must have been very
+bitter to her, inasmuch as she felt no fear of death whatever.
+
+But no one discovered that she was living. She was conveyed to the
+church, carried to the churchyard, and lowered into the grave.
+
+The grave, however, was not filled in; she had been buried before the
+service on Sunday morning, as was the custom at Raglanda. The mourners
+had gone into church after the funeral, and the coffin was left in the
+open grave; but as soon as the service was over they would come back,
+and help the grave-digger to fill in the grave.
+
+The young girl knew everything that happened, but felt no fear. She had
+not been able to make the slightest movement to show that she was alive,
+even if she had wanted to; but even if she had been able to move, she
+would not have done so; the whole time she was happy because she was as
+good as dead.
+
+But, on the other hand, one could hardly say that she was alive. She had
+neither the use of her mind nor of her senses. It was only that part of
+the soul which dreams dreams during the night that was still living
+within her.
+
+She could not even think enough to realize how terrible it would be for
+her to awake when the grave was filled in. She had no more power over
+her mind than has one who dreams.
+
+'I should like to know,' she thought, 'if there is anything in the whole
+wide world that could make me wish to live.'
+
+As soon as that thought rushed through her it seemed to her as if the
+lid of the coffin, and the handkerchief which had been placed over her
+face, became transparent, and she saw before her riches and beautiful
+raiment, and lovely gardens with delicious fruits.
+
+'No, I do not care for any of these things,' she said, and she closed
+her eyes for their glories.
+
+When she again looked up they had disappeared, but instead she saw quite
+distinctly a little angel of God sitting on the edge of the grave.
+
+'Good-morning, thou little angel of God,' she said to him.
+
+'Good-morning, Ingrid,' the angel said. 'Whilst thou art lying here
+doing nothing, I would like to speak a little with thee about days gone
+by.'
+
+Ingrid heard distinctly every word the angel said; but his voice was not
+like anything she had ever heard before. It was more like a stringed
+instrument; it was not like singing, but like the tones of a violin or
+the clang of a harp.
+
+'Ingrid,' the angel said, 'dost thou remember, whilst thy grandfather
+was still living, that thou once met a young student, who went with
+thee from house to house playing the whole day on thy grandfather's
+violin?'
+
+The girl's face was lighted by a smile.
+
+'Dost thou think I have forgotten this?' she said. 'Ever since that time
+no day has passed when I have not thought of him.'
+
+'And no night when thou hast not dreamt of him?'
+
+'No, not a night when I have not dreamt of him.'
+
+'And thou wilt die, although thou rememberest him so well,' said the
+angel. 'Then thou wilt never be able to see him again.'
+
+When he said this it was as if the dead girl felt all the happiness of
+love, but even that could not tempt her.
+
+'No, no,' she said; 'I am afraid to live; I would rather die.'
+
+Then the angel waved his hand, and Ingrid saw before her a wide waste of
+desert. There were no trees, and the desert was barren and dry and hot,
+and extended in all directions without any limits. In the sand there
+lay, here and there, objects which at the first glance looked like
+pieces of rock, but when she examined them more closely, she saw they
+were the immense living animals of fairy tales, with huge claws and
+great jaws, with sharp teeth; they lay in the sand, watching for prey.
+And between these terrible animals the student came walking along. He
+went quite fearlessly, without suspecting that the figures around him
+were living.
+
+'But warn him! do warn him!' Ingrid said to the angel in unspeakable
+fear. 'Tell him that they are living, and that he must take care.'
+
+'I am not allowed to speak to him,' said the angel with his clear voice;
+'thou must thyself warn him.'
+
+The apparently dead girl felt with horror that she lay powerless, and
+could not rush to save the student. She made one futile effort after the
+other to raise herself, but the impotence of death bound her. But then
+at last, at last, she felt her heart begin to beat, the blood rushed
+through her veins, the stiffness of death was loosened in her body. She
+arose and hastened towards him.
+
+
+IV
+
+It is quite certain the sun loves the open places outside the small
+village churches. Has no one ever noticed that one never sees so much
+sunshine as during the morning service outside a small, whitewashed
+church? Nowhere else does one see such radiant streams of light, nowhere
+else is the air so devoutly quiet. The sun simply keeps watch that no
+one remains on the church hill gossiping. It wants them all to sit
+quietly in church and listen to the sermon--that is why it sends such a
+wealth of sunny rays on to the ground outside the church wall.
+
+Perhaps one must not take it for granted that the sun keeps watch
+outside the small churches every Sunday; but so much is certain, that
+the morning Ingrid had been placed in the grave in the churchyard at
+Raglanda, it spread a burning heat over the open space outside the
+church. Even the flint stones looked as if they might take fire as they
+lay and sparkled in the wheel-ruts. The short, down-trodden grass
+curled, so that it looked like dry moss, whilst the yellow dandelions
+which grew amongst the grass spread themselves out on their long stems,
+so that they became as large as asters.
+
+A man from Dalarne came wandering along the road--one of those men who
+go about selling knives and scissors. He was clad in a long, white
+sheep-skin coat, and on his back he had a large black leather pack. He
+had been walking with this burden for several hours without finding it
+too hot, but when he had left the highroad, and came to the open place
+outside the church, he stopped and took off his hat in order to dry the
+perspiration from his forehead.
+
+As the man stood there bare-headed, he looked both handsome and clever.
+His forehead was high and white, with a deep wrinkle between the
+eyebrows; the mouth was well formed, with thin lips. His hair was parted
+in the middle; it was cut short at the back, but hung over his ears, and
+was inclined to curl. He was tall, and strongly, but not coarsely,
+built; in every respect well proportioned. But what was wrong about him
+was his glance, which was unsteady, and the pupils of his eyes rolled
+restlessly, and were drawn far into the sockets, as if to hide
+themselves. There was something drawn about the mouth, something dull
+and heavy, which did not seem to belong to the face.
+
+He could not be quite right, either, or he would not have dragged that
+heavy pack about on a Sunday. If he had been quite in his senses, he
+would have known that it was of no use, as he could not sell anything in
+any case. None of the other men from Dalarne who walked about from
+village to village bent their backs under this burden on a Sunday, but
+they went to the house of God free and erect as other men.
+
+But this poor fellow probably did not know it was a holy day until he
+stood in the sunshine outside the church and heard the singing. He was
+sensible enough at once to understand that he could not do any business,
+and then his brain began to work as to how he should spend the day.
+
+He stood for a long time and stared in front of him. When everything
+went its usual course, he had no difficulty in managing. He was not so
+bad but that he could go from farm to farm all through the week and
+attend to his business, but he never could get accustomed to the
+Sunday--that always came upon him as a great, unexpected trouble.
+
+His eyes became quite fixed, and the muscles of his forehead swelled.
+
+The first thought that took shape in his brain was that he should go
+into the church and listen to the singing, but he would not accept this
+suggestion. He was very fond of singing, but he dared not go into the
+church. He was not afraid of human beings, but in some churches there
+were such quaint, uncanny pictures, which represented creatures of which
+he would rather not think.
+
+At last his brain worked round to the thought that, as this was a
+church, there would probably also be a churchyard, and when he could
+take refuge in a churchyard all was well. One could not offer him
+anything better. If on his wanderings he saw a churchyard, he always
+went in and sat there awhile, even if it were in the middle of a
+workaday week.
+
+Now that he wanted to go to the churchyard a new difficulty suddenly
+arose. The burial-place at Raglanda does not lie quite near the church,
+which is built on a hill, but on the other side of the road; and he
+could not get to the entrance of the churchyard without passing along
+the road where the horses of the church-goers were standing tied up.
+
+All the horses stood with their heads deep in bundles of hay and
+nosebags, chewing. There was no question of their being able to do the
+man any harm, but he had his own ideas as to the danger of going past
+such a long row of animals.
+
+Two or three times he made an attempt, but his courage failed him, so
+that he was obliged to turn back. He was not afraid that the horses
+would bite or kick. It was quite enough for him that they were so near
+that they could see him. It was quite enough that they could shake their
+bridles and scrape the earth with their hoofs.
+
+At last a moment came when all the horses were looking down, and seemed
+to be eating for a wager. Then he began to make his way between them. He
+held his sheepskin cloak tightly around him so that it should not flap
+and betray him, and he went on tiptoe as lightly as he could. When a
+horse raised its eyelid and looked at him, he at once stopped and
+curtsied. He wanted to be polite in this great danger, but surely
+animals were amenable to reason, and could understand that he could not
+bow when he had a pack full of hardware upon his back; he could only
+curtsy.
+
+He sighed deeply, for in this world it was a sad and troublesome thing
+to be so afraid of all four-footed animals as he was. He was really not
+afraid of any other animals than goats, and he would not have been at
+all afraid of horses and dogs and cats had he only been quite sure that
+they were not a kind of transformed goats. But he never was quite sure
+of that, so as a matter of fact it was just as bad for him as if he had
+been afraid of all kinds of four-footed animals.
+
+It was no use his thinking of how strong he was, and that these small
+peasant horses never did any harm to anyone: he who has become possessed
+of such fears cannot reason with himself. Fear is a heavy burden, and it
+is hard for him who must always carry it.
+
+It was strange that he managed to get past all the horses. The last few
+steps he took in two long jumps, and when he got into the churchyard he
+closed the gate after him, and began to threaten the horses with his
+clenched fist.
+
+'You wretched, miserable, accursed goats!'
+
+He did that to all animals. He could not help calling them goats, and
+that was very stupid of him, for it had procured him a name which he did
+not like. Everyone who met him called him the 'Goat.' But he would not
+own to this name. He wanted to be called by his proper name, but
+apparently no one knew his real name in that district.
+
+He stood a little while at the gate, rejoicing at having escaped from
+the horses, but he soon went further into the churchyard. At every cross
+and every stone he stopped and curtsied, but this was not from fear:
+this was simply from joy at seeing these dear old friends. All at once
+he began to look quite gentle and mild. They were exactly the same
+crosses and stones he had so often seen before. They looked just as
+usual. How well he knew them again! He must say 'Good-morning' to them.
+
+How nice it was in the churchyard! There were no animals about there,
+and there were no people to make fun of him. It was best there, when it
+was quite quiet as now; but even if there were people, they did not
+disturb him. He certainly knew many pretty meadows and woods which he
+liked still better, but there he was never left in peace. They could not
+by any means compare with the churchyard. And the churchyard was better
+than the forest, for in the forest the loneliness was so great that he
+was frightened by it. Here it was quiet, as in the depths of the
+forest; but he was not without company. Here people were sleeping under
+every stone and every mound; just the company he wanted in order not to
+feel lonely and strange.
+
+He went straight to the open grave. He went there partly because there
+were some shady trees, and partly because he wanted company. He thought,
+perhaps, that the dead who had so recently been laid in the grave might
+be a better protection against his loneliness than those who had passed
+away long ago.
+
+He bent his knees, with his back to the great mound of earth at the edge
+of the grave, and succeeded in pushing the pack upwards, so that it
+stood firmly on the mound, and he then loosened the heavy straps that
+fastened it. It was a great day--a holiday. He also took off his coat.
+He sat down on the grass with a feeling of great pleasure, so close to
+the grave that his long legs, with the stockings tied under the knee,
+and the heavy laced shoes dangled over the edge of the grave.
+
+For a while he sat still, with his eyes steadily fixed upon the coffin.
+When one was possessed by such fear as he was, one could not be too
+careful. But the coffin did not move in the least; it was impossible to
+suspect it of containing any snare.
+
+He was no sooner certain of this than he put his hand into a side-pocket
+of the pack and took out a violin and bow, and at the same time he
+nodded to the dead in the grave. As he was so quiet he should hear
+something pretty.
+
+This was something very unusual for him. There were not many who were
+allowed to hear him play. No one was ever allowed to hear him play at
+the farms, where they set the dogs at him and called him the 'Goat'; but
+sometimes he would play in a house where they spoke softly, and went
+about quietly, and did not ask him if he wanted to buy any goat-skins.
+At such places he took out his violin and treated them to some music;
+and this was a great favour--the greatest he could bestow upon anybody.
+
+As he sat there and played at the edge of the grave it did not sound
+amiss; he did not play a wrong note, and he played so softly and gently
+that it could hardly be heard at the next grave. The strange thing about
+it was that it was not the man who could play, but it was his violin
+that could remember some small melodies. They came forth from the violin
+as soon as he let the bow glide over it. It might not, perhaps, have
+meant so much to others, but for him, who could not remember a single
+tune, it was the most precious gift of all to possess such a violin that
+could play by itself.
+
+Whilst he played he sat with a beaming smile on his face. It was the
+violin that spoke and spoke; he only listened. Was it not strange that
+one heard all these beautiful things as soon as one let the bow glide
+over the strings? The violin did that. It knew how it ought to be, and
+the Dalar man only sat and listened. Melodies grew out of that violin as
+grass grows out of the earth. No one could understand how it happened.
+Our Lord had ordered it so.
+
+The Dalar man intended to remain sitting there the whole day, and let
+the dear tunes grow out of the violin like small white and many-coloured
+flowers. He would play a whole meadowful of flowers, play a whole long
+valleyful, a whole wide plain.
+
+But she who lay in the coffin distinctly heard the violin, and upon her
+it had a strange effect. The tones had made her dream, and what she had
+seen in her dreams caused her such emotion that her heart began to beat,
+her blood to flow, and she awoke.
+
+But all she had lived through while she lay there, apparently dead, the
+thoughts she had had, and also her last dream--everything vanished in
+the same moment she awoke to consciousness. She did not even know that
+she was lying in her coffin, but thought she was still lying ill at home
+in her bed. She only thought it strange that she was still alive. A
+little while ago, before she fell asleep, she had been in the pangs of
+death. Surely, all must have been over with her long ago. She had taken
+leave of her adopted parents, and of her brothers and sisters, and of
+the servants. The Dean had been there himself to administer the last
+Communion, for her adopted father did not think he could bear to give it
+to her himself. For several days she had put away all earthly thoughts
+from her mind. It was incomprehensible that she was not dead.
+
+She wondered why it was so dark in the room where she lay. There had
+been a light all the other nights during her illness. And then they had
+let the blankets fall off the bed. She was lying there getting as cold
+as ice. She raised herself a little to pull the blankets over her. In
+doing so she knocked her head against the lid of the coffin, and fell
+back with a little scream of pain. She had knocked herself rather
+severely, and immediately became unconscious again. She lay as
+motionless as before, and it seemed as if life had again left her.
+
+The Dalar man, who had heard both the knock and the cry, immediately
+laid down his violin and sat listening; but there was nothing more to be
+heard--nothing whatever. He began again to look at the coffin as
+attentively as before. He sat nodding his head, as if he would say 'Yes'
+to what he was himself thinking about, namely, that nothing in this
+world was to be depended upon. Here he had had the best and most silent
+of comrades, but had he not also been disappointed in him?
+
+He sat and looked at the coffin, as if trying to see right through it.
+At last, when it continued quite still, he took his violin again and
+began to play. But the violin would not play any longer. However gently
+and tenderly he drew his bow, there came forth no melody. This was so
+sad that he was nearly crying. He had intended to sit still and listen
+to his violin the whole day, and now it would not play any more.
+
+He could quite understand the reason. The violin was uneasy and afraid
+of what had moved in the coffin. It had forgotten all its melodies, and
+thought only of what it could be that had knocked at the coffin-lid.
+That is how it is one forgets everything when one is afraid. He saw
+that he would have to quiet the violin if he wanted to hear more.
+
+He had felt so happy, more so than for many years. If there was really
+anything bad in the coffin, would it not be better to let it out? Then
+the violin would be glad, and beautiful flowers would again grow out of
+it.
+
+He quickly opened his big pack, and began to rummage amongst his knives
+and saws and hammers until he found a screw-driver. In another moment he
+was down in the grave on his knees and unscrewing the coffin-lid. He
+took out one screw after the other, until at last he could raise the lid
+against the side of the grave; at the same moment the handkerchief fell
+from off the face of the apparently dead girl. As soon as the fresh air
+reached Ingrid, she opened her eyes. Now she saw that it was light. They
+must have removed her. Now she was lying in a yellow chamber with a
+green ceiling, and a large chandelier was hanging from the ceiling. The
+chamber was small, but the bed was still smaller. Why had she the
+sensation of her arms and legs being tied? Was it because she should lie
+still in the little narrow bed? It was strange that they had placed a
+hymn-book under her chin; they only did that with corpses. Between her
+fingers she had a little bouquet. Her adopted mother had cut a few
+sprigs from her flowering myrtle, and laid them in her hands. Ingrid was
+very much surprised. What had come to her adopted mother? She saw that
+they had given her a pillow with broad lace, and a fine hem-stitched
+sheet. She was very glad of that; she liked to have things nice. Still,
+she would rather have had a warm blanket over her. It could surely not
+be good for a sick person to lie without a blanket. Ingrid was nearly
+putting her hands to her eyes and beginning to cry, she was so bitterly
+cold. At the same moment she felt something hard and cold against her
+cheek. She could not help smiling. It was the old, red wooden horse, the
+old three-legged Camilla, that lay beside her on the pillow. Her little
+brother, who could never sleep at night without having it with him in
+his bed, had put it in her bed. It was very sweet of her little brother.
+Ingrid felt still more inclined to cry when she understood that her
+little brother had wanted to comfort her with his wooden horse.
+
+But she did not get so far as crying. The truth all at once flashed upon
+her. Her little brother had given her the wooden horse, and her mother
+had given her her white myrtle flowers, and the hymn-book had been
+placed under her chin, because they had thought she was dead.
+
+Ingrid took hold of the sides of the coffin with both hands and raised
+herself. The little narrow bed was a coffin, and the little narrow
+chamber was a grave. It was all very difficult to understand. She could
+not understand that this concerned her, that it was she who had been
+swathed like a corpse and placed in the grave. She must be lying all the
+same in her bed, and be seeing or dreaming all this. She would soon find
+out that this was no reality, but that everything was as usual.
+
+All at once she found the explanation of the whole thing--'I often have
+such strange dreams. This is only a vision'--and she sighed, relieved
+and happy. She laid herself down in her coffin again; she was so sure
+that it was her own bed, for that was not very wide either.
+
+All this time the Dalar man stood in the grave, quite close to the foot
+of the coffin. He only stood a few feet from her, but she had not seen
+him; that was probably because he had tried to hide himself in the
+corner of the grave as soon as the dead in the coffin had opened her
+eyes and begun to move. She could, perhaps, have seen him, although he
+held the coffin-lid before him as a screen, had there not been something
+like a white mist before her eyes so that she could only see things
+quite near her distinctly. Ingrid could not even see that there were
+earthen walls around her. She had taken the sun to be a large
+chandelier, and the shady lime-trees for a roof. The poor Dalar man
+stood and waited for the thing that moved in the coffin to go away. It
+did not strike him that it would not go unrequested. Had it not knocked
+because it wanted to get out? He stood for a long time with his head
+behind the coffin-lid and waited, that it should go. He peeped over the
+lid when he thought that now it must have gone. But it had not moved; it
+remained lying on its bed of shavings.
+
+He could not put up with it any longer; he must really make an end of
+it. It was a long time since his violin had spoken so prettily as
+to-day, he longed to sit again quietly with it. Ingrid, who had nearly
+fallen asleep again, suddenly heard herself addressed in the sing-song
+Dalar dialect:
+
+'Now, I think it is time you got up.'
+
+As soon as he had said this he hid his head. He shook so much over his
+boldness that he nearly let the lid fall.
+
+But the white mist which had been before Ingrid's eyes disappeared
+completely when she heard a human being speaking. She saw a man standing
+in the corner, at the foot of the coffin, holding a coffin-lid before
+him. She saw at once that she could not lie down again and think it was
+a vision. Surely he was a reality, which she must try and make out. It
+certainly looked as if the coffin were a coffin, and the grave a grave,
+and that she herself a few minutes ago was nothing but a swathed and
+buried corpse. For the first time she was terror-stricken at what had
+happened to her. To think that she could really have been dead that
+moment! She could have been a hideous corpse, food for worms. She had
+been placed in the coffin for them to throw earth upon her; she was
+worth no more than a piece of turf; she had been thrown aside
+altogether. The worms were welcome to eat her; no one would mind about
+that.
+
+Ingrid needed so badly to have a fellow-creature near her in her great
+terror. She had recognized the Goat directly he put up his head. He was
+an old acquaintance from the parsonage; she was not in the least afraid
+of him. She wanted him to come close to her. She did not mind in the
+least that he was an idiot. He was, at any rate, a living being. She
+wanted him to come so near to her that she could feel she belonged to
+the living and not to the dead.
+
+'Oh, for God's sake, come close to me!' she said, with tears in her
+voice.
+
+She raised herself in the coffin and stretched out her arms to him.
+
+But the Dalar man only thought of himself. If she were so anxious to
+have him near her, he resolved to make his own terms.
+
+'Yes,' he said, 'if you will go away.'
+
+Ingrid at once tried to comply with his request, but she was so tightly
+swathed in the sheet that she found it difficult to get up.
+
+'You must come and help me,' she said.
+
+She said this, partly because she was obliged to do it, and partly
+because she was afraid that she had not quite escaped death. She must be
+near someone living.
+
+He actually went near her, squeezing himself between the coffin and the
+side of the grave. He bent over her, lifted her out of the coffin, and
+put her down on the grass at the side of the open grave.
+
+Ingrid could not help it. She threw her arms round his neck, laid her
+head on his shoulder and sobbed. Afterwards she could not understand how
+she had been able to do this, and that she was not afraid of him. It was
+partly from joy that he was a human being--a living human being--and
+partly from gratitude, because he had saved her.
+
+What would have become of her if it had not been for him? It was he who
+had raised the coffin-lid, who had brought her back to life. She
+certainly did not know how it had all happened, but it was surely he who
+had opened the coffin. What would have happened to her if he had not
+done this? She would have awakened to find herself imprisoned in the
+black coffin. She would have knocked and shouted; but who would have
+heard her six feet below the ground? Ingrid dared not think of it; she
+was entirely absorbed with gratitude because she had been saved. She
+must have someone she could thank. She must lay her head on someone's
+breast and cry from gratitude.
+
+The most extraordinary thing, almost, that happened that day was, that
+the Dalar man did not repulse her. But it was not quite clear to him
+that she was alive. He thought she was dead, and he knew it was not
+advisable to offend anyone dead. But as soon as he could manage, he
+freed himself from her and went down into the grave again. He placed the
+lid carefully on the coffin, put in the screws and fastened it as
+before. Then he thought the coffin would be quite still, and the violin
+would regain its peace and its melodies.
+
+In the meantime Ingrid sat on the grass and tried to collect her
+thoughts. She looked towards the church and discovered the horses and
+the carriages on the hillside. Then she began to realize everything. It
+was Sunday; they had placed her in the grave in the morning, and now
+they were in church.
+
+A great fear now seized Ingrid. The service would, perhaps, soon be
+over, and then all the people would come out and see her. And she had
+nothing on but a sheet! She was almost naked. Fancy, if all these people
+came and saw her in this state! They would never forget the sight. And
+she would be ashamed of it all her life.
+
+Where should she get some clothes? For a moment she thought of throwing
+the Dalar man's fur coat round her, but she did not think that that
+would make her any more like other people.
+
+She turned quickly to the crazy man, who was still working at the
+coffin-lid.
+
+'Oh,' she said, 'will you let me creep into your pack?'
+
+In a moment she stood by the great leather pack, which contained goods
+enough to fill a whole market-stall, and began to open it.
+
+'You must come and help me.'
+
+She did not ask in vain. When the Dalar man saw her touching his wares
+he came up at once.
+
+'Are you touching my pack?' he asked threateningly.
+
+Ingrid did not notice that he spoke angrily; she considered him to be
+her best friend all the time.
+
+'Oh, dear good man,' she said, 'help me to hide, so that people will not
+see me. Put your wares somewhere or other, and let me creep into the
+pack, and carry me home. Oh, do do it! I live at the Parsonage, and it
+is only a little way from here. You know where it is.'
+
+The man stood and looked at her with stupid eyes. She did not know
+whether he had understood a word of what she said. She repeated it, but
+he made no sign of obeying her. She began again to take the things out
+of the pack. Then he stamped on the ground and tore the pack from her.
+
+However should Ingrid be able to make him do what she wanted?
+
+On the grass beside her lay a violin and a bow. She took them up
+mechanically--she did not know herself why. She had probably been so
+much in the company of people playing the violin that she could not bear
+to see an instrument lying on the ground.
+
+As soon as she touched the violin he let go the pack, and tore the
+violin from her. He was evidently quite beside himself when anyone
+touched his violin. He looked quite malicious.
+
+What in the world could she do to get away before people came out of
+church?
+
+She began to promise him all sorts of things, just as one promises
+children when one wants them to be good.
+
+'I will ask father to buy a whole dozen of scythes from you. I will lock
+up all the dogs when you come to the Parsonage. I will ask mother to
+give you a good meal.'
+
+But there was no sign of his giving way. She bethought herself of the
+violin, and said in her despair:
+
+'If you will carry me to the Parsonage, I will play for you.'
+
+At last a smile flashed across his face. That was evidently what he
+wanted.
+
+'I will play for you the whole afternoon; I will play for you as long as
+you like.'
+
+'Will you teach the violin new melodies?' he asked.
+
+'Of course I will.'
+
+But Ingrid now became both surprised and unhappy, for he took hold of
+the pack and pulled it towards him. He dragged it over the graves, and
+the sweet-williams and southernwood that grew on them were crushed under
+it as if it were a roller. He dragged it to a heap of branches and
+wizened leaves and old wreaths lying near the wall round the churchyard.
+There he took all the things out of the pack, and hid them well under
+the heap. When it was empty he returned to Ingrid.
+
+'Now you can get in,' he said.
+
+Ingrid stepped into the pack, and crouched down on the wooden bottom.
+The man fastened all the straps as carefully as when he went about with
+his usual wares, bent down so that he nearly went on his knees, put his
+arms through the braces, buckled a couple of straps across his chest,
+and stood up. When he had gone a few steps he began to laugh. His pack
+was so light that he could have danced with it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was only about a mile from the church to the Parsonage. The Dalar man
+could walk it in twenty minutes. Ingrid's only wish was that he would
+walk so quickly that she could get home before the people came back from
+church. She could not bear the idea of so many people seeing her. She
+would like to get home when only her mother and the maid-servants were
+there.
+
+Ingrid had taken with her the little bouquet of flowers from her adopted
+mother's myrtle. She was so pleased with it that she kissed it over and
+over again. It made her think more kindly of her adopted mother than she
+had ever done before. But in any case she would, of course, think kindly
+of her now. One who has come straight from the grave must think kindly
+and gently of everything living and moving on the face of the earth.
+
+She could now understand so well that the Pastor's wife was bound to
+love her own children more than her adopted daughter. And when they were
+so poor at the Parsonage that they could not afford to keep a nursemaid,
+she could see now that it was quite natural that she should look after
+her little brothers and sisters. And when her brothers and sisters were
+not good to her, it was because they had become accustomed to think of
+her as their nurse. It was not so easy for them to remember that she had
+come to the Parsonage to be their sister.
+
+And, after all, it all came from their being poor. When father some day
+got another living, and became Dean, or even Rector, everything would
+surely come right. Then they would love her again, as they did when she
+first came to them. The good old times would be sure to come back again.
+Ingrid kissed her flowers. It had not been mother's intention, perhaps,
+to be hard; it was only worry that had made her so strange and unkind.
+
+But now it would not matter how unkind they were to her. In the future
+nothing could hurt her, for now she would always be glad, simply because
+she was alive. And if things should ever be really bad again, she would
+only think of mother's myrtle and her little brother's horse.
+
+It was happiness enough to know that she was being carried along the
+road alive. This morning no one had thought that she would ever again go
+over these roads and hills. And the fragrant clover and the little birds
+singing and the beautiful shady trees, which had all been a source of
+joy for the living, had not even existed for her. But she had not much
+time for reflection, for in twenty minutes the Dalar man had reached the
+Parsonage.
+
+No one was at home but the Pastor's wife and the maid-servants, just as
+Ingrid had wished. The Pastor's wife had been busy the whole morning
+cooking for the funeral feast. She soon expected the guests, and
+everything was nearly ready. She had just been into the bedroom to put
+on her black dress. She glanced down the road to the church, but there
+were still no carriages to be seen. So she went once again into the
+kitchen to taste the food.
+
+She was quite satisfied, for everything was as it ought to be, and one
+cannot help being glad for that, even if one is in mourning. There was
+only one maid in the kitchen, and that was the one the Pastor's wife had
+brought with her from her old home, so she felt she could speak to her
+in confidence.
+
+'I must confess, Lisa,' she said, 'I think anyone would be pleased with
+having such a funeral.'
+
+'If she could only look down and see all the fuss you make of her,' Lisa
+said, 'she would be pleased.'
+
+'Ah!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I don't think she would ever be pleased
+with me.'
+
+'She is dead now,' said the girl, 'and I am not the one to say anything
+against one who is hardly yet under the ground.'
+
+'I have had to bear many a hard word from my husband for her sake,' said
+the mistress.
+
+The Pastor's wife felt she wanted to speak with someone about the dead
+girl. Her conscience had pricked her a little on her account, and this
+was why she had arranged such a grand funeral feast. She thought her
+conscience might leave her alone now she had had so much trouble over
+the funeral, but it did not do so by any means. Her husband also
+reproached himself, and said that the young girl had not been treated
+like one of their own children, and that they had promised she should be
+when they adopted her; and he said it would have been better if they had
+never taken her, when they could not help letting her see that they
+loved their own children more. And now the Pastor's wife felt she must
+talk to someone about the young girl, to hear whether people thought she
+had treated her badly.
+
+She saw that Lisa began to stir the pan violently, as if she had
+difficulty in controlling her anger. She was a clever girl, who
+thoroughly understood how to get into her mistress's good books.
+
+'I must say,' Lisa began, 'that when one has a mother who always looks
+after one, and takes care that one is neat and clean, one might at
+least try to obey and please her. And when one is allowed to live in a
+good Parsonage, and to be educated respectably, one ought at least to
+give some return for it, and not always go idling about and dreaming. I
+should like to know what would have happened if you had not taken the
+poor thing in. I suppose she would have been running about with those
+acrobats, and have died in the streets, like any other poor wretch.'
+
+A man from Dalarne came across the yard; he had his pack on his back,
+although it was Sunday. He came very quietly through the open
+kitchen-door, and curtsied when he entered, but no one took any notice
+of him. Both the mistress and the maid saw him, but as they knew him,
+they did not think it necessary to interrupt their conversation.
+
+The Pastor's wife was anxious to continue it; she felt she was about to
+hear what she needed to ease her conscience.
+
+'It is perhaps as well she is gone,' she said.
+
+'Yes, ma'am,' the servant said eagerly; 'and I am sure the Pastor thinks
+just the same. In any case he soon will. And the mistress will see that
+now there will be more peace in the house, and I am sure the master
+needs it.'
+
+'Oh!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I was obliged to be careful. There were
+always so many clothes to be got for her, that it was quite dreadful. He
+was so afraid that she should not get as much as the others that she
+sometimes even had more. And it cost so much, now that she was grown
+up.'
+
+'I suppose, ma'am, Greta will get her muslin dress?'
+
+'Yes; either Greta will have it, or I shall use it myself.'
+
+'She does not leave much behind her, poor thing!'
+
+'No one expects her to leave anything,' said her adopted mother. 'I
+should be quite content if I could remember ever having had a kind word
+from her.'
+
+This is only the kind of thing one says when one has a bad conscience,
+and wants to excuse one's self. Her adopted mother did not really mean
+what she said.
+
+The Dalar man behaved exactly as he always did when he came to sell his
+wares. He stood for a little while looking round the kitchen; then he
+slowly pushed the pack on to a table, and unfastened the braces and the
+straps; then he looked round to see if there were any cats or dogs
+about. He then straightened his back, and began to unfasten the two
+leather flaps, which were fastened with numerous buckles and knots.
+
+'He need not trouble about opening his pack to-day,' Lisa said; 'it is
+Sunday, and he knows quite well we don't buy anything on Sundays.'
+
+She, however, took no notice of the crazy fellow, who continued to
+unfasten his straps. She turned round to her mistress. This was a good
+opportunity for insinuating herself.
+
+'I don't even know whether she was good to the children. I have often
+heard them cry in the nursery.'
+
+'I suppose it was the same with them as it was with their mother,' said
+the Pastor's wife; 'but now, of course, they cry because she is dead.'
+
+'They don't understand what is best for them,' said the servant; 'but
+the mistress can be certain that before a month is gone there will be no
+one to cry over her.'
+
+At the same moment they both turned round from the kitchen range, and
+looked towards the table, where the Dalar man stood opening his big
+pack. They had heard a strange noise, something like a sigh or a sob.
+The man was just opening the inside lid, and out of the pack rose the
+newly-buried girl, exactly the same as when they laid her in the coffin.
+
+And yet she did not look quite the same. She looked almost more dead now
+than when she was laid in her coffin. Then she had nearly the same
+colour as when she was alive; now her face was ashy-gray, there was a
+bluish-black shadow round her mouth, and her eyes lay deep in her head.
+She said nothing, but her face expressed the greatest despair, and she
+held out beseechingly, and as if to avert their anger, the bouquet of
+myrtle which she had received from her adopted mother.
+
+This sight was more than flesh and blood could stand. Her mother fell
+fainting to the ground; the maid stood still for a moment, gazing at the
+mother and daughter, covered her eyes with her hands, and rushed into
+her own room and locked the door.
+
+'It is not me she has come for; this does not concern me.'
+
+But Ingrid turned round to the Dalar man.
+
+'Put me in your pack again, and take me away. Do you hear? Take me away.
+Take me back to where you found me.'
+
+The Dalar man happened to look through the window. A long row of carts
+and carriages was coming up the avenue and into the yard. Ah, indeed!
+then he was not going to stay. He did not like that at all.
+
+Ingrid crouched down at the bottom of the pack. She said not another
+word, but only sobbed. The flaps and the lids were fastened, and she was
+again lifted on to his back and carried away. Those who were coming to
+the funeral feast laughed at the Goat, who hastened away, curtsying and
+curtsying to every horse he met.
+
+
+V
+
+Anna Stina was an old woman who lived in the depths of the forest. She
+gave a helping hand at the Parsonage now and then, and always managed
+opportunely to come down the hillside when they were baking or washing.
+She was a nice, clever old woman, and she and Ingrid were good friends.
+As soon as the young girl was able to collect her thoughts, she made up
+her mind to take refuge with her.
+
+'Listen,' she said to the Dalar man. 'When you get onto the highroad,
+turn into the forest; then go straight on until you come to a gate;
+there you must turn to the left; then you must go straight on until you
+come to the large gravel-pit. From there you can see a house: take me
+there, and I will play to you.'
+
+The short and harsh manner in which she gave her orders jarred upon her
+ears, but she was obliged to speak in this way in order to be obeyed; it
+was the only chance she had. What right had she to order another person
+about--she who had not even the right to be alive?
+
+After all this she would never again be able to feel as if she had any
+right to live. This was the most dreadful part of all that had happened
+to her: that she could have lived in the Parsonage for six years, and
+not even been able to make herself so much loved that they wished to
+keep her alive. And those whom no one loves have no right to live. She
+could not exactly say how she knew it was so, but it was as clear as
+daylight. She knew it from the feeling that the same moment she heard
+that they did not care about her an iron hand seemed to have crushed her
+heart as if to make it stop. Yes, it was life itself that had been
+closed for her. And the same moment she had come back from death, and
+felt the delight of being alive burn brightly and strongly within her,
+just at that moment the one thing that gave her the right of existing
+had been torn from her.
+
+This was worse than sentence of death. It was much more cruel than an
+ordinary sentence of death. She knew what it was like. It was like
+felling a tree--not in the usual manner, when the trunk is cut through,
+but by cutting its roots and leaving it standing in the ground to die by
+itself. There the tree stands, and cannot understand why it no longer
+gets nourishment and support. It struggles and strives to live, but the
+leaves get smaller and smaller, it sends forth no fresh shoots, the bark
+falls off, and it must die, because it is severed from the spring of
+life. Thus it is it must die.
+
+At last the Dalar man put down his pack on the stone step outside a
+little house in the midst of the wild forest. The door was locked, but
+as soon as Ingrid had got out of the pack she took the key from under
+the doorstep, opened the door, and walked in.
+
+Ingrid knew the house thoroughly and all it contained. It was not the
+first time she had come there for comfort; it was not the first time she
+had come and told old Anna Stina that she could not bear living at home
+any longer--that her adopted mother was so hard to her that she would
+not go back to the Parsonage. But every time she came the old woman had
+talked her over and quieted her. She had made her some terrible coffee
+from roasted peas and chicory, without a single coffee-bean in it, but
+which had all the same given her new courage, and in the end she had
+made her laugh at everything, and encouraged her so much, that she had
+simply danced down the hillside on her way home.
+
+Even if Anna Stina had been at home, and had made some of her terrible
+coffee, it would probably not have helped Ingrid this time. But the old
+woman was down at the Parsonage to the funeral feast, for the Pastor's
+wife had not forgotten to invite any of those of whom Ingrid had been
+fond. That, too, was probably the result of an uneasy conscience.
+
+But in Anna's room everything was as usual. And when Ingrid saw the
+sofa with the wooden seat, and the clean, scoured table, and the cat,
+and the coffee-kettle, although she did not feel comforted or cheered,
+she felt that here was a place where she could give vent to her sorrow.
+It was a relief that here she need not think of anything but crying and
+moaning.
+
+She went straight to the settle, threw herself on the wooden seat, and
+lay there crying, she did not know for how long.
+
+The Dalar man sat outside on the stone step; he did not want to go into
+the house on account of the cat. He expected that Ingrid would come out
+and play to him. He had taken the violin out long ago. As it was such a
+long time before she came, he began to play himself. He played softly
+and gently, as was his wont. It was barely possible for the young girl
+to hear him playing.
+
+Ingrid had one fit of shivering after the other. This was how she had
+been before she fell ill. She would no doubt be ill again. It was also
+best that the fever should come and put an end to her in earnest.
+
+When she heard the violin, she rose and looked round with bewildered
+glance. Who was that playing? Was that her student? Had he come at last?
+It soon struck her, however, that it was the Dalar man, and she lay down
+again with a sigh. She could not follow what he was playing. But as soon
+as she closed her eyes the violin assumed the student's voice. She also
+heard what he said; he spoke with her adopted mother and defended her.
+He spoke just as nicely as he had done to Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren. Ingrid
+needed love so much, he said. That was what she had missed. That was
+why she had not always attended to her work, but allowed dreams to fill
+her mind. But no one knew how she could work and slave for those who
+loved her. For their sake she could bear sorrow and sickness, and
+contempt and poverty; for them she would be as strong as a giant, and as
+patient as a slave.
+
+Ingrid heard him distinctly and she became quiet. Yes, it was true. If
+only her adopted mother had loved her, she would have seen what Ingrid
+was worth. But as she did not love her, Ingrid was paralyzed in her
+efforts. Yes, so it had been.
+
+Now the fever had left her, she only lay and listened to what the
+student said. She slept a little now and then; time after time she
+thought she was lying in her grave, and then it was always the student
+who came and took her out of the coffin. She lay and disputed with him.
+
+'When I am dreaming it is you who come,' she said.
+
+'It is always I who come to you, Ingrid,' he said. 'I thought you knew
+that. I take you out of the grave; I carry you on my shoulders; I play
+you to sleep. It is always I.'
+
+What disturbed and awoke her was the thought that she had to get up and
+play for the Dalar man. Several times she rose up to do it, but could
+not. As soon as she fell back upon the settle she began to dream. She
+sat crouching in the pack and the student carried her through the
+forest. It was always he.
+
+'But it was not you,' she said to him.
+
+'Of course it was I,' he said, smiling at her contradicting him. 'You
+have been thinking about me every day for all these years; so you can
+understand I could not help saving you when you were in such great
+danger.'
+
+Of course she saw the force of his argument; and then she began to
+realize that he was right, and that it was he. But this was such
+infinite bliss that she again awoke. Love seemed to fill her whole
+being. It could not have been more real had she seen and spoken with her
+beloved.
+
+'Why does he never come in real life?' she said, half aloud. 'Why does
+he only come in my dreams?'
+
+She did not dare to move, for then love would fly away. It was as if a
+timid bird had settled on her shoulder, and she was afraid of
+frightening it away. If she moved, the bird would fly away, and sorrow
+would overcome her.
+
+When at last she really awoke, it was twilight. She must have slept the
+whole afternoon and evening. At that time of the year it was not dark
+until after ten o'clock. The violin had ceased playing, and the Dalar
+man had probably gone away.
+
+Anna Stina had not yet come back. She would probably be away the whole
+night. It did not matter to Ingrid; all she wanted was to lie down again
+and sleep. She was afraid of all the sorrow and despair that would
+overwhelm her as soon as she awoke. But then she got something new to
+think about. Who could have closed the door? who had spread Anna Stina's
+great shawl over her? and who had placed a piece of dry bread beside her
+on the seat? Had he, the Goat, done all this for her? For a moment she
+thought she saw dream and reality standing side by side, trying which
+could best console her. And the dream stood joyous and smiling,
+showering over her all the bliss of love to comfort her. But life, poor,
+hard, and bitter though it was, also brought its kindly little mite to
+show that it did not mean to be so hard upon her as perhaps she thought.
+
+
+VI
+
+Ingrid and Anna Stina were walking through the dark forest. They had
+been walking for four days, and had slept three nights in the Säter
+huts. Ingrid was weak and weary; her face was transparently pale; her
+eyes were sunken, and shone feverishly. Old Anna Stina now and then
+secretly cast an anxious look at her, and prayed to God that He would
+sustain her so that she might not die by the wayside. Now and then the
+old woman could not help looking behind her with uneasiness. She had an
+uncomfortable feeling that the old man with his scythe came stealthily
+after them through the forest to reclaim the young girl who, both by the
+word of God and the casting of earth upon her, had been consecrated to
+him.
+
+Old Anna Stina was little and broad, with a large, square face, which
+was so intelligent that it was almost good-looking. She was not
+superstitious--she lived quite alone in the midst of the forest without
+being afraid either of witches or evil spirits--but as she walked there
+by the side of Ingrid she felt as distinctly as if someone had told her
+that she was walking beside a being who did not belong to this world.
+She had had that sensation ever since she had found Ingrid lying in her
+house that Monday morning.
+
+Anna Stina had not returned home on the Sunday evening, for down at the
+Parsonage the Pastor's wife had been taken very ill, and Anna Stina, who
+was accustomed to nurse sick people, had stayed to sit up with her. The
+whole night she had heard the Pastor's wife raving about Ingrid's having
+appeared to her; but that the old woman had not believed. And when she
+returned home the next day and found Ingrid, the old woman would at once
+have gone down to the Parsonage again to tell them that it was not a
+ghost they had seen; but when she had suggested this to Ingrid, it had
+affected her so much that she dared not do it. It was as if the little
+life which burnt in her would be extinguished, just as the flame of a
+candle is put out by too strong a draught. She could have died as easily
+as a little bird in its cage. Death was prowling around her. There was
+nothing to be done but to nurse her very tenderly and deal very gently
+with her if her life was to be preserved.
+
+The old woman hardly knew what to think of Ingrid. Perhaps she was a
+ghost; there seemed to be so little life in her. She quite gave up
+trying to talk her to reason. There was nothing else for it but giving
+in to her wishes that no one should hear anything about her being alive.
+And then the old woman tried to arrange everything as wisely as
+possible. She had a sister who was housekeeper on a large estate in
+Dalarne, and she made up her mind to take Ingrid to her, and persuade
+her sister, Stafva, to give the girl a situation at the Manor House.
+Ingrid would have to be content with being simply a servant. There was
+nothing else for it.
+
+They were now on their way to the Manor House. Anna Stina knew the
+country so well that they were not obliged to go by the highroad, but
+could follow the lonely forest paths. But they had also undergone much
+hardship. Their shoes were worn and in pieces, their skirts soiled and
+frayed at the bottom, and a branch had torn a long rent in Ingrid's
+sleeve.
+
+On the evening of the fourth day they came to a hill from which they
+could look down into a deep valley. In the valley was a lake, and near
+the edge of the lake was a high, rocky island, upon which stood a large
+white building. When Anna Stina saw the house, she said it was called
+Munkhyttan, and that it was there her sister lived.
+
+They made themselves as tidy as they could on the hillside. They
+arranged the handkerchiefs which they wore on their heads, dried their
+shoes with moss, and washed themselves in a forest stream, and Anna
+Stina tried to make a fold in Ingrid's sleeve so that the rent could not
+be seen.
+
+The old woman sighed when she looked at Ingrid, and quite lost courage.
+It was not only that she looked so strange in the clothes she had
+borrowed from Anna Stina, and which did not at all fit her, but her
+sister Stafva would never take her into her service, she looked so
+wretched and pitiful. It was like engaging a breath of wind. The girl
+could be of no more use than a sick butterfly.
+
+As soon as they were ready, they went down the hill to the lake. It was
+only a short distance. Then they came to the land belonging to the Manor
+House.
+
+Was that a country house?
+
+There were large neglected fields, upon which the forest encroached more
+and more. There was a bridge leading on to the island, so shaky that
+they hardly thought it would keep together until they were safely over.
+There was an avenue leading from the bridge to the main building,
+covered with grass, like a meadow, and a tree which had been blown down
+had been left lying across the road.
+
+The island was pretty enough, so pretty that a castle might very well
+have been built there. But nothing but weeds grew in the garden, and in
+the large park the trees were choking each other, and black snakes
+glided over the green, wet walks.
+
+Anna Stina felt uneasy when she saw how neglected everything was, and
+went along mumbling to herself: 'What does all this mean? Is Stafva
+dead? How can she stand everything looking like this? Things were very
+different thirty years ago, when I was last here. What in the world can
+be the matter with Stafva?' She could not imagine that there could be
+such neglect in any place where Stafva lived.
+
+Ingrid walked behind her, slowly and reluctantly. The moment she put her
+foot on the bridge she felt that there were not two walking there, but
+three. Someone had come to meet her there, and had turned back to
+accompany her. Ingrid heard no footsteps, but he who accompanied them
+appeared indistinctly by her side. She could see there was someone.
+
+She became terribly afraid. She was just going to beg Anna Stina to turn
+back and tell her that everything seemed so strange here that she dare
+not go any further. But before she had time to say anything, the
+stranger came quite close to her, and she recognised him. Before, she
+only saw him indistinctly; now she saw him so clearly that she could see
+it was the student.
+
+It no longer seemed weird and ghost-like that he walked there. It was
+only strangely delightful that he came to receive her. It was as if it
+were he who had brought her there, and would, by coming to welcome her,
+show that it was.
+
+He walked with her over the bridge, through the avenue, quite up to the
+main building.
+
+She could not help turning her head every moment to the left. It was
+there she saw his face, quite close to her cheek. It was really not a
+face that she saw, only an unspeakably beautiful smile that drew
+tenderly near her. But if she turned her head quite round to see it
+properly, it was no longer there. No, there was nothing one could see
+distinctly. But as soon as she looked straight before her, it was there
+again, quite close to her.
+
+Her invisible companion did not speak to her, he only smiled. But that
+was enough for her. It was more than enough to show her that there was
+one in the world who kept near her with tender love.
+
+She felt his presence as something so real, that she firmly believed he
+protected her and watched over her. And before this happy consciousness
+vanished all the despair which her adopted mother's hard words had
+called forth.
+
+Ingrid felt herself again given back to life. She had the right to live,
+as there was one who loved her.
+
+And this was why she entered the kitchen at Munkhyttan with a faint
+blush on her cheeks, and with radiant eyes, fragile, weak, and
+transparent, but sweet as a newly-opened rose.
+
+She still went about as if in a dream, and did not know much about where
+she was; but what surprised her so much that it nearly awakened her was
+to see a new Anna Stina standing by the fireplace. She stood there,
+little and broad, with a large, square face, exactly like the other. But
+why was she so fine, with a white cap with strings tied in a large bow
+under her chin, and with a black bombazine dress? Ingrid's head was so
+confused, that it was some time before it occurred to her that this must
+be Miss Stafva.
+
+She felt that Anna Stina looked uneasily at her, and she tried to pull
+herself together and say 'Good-day.' But the only thing her mind could
+grasp was the thought that he had come to her.
+
+Inside the kitchen there was a small room, with blue-checked covering on
+the furniture. They were taken into that room, and Miss Stafva gave them
+coffee and something to eat.
+
+Anna Stina at once began to talk about their errand. She spoke for a
+long time; said that she knew her sister stood so high in her
+ladyship's favour that she left it to her to engage the servants. Miss
+Stafva said nothing, but she gave a look at Ingrid as much as to say
+that it would hardly have been left with her if she had chosen servants
+like her.
+
+Anna Stina praised Ingrid, and said she was a good girl. She had
+hitherto served in a parsonage, but now that she was grown up she wanted
+really to learn something, and that was why Anna Stina had brought her
+to one who could teach her more than any other person she knew.
+
+Miss Stafva did not reply to this remark either. But her glance plainly
+showed that she was surprised that anyone who had had a situation in a
+parsonage had no clothes of her own, but was obliged to borrow old Anna
+Stina's.
+
+Then old Anna Stina began to tell how she lived quite alone in the
+forest, deserted by all her relatives. And this young girl had come
+running up the hill many an evening and many an early morning to see
+her. She had therefore thought and hoped that she could now help her to
+get a good situation.
+
+Miss Stafva said it was a pity that they had gone such a long way to
+find a place. If she were a clever girl, she could surely get a
+situation in some good family in their own neighbourhood.
+
+Anna Stina could now clearly see that Ingrid's prospects were not good,
+and therefore she began in a more solemn vein:
+
+'Here you have lived, Stafva, and had a good, comfortable home all your
+life, and I have had to fight my way in great poverty. But I have never
+asked you for anything before to-day. And now you will send me away
+like a beggar, to whom one gives a meal and nothing more.'
+
+Miss Stafva smiled a little; then she said:
+
+'Sister Anna Stina, you are not telling me the truth. I, too, come from
+Raglanda, and I should like to know at what peasant's house in that
+parish grow such eyes and such a face.'
+
+And she pointed at Ingrid, and continued:
+
+'I can quite understand, Anna Stina, that you would like to help one who
+looks like that. But I do not understand how you can think that your
+sister Stafva has not more sense than to believe the stories you choose
+to tell her.'
+
+Anna Stina was so frightened that she could not say a word, but Ingrid
+made up her mind to confide in Miss Stafva, and began at once to tell
+her whole story in her soft, beautiful voice.
+
+And Ingrid had hardly told of how she had been lying in the grave, and
+that a Dalar man had come and saved her, before old Miss Stafva grew red
+and quickly bent down to hide it. It was only a second, but there must
+have been some cause for it, for from that moment she looked so kind.
+
+She soon began to ask full particulars about it; more especially she
+wanted to know about the crazy man, whether Ingrid had not been afraid
+of him. Oh no, he did no harm. He was not mad, Ingrid said; he could
+both buy and sell. He was only frightened of some things.
+
+Ingrid thought the hardest of all was to tell what she had heard her
+adopted mother say. But she told everything, although there were tears
+in her voice.
+
+Then Miss Stafva went up to her, drew back the handkerchief from her
+head, and looked into her eyes. Then she patted her lightly on the
+cheek.
+
+'Never mind that, little miss,' she said. 'There is no need for me to
+know about that. Now sister and Miss Ingrid must excuse me,' she said
+soon after, 'but I must take up her ladyship's coffee. I shall soon be
+down again, and you can tell me more.'
+
+When she returned, she said she had told her ladyship about the young
+girl who had lain in the grave, and now her mistress wanted to see her.
+
+They were taken upstairs, and shown into her ladyship's boudoir.
+
+Anna Stina remained standing at the door of the fine room. But Ingrid
+was not shy; she went straight up to the old lady and put out her hand.
+She had often been shy with others who looked much less aristocratic;
+but here, in this house, she did not feel embarrassed. She only felt so
+wonderfully happy that she had come there.
+
+'So it is you, my child, who have been buried,' said her ladyship,
+nodding friendlily to her. 'Do you mind telling me your story, my child?
+I sit here quite alone, and never hear anything, you know.'
+
+Then Ingrid began again to tell her story. But she had not got very far
+before she was interrupted. Her ladyship did exactly the same as Miss
+Stafva had done. She rose, pushed the handkerchief back from Ingrid's
+forehead and looked into her eyes.
+
+'Yes,' her ladyship said to herself, 'that I can understand. I can
+understand that he must obey those eyes.'
+
+For the first time in her life Ingrid was praised for her courage. Her
+ladyship thought she had been very brave to place herself in the hands
+of a crazy fellow.
+
+She _was_ afraid, she said, but she was still more afraid of people
+seeing her in that state. And he did no harm; he was almost quite right,
+and then he was so good.
+
+Her ladyship wanted to know his name, but Ingrid did not know it. She
+had never heard of any other name but the Goat. Her ladyship asked
+several times how he managed when he came to do business. Had she not
+laughed at him, and did she not think that he looked terrible--the Goat?
+It sounded so strange when her ladyship said 'the Goat.' There was so
+much bitterness in her voice when she said it, and yet she said it over
+and over again.
+
+No; Ingrid did not think so, and she never laughed at unfortunate
+people. The old lady looked more gentle than her words sounded.
+
+'It appears you know how to manage mad people, my child,' she said.
+'That is a great gift. Most people are afraid of such poor creatures.'
+She listened to all Ingrid had to say, and sat meditating. 'As you have
+not any home, my child,' she said, 'will you not stay here with me? You
+see, I am an old woman living here by myself, and you can keep me
+company, and I shall take care that you have everything you want. What
+do you say to it, my child? There will come a time, I suppose,'
+continued her ladyship, 'when we shall have to inform your parents that
+you are still living; but for the present everything shall remain as it
+is, so that you can have time to rest both body and mind. And you shall
+call me "Aunt"; but what shall I call you?'
+
+'Ingrid--Ingrid Berg.'
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship thoughtfully. 'I would rather have called
+you something else. As soon as you entered the room with those star-like
+eyes, I thought you ought to be called Mignon.'
+
+When it dawned upon the young girl that here she would really find a
+home, she felt more sure than ever that she had been brought here in
+some supernatural manner, and she whispered her thanks to her invisible
+protector before she thanked her ladyship, Miss Stafva, and Anna Stina.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ingrid slept in a four-poster, on luxurious featherbeds three feet high,
+and had hem-stitched sheets, and silken quilts embroidered with Swedish
+crowns and French lilies. The bed was so broad that she could lie as she
+liked either way, and so high that she must mount two steps to get into
+it. At the top sat a Cupid holding the brightly-coloured hangings, and
+on the posts sat other Cupids, which held them up in festoons.
+
+In the same room where the bed stood was an old curved chest of drawers
+inlaid with olive-wood, and from it Ingrid might take as much
+sweetly-scented linen as she liked. There was also a wardrobe containing
+many gay and pretty silk and muslin gowns that only hung there and
+waited until it pleased her to put them on.
+
+When she awoke in the morning there stood by her bedside a tray with a
+silver coffee-set and old Indian china. And every morning she set her
+small white teeth in fine white bread and delicious almond-cakes; every
+day she was dressed in a fine muslin gown with a lace fichu. Her hair
+was dressed high at the back, but round her forehead there was a row of
+little light curls.
+
+On the wall between the windows hung a mirror, with a narrow glass in a
+broad frame, where she could see herself, and nod to her picture, and
+ask:
+
+'Is it you? Is it really you? How have you come here?'
+
+In the daytime, when Ingrid had left the chamber with the four-poster,
+she sat in the drawing-room and embroidered or painted on silk, and when
+she was tired of that, she played a little on the guitar and sang, or
+talked with the old lady, who taught her French, and amused herself by
+training her to be a fine lady.
+
+But she had come to an enchanted castle--she could not get away from
+that idea. She had had that feeling the first moment, and it was always
+coming back again. No one arrived at the house, no one left it. In this
+big house only two or three rooms were kept in order; in the others no
+one ever went. No one walked in the garden, no one looked after it.
+There was only one man-servant, and an old man who cut the firewood. And
+Miss Stafva had only two servants, who helped her in the kitchen and in
+the dairy.
+
+But there was always dainty food on the table, and her ladyship and
+Ingrid were always waited upon and dressed like fine ladies of rank.
+
+If nothing thrived on the old estate, there was, at any rate, fertile
+soil for dreams, and even if they did not nurse and cultivate flowers
+there, Ingrid was not the one to neglect her dream-roses. They grew up
+around her whenever she was alone. It seemed to her then as if red
+dream-roses formed a canopy over her.
+
+Round the island where the trees bent low over the water, and sent long
+branches in between the reeds, and where shrubs and lofty trees grew
+luxuriantly, was a pathway where Ingrid often walked. It looked so
+strange to see so many letters carved on the trees, to see the old seats
+and summer-houses; to see the old tumble-down pavilions, which were so
+worm-eaten that she dared not go into them; to think that real people
+had walked here, that here they had lived, and longed, and loved, and
+that this had not always been an enchanted castle.
+
+Down here she felt even more the witchery of the place. Here the face
+with the smile came to her. Here she could thank him, the student,
+because he had brought her to a home where she was so happy, where they
+loved her, and made her forget how hardly others had treated her. If it
+had not been he who had arranged all this for her, she could not
+possibly have been allowed to remain here; it was quite impossible.
+
+She knew that it must be he. She had never before had such wild fancies.
+She had always been thinking of him, but she had never felt that he was
+so near her that he took care of her. The only thing she longed for was
+that he himself should come, for of course he would come some day. It
+was impossible that he should not come. In these avenues he had left
+behind part of his soul.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Summer went, and autumn; Christmas was drawing near.
+
+'Miss Ingrid,' said the old housekeeper one day, in a rather mysterious
+manner, 'I think I ought to tell you that the young master who owns
+Munkhyttan is coming home for Christmas. In any case, he generally
+comes,' she added, with a sigh.
+
+'And her ladyship, who has never even mentioned that she has a son,'
+said Ingrid.
+
+But she was not really surprised. She might just as well have answered
+that she had known it all along.
+
+'No one has spoken to you about him, Miss Ingrid,' said the housekeeper,
+'for her ladyship has forbidden us to speak about him.'
+
+And then Miss Stafva would not say any more.
+
+Neither did Ingrid want to ask any more. Now she was afraid of hearing
+something definite. She had raised her expectations so high that she was
+herself afraid they would fail. The truth might be well worth hearing,
+but it might also be bitter, and destroy all her beautiful dreams. But
+from that day he was with her night and day. She had hardly time to
+speak to others. She must always be with him.
+
+One day she saw that they had cleared the snow away from the avenue. She
+grew almost frightened. Was he coming now?
+
+The next day her ladyship sat from early morning in the window looking
+down the avenue. Ingrid had gone further into the room. She was so
+restless that she could not remain at the window.
+
+'Do you know whom I am expecting to-day, Ingrid?'
+
+The young girl nodded; she dared not depend upon her voice to answer.
+
+'Has Miss Stafva told you that my son is peculiar?'
+
+Ingrid shook her head.
+
+'He is very peculiar--he--I cannot speak about it. I cannot--you must
+see for yourself.'
+
+It sounded heartrending. Ingrid grew very uneasy. What was there with
+this house that made everything so strange? Was it something terrible
+that she did not know about? Was her ladyship not on good terms with her
+son? What was it, what was it?
+
+The one moment in an ecstasy of joy, the next in a fever of uncertainty,
+she was obliged to call forth the long row of visions in order again to
+feel that it must be he who came. She could not at all say why she so
+firmly believed that he must be the son just of this house. He might,
+for the matter of that, be quite another person. Oh, how hard it was
+that she had never heard his name!
+
+It was a long day. They sat waiting in silence until evening came.
+
+The man came driving a cartload of Christmas logs, and the horse
+remained in the yard whilst the wood was unloaded.
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship in a commanding and hasty tone, 'run down
+to Anders and tell him that he must be quick and get the horse into the
+stable. Quick--quick!'
+
+Ingrid ran down the stairs and on to the veranda; but when she came out
+she forgot to call to the man. Just behind the cart she saw a tall man
+in a sheepskin coat, and with a large pack on his back. It was not
+necessary for her to see him standing curtsying and curtsying to
+recognise him. But, but----She put her hand to her head and drew a deep
+breath. How would all these things ever become clear to her? Was it for
+that fellow's sake her ladyship had sent her down? And the man, why did
+he pull the horse away in such great haste? And why did he take off his
+cap and salute? What had that crazy man to do with the people of this
+house?
+
+All at once the truth flashed upon Ingrid so crushingly and
+overwhelmingly that she could have screamed. It was not her beloved who
+had watched over her; it was this crazy man. She had been allowed to
+remain here because she had spoken kindly of him, because his mother
+wanted to carry on the good work which he had commenced.
+
+The Goat--that was the young master.
+
+But to her no one came. No one had brought her here; no one had expected
+her. It was all dreams, fancies, illusions! Oh, how hard it was! If she
+had only never expected him!
+
+But at night, when Ingrid lay in the big bed with the brightly-coloured
+hangings, she dreamt over and over again that she saw the student come
+home. 'It was not you who came,' she said. 'Yes, of course it was I,'
+he replied. And in her dreams she believed him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One day, the week after Christmas, Ingrid sat at the window in the
+boudoir embroidering. Her ladyship sat on the sofa knitting, as she
+always did now. There was silence in the room.
+
+Young Hede had been at home for a week. During all that time Ingrid had
+never seen him. In his home, too, he lived like a peasant, slept in the
+men-servants' quarters, and had his meals in the kitchen. He never went
+to see his mother.
+
+Ingrid knew that both her ladyship and Miss Stafva expected that she
+should do something for Hede, that at the least she would try and
+persuade him to remain at home. And it grieved her that it was
+impossible for her to do what they wished. She was in despair about
+herself and about the utter weakness that had come over her since her
+expectations had been so shattered.
+
+To-day Miss Stafva had just come in to say that Hede was getting his
+pack ready to start. He was not even staying as long as he generally did
+at Christmas, she said with a reproachful look at Ingrid.
+
+Ingrid understood all they had expected from her, but she could do
+nothing. She sewed and sewed without saying anything.
+
+Miss Stafva went away, and there was again silence in the room. Ingrid
+quite forgot that she was not alone; a feeling of drowsiness suddenly
+came over her, whilst all her sad thoughts wove themselves into a
+strange fancy.
+
+She thought she was walking up and down the whole of the large house.
+She went through a number of rooms and salons; she saw them before her
+with gray covers over the furniture. The paintings and the chandeliers
+were covered with gauze, and on the floors was a layer of thick dust,
+which whirled about when she went through the rooms. But at last she
+came to a room where she had never been before; it was quite a small
+chamber, where both walls and ceiling were black. But when she came to
+look more closely at them, she saw that the chamber was neither painted
+black, nor covered with black material, but it was so dark on account of
+the walls and the ceiling being completely covered with bats. The whole
+room was nothing but a huge nest for bats. In one of the windows a pane
+was broken, so one could understand how the bats had got in in such
+incredible numbers that they covered the whole room. They hung there in
+their undisturbed winter sleep; not one moved when she entered. But she
+was seized by such terror at this sight that she began to shiver and
+shake all over. It was dreadful to see the quantity of bats she so
+distinctly saw hanging there. They all had black wings wrapped around
+them like cloaks; they all hung from the walls by a single long claw in
+undisturbable sleep. She saw it all so distinctly that she wondered if
+Miss Stafva knew that the bats had taken possession of a whole room. In
+her thoughts she then went to Miss Stafva and asked her whether she had
+been into that room and seen all the bats.
+
+'Of course I have seen them,' said Miss Stafva. 'It is their own room. I
+suppose you know, Miss Ingrid, that there is not a single old country
+house in all Sweden where they have not to give up a room to the bats?'
+
+'I have never heard that before,' Ingrid said.
+
+'When you have lived as long in the world as I have, Miss Ingrid, you
+will find out that I am speaking the truth,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+'I cannot understand that people will put up with such a thing,' Ingrid
+said.
+
+'We are obliged to,' said Miss Stafva. 'Those bats are Mistress Sorrow's
+birds, and she has commanded us to receive them.'
+
+Ingrid saw that Miss Stafva did not wish to say anything more about that
+matter, and she began to sew again; but she could not help speculating
+over who that Mistress Sorrow could be who had so much power here that
+she could compel Miss Stafva to give up a whole room to the bats.
+
+Just as she was thinking about all this, she saw a black sledge, drawn
+by black horses, pull up outside the veranda. She saw Miss Stafva come
+out and make a low curtsy. An old lady in a long black velvet cloak,
+with many small capes on the shoulders, alighted from the sledge. She
+was bent, and had difficulty in walking. She could hardly lift her feet
+sufficiently to walk up the steps.
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship, looking up from her knitting, 'I think I
+heard Mistress Sorrow arrive. It must have been her jingle I heard. Have
+you noticed that she never has sledge-bells on her horses, but only
+quite a small jingle? But one can hear it--one can hear it! Go down
+into the hall, Ingrid, and bid Mistress Sorrow welcome.'
+
+When Ingrid came down into the front hall, Mistress Sorrow stood talking
+with Miss Stafva on the veranda. They did not notice her.
+
+Ingrid saw with surprise that the round-backed old lady had something
+hidden under all her capes which looked like crape; it was put well up
+and carefully hidden. Ingrid had to look very closely before she
+discovered that they were two large bat's wings which she tried to hide.
+The young girl grew still more curious and tried to see her face, but
+she stood and looked into the yard, so it was impossible. So much,
+however, Ingrid did see when she put out her hand to the
+housekeeper--that one of her fingers was much longer than the others,
+and at the end of it was a large, crooked claw.
+
+'I suppose everything is as usual here?' she said.
+
+'Yes, honoured Mistress Sorrow,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+'You have not planted any flowers, nor pruned any trees? You have not
+mended the bridge, nor weeded the avenue?'
+
+'No, honoured mistress.'
+
+'This is quite as it should be,' said the honoured mistress. 'I suppose
+you have not had the audacity to search for the vein of ore, or to cut
+down the forest which is encroaching on the fields?'
+
+'No, honoured mistress.'
+
+'Or to clean the wells?'
+
+'No, nor to clean the wells.'
+
+'This is a nice place,' said Mistress Sorrow; 'I always like being here.
+In a few years things will be in such a state that my birds can live all
+over the house. You are really very good to my birds, Miss Stafva.'
+
+At this praise the housekeeper made a deep curtsy.
+
+'How are things otherwise at the house?' said Mistress Sorrow. 'What
+sort of a Christmas have you had?'
+
+'We have kept Christmas as we always do,' said Miss Stafva. 'Her
+ladyship sits knitting in her room day after day, thinks of nothing but
+her son, and does not even know that it is a festival. Christmas Eve we
+allowed to pass like any other day--no presents and no candles.'
+
+'No Christmas tree, no Christmas fare?'
+
+'Nor any going to church; not so much as a candle in the windows on
+Christmas morning.'
+
+'Why should her ladyship honour God's Son when God will not heal her
+son?' said Mistress Sorrow.
+
+'No, why should she?'
+
+'He is at home at present, I suppose? Perhaps he is better now?'
+
+'No, he is no better. He is as much afraid of things as ever.'
+
+'Does he still behave like a peasant? Does he never go into the rooms?'
+
+'We cannot get him to go into the rooms; he is afraid of her ladyship,
+as the honoured mistress knows.'
+
+'He has his meals in the kitchen, and sleeps in the men-servants'
+room?'
+
+'Yes, he does.'
+
+'And you have no idea how to cure him?'
+
+'We know nothing, we understand nothing.'
+
+Mistress Sorrow was silent for a moment; when she spoke again there was
+a hard, sharp ring in her voice:
+
+'This is all right as far as it goes, Miss Stafva; but I am not quite
+satisfied with you, all the same.'
+
+The same moment she turned round and looked sharply at Ingrid.
+
+Ingrid shuddered. Mistress Sorrow had a little, wrinkled face, the under
+part of which was so doubled up that one could hardly see the lower jaw.
+She had teeth like a saw, and thick hair on the upper lip. Her eyebrows
+were one single tuft of hair, and her skin was quite brown.
+
+Ingrid thought Miss Stafva could not see what she saw: Mistress Sorrow
+was not a human being; she was only an animal.
+
+Mistress Sorrow opened her mouth and showed her glittering teeth when
+she looked at Ingrid.
+
+'When this girl came here,' she said to Miss Stafva, 'you thought she
+had been sent by God. You thought you could see from her eyes that she
+had been sent by Our Lord to save him. She knew how to manage mad
+people. Well, how has it worked?'
+
+'It has not worked at all. She has not done anything.'
+
+'No, I have seen to that,' said Mistress Sorrow. 'It was my doing that
+you did not tell her why she was allowed to stay here. Had she known
+that, she would not have indulged in such rosy dreams about seeing her
+beloved. If she had not had such expectations, she would not have had
+such a bitter disappointment. Had disappointment not paralyzed her, she
+could perhaps have done something for this mad fellow. But now she has
+not even been to see him. She hates him because he is not the one she
+expected him to be. That is my doing, Miss Stafva, my doing.'
+
+'Yes; the honoured mistress knows her business,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+Mistress Sorrow took her lace handkerchief and dried her red-rimmed
+eyes. It looked as if it were meant for an expression of joy.
+
+'You need not make yourself out to be any better than you are, Miss
+Stafva,' she said. 'I know you do not like my having taken that room for
+my birds. You do not like the thought of my having the whole house soon.
+I know that. You and your mistress had intended to cheat me. But it is
+all over now.'
+
+'Yes,' said Miss Stafva, 'the honoured mistress can be quite easy. It is
+all over. The young master is leaving to-day. He has packed up his pack,
+and then we always know he is about to leave. Everything her ladyship
+and I have been dreaming about the whole autumn is over. Nothing has
+been done. We thought she might at least have persuaded him to remain at
+home, but in spite of all we have done for her, she has not done
+anything for us.'
+
+'No, she has only been a poor help, I know that,' said Mistress Sorrow.
+'But, all the same, she must be sent away now. That was really what I
+wanted to see her ladyship about.'
+
+Mistress Sorrow began to drag herself up the steps on her tottering
+legs. At every step she raised her wings a little, as if they should
+help her. She would, no doubt, much rather have flown.
+
+Ingrid went behind her. She felt strangely attracted and fascinated. If
+Mistress Sorrow had been the most beautiful woman in the world, she
+could not have felt a greater inclination to follow her.
+
+When she went into the boudoir she saw Mistress Sorrow sitting on the
+sofa by the side of her ladyship, whispering confidentially with her, as
+if they were old friends.
+
+'You must be able to see that you cannot keep her with you,' said
+Mistress Sorrow impressively. 'You, who cannot bear to see a flower
+growing in your garden, can surely not stand having a young girl about
+in the house. It always brings a certain amount of brightness and life,
+and that would not suit you.'
+
+'No; that is just what I have been sitting and thinking about.'
+
+'Get her a situation as lady's companion somewhere or other, but don't
+keep her here.'
+
+She rose to say good-bye.
+
+'That was all I wanted to see you about,' she said. 'But how are you
+yourself?'
+
+'Knives and scissors cut my heart all day long,' said her ladyship. 'I
+only live in him as long as he is at home. It is worse than usual, much
+worse this time. I cannot bear it much longer.' . . .
+
+Ingrid started; it was her ladyship's bell that rang. She had been
+dreaming so vividly that she was quite surprised to see that her
+ladyship was alone, and that the black sledge was not waiting before the
+door.
+
+Her ladyship had rung for Miss Stafva, but she did not come. She asked
+Ingrid to go down to her room and call her.
+
+Ingrid went, but the little blue-checked room was empty. The young girl
+was going into the kitchen to ask for the housekeeper, but before she
+had time to open the door she heard Hede talking. She stopped outside;
+she could not persuade herself to go in and see him.
+
+She tried, however, to argue with herself. It was not his fault that he
+was not the one she had been expecting. She must try to do something for
+him; she must persuade him to remain at home. Before, she had not had
+such a feeling against him. He was not so very bad.
+
+She bent down and peeped through the keyhole. It was the same here as at
+other places. The servants tried to lead him on in order to amuse
+themselves by his strange talk. They asked him whom he was going to
+marry. Hede smiled; he liked to be asked about that kind of thing.
+
+'She is called Grave-Lily--don't you know that?' he said.
+
+The servant said she did not know that she had such a fine name.
+
+'But where does she live?'
+
+'Neither has she home nor has she farm,' Hede said. 'She lives in my
+pack.'
+
+The servant said that was a queer home, and asked about her parents.
+
+'Neither has she father nor has she mother,' Hede said. 'She is as fine
+as a flower; she has grown up in a garden.'
+
+He said all this with a certain amount of clearness, but when he wanted
+to describe how beautiful his sweetheart was he could not get on at all.
+He said a number of words, but they were strangely mixed together. One
+could not follow his thoughts, but evidently he himself derived much
+pleasure from what he said. He sat smiling and happy.
+
+Ingrid hurried away. She could not bear it any longer. She could not do
+anything for him. She was afraid of him. She disliked him. But she had
+not got further than the stairs before her conscience pricked her. Here
+she had received so much kindness, and she would not make any return.
+
+In order to master her dislike she tried in her own mind to think of
+Hede as a gentleman. She wondered how he had looked when he wore good
+clothes, and had his hair brushed back. She closed her eyes for a moment
+and thought. No, it was impossible, she could not imagine him as being
+any different from what he was. The same moment she saw the outlines of
+a beloved face by her side. It appeared at her left side wonderfully
+distinct. This time the face did not smile. The lips trembled as if in
+pain, and unspeakable suffering was written in sharp lines round the
+mouth.
+
+Ingrid stopped half-way up the stairs and looked at it. There it was,
+light and fleeting, as impossible to grasp and hold fast as a sun-spot
+reflected by the prism of a chandelier, but just as visible, just as
+real. She thought of her recent dream, but this was different--this was
+reality.
+
+When she had looked a little at the face, the lips began to move; they
+spoke, but she could not hear a sound. Then she tried to see what they
+said, tried to read the words from the lips, as deaf people do, and she
+succeeded.
+
+'Do not let me go,' the lips said; 'do not let me go.'
+
+And the anguish with which it was said! If a fellow-creature had been
+lying at her feet begging for life, it could not have affected her more.
+She was so overcome that she shook. It was more heart-rending than
+anything she had ever heard in her whole life. Never had she thought
+that anyone could beg in such fearful anguish. Again and again the lips
+begged, 'Do not let me go!' And for every time the anguish was greater.
+
+Ingrid did not understand it, but remained standing, filled with
+unspeakable pity. It seemed to her that more than life itself must be at
+stake for one who begged like this, that his very soul must be at stake.
+
+The lips did not move any more; they stood half open in dull despair.
+When they assumed this expression she uttered a cry and stumbled. She
+recognised the face of the crazy fellow as she had just seen it.
+
+'No, no, no!' she said. 'It cannot be so! It must not! it cannot! It is
+not possible that it is he!'
+
+The same moment the face vanished. She must have sat for a whole hour on
+the cold staircase, crying in helpless despair. But at last hope sprang
+up in her, strong and fair. She again took courage to raise her head.
+All that had happened seemed to show that she should save him. It was
+for that she had come here. She should have the great, great happiness
+of saving him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the little boudoir her ladyship was talking to Miss Stafva. It
+sounded so pitiful to hear her asking the housekeeper to persuade her
+son to remain a few days longer. Miss Stafva tried to appear hard and
+severe.
+
+'Of course, I can ask him,' she said; 'but your ladyship knows that no
+one can make him stay longer than he wants.'
+
+'We have money enough, you know. There is not the slightest necessity
+for him to go. Can you not tell him that?' said her ladyship.
+
+At the same moment Ingrid came in. The door opened noiselessly. She
+glided through the room with light, airy steps; her eyes were radiant,
+as if she beheld something beautiful afar off.
+
+When her ladyship saw her she frowned a little. She also felt an
+inclination to be cruel, to give pain.
+
+'Ingrid,' she said, 'come here; I must speak with you about your
+future.'
+
+The young girl had fetched her guitar and was about to leave the room.
+She turned round to her ladyship.
+
+'My future?' she said, putting her hand to her forehead. 'My future is
+already decided, you know,' she continued, with the smile of a martyr;
+and without saying any more she left the room.
+
+Her ladyship and Stafva looked in surprise at each other. They began to
+discuss where they should send the young girl. But when Miss Stafva came
+down to her room she found Ingrid sitting there, singing some little
+songs and playing on the guitar, and Hede sat opposite her, listening,
+his face all sunshine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ever since Ingrid had recognised the student in the poor crazy fellow,
+she had no other thought but that of trying to cure him; but this was a
+difficult task, and she had no idea whatever as to how she should set
+about it. To begin with, she only thought of how she could persuade him
+to remain at Munkhyttan; and this was easy enough. Only for the sake of
+hearing her play the violin or the guitar a little every day he would
+now sit patiently from morning till evening in Miss Stafva's room
+waiting for her.
+
+She thought it would be a great thing if she could get him to go into
+the other rooms, but that she could not. She tried keeping in her room,
+and said she would not play any more for him if he did not come to her.
+But after she had remained there two days, he began to pack up his pack
+to go away, and then she was obliged to give in.
+
+He showed great preference for her, and distinctly showed that he liked
+her better than others; but she did not make him less frightened. She
+begged him to leave off his sheepskin coat, and wear an ordinary coat.
+He consented at once, but the next day he had it on again. Then she hid
+it from him; but he then appeared in the man-servant's skin coat. So
+then they would rather let him keep his own. He was still as frightened
+as ever, and took great care no one came too near him. Even Ingrid was
+not allowed to sit quite close to him.
+
+One day she said to him that now he must promise her something: he must
+give over curtsying to the cat. She would not ask him to do anything so
+difficult as give up curtsying to horses and dogs, but surely he could
+not be afraid of a little cat.
+
+Yes, he said; the cat was a goat.
+
+'It can't be a goat,' she said; 'it has no horns, you know.'
+
+He was pleased to hear that. It seemed as if at last he had found
+something by which he could distinguish a goat from other animals.
+
+The next day he met Miss Stafva's cat.
+
+'That goat has no horns,' he said; and laughed quite proudly.
+
+He went past it, and sat down on the sofa to listen to Ingrid playing.
+But after he had sat a little while he grew restless, and he rose, went
+up to the cat, and curtsied.
+
+Ingrid was in despair. She took him by his arm and shook him. He ran
+straight out of the room, and did not appear until the next day.
+
+'Child, child,' said her ladyship, 'you do exactly as I did; you try the
+same as I did. It will end by your frightening him so that he dare not
+see you any more. It is better to leave him in peace. We are satisfied
+with things as they are if he will only remain at home.'
+
+There was nothing else for Ingrid to do but wring her hands in sorrow
+that such a fine, lovable fellow should be concealed in this crazy man.
+
+Ingrid thought again and again, had she really only come here to play
+her grandfather's tunes to him? Should they go on like that all through
+life? Would it never be otherwise?
+
+She also told him many stories, and in the midst of a story his face
+would lighten up, and he would say something wonderfully subtle and
+beautiful. A sane person would never have thought of anything like it.
+And no more was needed to make her courage rise, and then she began
+again with these endless experiments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was late one afternoon, and the moon was just about to rise. White
+snow lay on the ground, and bright gray ice covered the lake. The trees
+were blackish-brown, and the sky was a flaming red after the sunset.
+
+Ingrid was on her way to the lake to skate. She went along a narrow path
+where the snow was quite trodden down. Gunnar Hede went behind her.
+There was something cowed in his bearing that made one think of a dog
+following its master.
+
+Ingrid looked tired; there was no brightness in her eyes, and her
+complexion was gray.
+
+As she walked along she wondered whether the day, which was now so
+nearly over, was content with itself--if it were from joy it had
+lighted the great flaming red sunset far away in the west.
+
+She knew she could light no bonfire over this day, nor over any other
+day. In the whole month that had passed since she recognised Gunnar Hede
+she had gained nothing.
+
+And to-day a great fear had come upon her. It seemed to her as if she
+might perhaps lose her love over all this. She was nearly forgetting the
+student, only for thinking of the poor fellow. All that was bright and
+beautiful and youthful vanished from her love. Nothing was left but
+dull, heavy earnest.
+
+She was quite in despair as she walked towards the lake. She felt she
+did not know what ought to be done--felt that she must give it all up.
+Oh, God, to have him walking behind her apparently strong and hale, and
+yet so helplessly, incurably sick!
+
+They had reached the lake, and she was putting on her skates. She also
+wanted him to skate, and helped him to put on his skates; but he fell as
+soon as he got on to the ice. He scrambled to the bank and sat down on a
+stone, and she skated away from him.
+
+Just opposite the stone upon which Gunnar Hede was sitting was an islet
+overgrown with birches and poplars, and behind it the radiant evening
+sky, which was still flaming red. And the fine, light, leafless tops of
+the trees stood against the glorious sky with such beauty that it was
+impossible not to notice it.
+
+Is it not a fact that one always recognises a place by a single feature?
+One does not exactly know how even the most familiar spot looks from
+all sides. And Munkhyttan one always knew by the little islet. If one
+had not seen the place for many years, one would know it again by this
+islet, where the dark tree-tops were lifted towards the sunset.
+
+Hede sat quite still, and looked at the islet and at the branches of the
+trees and at the gray ice which surrounded it.
+
+This was the view he knew best of all; there was nothing on the whole
+estate he knew so well, for it was always this islet that attracted the
+eye. And soon he was sitting looking at the islet without thinking about
+it, just as one does with things one knows so well. He sat for a long
+time gazing. Nothing disturbed him, not a human being, not a gust of
+wind, no strange object. He could not see Ingrid; she had skated far
+away on the ice.
+
+A rest and peace fell upon Gunnar Hede such as one only feels in home
+surroundings. Security and peace came to him from the little islet; it
+quieted the everlasting unrest that tormented him.
+
+Hede always imagined he was amongst enemies, and always thought of
+defending himself. For many years he had not felt that peace which made
+it possible for him to forget himself. But now it came upon him.
+
+Whilst Gunnar Hede was sitting thus and not thinking of anything, he
+happened mechanically to make a movement as one may do when one finds
+one's self in accustomed circumstances. As he sat there with the shining
+ice before him and with skates on his feet, he got up and skated on to
+the lake, and he thought as little of what he was doing as one thinks of
+how one is holding fork or spoon when eating.
+
+He glided over the ice; it was glorious skating. He was a long way off
+the shore before he realized what he was doing.
+
+'Splendid ice!' he thought. 'I wonder why I did not come down earlier in
+the day. It is a good thing I was more here yesterday,' he said. 'I will
+really not waste a single day during the rest of my vacation.'
+
+No doubt it was because Gunnar Hede happened to do something he was in
+the habit of doing before he was ill that his old self awakened within
+him.
+
+Thoughts and associations connected with his former life began to force
+themselves upon his consciousness, and at the same time all the thoughts
+connected with his illness sank into oblivion.
+
+It had been his habit when skating to take a wide turn on the lake in
+order to see beyond a certain point. He did so now without thinking, but
+when he had turned the point he knew he had skated there to see if there
+was a light in his mother's window.
+
+'She thinks it is time I was coming home, but she must wait a little;
+the ice is too good.'
+
+But it was mostly vague sensations of pleasure over the exercise and the
+beautiful evening that were awakened within him. A moonlight evening
+like this was just the time for skating; he was so fond of this peaceful
+transition from day to night. It was still light, but the stillness of
+night was already there, the best both of day and of night.
+
+There was another skater on the ice; it was a young girl. He was not
+sure if he knew her, but he skated towards her to find out. No; it was
+no one he knew, but he could not help making a remark when he passed her
+about the splendid ice.
+
+The stranger was probably a young girl from the town. She was evidently
+not accustomed to be addressed in this unceremonious manner; she looked
+quite frightened when he spoke to her. He certainly was queerly dressed;
+he was dressed quite like a peasant.
+
+Well, he did not want to frighten her away. He turned off and skated
+further up the lake; the ice was big enough for them both.
+
+But Ingrid had nearly screamed with astonishment. He had come towards
+her skating elegantly, with his arms crossed, the brim of his hat turned
+up, and his hair thrown back, so that it did not fall over his ears.
+
+He had spoken with the voice of a gentleman, almost without the
+slightest Dalar accent. She did not stop to think about it. She skated
+quickly towards the shore. She came breathless into the kitchen. She did
+not know how to say it shortly and quickly enough.
+
+'Miss Stafva, the young master has come home!'
+
+The kitchen was empty; neither the housekeeper nor the servants were
+there. Nor was there anybody in the housekeeper's room. Ingrid rushed
+through the whole house, went into rooms where no one ever went. The
+whole time she cried out, 'Miss Stafva, Miss Stafva! the young master
+has come home!'
+
+She was quite beside herself, and went on calling out, even when she
+stood on the landing upstairs, surrounded by the servants, Miss Stafva,
+and her ladyship herself. She said it over and over again. She was too
+much excited to stop. They all understood what she meant. They stood
+there quite as much overcome as she was.
+
+Ingrid turned restlessly from the one to the other. She ought to give
+explanations and orders, but about what? That she could so lose her
+presence of mind! She looked wildly questioning at her ladyship.
+
+'What was it I wanted?'
+
+The old lady gave some orders in a low, trembling voice. She almost
+whispered.
+
+'Light the candles and make a fire in the young master's room. Lay out
+the young master's clothes.'
+
+It was neither the place nor the time for Miss Stafva to be important.
+But there was all the same a certain superior ring in her voice as she
+answered:
+
+'There is always a fire in the young master's room. The young master's
+clothes are always in readiness for him.'
+
+'Ingrid had better go up to her room,' said her ladyship.
+
+The young girl did just the opposite. She went into the drawing-room,
+placed herself at the window, sobbed and shook, but did not herself
+know that she was not still. She impatiently dried the tears from her
+eyes, so that she could see over the snowfield in front of the house. If
+only she did not cry, there was nothing she could miss seeing in the
+clear moonlight. At last he came.
+
+'There he is! there he is!' she cried to her ladyship. 'He walks
+quickly! he runs! Do come and see!'
+
+Her ladyship sat quite still before the fire. She did not move. She
+strained her ears to hear, just as much as the other strained her eyes
+to see. She asked Ingrid to be quiet, so that she could hear how he
+walked. Ah, yes, she would be quiet. Her ladyship should hear how he
+walked. She grasped the window-sill, as if that could help her.
+
+'You _shall_ be quiet,' she whispered, 'so that her ladyship can hear
+how he walks.'
+
+Her ladyship sat bending forward, listening with all her soul. Did she
+already hear his steps in the court-yard? She probably thought he would
+go towards the kitchen. Did she hear that it was the front steps that
+creaked? Did she hear that it was the door to the front hall that
+opened? Did she hear how quickly he came up the stairs, two or three
+steps at a time? Had his mother heard that? It was not the dragging step
+of a peasant, as it had been when he left the house.
+
+It was almost more than they could bear, to hear him coming towards the
+door of the drawing-room. Had he come in then, they would no doubt both
+have screamed. But he turned down the corridor to his own rooms.
+
+Her ladyship fell back in her chair, and her eyes closed. Ingrid thought
+her ladyship would have liked to die at that moment. Without opening her
+eyes, she put out her hand. Ingrid went softly up and took it; the old
+lady drew her towards her.
+
+'Mignon, Mignon,' she said; 'that was the right name after all. But,'
+she continued, 'we must not cry. We must not speak about it. Take a
+stool and come and sit down by the fire. We must be calm, my little
+friend. Let us speak about something else. We must be perfectly calm
+when he comes in.'
+
+Half an hour afterwards Hede came in; the tea was on the table, and the
+chandelier was lighted. He had dressed; every trace of the peasant had
+disappeared. Ingrid and her ladyship pressed each other's hands.
+
+They had been sitting trying to imagine how he would look when he came
+in. It was impossible to say what he might say or do, said her ladyship.
+One never had known what he might do. But in any case they would both be
+quite calm. A feeling of great happiness had come over her, and that had
+quieted her. She was resting, free from all sorrow, in the arms of
+angels carrying her upwards, upwards.
+
+But when Hede came in, there was no sign of confusion about him.
+
+'I have only come to tell you,' he said, 'that I have got such a
+headache, that I shall have to go to bed at once. I felt it already when
+I was on the ice.'
+
+Her ladyship made no reply. Everything was so simple; she had never
+thought it would be like that. It took her a few moments to realize that
+he did not know anything about his illness, that he was living somewhere
+in the past.
+
+'But perhaps I can first drink a cup of tea,' he said, looking a little
+surprised at their silence.
+
+Her ladyship went to the tea-tray. He looked at her.
+
+'Have you been crying, mother? You are so quiet.'
+
+'We have been sitting talking about a sad story, I and my young friend
+here,' said her ladyship, pointing to Ingrid.
+
+'I beg your pardon,' he said. 'I did not see you had visitors.'
+
+The young girl came forward towards the light, beautiful as one would be
+who knew that the gates of heaven the next moment would open before her.
+
+He bowed a little stiffly. He evidently did not know who she was. Her
+ladyship introduced them to each other. He looked curiously at Ingrid.
+
+'I think I saw Miss Berg on the ice,' he said.
+
+He knew nothing about her--had never spoken to her before.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A short, happy time followed. Gunnar Hede was certainly not quite
+himself; but those around him were happy in the belief that he soon
+would be. His memory was partly gone. He knew nothing about certain
+periods of his life; he could not play the violin; he had almost
+forgotten all he knew; and his power of thinking was weak; and he
+preferred neither to read nor to write. But still he was very much
+better. He was not frightened; he was fond of his mother; he had again
+assumed the manners and habits of a gentleman. One can easily understand
+that her ladyship and all her household were delighted.
+
+Hede was in the best of spirits--bright and joyous all day long. He
+never speculated over anything, put to one side everything he could not
+understand, never spoke about anything that necessitated mental
+exertion, but talked merrily and cheerfully. He was most happy when he
+was engaged in bodily exercise. He took Ingrid out with him sledging and
+skating. He did not talk much to her, but she was happy to be with him.
+He was kind to Ingrid, as he was to everyone else, but not in the least
+in love with her. He often wondered about his _fiancée_--wondered why
+she never wrote. But after a short time that trouble, too, left him. He
+always put away from him anything that worried him.
+
+Ingrid thought that he would never get really well by doing like this.
+He must some time be made to think--to face his own thoughts, which he
+was afraid of doing now. But she dared not compel him to do this, and
+there was no one else who dared. If he began to care for her a little,
+perhaps she might dare. She thought all they now wanted, every one of
+them, was a little happiness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was just at that time that a little child died at the Parsonage at
+Raglanda where Ingrid had been brought up; and the grave-digger was
+about to dig the grave.
+
+The man dug the grave quite close to the spot where the previous summer
+he had dug the grave for Ingrid. And when he had got a few feet into the
+ground he happened to lay bare a corner of her coffin. The grave-digger
+could not help smiling a little to himself. Of course he had heard that
+the dead girl lying in this coffin had appeared. She was supposed to
+have unscrewed her coffin-lid on the very day of her funeral, risen from
+the grave, and appeared at the Parsonage. The Pastor's wife was not so
+much liked but that people in the parish rather enjoyed telling this
+story about her. The grave-digger thought that people should only know
+how securely the dead were lying in the ground, and how fast the
+coffin-lids. . . .
+
+He interrupted himself in the midst of this thought. On the corner of
+the coffin which was exposed the lid was not quite straight, and one of
+the screws was not quite fast. He did not say anything, he did not think
+anything, but stopped digging and whistled the whole reveille of the
+Vermland Regiment--for he was an old soldier. Then he thought he had
+better examine the thing properly. It would never do for a grave-digger
+to have thoughts about the dead which might come and trouble him during
+the dark autumn nights. He hastily removed some more earth. Then he
+began to hammer on the coffin with his shovel. The coffin answered quite
+distinctly that it was empty--empty.
+
+Half an hour after the grave-digger was at the Parsonage. There was no
+end to the questionings and surmises. So much they were all agreed
+upon--that the young girl had been in the Dalar man's pack. But what had
+become of her afterwards?
+
+Anna Stina stood at the oven in the Parsonage and looked after the
+baking, for of course there was baking to be done for the new funeral.
+She stood for a long time listening to all this talk without saying a
+word. All she took care of was that the cakes were not burnt. She put
+sheet-tins in and took sheet-tins out, and it was dangerous to approach
+her as she stood there with the long baker's shovel. But suddenly she
+took off her kitchen-apron, wiped the worst of the sweat and the soot
+from her face, and was talking with the Pastor in his study almost
+before she knew how it had come about.
+
+After this it was not so very wonderful that one day in March the
+Pastor's little red-painted sledge, ornamented with green tulips, and
+drawn by the Pastor's little red horse, pulled up at Munkhyttan. Ingrid
+was of course obliged to go back with the Pastor home to her mother. The
+Pastor had come to fetch her. He did not say much about their being glad
+that she was alive, but one could see how happy he was. He had never
+been able to forgive himself that they had not been more kind to their
+adopted daughter. And now he was radiant at the thought that he was
+allowed to make a new beginning and make everything good for her this
+time.
+
+They did not speak a word about the reason why she had run away. It was
+of no use bringing that up again so long after. But Ingrid understood
+that the Pastor's wife had had a hard time, and had suffered many pangs
+of conscience, and that they wanted to have her back again in order to
+be good to her. She felt that she was almost obliged to go back to the
+Parsonage to show that she had no ill-feeling against her adopted
+parents.
+
+They all thought it was the most natural thing that she should go to the
+Parsonage for a week or two. And why should she not? She could not make
+the excuse that they needed her at Munkhyttan. She could surely be away
+for some weeks without it doing Gunnar Hede any harm. She felt it was
+hard, but it was best she should go away, as they all thought it was the
+right thing.
+
+Perhaps she had hoped they would ask her not to go away. She took her
+seat in the sledge with the feeling that her ladyship or Miss Stafva
+would surely come and lift her out of it, and carry her into the house
+again. It was impossible to realize that she was actually driving down
+the avenue, that she was turning into the forest, and that Munkhyttan
+was disappearing behind her.
+
+But supposing it was from pure goodness that they let her go? They
+thought, perhaps, that youth, with its craving for pleasure, wanted to
+get away from the loneliness of Munkhyttan. They thought, perhaps, she
+was tired of being the keeper of a crazy man. She raised her hand, and
+was on the point of seizing the reins and turning the horse. Now that
+she was several miles from the house it struck her that that was why
+they had let her go. She would have liked so much to have gone back and
+asked them.
+
+In her utter loneliness she felt as if she were groping about in the
+wild forest. There was not a single human being who answered her or
+advised her. She received just as much answer from fir and pine, and
+squirrel and owl, as she did from any human being.
+
+It was really a matter of utter indifference to her how they treated her
+at the Parsonage. They were very kind to her, as far as she knew, but it
+really did not matter. If she had come to a palace full of everything
+one could most desire, that would likewise have been the same to her. No
+bed is soft enough to give rest unto one whose heart is full of longing.
+
+In the beginning she had asked them every day, as modestly as she could,
+if they would not let her go home, now that she had had the great
+happiness of seeing her mother and her brothers and sisters. But the
+roads were really too bad. She must stay with them until the frost had
+disappeared. It was not a matter of life and death, they supposed, to go
+back to that place.
+
+Ingrid could not understand why it annoyed people when she said she
+wanted to go back to Munkhyttan. But this seemed to be the case with her
+father and her mother and everybody else in the parish. One had no
+right, it appeared, to long for any other place in the world, when one
+was at Raglanda.
+
+She soon saw it was best not to speak about her going away. There were
+so many difficulties in the way whenever she spoke about it. It was not
+enough that the roads were still in the same bad condition; they
+surrounded her with walls and ramparts and moats. She would knit and
+weave, and plant out in the forcing-frames. And surely she would not go
+away until after the large birthday party at the Dean's? And she could
+not think of leaving till after Karin Landberg's wedding.
+
+There was nothing for her to do but to lift her hands in supplication to
+the spring, and beg it to make haste with its work, beg for sunshine and
+warmth, beg the gentle sun to do its very best for the great border
+forest, send small piercing rays between the fir-trees, and melt the
+snow beneath them. Dear, dear sun! It did not matter if the snow were
+not melted in the valley, if only the snow would vanish from the
+mountains, if only the forest paths became passable, if only the Säter
+girls were able to go to their huts, if only the bogs became dry, if
+only it became possible to go by the forest road, which was half the
+distance of the highroad.
+
+Ingrid knew one who would not wait for carriage, or ask for money to
+drive, if only the road through the forest became passable. She knew one
+who would leave the Parsonage some moonlight night, and who would do it
+without asking a single person's permission.
+
+She thought she had waited for the spring before. That everybody does.
+But now Ingrid knew that she had never before longed for it. Oh no, no!
+She had never before known what it was to long. Before she had waited
+for green leaves and anemones, and the song of the thrush and the
+cuckoo. But that was childishness--nothing more. They did not long for
+the spring who only thought of what was beautiful. One should take the
+first bit of earth that peeped through the snow, and kiss it. One should
+pluck the first coarse leaf of the nettle simply to burn into one that
+now the spring had come.
+
+Everybody was very good to her. But although they did not say anything,
+they seemed to think that she was always thinking of leaving them.
+
+'I can't understand why you want to go back to that place and look after
+that crazy fellow,' said Karin Landberg one day. It seemed as if she
+could read Ingrid's thoughts.
+
+'Oh, she has given up thinking of that now,' said the Pastor's wife,
+before the young girl had time to answer.
+
+When Karin was gone the Pastor's wife said:
+
+'People wonder that you want to leave us.'
+
+Ingrid was silent.
+
+'They say that when Hede began to improve perhaps you fell in love with
+him.'
+
+'Oh no! Not after he had begun to improve,' Ingrid said, feeling almost
+inclined to laugh.
+
+'In any case, he is not the sort of person one could marry,' said her
+adopted mother. 'Father and I have been speaking about it, and we think
+it is best that you should remain with us.'
+
+'It is very good of you that you want to keep me,' Ingrid said. And she
+was touched that now they wanted to be so kind to her.
+
+They did not believe her, however obedient she was. She could not
+understand what little bird it was that told them about her longing.
+Now her adopted mother had told her that she must not go back to
+Munkhyttan. But even then she could not leave the matter alone.
+
+'If they really wanted you,' she said, 'they would write for you.'
+
+Ingrid again felt inclined to laugh. That would be the strangest thing
+of all, should there be a letter from the enchanted castle. She would
+like to know if her adopted mother thought that the King of the Mountain
+wrote for the maiden who had been swallowed by the mountain to come back
+when she had gone to see her mother?
+
+But if her adopted mother had known how many messages she had received
+she would probably have been even more uneasy. There came messages to
+her in her dreams by nights, and there came messages to her in her
+visions by day. He let Ingrid know that he was in need of her. He was so
+ill--so ill!
+
+She knew that he was nearly going out of his mind again, and that she
+must go to him. If anyone had told her this, she would simply have
+answered that she knew it.
+
+The large star-like eyes looked further and further away. Those who saw
+that look would never believe that she meant to stay quietly and
+patiently at home.
+
+It is not very difficult either to see whether a person is content or
+full of longing. One only needs to see a little gleam of happiness in
+the eyes when he or she comes in from work and sits down by the fire.
+But in Ingrid's eyes there was no gleam of happiness, except when she
+saw the mountain stream come down through the forest, broad and strong.
+It was that that should prepare the way for her.
+
+It happened one day that Ingrid was sitting alone with Karin Landberg,
+and she began to tell her about her life at Munkhyttan. Karin was quite
+shocked. How could Ingrid stand such a life?
+
+Karin Landberg was to be married very soon. And she was now at that
+stage when she could speak of nothing but her lover. She knew nothing
+but what he had taught her, and she could do nothing without first
+consulting him.
+
+It occurred to her that Oluf had said something about Gunnar Hede which
+would help to frighten Ingrid if she had begun to like that crazy
+fellow. And then she began to tell her how mad he had really been. For
+Oluf had told her that when he was at the fair last autumn some
+gentlemen had said that they did not think the Goat was mad at all. He
+only pretended to be in order to attract customers. But Oluf had
+maintained that he was mad, and in order to prove it went to the market
+and bought a wretched little goat. And then it was plain enough to see
+that he was mad. Oluf had only put the goat in front of him on the
+counter where his knives and things lay, and he had run away and left
+both his pack and his wares, and they had all laughed so awfully when
+they saw how frightened he was. And it was impossible that Ingrid could
+care for anyone who had been so crazy.
+
+It was, no doubt, unwise of Karin Landberg that she did not look at
+Ingrid whilst she told this story. If she had seen how she frowned, she
+would perhaps have taken warning.
+
+'And you will marry anyone who could do such a thing!' Ingrid said. 'I
+think it would be better to marry the Goat himself.'
+
+This Ingrid said in downright earnest, and it seemed so strange to Karin
+that she, who was always so gentle, should have said anything so unkind,
+that it quite worried her. For several days she was quite unhappy,
+because she feared Oluf was not what she would like him to be. It simply
+embittered Karin's life until she made up her mind to tell Oluf
+everything; but he was so nice and good, that he quite reassured her.
+
+It is not an easy task to wait for the spring in Vermland. One can have
+sun and warmth in the evening, and the next morning find the ground
+white with snow. Gooseberry-bushes and lawns may be green, but the trees
+of the birch-forest are bare, and seem as if they will never spring out.
+
+At Whitsuntide there was spring in the air, but Ingrid's prayers had
+been of no avail. Not a single Säter girl had taken up her abode in the
+forest, not a fen was dry; it was impossible to go through the forest.
+
+On Whit-Sunday Ingrid and her adopted mother went to church. As it was
+such a great festival, they had driven to church. In olden days Ingrid
+had very much enjoyed driving up to the church in full gallop, whilst
+people along the roadside politely took off their hats, and those who
+were standing on the road rushed to the side as if they were quite
+frightened. But at the present moment she could not enjoy anything.
+'Longing takes the fragrance from the rose, and the light from the full
+moon,' says an old proverb.
+
+But Ingrid was glad for what she heard in church. It did her good to
+hear how the disciples were comforted in their longing. She was glad
+that Jesus thought of comforting those who longed so greatly for Him.
+
+Whilst Ingrid and the rest of the congregation were in church a tall
+Dalar man came walking down the road. He wore a sheepskin coat, and had
+a large pack on his back, like one who cannot tell winter from summer,
+or Sunday from any other day. He did not go into the church, but stole
+timidly past the horses that were tied to the railings, and went into
+the churchyard.
+
+He sat down on a grave and thought of all the dead who were still
+sleeping, and of one of the dead who had awakened to life again. He was
+still sitting there when the people left the church. Karin Landberg's
+Oluf was one of the first to leave the church, and when he happened to
+look across the churchyard he discovered the Dalar man. It is hard to
+say whether it was curiosity or some other motive that prompted him, but
+he went up to talk to him. He wanted to see if it were possible that he
+who was supposed to have been cured had become mad again.
+
+And it was possible. He told him at once that he sat there waiting for
+her who was called Grave-Lily. She was to come and play to him. She
+played so beautifully that the sun and the stars danced.
+
+Then Karin Landberg's Oluf told him that she for whom he was waiting was
+standing outside the church. If he stood up, he could see her. She
+would, no doubt, be glad to see him.
+
+The Pastor's wife and Ingrid were just getting into the carriage, when a
+tall Dalar man came running up to them. He came at a great pace in spite
+of all the horses he must curtsy to, and he beckoned eagerly to the
+young girl.
+
+As soon as Ingrid saw him she stood quite still. She could not have told
+whether she was most glad to see him again or most grieved that he had
+again gone out of his mind; she only forgot everything else in the
+world.
+
+Her eyes began to sparkle. In that moment she saw nothing of the poor
+wretched man. She only felt that she was once again near the beautiful
+soul of the man for whom she had longed so terribly.
+
+There were a great many people about, and they could not help looking at
+her. They could not take their eyes from her face. She did not move; she
+stood waiting for him. But those who saw how radiant she was with
+happiness must have thought that she was waiting for some great and
+noble man, instead of a poor, half-witted fellow.
+
+They said afterwards that it almost seemed as if there were some
+affinity between his soul and hers--some secret affinity which lay so
+deeply hidden beneath their consciousness that no human being could
+understand it.
+
+But when Hede was only a step or two from Ingrid her adopted mother took
+her resolutely round the waist and lifted her into the carriage. She
+would not have a scene between the two just outside the church, with so
+many people present. And as soon as they were in the carriage the man
+sent his horses off at full gallop.
+
+A wild, terrified cry was heard as they drove away. The Pastor's wife
+thanked God that she had got the young girl into the carriage.
+
+It was still early in the afternoon when a peasant came to the Parsonage
+to speak with the Pastor. He came to speak about the crazy Dalar man. He
+had now gone quite raving mad, and they had been obliged to bind him.
+What did the Pastor advise them to do? What should they do with him?
+
+The Pastor could give them no other advice but to take him home. He told
+the peasant who he was, and where he lived.
+
+Later on in the evening he told Ingrid everything. It was best to tell
+her the truth, and trust to her own common-sense.
+
+But when night came it became clear to her that she had not time to wait
+for the spring. The poor girl set out for Munkhyttan by the highroad.
+She would no doubt be able to get there by that road, although she knew
+that it was twice as long as the way through the forest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was Whit-Monday, late in the afternoon. Ingrid walked along the
+highroad. There was a wide expanse of country, with low mountains and
+small patches of birch forest between the fields. The mountain-ash and
+the bird-cherry were in bloom; the light, sticky leaves of the aspen
+were just out. The ditches were full of clear, rippling water which made
+the stones at the bottom glisten and sparkle.
+
+Ingrid walked sorrowfully along, thinking of him whose mind had again
+given way, wondering whether she could do anything for him, whether it
+was of any use that she had left her home in this manner.
+
+She was tired and hungry; her shoes had begun to go to pieces. Perhaps
+it would be better for her to turn back. She could never get to
+Munkhyttan.
+
+The further she walked, the more sorrowful she became. She could not
+help thinking that it could be of no use her coming now that he had gone
+quite out of his mind. There was no doubt it was too late now; it was
+quite hopeless to do anything for him.
+
+But as soon as she thought of turning back she saw Gunnar Hede's face
+close to her cheek, as she had so often seen it before. It gave her new
+courage; she felt as if he were calling for her. She again felt hopeful
+and confident of being able to help him.
+
+Just as Ingrid raised her head, looking a little less downcast, a queer
+little procession came towards her.
+
+There was a little horse, drawing a little cart; a fat woman sat in the
+cart, and a tall, thin man, with long, thin moustaches walked by the
+side of it.
+
+In the country, where no one understood anything about art, Mr. and
+Mrs. Blomgren always went in for looking like ordinary people. The
+little cart in which they travelled about was well covered over, and no
+one could suspect that it only contained fireworks and conjuring
+apparatus and marionettes.
+
+No one could suspect that the fat woman who sat on the top of the load,
+looking like a well-to-do shopkeeper's wife, was formerly Miss Viola,
+who once sprang through the air, or that the man who walked by her side,
+and looked like a pensioned soldier, was the same Mr. Blomgren who
+occasionally, to break the monotony of the journey, took it into his
+head to turn a somersault over the horse, and play the ventriloquist
+with thrushes and siskins that sang in the trees by the roadside, so
+that he made them quite mad.
+
+The horse was very small, and had formerly drawn a roundabout, and
+therefore it would never go unless it heard music. On that account Mrs.
+Blomgren generally sat playing the Jews'-harp, but as soon as they met
+anyone, she put it in her pocket, so that no one should discover they
+were artists, for whom country people have no respect whatever. Owing to
+this they did not travel very fast, but they were not in any hurry
+either.
+
+The blind man, who played the violin, had to walk some little distance
+behind the others in order not to betray the fact of his belonging to
+the company. The blind man was led by a little dog; he was not allowed
+to have a child to lead him, for that would always have reminded Mr.
+and Mrs. Blomgren of a little girl who was called Ingrid. That would
+have been too sad.
+
+And now they were all in the country on account of the spring. For
+however much money Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren were making in the towns, they
+felt they _must_ be in the country at that time of the year, for Mr. and
+Mrs. Blomgren were artists.
+
+They did not recognise Ingrid, and she went past them without taking any
+notice of them, for she was in a hurry; she was afraid of their
+detaining her. But directly afterwards she felt that it was heartless
+and unkind of her, and turned back.
+
+If Ingrid could have felt glad about anything, she would have been glad
+by seeing the old people's joy at meeting her. You may be sure they had
+plenty to talk about. The little horse turned its head time after time
+to see what was wrong with the roundabout.
+
+Strangely enough, it was Ingrid who talked the most. The two old people
+saw at once that she had been crying, and they were so concerned that
+she was obliged to tell them everything that had happened to her.
+
+But it was a relief to Ingrid to speak. The old people had their own way
+of taking things; they clapped their hands when she told them how she
+had got out of the grave and how she had frightened the Pastor's wife.
+They caressed her and praised her because she had run away from the
+Parsonage. For them nothing was dull or sad, but everything was bright
+and hopeful. They simply had no standard by which to measure reality,
+and therefore its hardness could not affect them. They compared
+everything they heard with the pieces from marionette theatres and
+pantomimes. Of course, one also put a little sorrow and misery into the
+pantomime, but that was only done to heighten the effect. And, of
+course, everything would end well. In the pantomimes it always ended
+well.
+
+There was something infectious in all this hopefulness. Ingrid knew they
+did not at all understand how great her trouble was, but it was cheering
+all the same to listen to them.
+
+But they were also of real help to Ingrid. They told her that they had
+had dinner a short time since at the inn at Torsäker, and just as they
+were getting up from the table some peasants came driving up with a man
+who was mad. Mrs. Blomgren could not bear to see mad people, and wanted
+to go away at once, and Mr. Blomgren had consented. But supposing it was
+Ingrid's madman! And they had hardly said the words before Ingrid said
+that it was very likely, and wanted to set off at once.
+
+Mr. Blomgren then asked his wife in his own ceremonious manner if they
+were not in the country solely on account of the spring, and if it were
+not just the same where they went. And old Mrs. Blomgren asked him
+equally ceremoniously in her turn if he thought she would leave her
+beloved Ingrid before she had reached the harbour of her happiness.
+
+Then the old roundabout horse was turned, and conversation grew more
+difficult, because they again had to play on the Jews'-harp. As soon as
+Mrs. Blomgren wished to say anything, she was obliged to hand the
+instrument to Mr. Blomgren, and when Mr. Blomgren wanted to speak, he
+gave it back again to his wife. And the little horse stood still every
+time the instrument passed from mouth to mouth.
+
+The whole time they did their best to comfort Ingrid. They related all
+the fairy tales they had seen represented at the dolls' theatre. They
+comforted her with the 'Enchanted Princess,' they comforted her with
+'Cinderella,' they comforted her with all the fairy tales under the sun.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren watched Ingrid when they saw that her eyes grew
+brighter. 'Artist's eyes,' they said, nodding contentedly to each other.
+'What did we say? Artist's eyes!'
+
+In some incomprehensible manner they had got the idea that Ingrid had
+become one of them, an artist. They thought she was playing a part in a
+drama. It was a triumph for them in their old age.
+
+On they went as fast as they could. The old couple were only afraid that
+the madman would not be at the inn any longer. But he was there, and the
+worst of it was, no one knew how to get him away.
+
+The two peasants from Raglanda who had brought him had taken him to one
+of the rooms and locked him in whilst they were waiting for fresh
+horses. When they left him his arms had been tied behind him, but he had
+somehow managed to free his hands from the cord, and when they came to
+fetch him he was free, and, beside himself with rage, had seized a
+chair, with which he threatened to strike anyone who approached him.
+They could do nothing but beat a hasty retreat and lock the door. The
+peasants now only waited for the landlord and his men to return and help
+them to bind him again.
+
+All the hope which Ingrid's old friends had reawakened within her was,
+however, not quenched. She quite saw that Gunnar Hede was worse than he
+had ever been before, but that was what she had expected. She still
+hoped. It was not their fairy tales, it was their great love that had
+given her new hope.
+
+She asked the men to let her go to the madman. She said she knew him,
+and he would not do her any harm; but the peasants said they were not
+mad. The man in the room would kill anybody who went in.
+
+Ingrid sat down to think. She thought how strange it was that she should
+meet Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren just to-day. Surely that meant something. She
+would never have met them if it had not been for some purpose. And
+Ingrid thought of how Hede had regained his senses the last time. Could
+she not again make him do something which would remind him of olden
+days, and drive away his mad thoughts? She thought and thought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren sat on a seat outside the inn, looking more
+unhappy than one would have thought was possible. They were not far from
+crying.
+
+Ingrid, their 'child,' came up to them with a smile--such a smile as
+only she could have--and stroked their old, wrinkled cheeks, and said
+it would please her so much if they would let her see a performance like
+those she used to see every day in the olden time. It would be such a
+comfort to her.
+
+At first they said no, for they were not at all in proper artist humour,
+but when she had expended a few smiles upon them they could not resist
+her. They went to their cart and unpacked their costumes.
+
+When they were ready they called for the blind man, and Ingrid selected
+the place where the performance was to be held. She would not let them
+perform in the yard, but took them into the garden belonging to the inn,
+for there was a garden belonging to this inn. It was mostly full of beds
+for vegetables which had not yet come up, but here and there was an
+apple-tree in bloom. And Ingrid said she would like them to perform
+under one of the apple-trees in bloom.
+
+Some lads and servant-girls came running when they heard the violin, so
+there was a small audience. But it was hard work for Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren to perform. Ingrid had asked too much of them; they were really
+much too sad.
+
+And it was very unfortunate that Ingrid had taken them out into the
+garden. She had evidently not remembered that the rooms in the inn faced
+this way. Mrs. Blomgren was very nearly running away when she heard a
+window in one of the rooms quickly opened. Supposing the madman had
+heard the music, and supposing he jumped out of the window and came to
+them?
+
+But Mrs. Blomgren was somewhat reassured when she saw who had opened
+the window. It was a young gentleman with a pleasant face. He was in
+shirt-sleeves, but otherwise very decently dressed. His eye was quiet,
+his lips smiled, and he stroked his hair back from his forehead with his
+hand.
+
+Mr. Blomgren was working, and was so taken up with the performance that
+he did not notice anything. Mrs. Blomgren, who had nothing else to do
+but kiss her hands in all directions, had time to observe everything.
+
+It was astonishing how radiant Ingrid suddenly looked. Her eyes shone as
+never before, and her face was so white that light seemed to come from
+it. And all this radiancy was directed towards the man in the window.
+
+He did not hesitate long. He stood up on the window-sill and jumped down
+to them, and he went up to the blind man and asked him to lend him his
+violin. Ingrid at once took the violin from the blind man and gave it to
+him.
+
+'Play the waltz from "Freischütz,"' she said.
+
+Then the man began to play, and Ingrid smiled, but she looked so
+unearthly that Mrs. Blomgren almost thought that she would dissolve into
+a sunbeam, and fly away from them. But as soon as Mrs. Blomgren heard
+the man play she knew him again.
+
+'Is that how it is?' she said to herself. 'Is it he? That was why she
+wanted to see two old people perform.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gunnar Hede, who had been walking up and down his room in such a rage
+that he felt inclined to kill someone, had suddenly heard a blind man
+playing outside his window, and that had taken him back to an incident
+in his former life.
+
+He could not at first understand where his own violin was, but then he
+remembered that Alin had taken it away with him, and now the only thing
+left for him to do was to try and borrow the blind man's violin to play
+himself quiet again; he was so excited. And as soon as he had got the
+violin in his hand he began to play. It never occurred to him that he
+could not play. He had no idea that for several years he had only been
+able to play some poor little tunes.
+
+He thought all the time he was in Upsala, outside the house with the
+Virginia-creepers, and he expected the acrobats would begin to dance as
+they had done last time. He endeavoured to play with more life to make
+them do so, but his fingers were stiff and awkward; the bow would not
+properly obey them. He exerted himself so much that the perspiration
+stood on his forehead.
+
+At last, however, he got hold of the right tune--the same they had
+danced to the last time. He played it so enticingly, so temptingly, that
+it ought to have melted their hearts. But the old acrobats did not begin
+to dance. It was a long time since they had met the student at Upsala;
+they did not remember how enthusiastic they were then. They had no idea
+what he expected them to do.
+
+Gunnar Hede looked at Ingrid for an explanation why they did not dance.
+When he looked at her there was such an unearthly radiance in her eyes
+that in his astonishment he gave up playing. He stood a moment looking
+round the small crowd. They all looked at him with such strange, uneasy
+glances. It was impossible to play with people staring at him so. He
+simply went away from them. There were some apple-pears in bloom at the
+other end of the garden, so he went there.
+
+He saw now that nothing fitted in with the ideas he had just had that
+Alin had locked him in, and that he was at Upsala. The garden was too
+large, and the house was not covered with red creepers. No, it could not
+be Upsala. But he did not mind very much where he was. It seemed to him
+as if he had not played for centuries, and now he had got hold of a
+violin. Now he would play. He placed the violin against his cheek, and
+began. But again he was stopped by the stiffness in his fingers. He
+could only play the very simplest things.
+
+'I shall have to begin at the beginning,' he said.
+
+And he smiled and played a little minuet. It was the first thing he had
+learnt. His father had played it to him, and he had afterwards played it
+from ear. He saw all at once the whole scene before him, and he heard
+the words:
+
+'The little Prince should learn to dance, but he broke his little leg.'
+
+Then he tried to play several other small dances. They were some he had
+played as a school boy. They had asked him to play at the
+dancing-lessons at the young ladies' boarding-school. He could see the
+girls dance and swing about, and could hear the dancing-mistress beat
+the time with her foot.
+
+Then he grew bolder. He played first violin in one of Mozart's
+quartettes. When he learnt that, he was in the Sixth Form at the Latin
+school at Falun. Some old gentlemen had practised this quartette for a
+concert, but the first violin had been taken ill, and he was asked to
+take his part, young as he was. He remembered how proud he had been.
+
+Gunnar Hede only thought of getting his fingers into practice when he
+played these childish exercises. But he soon noticed that something
+strange was happening to him. He had a distinct sensation that in his
+brain there was some great darkness that hid his past. As soon as he
+tried to remember anything, it was as if he were trying to find
+something in a dark room; but when he played, some of the darkness
+vanished. Without his having thought of it, the darkness had vanished so
+much that he could now remember his childhood and school life.
+
+Then he made up his mind to let himself be led by the violin; perhaps it
+could drive away all the darkness. And so it did, for every piece he
+played the darkness vanished a little. The violin led him through the
+one year after the other, awoke in him memories of studies, friends and
+pleasures. The darkness stood like a wall before him, but when he
+advanced against it, armed with the violin, it vanished step by step.
+Now and then he looked round to see whether it closed again behind him.
+But behind him was bright day.
+
+The violin came to a series of duets for piano and violin. He only
+played a bar or two of each. But a large portion of the darkness
+vanished; he remembered his _fiancée_ and his engagement. He would like
+to have dwelt a little over this, but there was still much darkness left
+to be played away. He had no time.
+
+He glided into a hymn. He had heard it once when he was unhappy. He
+remembered he was sitting in a village church when he heard it. But why
+had he been unhappy? Because he went about the country selling goods
+like a poor pedlar. It was a hard life. It was sad to think about it.
+
+The bow went over the strings like a whirlwind, and again cut through a
+large portion of the darkness. Now he saw the Fifty-Mile Forest, the
+snow-covered animals, the weird shapes, the drifts made of them. He
+remembered the journey to see his _fiancée_, remembered that she had
+broken the engagement. All this became clear to him at one time.
+
+He really felt neither sorrow nor joy over anything he remembered. The
+most important thing was that he did remember. This of itself was an
+unspeakable pleasure. But all at once the bow stopped, as if of its own
+accord. It would not lead him any further. And yet there was more--much
+more--that he must remember. The darkness still stood like a solid wall
+before him.
+
+He compelled the bow to go on. And it played two quite common tunes, the
+poorest he had ever heard. How could his bow have learned such tunes?
+The darkness did not vanish in the least for these tunes. They really
+taught him nothing; but from them came a terror which he could not
+remember having ever felt before--an inconceivable, awful fear, the mad
+terror of a doomed soul.
+
+He stopped playing; he could not bear it. What was there in these
+tunes--what was there? The darkness did not vanish for them, and the
+awful thing was, that it seemed to him that when he did not advance
+against the darkness with the violin and drive it before him, it came
+gliding towards him to overwhelm him.
+
+He had been standing playing, with his eyes half closed; now he opened
+them and looked into the world of reality. He saw Ingrid, who had been
+standing listening to him the whole time. He asked her, not expecting an
+answer, but simply to keep back the darkness for a moment:
+
+'When did I last play this tune?'
+
+But Ingrid stood trembling. She had made up her mind, whatever happened,
+now he should hear the truth. Afraid she was, but at the same time full
+of courage, and quite decided as to what she meant to do. He should not
+again escape her, not be allowed to slip away from her. But in spite of
+her courage she did not dare to tell him straight out that these were
+the tunes he had played whilst he was out of his mind; she evaded the
+question.
+
+'That was what you used to play at Munkhyttan last winter,' she said.
+
+Hede felt as if he were surrounded by nothing but mysteries. Why did
+this young girl say '_du_' to him? She was not a peasant girl.[A] Her
+hair was dressed like other young ladies', on the top of the head and
+in small curls. Her dress was home-woven, but she wore a lace collar.
+She had small hands and a refined face. This face, with the large,
+dreamy eyes, could not belong to a peasant girl. Hede's memory could not
+tell him anything about her. Why did she, then, say '_du_' to him? How
+did she know that he had played these tunes at home?
+
+ [A] The peasants in the Dalar district used formerly to address
+ everybody by the pronoun _du_ (thou), even when speaking to the King;
+ this custom is now, however, not so general.--I.B.
+
+'What is your name?' he said. 'Who are you?'
+
+'I am Ingrid, whom you saw at Upsala many years ago, and whom you
+comforted because she could not learn to dance on the tight-rope.'
+
+This went back to the time he could partly remember. Now he did remember
+her.
+
+'How tall and pretty you have grown, Ingrid!' he said. 'And how fine you
+have become! What a beautiful brooch you have!'
+
+He had been looking at her brooch for some time. He thought he knew it;
+it was like a brooch of enamel and pearls his mother used to wear. The
+young girl answered at once.
+
+'Your mother gave it to me. You must have seen it before.'
+
+Gunnar Hede put down the violin and went up to Ingrid. He asked her
+almost violently:
+
+'How is it possible--how can you wear her brooch? How is it that I don't
+know anything about your knowing my mother?'
+
+Ingrid was frightened. She grew almost gray with terror. She knew
+already what the next question would be.
+
+'I know nothing, Ingrid. I don't know why I am here. I don't know why
+you are here. Why don't I know all this?'
+
+'Oh, don't ask me!'
+
+She went back a step or two, and stretched out her hands as if to
+protect herself.
+
+'Won't you tell me?'
+
+'Don't ask! don't ask!'
+
+He seized her roughly by the wrist to compel her to tell the truth.
+
+'Tell me! I am in my full senses! Why is there so much I can't
+remember?'
+
+She saw something wild and threatening in his eyes. She knew now that
+she would be obliged to tell him. But she felt as if it were impossible
+to tell a man that he had been mad. It was much more difficult than she
+had thought. It was impossible--impossible!
+
+'Tell me!' he repeated.
+
+But she could hear from his voice that he would not hear it. He was
+almost ready to kill her if she told him. Then she summoned up all her
+love, and looked straight into Gunnar Hede's eyes, and said:
+
+'You have not been quite right.'
+
+'Not for a long time?'
+
+'I don't quite know--not for three or four years.'
+
+'Have I been out of my mind?'
+
+'No, no! You have bought and sold and gone to the fairs.'
+
+'In what way have I been mad?'
+
+'You were frightened.'
+
+'Of whom was I frightened?'
+
+'Of animals.'
+
+'Of goats, perhaps?'
+
+'Yes, mostly of goats.'
+
+He had stood clutching her by the wrist the whole time. He now flung her
+hand away from him--simply flung it. He turned away from Ingrid in a
+rage, as if she had maliciously told him an infamous lie.
+
+But this feeling gave way for something else which excited him still
+more. He saw before his eyes, as distinctly as if it had been a picture,
+a tall Dalar man, weighed down by a huge pack. He was going into a
+peasant's house, but a wretched little dog came rushing at him. He
+stopped and curtsied and curtsied, and did not dare to go in until a man
+came out of the house, laughing, and drove the dog away.
+
+When he saw this he again felt that terrible fear. In this anguish the
+vision disappeared, but then he heard voices. They shouted and shrieked
+around him. They laughed. Derision was showered upon him. Worst and
+loudest were the shrill voices of children. One word, one name came over
+and over again: it was shouted, shrieked, whispered, wheezed into his
+ear--'The Goat! the Goat!' And that all meant him, Gunnar Hede. All that
+he had lived in. He felt in full consciousness the same unspeakable fear
+he had suffered whilst out of his mind. But now it was not fear for
+anything outside himself--now he was afraid of himself.
+
+'It was I! it was I!' he said, wringing his hands. The next moment he
+was kneeling against a low seat. He laid his head down and cried, cried:
+'It was I!' He moaned and sobbed. 'It was I!' How could he have courage
+to bear this thought--a madman, scorned and laughed at by all? 'Ah! let
+me go mad again!' he said, hitting the seat with his fist. 'This is more
+than a human being can bear.'
+
+He held his breath a moment. The darkness came towards him as the
+saviour he invoked. It came gliding towards him like a mist. A smile
+passed over his lips. He could feel the muscles of his face relax, feel
+that he again had the look of a madman. But that was better. The other
+he could not bear. To be pointed at, jeered at, scorned, mad! No, it was
+better to be so again and not to know it. Why should he come back to
+life? Everyone must loathe him. The first light, fleeting clouds of the
+great darkness began to enwrap him.
+
+Ingrid stood there, seeing and hearing all his anguish, not knowing but
+that all would soon be lost again. She saw clearly that madness was
+again about to seize him. She was so frightened, so frightened, all her
+courage had gone. But before he again lost his senses, and became so
+scared that he allowed no one to come near him, she would at least take
+leave of him and of all her happiness.
+
+Gunnar Hede felt that Ingrid came and knelt down beside him, laid her
+arm round his neck, put her cheek to his, and kissed him. She did not
+think herself too good to come near him, the madman, did not think
+herself too good to kiss him.
+
+There was a faint hissing in the darkness. The mist lifted, and it was
+as if serpents had raised their heads against him, and now wheezed with
+anger that they could not reach to sting him.
+
+'Do not be so unhappy,' Ingrid said. 'Do not be so unhappy. No one
+thinks of the past, if you will only get well.'
+
+'I want to be mad again,' he said. 'I cannot bear it. I cannot bear to
+think how I have been.'
+
+'Yes, you can,' said Ingrid.
+
+'No; that no one can forget,' he moaned. 'I was so dreadful! No one can
+love me.'
+
+'I love you,' she said.
+
+He looked up doubtfully.
+
+'You kissed me in order that I should not go out of my mind again. You
+pity me.'
+
+'I will kiss you again,' she said.
+
+'You say that now because you think I am in need of hearing it.'
+
+'Are you in need of hearing that someone loves you?'
+
+'If I am--if I am? Ah, child,' he said, and tore himself away from her,
+'how can I possibly bear it, when I know that everyone who sees me
+thinks: "That fellow has been mad; he has gone about curtsying for dogs
+and cats."'
+
+Then he began again. He lay crying with his face in his hands.
+
+'It is better to go out of one's mind again. I can hear them shouting
+after me, and I see myself, and the anguish, the anguish, the
+anguish----'
+
+But then Ingrid's patience came to an end.
+
+'Yes, that is right,' she cried; 'go out of your mind again. I call that
+manly to go mad in order to escape a little anguish.'
+
+She sat biting her lips, struggling with her tears, and as she could
+not get the words out quickly enough, she seized him by the shoulder and
+shook him. She was enraged and quite beside herself with anger because
+he would again escape her, because he did not struggle and fight.
+
+'What do you care about me? What do you care about your mother? You go
+mad, and then you will have peace.' She shook him again by the arm. 'To
+be saved from anguish, you say, but you don't care about one who has
+been waiting for you all her life. If you had any thought for anyone but
+yourself, you would fight against this and get well; but you have no
+thought for others. You can come so touchingly in visions and dreams and
+beg for help, but in reality you will not have any help. You imagine
+that your sufferings are greater than anyone else's, but there are
+others who have suffered more than you.'
+
+At last Gunnar Hede raised his eyes, and looked her straight in the
+face. She was anything but beautiful at this moment. Tears were
+streaming down her cheeks, and her lips trembled, whilst she tried to
+get out the words between her sobs. But in his eyes her emotion only
+made her more beautiful. A wonderful peace came over him, and a great
+and humble thankfulness. Something great and wonderful had come to him
+in his deepest humiliation. It must be a great love--a great love.
+
+He had sat bemoaning his wretchedness, and Love came and knocked at his
+door. He would not merely be tolerated when he came back to life;
+people would not only with difficulty refrain from laughing at him.
+
+There was one who loved him and longed for him. She spoke hardly to him,
+but he heard love trembling in every single word. He felt as if she were
+offering him thrones and kingdoms. She told him that whilst he had been
+out of his mind he had saved her life. He had awakened her from the
+dead, had helped her, protected her. But this was not enough for her;
+she would possess him altogether.
+
+When she kissed him he had felt a life-giving balm enter his sick soul,
+but he had hardly dared to think that it was love that made her. But he
+could not doubt her anger and her tears. He was beloved--he, poor
+wretched creature! he who had been held in derision by everybody! and
+before the great and humble bliss which now filled Gunnar Hede vanished
+the last darkness. It was drawn aside like a heavy curtain, and he saw
+plainly before him the region of terror through which he had wandered.
+But there, too, he had met Ingrid; there he had lifted her from the
+grave; there he had played for her at the hut in the forest; there she
+had striven to heal him.
+
+But only the memory of her came back: the feelings with which she had
+formerly inspired him now awoke. Love filled his whole being; he felt
+the same burning longing that he had felt in the churchyard at Raglanda
+when she was taken from him.
+
+In that region of terror, in that great desert, there had at any rate
+grown one flower that had comforted him with fragrance and beauty, and
+now he felt that love would dwell with him forever. The wild flower of
+the desert had been transplanted into the garden of life, and had taken
+root and grown and thriven, and when he felt this he knew he was saved;
+he knew that the darkness had found its master.
+
+Ingrid was silent. She was tired, as one is tired after hard work; but
+she was also content, for she felt she had carried out her work in the
+best possible manner. She knew she had conquered.
+
+At last Gunnar Hede broke the silence.
+
+'I promise you that I will not give in,' he said.
+
+'Thank you,' Ingrid answered.
+
+Nothing more was said.
+
+Gunnar Hede thought he would never be able to tell her how much he loved
+her. It could never be told in words, only shown every day and every
+hour of his life.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ II
+
+ _Queens at_ KUNGAHÄLLA
+
+
+
+
+_Queens at_ KUNGAHÄLLA
+
+_On the_ SITE _of the Great_ KUNGAHÄLLA
+
+
+Should a stranger who had heard about the old city of Kungahälla ever
+visit the site on the northern river where it once lay, he would
+assuredly be much surprised. He would ask himself whether churches and
+fortifications could melt away like snow, or if the earth had opened and
+swallowed them up. He stands on a spot where formerly there was a mighty
+city, and he cannot find a street or a landing-stage. He sees neither
+ruins nor traces of devastating fires; he only sees a country seat,
+surrounded by green trees and red outbuildings. He sees nothing but
+broad meadows and fields, where the plough does its work year after year
+without being hindered either by brick foundations or old pavements.
+
+He would probably first of all go down to the river. He would not expect
+to see anything of the great ships that went to the Baltic ports or to
+distant Spain, but he would in all likelihood think that he might find
+traces of the old ship-yards, of the large boat-houses and
+landing-stages. He presumes that he will find some of the old kilns
+where they used to refine salt; he will see the worn-out pavement on the
+main street that led to the harbour. He will inquire about the German
+pier and the Swedish pier; he would like to see the Weeping Bridge where
+the women of Kungahälla took leave of their husbands and sons when they
+went to distant lands, but when he comes down to the river's edge he
+sees nothing but a forest of waving reeds. He sees a road full of holes
+leading down to the ferry; he sees a couple of common barges and a
+little flat-bottomed ferryboat that is taking a peasant cart over to
+Hisingen, but no big ships come gliding up the river. He does not even
+see any dark hulls lying and rotting at the bottom of the river.
+
+As he does not find anything remarkable down at the harbour, he will
+probably begin to look for the celebrated Convent Hill. He expects to
+see traces of the palisading and ramparts which in olden days surrounded
+it. He is hoping to see the ruins of the high walls and the long
+cloisters. He says to himself that anyhow there must be ruins of that
+magnificent church where the cross was kept--that miracle-working cross
+which had been brought from Jerusalem. He thinks of the number of
+monuments covering the holy hills which rise over other ancient cities,
+and his heart begins to beat with glad expectation. But when he comes to
+the old Convent Hill which rises above the fields, he finds nothing but
+clusters of murmuring trees; he finds neither walls, nor towers, nor
+gables perforated with pointed arched windows. Garden seats and benches
+he will find under the shadow of the trees, but no cloisters decorated
+with pillars, no hewn gravestones.
+
+Well, if he has not found anything here, he will in any case try to
+find the old King's Hall. He thinks about the large halls from which
+Kungahälla is supposed to have derived its name. It might be that there
+was something left of the timber--a yard thick--that formed the walls,
+or of the deep cellars under the great hall where the Norwegian kings
+celebrated their banquets. He thinks of the smooth green courtyard of
+the King's Hall, where the kings used to ride their silver-shod
+chargers, and where the queens used to milk the golden-horned cows. He
+thinks of the lofty ladies' bower; of the brewing-room, with its large
+boilers; of the huge kitchen, where half an ox at a time was placed in
+the pot, and where a whole hog was roasted on the spit. He thinks of the
+serfs' house, of the falcon's cages, of the great pantries--house by
+house all round the courtyard, moss-grown with age, decorated with
+dragons' heads. Of such a number of buildings there must be some traces
+left, he thinks.
+
+But should he then inquire for the old King's Hall, he will be taken to
+a modern country-house, with glass veranda and conservatories. The
+King's seat has vanished, and with it all the drinking-horns, inlaid
+with silver, and the shields, covered with skin. One cannot even show
+him the well-kept courtyard, with its short, close grass, and with
+narrow paths of black earth. He sees strawberry-beds and hedges of
+rose-trees; he sees happy children and young girls dancing under apple
+and pear trees. But he does not see strong men wrestling, or knights
+playing at ball.
+
+Perhaps he asks about the great oak on the Market Place, beneath which
+the Kings sat in judgment, and where the twelve stones of judgment were
+set up. Or about the long street, which was said to be seven miles long!
+Or about the rich merchants' houses, separated by dark lanes, each
+having its own landing-stage and boathouse down by the river. Or about
+the Marie Church in the Market Place, where the seamen brought their
+offerings of small, full-rigged ships, and the sorrowful, small silver
+hearts.
+
+But there is nothing left to show him of all these things. Cows and
+sheep graze where the long street used to be. Rye and barley grow on the
+Market Place, and stables and barns stand where people used to flock
+round the tempting market-stalls.
+
+How can he help feeling disappointed? Is there not a single thing to be
+found, he says, not a single relic left? And he thinks perhaps that they
+have been deceiving him. The great Kungahälla can never have stood here,
+he says. It must have stood in some other place.
+
+Then they take him down to the riverside, and show him a roughly-hewn
+stone block, and they scrape away the silver-gray lichen, so that he can
+see there are some figures hewn in the stone. He will not be able to
+understand what they represent; they will be as incomprehensible to him
+as the spots in the moon. But they will assure him that they represent a
+ship and an elk, and that they were cut in the stone in the olden days
+to commemorate the foundation of the city.
+
+And should he still not be able to understand, they will tell him what
+is the meaning of the inscription on the stone.
+
+
+
+
+_The Forest_ QUEEN
+
+
+Marcus Antonius Poppius was a Roman merchant of high standing. He traded
+with distant lands; and from the harbour at Ostia he sent well-equipped
+triremas to Spain, to Britain, and even to the north coast of Germany.
+Fortune favoured him, and he amassed immense riches, which he hoped to
+leave as an inheritance to his only son. Unfortunately, this only son
+had not inherited his father's ability. This happens, unfortunately, all
+the world over. A rich man's only son. Need one say more? It is, and
+always will be, the same story.
+
+One would almost think that the gods give rich men these incorrigible
+idlers, these dull, pale, languid fools of sons, to show man what
+unutterable folly it is to amass riches. When will the eyes of mankind
+be opened? When will men listen to the warning voice of the gods?
+
+Young Silvius Antonius Poppius, at the age of twenty, had already tried
+all the pleasures of life. He was also fond of letting people see that
+he was tired of them; but in spite of that, one did not notice any
+diminution in the eagerness with which he sought them. On the contrary,
+he was quite in despair when a singularly persistent ill-luck began to
+pursue him, and to interfere with all his pleasures. His Numidian horses
+fell lame the day before the great chariot race of the year; his
+illicit love affairs were found out; his cleverest cook died from
+malaria. This was more than enough to crush a man whose strength had not
+been hardened by exertion and toil. Young Poppius felt so unhappy that
+he made up his mind to take his own life. He seemed to think that this
+was the only way in which he could cheat the God of Misfortune who
+pursued him and made his life a burden.
+
+One can understand that an unhappy creature commits suicide in order to
+escape the persecution of man; but only a fool like Silvius Antonius
+could think of adopting such means to flee from the gods. One recalls
+involuntarily the story of the man who, to escape from the lion, sprang
+right into its open jaws.
+
+Young Silvius was much too effeminate to choose a bloody death. Neither
+had he any inclination to die from a painful poison. After careful
+consideration, he resolved to die the gentle death of the waves.
+
+But when he went down to the Tiber to drown himself he could not make up
+his mind to give his body to the dirty, sluggish water of the river. For
+a long time he stood undecided, staring into the stream. Then he was
+seized by the magic charm which lies dreamily over a river. He felt that
+great, holy longing which fills these never-resting wanderers of nature;
+he would see the sea.
+
+'I will die in the clear blue sea, through which the sun's rays
+penetrate right to the bottom,' said Silvius Antonius. 'My body shall
+rest upon a couch of pink coral. The foamy waves which I set in motion
+when I sink into the deep shall be snow-white and fresh; they shall not
+be like the sooty froth which lies quivering at the river-side.'
+
+He immediately hurried home, had his horses harnessed and drove to
+Ostia. He knew that one of his father's ships was lying in the harbour
+ready to sail. Young Poppius drove his horses at a furious pace, and he
+succeeded in getting on board just as the anchor was being weighed. Of
+course he did not think it necessary to take any baggage with him. He
+did not even trouble to ask the skipper for what place the craft was
+bound. To the sea they were going, in any case--that was enough for him.
+
+Nor was it very long before the young suicide reached the goal of his
+desire. The trirema passed the mouth of the Tiber, and the Mediterranean
+lay before Silvius Antonius, its sparkling waves bathed in sun. Its
+beauty made Silvius Antonius believe in the poet's assertion that the
+swelling ocean is but a thin veil which covers the most beautiful world.
+He felt bound to believe that he who boldly makes his way through this
+cover will immediately reach the sea-god's palace of pearls. The young
+man congratulated himself that he had chosen this manner of death. And
+one could scarcely call it that; it was impossible to believe that this
+beautiful water could kill. It was only the shortest road to a land
+where pleasure is not a delusion, leaving nothing but distaste and
+loathing. He could only with difficulty suppress his eagerness. But the
+whole deck was full of sailors. Even Silvius could understand that if he
+now sprang into the sea the consequence would simply be that one of his
+father's sailors would quickly spring overboard and fish him out.
+
+As soon as the sails were set and the oarsmen were well in swing, the
+skipper came up to him and saluted him with the greatest politeness.
+
+'You intend, then, to go with me to Germany, my Silvius?' he said. 'You
+do me great honour.'
+
+Young Poppius suddenly remembered that this man used never to return
+from a voyage without bringing him some curious thing or other from the
+barbarous countries he had visited. Sometimes it was a couple of pieces
+of wood with which the savages made fire; sometimes it was the black
+horn of an ox, which they used as a drinking-vessel; sometimes a
+necklace of bear's teeth, which had been a great chief's mark of
+distinction.
+
+The good man beamed with joy at having his master's son on board his
+ship. He saw in it a new proof of the wisdom of old Poppius, in sending
+his son to distant lands, instead of letting him waste more time amongst
+the effeminate young Roman idlers.
+
+Young Poppius did not wish to undeceive him. He was afraid that if he
+disclosed his intention the skipper would at once turn back with him.
+
+'Verily, Galenus,' he said, 'I would gladly accompany you on this
+voyage, but I fear I must ask you to put me ashore at Bajæ. I made up my
+mind too late. I have neither clothes nor money.'
+
+But Galenus assured him that that need was soon remedied. Was he not
+upon his father's well-appointed vessel? He should not want for
+anything--neither warm fur tunic when the weather was cold, or light
+Syrian clothing of the kind that seamen wear when they cruise in fair
+weather in the friendly seas between the islands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Three months after their departure from Ostia, Galenus's trirema rowed
+in amongst a cluster of rocky islands. Neither the skipper nor any of
+his crew were quite clear as to where they really were, but they were
+glad to take shelter for a time from the storms that raged on the open
+sea.
+
+One could almost think that Silvius Antonius was right in his belief
+that some deity persecuted him. No one on the ship had ever before
+experienced such a voyage. The luckless sailors said to each other that
+they had not had fair weather for two days since they left Ostia. The
+one storm had followed upon the other. They had undergone the most
+terrible sufferings. They had suffered hunger and thirst, whilst they,
+day and night, exhausted and almost fainting from want of sleep, had had
+to manage sails and oars. The fact of the seamen being unable to trade
+had added to their despondency. How could they approach the coast and
+display their wares on the shore to effect an exchange in such weather?
+On the contrary, every time they saw the coast appear through the
+obstinate heavy mist that surrounded them, they had been compelled to
+put out to sea again for fear of the foam-decked rocks. One night, when
+they struck on a rock, they had been obliged to throw the half of their
+cargo into the sea. And as for the other half, they dared not think
+about it, as they feared it was completely spoiled by the breakers
+which had rolled over the ship.
+
+Certain it was that Silvius Antonius had proved himself not to be lucky
+at sea either. Silvius Antonius was still living; he had not drowned
+himself. It is difficult to say why he prolonged an existence which
+could not be of any more pleasure to him now than when he first made up
+his mind to cut it short. Perhaps he had hoped that the sea would have
+taken possession of him without he himself doing anything to bring it
+about. Perhaps his love for the sea had passed away during its bursts of
+anger; perhaps he had resolved to die in the opal-green perfumed water
+of his bath.
+
+But had Galenus and his men known why the young man had come on board,
+they would assuredly have bitterly complained that he had not carried
+out his intention, for they were all convinced that it was his presence
+which had called forth their misfortunes. Many a dark night Galenus had
+feared that the sailors would throw him into the sea. More than one of
+them related that in the terrible stormy nights he had seen dark hands
+stretching out of the water, grasping after the ship. And they did not
+think it was necessary to cast lots to find out who it was that these
+hands wanted to draw down into the deep. Both the skipper and the crew
+did Silvius Antonius the special honour to think that it was for his
+sake these storms rent the air and scourged the sea.
+
+If Silvius during this time had behaved like a man, if he had taken his
+share of their work and anxiety, then perhaps some of his companions
+might have had pity upon him as a being who had brought upon himself the
+wrath of the gods. But the young man had not understood how to win their
+sympathy. He had only thought of seeking shelter for himself from the
+wind, and of sending them to fetch furs and rugs from the stores for his
+protection from the cold.
+
+But for the moment all complaints over his presence had ceased. As soon
+as the storm had succeeded in driving the trirema into the quiet waters
+between the islands, its rage was spent. It behaved like a sheep-dog
+that becomes silent and keeps quiet as soon as it sees the sheep on the
+right way to the fold. The heavy clouds disappeared from the sky; the
+sun shone. For the first time during the voyage the sailors felt the
+joys of summer spreading over Nature.
+
+Upon these storm-beaten men the sunshine and the warmth had almost an
+intoxicating effect. Instead of longing for rest and sleep, they became
+as merry as happy children in the morning. They expected they would find
+a large continent behind all these rocks and boulders. They hoped to
+find people, and--who could tell?--on this foreign coast, which had
+probably never before been visited by a Roman ship, their wares would no
+doubt find a ready sale. In that case they might after all do some good
+business, and bring back with them skins of bear and elk, and large
+quantities of white wax and golden amber.
+
+Whilst the trirema slowly made its way between the rocks, which grew
+higher and higher and richer with verdure and trees, the crew made haste
+to decorate it so that it could attract the attention of the
+barbarians. The ship, which, even without any decoration, was a
+beautiful specimen of human handiwork, soon rivalled in splendour the
+most gorgeous bird. Recently tossed about by storms and ravaged by
+tempests, it now bore on its topmast a golden sceptre and sails striped
+with purple. In the bows a resplendent figure of Neptune was raised, and
+in the stern a tent of many-coloured silken carpets. And do not think
+the sailors neglected to hang the sides of the ship with rugs, the
+fringes of which trailed in the water, or to wind the long oars of the
+ship with golden ribbons. Neither did the crew of the ship wear the
+clothes they had worn during the voyage, and which the sea and the storm
+had done their best to destroy. They arrayed themselves in white
+garments, wound purple scarves round their waists, and placed glittering
+bands in their hair.
+
+Even Silvius Antonius roused himself from his apathy. It was as if he
+was glad of having at last found something to do which he thoroughly
+understood. He was shaved, had his hair trimmed, and his whole person
+rubbed over with fragrant scents. Then he put on a flowing robe, hung a
+mantle over his shoulders, and chose from the large casket of jewels
+which Galenus opened for him rings and bracelets, necklaces, and a
+golden belt. When he was ready he flung aside the purple curtains of the
+silken tent, and laid himself on a couch in the opening of the tent in
+order to be seen by the people on the shore.
+
+During these preparations the sea became narrower and narrower, and the
+sailors discovered that they were entering the mouth of a river. The
+water was fresh, and there was land on both sides. The trirema glided
+slowly onwards up the sparkling river. The weather was brilliant, and
+the whole of nature was gloriously peaceful. And how the magnificent
+merchantman enlivened the great solitude!
+
+On both sides of the river primeval forests, high and thick, met their
+view. Pine-trees grew right to the water's edge. The river in its
+eternal course had washed away the earth from the roots, and the hearts
+of the seamen were moved with solemn awe at the sight, not only of these
+venerable trees, but even more by that of the naked roots, which
+resembled the mighty limbs of a giant. 'Here,' they thought, 'man will
+never succeed in planting corn; here the ground will never be cleared
+for the building of a city, or even a farmstead. For miles round the
+earth is woven through with this network of roots, hard as steel. This
+alone is sufficient to make the dominion of the forest everlasting and
+unchangeable.'
+
+Along the river the trees grew so close, and their branches were so
+entangled, that they formed firm, impenetrable walls. These walls of
+prickly firs were so strong and high that no fortified city need wish
+for stronger defences. But here and there there was, all the same, an
+opening in this wall of firs. It was the paths the wild beasts had made
+on their way to the river to drink. Through these openings the strangers
+could obtain a glimpse of the interior of the forest. They had never
+seen anything like it. In sunless twilight there grew trees with trunks
+of greater circumference than the gate-towers on the walls of Rome.
+There was a multitude of trees, fighting with each other for light and
+air. Trees strove and struggled, trees were crippled and weighed down by
+other trees. Trees took root in the branches of other trees. Trees
+strove and fought as if they had been human beings.
+
+But if man or beast moved in this world of trees they must have other
+modes of making their way than those which the Romans knew, for from the
+ground right up to the top of the forest was a network of stiff bare
+branches. From these branches fluttered long tangles of gray lichen,
+transforming the trees into weird beings with hair and beard. And
+beneath them the ground was covered with rotten and rotting trunks, and
+one's feet would have sunk into the decayed wood as into melting snow.
+
+The forest sent forth a fragrance which had a drowsy effect upon the men
+on board the ship. It was the strong odour of resin and wild honey that
+blended with the sickly smell from the decayed wood, and from
+innumerable gigantic red and yellow mushrooms.
+
+There was no doubt something awe-inspiring in all this, but it was also
+elevating to see nature in all its power before man had yet interfered
+with its dominion. It was not long before one of the sailors began to
+sing a hymn to the God of the Forest, and involuntarily the whole crew
+joined in. They had quite given up all thought of meeting human beings
+in this forest-world. Their hearts were filled with pious thoughts;
+they thought of the forest god and his nymphs. They said to themselves
+that when Pan was driven from the woods of Hellas he must have taken
+refuge here in the far north. With pious songs they entered his kingdom.
+
+Every time there was a pause in the song they heard a gentle music from
+the forest. The tops of the fir-trees, vibrating in the noonday heat,
+sang and played. The sailors often discontinued their song in order to
+listen, if Pan was not playing upon his flute.
+
+The oarsmen rowed slower and slower. The sailors gazed searchingly into
+the golden-green and black-violet water flowing under the fir-trees.
+They peered between the tall reeds which quivered and rustled in the
+wash of the ship. They were in such a state of expectation that they
+started at the sight of the white water-lilies that shone in the dark
+water between the reeds.
+
+And again they sang the song, 'Pan, thou ruler of the forest!' They had
+given up all thoughts of trading. They felt that they stood at the
+entrance to the dwelling of the gods. All earthly cares had left them.
+Then, all of a sudden, at the outlet of one of the tracks, there stood
+an elk, a royal deer with broad forehead and a forest of antlers on its
+horns.
+
+There was a breathless silence on the trirema. They stemmed the oars to
+slacken speed. Silvius Antonius arose from his purple couch.
+
+All eyes were fixed upon the elk. They thought they could discern that
+it carried something on its back, but the darkness of the forest and
+the drooping branches made it impossible to see distinctly.
+
+The huge animal stood for a long time and scented the air, with its
+muzzle turned towards the trirema. At last it seemed to understand that
+there was no danger. It made a step towards the water. Behind the broad
+horns one could now discern more distinctly something light and white.
+They wondered if the elk carried on its back a harvest of wild roses.
+
+The crew gently plied their oars. The trirema drew nearer to the animal,
+which gradually moved towards the edge of the reeds.
+
+The elk strode slowly into the water, put down its feet carefully, so as
+not to be caught by the roots at the bottom. Behind the horns one could
+now distinctly see the face of a maiden, surrounded by fair hair. The
+elk carried on its back one of those nymphs whom they had been
+expectantly awaiting, and whom they felt sure would be found in this
+primeval world.
+
+A holy enthusiasm filled the men on the trirema. One of them, who hailed
+from Sicily, remembered a song which he had heard in his youth, when he
+played on the flowery plains around Syracuse. He began to sing softly:
+
+ 'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name,
+ Thou who in sheltered wood wanders, white like the moon.'
+
+And when the weather-beaten men understood the words, they tried to
+subdue the storm-like roar in their voices in order to sing:
+
+ 'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name.'
+
+They steered the ship nearer and nearer the reeds. They did not heed
+that it had already once or twice touched the bottom.
+
+But the young forest maiden sat and played hide-and-seek between the
+horns. One moment she hid herself, the next she peeped out. She did not
+stop the elk; she drove it further into the river.
+
+When the elk had gone some little distance, she stroked it to make it
+stop. Then she bent down and gathered two or three water-lilies. The men
+on the ship looked a little foolishly at each other. The nymph had,
+then, come solely for the purpose of plucking the white water-lilies
+that rocked on the waters of the river. She had not come for the sake of
+the Roman seamen.
+
+Then Silvius Antonius drew a ring from off his finger, sent up a shout
+that made the nymph look up, and threw her the ring. She stretched out
+her hand and caught it. Her eyes sparkled. She stretched out her hands
+for more. Silvius Antonius again threw a ring.
+
+Then she flung the water-lilies back into the river and drove the elk
+further into the water. Now and again she stopped, but then a ring came
+flying from Silvius Antonius, and enticed her further.
+
+All at once she overcame her hesitation. The colour rose in her cheeks.
+She came nearer to the ship without it being necessary to tempt her. The
+water was already up to the shoulders of the elk. She came right under
+the side of the vessel.
+
+The sailors hung over the gunwales to help the beautiful nymph, should
+she wish to go on board the trirema.
+
+But she saw only Silvius Antonius, as he stood there, decked with pearls
+and rings, and fair as the sunrise. And when the young Roman saw that
+the eyes of the nymph were fastened upon him, he leant over even further
+than the others. They cried to him that he should take care, lest he
+should lose his balance and fall into the sea. But this warning came too
+late. It is not known whether the nymph, with a quick movement, drew
+Silvius Antonius to her, or how it really happened, but before anyone
+thought of grasping him, he was overboard.
+
+All the same, there was no danger of Silvius Antonius drowning. The
+nymph stretched forth her lovely arms and caught him in them. He hardly
+touched the surface of the water. At the same moment her steed turned,
+rushed through the water, and disappeared in the forest. And loudly rang
+the laugh of the wild rider as she carried off Silvius Antonius.
+
+Galenus and his men stood for a moment horror-stricken. Then some of the
+men involuntarily threw off their clothes to swim to the shore; but
+Galenus stopped them.
+
+'Without doubt this is the will of the gods,' he said. 'Now we see the
+reason why they have brought Silvius Antonius Poppius through a thousand
+storms to this unknown land. Let us be glad that we have been an
+instrument in their hands; and let us not seek to hinder their will.'
+
+The seamen obediently took their oars and rowed down the river, softly
+singing to their even stroke the song of Arethusa's flight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When one has finished this story, surely the stranger must be able to
+understand the inscription on the old stone. He must be able to see both
+the elk with its many-antlered horns, and the trirema with its long
+oars. One does not expect that he shall be able to see Silvius Antonius
+Poppius and the beautiful queen of the primeval forest, for in order to
+see them he must have the eyes of the relaters of fairy-tales of bygone
+days. He will understand that the inscription hales from the young Roman
+himself, and that this also applies to the whole of the old story.
+Silvius Antonius has handed it down to his descendants word for word. He
+knew that it would gladden their hearts to know that they sprang from
+the world-famed Romans.
+
+But the stranger, of course, need not believe that any of Pan's nymphs
+have wandered here by the river's side. He understands quite well that a
+tribe of wild men have wandered about in the primeval forest, and that
+the rider of the elk was the daughter of the King who ruled over these
+people; and that the maiden who carried off Silvius Antonius would only
+rob him of his jewels, and that she did not at all think of Silvius
+Antonius himself, scarcely knew, perhaps, that he was a human being like
+herself. And the stranger can also understand that the name of Silvius
+Antonius would have been forgotten long ago in this country had he
+remained the fool he was. He will hear how misfortune and want roused
+the young Roman, so that from being the despised slave of the wild men
+he became their King. It was he who attacked the forest with fire and
+steel. He erected the first firmly-timbered house. He built vessels and
+planted corn. He laid the foundation of the power and glory of great
+Kungahälla.
+
+And when the stranger hears this, he looks around the country with a
+more contented glance than before. For even if the site of the city has
+been turned into fields and meadows, and even if the river no longer
+boasts of busy craft, still, this is the ground that has enabled him to
+breathe the air of the land of dreams, and shown him visions of bygone
+days.
+
+
+
+
+SIGRID STORRÄDE
+
+
+Once upon a time there was an exceedingly beautiful spring. It was the
+very spring that the Swedish Queen Sigrid Storräde summoned the
+Norwegian King Olaf Trygveson to meet her at Kungahälla in order to
+settle about their marriage.
+
+It was strange that King Olaf would marry Queen Sigrid; for although she
+was fair and well-gifted, she was a wicked heathen, whilst King Olaf was
+a Christian, who thought of nothing but building churches and compelling
+the people to be baptized. But maybe the King thought that God the
+Almighty would convert her.
+
+But it was even more strange that when Storräde had announced to King
+Olaf's messenger that she would set out for Kungahälla as soon as the
+sea was no longer ice-bound, spring should come almost immediately. Cold
+and snow disappeared at the time when winter is usually at its height.
+And when Storräde made known that she would begin to equip her ships,
+the ice vanished from the fjords, the meadows became green, and although
+it was yet a long time to Lady-day, the cattle could already be put out
+to grass.
+
+When the Queen rowed between the rocks of East Gothland into the Baltic,
+she heard the cuckoo's song, although it was so early in the year that
+one could scarcely expect to hear the lark.
+
+And great joy prevailed everywhere when Storräde proceeded on her way.
+All the trolls who had been obliged to flee from Norway during King
+Olaf's reign because they could not bear the sound of the church bells
+came on the rocks when they saw Storräde sailing past. They pulled up
+young birch-trees by the roots and waved them to the Queen, and then
+they went back to their rocky dwellings, where their wives were sitting,
+full of longing and anxiety, and said:
+
+'Woman, thou shalt not be cast down any longer. Storräde is now sailing
+to King Olaf. Now we shall soon return to Norway.'
+
+When the Queen sailed past Kullen, the Kulla troll came out of his cave,
+and he made the black mountain open, so that she saw the gold and silver
+veins which twisted through it, and it made the Queen happy to see his
+riches.
+
+When Storräde went past the Holland rivers, the Nixie came down from his
+waterfall, swam right out to the mouth of the river, and played upon his
+harp, so that the ship danced upon the waves.
+
+When she sailed past the Nidinge rocks, the mermen lay there and blew
+upon their seashell horns, and made the water splash in frothy pillars.
+And when the wind was against them, the most loathsome trolls came out
+of the deep to help Storräde's ship over the waves. Some lay at the
+stern and pushed, others took ropes of seaweed in their mouth and
+harnessed themselves before the ship like horses.
+
+The wild heathen, whom King Olaf would not allow to remain in the
+country on account of their great wickedness, came rowing towards the
+Queen's ship, with sails furled, and with their pole-axes raised as if
+for attack. But when they recognised the Queen, they allowed her to pass
+unhurt, and shouted after her:
+
+'We empty a beaker to thy wedding, Storräde.'
+
+All the heathen who lived along the coast laid firewood upon their stone
+altars, and sacrificed both sheep and goats to the old gods, in order
+that they should aid Storräde in her expedition to the Norwegian King.
+
+When the Queen sailed up the northern river, a mermaid swam alongside
+the ship, stretched her white arm out of the water, and gave her a large
+clear pearl.
+
+'Wear this, Storräde,' she said; 'then King Olaf will be so bewitched by
+thy beauty that he will never be able to forget thee.'
+
+When the Queen had sailed a short distance up the river, she heard such
+a roar and such a rushing noise that she expected to find a waterfall.
+The further she proceeded, the louder grew the noise. But when she rowed
+past the Golden Isle, and passed into a broad bay, she saw at the
+riverside the great Kungahälla.
+
+The town was so large, that as far as she could see up the river there
+was house after house, all imposing and well timbered, with many
+outhouses. Narrow lanes between the gray wooden walls led down to the
+river; there were large courtyards before the dwelling-houses,
+well-laid pathways went from each house down to its boathouse and
+landing-stage.
+
+Storräde commanded her men to row quite slowly. She herself stood on the
+poop of the ship and looked towards the shore.
+
+'Never before have I seen the like of this,' she said.
+
+She now understood that the roar she had heard was nothing but the noise
+of the work which went on at Kungahälla in the spring, when the ships
+were being made ready for their long cruises. She heard the smiths
+hammering with huge sledge-hammers, the baker's shovel clattered in the
+ovens; beams were hoisted on to heavy lighters with much crashing noise;
+young men planed oars and stripped the bark from the trees which were to
+be used for masts.
+
+She saw green courtyards, where handmaidens were twining ropes for the
+seafaring men, and where old men sat mending the gray wadmal sails. She
+saw the boat-builders tarring the new boats. Enormous nails were driven
+into strong oaken planks. The hulls of the ships were hauled out of the
+boathouses to be tightened; old ships were done up with freshly-painted
+dragon-heads; goods were stowed away; people took a hurried leave of
+each other; heavily-filled ships' chests were carried on board. Ships
+that were ready to sail left the shore. Storräde saw that the vessels
+rowing up the river were heavily laden with herrings and salt, but those
+making for the open sea were laden high up the masts with costly oak
+timber, hides, and skins.
+
+When the Queen saw all this she laughed with joy. She thought that she
+would willingly marry King Olaf in order to rule over such a city.
+Storräde rowed up to the King's Landing-Stage. There King Olaf stood
+ready to receive her, and when she advanced to meet him he thought that
+she was the fairest woman he had ever seen.
+
+They then proceeded to the King's Hall, and there was great harmony and
+friendship between them. When they went to table Storräde laughed and
+talked the whole time the Bishop was saying grace, and the King laughed
+and talked also, because he saw that it pleased Storräde. When the meal
+was finished, and they all folded their hands to listen to the Bishop's
+prayer, Storräde began to tell the King about her riches. She continued
+doing this as long as the prayer lasted, and the King listened to
+Storräde, and not to the Bishop.
+
+The King placed Storräde in the seat of honour, whilst he sat at her
+feet; and Storräde told him how she had caused two minor kings to be
+burnt to death for having had the presumption to woo her. The King was
+glad at hearing this, and thought that all minor kings who had the
+audacity to woo a woman like Storräde should share the same fate.
+
+When the bells rang for Evensong, the King rose to go to the Marie
+Church to pray, as was his wont. But then Storräde called for her bard,
+and he sang the lay of Brynhild Budles-dotter, who caused Sigurd
+Fofnersbane to be slain; and King Olaf did not go to church, but instead
+sat and looked into Storräde's radiant eyes, under the thick, black,
+arched eyebrows; and he understood that Storräde was Brynhild, and that
+she would kill him if ever he forsook her. He also thought that she was
+no doubt a woman who would be willing to burn on the pile with him. And
+whilst the priests were saying Mass and praying in the Marie Church at
+Kungahälla, King Olaf sat thinking that he would ride to Valhalla with
+Sigrid Storräde before him on the horse.
+
+That night the ferryman who conveyed people over the Göta River was
+busier than he had ever been before. Time after time he was called to
+the other side, but when he crossed over there was never anybody to be
+seen. But all the same he heard steps around him, and the boat was so
+full that it was nearly sinking. He rowed the whole night backwards and
+forwards, and did not know what it could all mean. But in the morning
+the whole shore was full of small footprints, and in the footprints the
+ferryman found small withered leaves, which on closer examination proved
+to be pure gold, and he understood they were the Brownies and Dwarfs who
+had fled from Norway when it became a Christian country, and who had now
+come back again. And the giant who lived in the Fortin mountain right to
+the east of Kungahälla threw one big stone after the other at the Marie
+Church the whole night through; and had not the giant been so strong
+that all the stones went too far and fell down at Hisingen, on the other
+side of the river, a great disaster would assuredly have happened.
+
+Every morning King Olaf was in the habit of going to Mass, but the day
+Storräde was at Kungahälla he thought he had not the time. As soon as he
+arose, he at once wanted to go down to the harbour, where her ship lay,
+in order to ask her if she would drink the wedding-cup with him before
+eventide.
+
+The Bishop had caused the bells to be rung the whole morning, and when
+the King left the King's Hall, and went across the Market Place, the
+church doors were thrown open, and beautiful singing was heard from
+within. But the King went on as if he had not heard anything. The Bishop
+ordered the bells to be stopped, the singing ceased, and the candles
+were extinguished.
+
+It all happened so suddenly that the King involuntarily stopped and
+looked towards the church, and it seemed to him that the church was more
+insignificant than he had ever before thought. It was smaller than the
+houses in the town; the peat roof hung heavily over its low walls
+without windows; the door was low, with a small projecting roof covered
+with fir-bark.
+
+Whilst the King stood thinking, a slender young woman came out of the
+dark church door. She wore a red robe and a blue mantle, and she bore in
+her arms a child with fair locks. Her dress was poor, and yet it seemed
+to the King that he had never before seen a more noble-looking woman.
+She was tall, dignified, and fair of face.
+
+The King saw with emotion that the young woman pressed the child close
+to her, and carried it with such care, that one could see it was the
+most precious thing she possessed in the world.
+
+As the woman stood in the doorway she turned her gentle face round and
+looked back, looked into the poor, dark little church with great longing
+in look and mien. When she again turned round towards the Market Place
+there were tears in her eyes. But just as she was about to step over the
+threshold into the Market Place her courage failed her. She leant
+against the doorposts and looked at the child with a troubled glance, as
+if to say:
+
+'Where in all the wide world shall we find a roof over our heads?'
+
+The King stood immovable, and looked at the homeless woman. What touched
+him the most was to see the child, who lay in her arms free from sorrow,
+stretch out his hand with a flower towards her, as if to win a smile
+from her. And then he saw she tried to drive away the sorrow from her
+face and smile at her son.
+
+'Who can that woman be?' thought the King. 'It seems to me that I have
+seen her before. She is undoubtedly a high-born woman who is in
+trouble.'
+
+However great a hurry the King was in to go to Storräde, he could not
+take his eyes away from the woman. It seemed to him that he had seen
+these tender eyes and this gentle face before, but where, he could not
+call to mind. The woman still stood in the church door, as if she could
+not tear herself away. Then the King went up to her and asked:
+
+'Why art thou so sorrowful?'
+
+'I am turned out of my home,' answered the woman, pointing to the little
+dark church.
+
+The King thought she meant that she had taken refuge in the church
+because she had no other place to go to. He again asked:
+
+'Who hath turned thee out?'
+
+She looked at him with an unutterably sorrowful glance.
+
+'Dost thou not know?' she asked.
+
+But then the King turned away from her. He had no time to stand guessing
+riddles, he thought. It appeared as if the woman meant that it was he
+who had turned her out. He did not understand what she could mean.
+
+The King went on quickly. He went down to the King's Landing-Stage,
+where Storräde's ship was lying. At the harbour the Queen's servants met
+the King. Their clothes were braided with gold, and they wore silver
+helmets on their heads.
+
+Storräde stood on her ship looking towards Kungahälla, rejoicing in its
+power and wealth. She looked at the city as if she already regarded
+herself as its Queen. But when the King saw Storräde, he thought at once
+of the gentle woman who, poor and sorrowful, had been turned out of the
+church.
+
+'What is this?' he thought. 'It seems to me as if she were fairer than
+Storräde.'
+
+When Storräde greeted him with smiles, he thought of the tears that
+sparkled in the eyes of the other woman. The face of the strange woman
+was so clear to King Olaf that he could not help comparing it, feature
+for feature, with Storräde's. And when he did that all Storräde's
+beauty vanished. He saw that Storräde's eyes were cruel and her mouth
+sensual. In each of her features he saw a sin. He could still see she
+was beautiful, but he no longer took pleasure in her countenance. He
+began to loathe her as if she were a beautiful poisonous snake.
+
+When the Queen saw the King come a victorious smile passed over her
+lips.
+
+'I did not expect thee so early, King Olaf,' she said. 'I thought thou
+wast at Mass.'
+
+The King felt an irresistible inclination to contradict Storräde, and do
+everything she did not want.
+
+'Mass has not yet begun,' he said. 'I have come to ask thee to go with
+me to the house of my God.'
+
+When the King said this he saw an angry look in Storräde's eyes, but she
+continued to smile.
+
+'Rather come to me on my ship,' she said, 'and I will show thee the
+presents I have brought for thee.'
+
+She took up a sword inlaid with gold, as if to tempt him; but the King
+thought all the time that he could see the other woman at her side, and
+it appeared to him that Storräde stood amongst her treasures like a foul
+dragon.
+
+'Answer me first,' said the King, 'if thou wilt go with me to church.'
+
+'What have I to do in thy church?' she asked mockingly.
+
+Then she saw that the King's brow darkened, and she perceived that he
+was not of the same mind as the day before. She immediately changed her
+manner, and became gentle and submissive.
+
+'Go thou to church as much as thou likest, even if I do not go. There
+shall be no discord between us on that account.'
+
+The Queen came down from the ship and went up to the King. She held in
+her hand a sword and a mantle trimmed with fur which she would give him.
+But in the same moment the King happened to look towards the harbour. At
+some distance he saw the other woman; her head was bowed, and she walked
+with weary steps, but she still bore the child in her arms.
+
+'What art thou looking so eagerly after, King Olaf?' Storräde asked.
+
+Then the other woman turned round and looked at the King, and as she
+looked at him it appeared to him as if a ring of golden light surrounded
+her head and that of the child, more beautiful than the crown of any
+King or Queen. Then she immediately turned round and walked again
+towards the town, and he saw her no more.
+
+'What art thou looking so eagerly after?' again asked Storräde.
+
+But when King Olaf now turned to the Queen she appeared to him old and
+ugly, and full of the world's sin and wickedness, and he was terrified
+at the thought that he might have fallen into her snares.
+
+He had taken off his glove to give her his hand; but he now took the
+glove and threw it in her face instead.
+
+'I will not own thee, foul woman and heathen dog that thou art!' he
+said.
+
+Then Storräde drew backwards. But she soon regained the command over
+herself, and answered:
+
+'That blow may prove thy destruction, King Olaf Trygveson.'
+
+And she was white as Hél when she turned away from him and went on board
+her ship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next night King Olaf had a strange dream. What he saw in his dream was
+not the earth, but the bottom of the sea. It was a grayish-green field,
+over which there were many fathoms of water. He saw fish swimming after
+their prey; he saw ships gliding past on the surface of the water, like
+dark clouds; and he saw the disc of the sun, dull as a pale moon.
+
+Then he saw the woman he had seen at the church-door wandering along the
+bottom of the sea. She had the same stooping gait and the same worn
+garments as when he first saw her, and her face was still sorrowful. But
+as she wandered along the bottom of the sea the water divided before
+her. He saw that it rose into pillars, as if in deep reverence, forming
+itself into arches, so that she walked in the most glorious temple.
+
+Suddenly the King saw that the water which surrounded the woman began to
+change colour. The pillars and the arches first became pale pink; but
+they soon assumed a darker colour. The whole sea around was also red, as
+if it had been changed into blood.
+
+At the bottom of the sea, where the woman walked, the King saw broken
+swords and arrows, and bows and spears in pieces. At first there were
+not many, but the longer she walked in the red water the more closely
+they were heaped together.
+
+The King saw with emotion that the woman went to one side in order not
+to tread upon a dead man who lay stretched upon the bed of green
+seaweed. The man, who had a deep cut in his head, wore a coat of mail,
+and had a sword in his hand. It seemed to the King that the woman closed
+her eyes so as not to see the dead man. She moved towards a fixed goal
+without hesitation or doubt. But he who dreamt could not turn his eyes
+away.
+
+He saw the bottom of the sea covered with wreckage. He saw heavy
+anchors, thick ropes twined about like snakes, ships with their sides
+riven asunder; golden dragon-heads from the bows of ships stared at him
+with red, threatening eyes.
+
+'I should like to know who has fought a battle here and left all this as
+a prey to destruction,' thought the dreamer.
+
+Everywhere he saw dead men. They were hanging on the ships' sides, or
+had sunk into the green seaweed. But he did not give himself time to
+look at them, for his eyes were obliged to follow the woman, who
+continued to walk onwards.
+
+At last the King saw her stop at the side of a dead man. He was clothed
+in a red mantle, had a bright helmet on his head, a shield on his arm,
+and a naked sword in his hand.
+
+The woman bent over him and whispered to him, as if awaking someone
+sleeping:
+
+'King Olaf! King Olaf!'
+
+Then he who was dreaming saw that the man at the bottom of the sea was
+himself. He could distinctly see that he was the dead man.
+
+As the dead did not move, the woman knelt by his side and whispered into
+his ear:
+
+'Now Storräde hath sent her fleet against thee and avenged herself. Dost
+thou repent what thou hast done, King Olaf?'
+
+And again she asked:
+
+'Now thou sufferest the bitterness of death because thou hast chosen me
+instead of Storräde. Dost thou repent? dost thou repent?'
+
+Then at last the dead opened his eyes, and the woman helped him to rise.
+He leant upon her shoulder, and she walked slowly away with him.
+
+Again King Olaf saw her wander and wander, through night and day, over
+sea and land. At last it seemed to him that they had gone further than
+the clouds and higher than the stars. Now they entered a garden, where
+the earth shone as light and the flowers were clear as dewdrops.
+
+The King saw that when the woman entered the garden she raised her head,
+and her step grew lighter. When they had gone a little further into the
+garden her garments began to shine. He saw that they became, as of
+themselves, bordered with golden braid, and coloured with the hues of
+the rainbow. He saw also that a halo surrounded her head that cast a
+light over her countenance.
+
+But the slain man who leant upon her shoulder raised his head, and
+asked:
+
+'Who art thou?'
+
+'Dost thou not know, King Olaf?' she answered; and an infinite majesty
+and glory encompassed her.
+
+But in the dream King Olaf was filled with a great joy because he had
+chosen to serve the gentle Queen of Heaven. It was a joy so great that
+he had never before felt the like of it, and it was so strong that it
+awoke him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When King Olaf awoke his face was bathed in tears, and he lay with his
+hands folded in prayer.
+
+
+
+
+ASTRID
+
+
+I
+
+In the midst of the low buildings forming the old Castle of the Kings at
+Upsala towered the Ladies' Bower. It was built on poles, like a
+dovecote. The staircase leading up to it was as steep as a ladder, and
+one entered it by a very low door. The walls inside were covered with
+runes, signifying love and longing; the sills of the small loopholes
+were worn by the maidens leaning on their elbows and looking down into
+the courtyard.
+
+Old Hjalte, the bard, had been a guest at the King's Castle for some
+time, and he went up every day to the Ladies' Bower to see Princess
+Ingegerd, and talk with her about Olaf Haraldsson, the King of Norway,
+and every time Hjalte came Ingegerd's bondwoman Astrid sat and listened
+to his words with as much pleasure as the Princess. And whilst Hjalte
+talked, both the maidens listened so eagerly that they let their hands
+fall in their laps and their work rest.
+
+Anyone seeing them would not think much spinning or weaving could be
+done in the Ladies' Bower. No one would have thought that they gathered
+all Hjalte's words as if they were silken threads, and that each of his
+listeners made from them her own picture of King Olaf. No one could
+know that in their thoughts they wove the Bard's words each into her own
+radiant picture.
+
+But so it was. And the Princess's picture was so beautiful that every
+time she saw it before her she felt as if she must fall on her knees and
+worship it. For she saw the King sitting on his throne, crowned and
+great; she saw a red, gold-embroidered mantle hanging from his shoulders
+to his feet. She saw no sword in his hand, but holy writings; and she
+also saw that his throne was supported by a chained troll. His face
+shone for her, white like wax, surrounded by long, soft locks, and his
+eyes beamed with piety and peace. Oh, she became nearly afraid when she
+saw the almost superhuman strength that shone from that pale face. She
+understood that King Olaf was not only a King, she saw that he was a
+saint, and the equal of the angels.
+
+But quite different was the picture which Astrid had made of the King.
+The fair-haired bondwoman, who had experienced both hunger and cold and
+suffered much hardship, but who all the same was the one who filled the
+Ladies' Bower with merriment and laughter, had in her mind an entirely
+different picture of the King. She could not help that every time she
+heard him spoken about she saw before her the wood-cutter's son who at
+eventide came out of the wood with the axe over his shoulder.
+
+'I can see thee--I can see thee so well,' Astrid said to the picture, as
+if it were a living being. 'Tall thou art not, but broad of shoulders
+and light and agile, and because thou hast walked about in the dark
+forest the whole long summer day thou takest the last few steps in one
+spring, and laughest when thou reachest the road. Then thy white teeth
+shine, and thy hair flies about, and that I love to see. I can see thee;
+thou hast a fair, ruddy face and freckles on thy nose, and thou hast
+blue eyes, which become dark and stern in the deep forest; but when thou
+comest so far that thou seest the valley and thy home, they become light
+and gentle. As soon as thou seest thine own hut down in the valley, thou
+raisest thy cap for a greeting, and then I see thy forehead. Is not that
+forehead befitting a King? Should not that broad forehead be able to
+wear both crown and helmet?'
+
+But however different these two pictures were, one thing is certain:
+just as much as the Princess loved the holy picture she had conjured
+forth, so did the poor bondwoman love the bold swain whom she saw coming
+from the depths of the forest to meet her.
+
+And had Hjalte the Bard been able to see these pictures he would have
+assuredly praised them both. He would assuredly have said that they both
+were like the King. For that is King Olaf's good fortune, he would have
+been sure to say, that he is a fresh and merry swain at the same time
+that he is God's holy warrior. For old Hjalte loved King Olaf, and
+although he had wandered from court to court he had never been able to
+find his equal.
+
+'Where can I find anyone to make me forget Olaf Haraldsson?' he was
+wont to say. 'Where shall I find a greater hero?'
+
+Hjalte the Bard was a rough old man and severe of countenance. Old as he
+was, his hair was still black, he was dark of complexion, and his eyes
+were keen, and his song had always tallied with his appearance. His
+tongue never uttered other words than those of strife; he had never made
+other lays than songs of war.
+
+Old Hjalte's heart had hitherto been like the stony waste outside the
+wood-cutter's hut; it had been like a rocky plain, where only poor ferns
+and dry mugworts could grow. But now Hjalte's roving life had brought
+him to the Court at Upsala, and he had seen the Princess Ingegerd. He
+had seen that she was the noblest of all the women he had met in his
+life--in truth, the Princess was just as much fairer than all other
+women as King Olaf was greater than all other men.
+
+Then the thought suddenly arose within Hjalte that he would try to
+awaken love between the Swedish Princess and the Norwegian King. He
+asked himself why she, who was the best amongst women, should not be
+able to love King Olaf, the most glorious amongst men? And after that
+thought had taken root in Hjalte's heart he gave up making his stern
+war-songs. He gave up trying to win praise and honour from the rough
+warriors at the Court of Upsala, and sat for many hours with the women
+in the Ladies' Bower, and one would never have thought that it was
+Hjalte who spoke. One would never have believed that he possessed such
+soft and fair and gentle words which he now used in speaking about King
+Olaf.
+
+No one would have known Hjalte again; he was entirely transformed ever
+since the thought of the marriage had arisen within him. When the
+beautiful thought took root in Hjalte's soul, it was as if a blushing
+rose, with soft and fragrant petals, had sprung up in the midst of a
+wilderness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One day Hjalte sat with the Princess in the Ladies' Bower. All the
+maidens were absent except Astrid. Hjalte thought that now he had spoken
+long enough about Olaf Haraldsson. He had said all the fair words he
+could about him, but had it been of any avail? What did the Princess
+think of the King? Then he began to lay snares for the Princess to find
+out what she thought of King Olaf.
+
+'I can see from a look or a blush,' he thought.
+
+But the Princess was a high-born lady; she knew how to conceal her
+thoughts. She neither blushed nor smiled, neither did her eyes betray
+her. She would not let Hjalte divine what she thought.
+
+When the Bard looked into her noble face he was ashamed of himself.
+
+'She is too good for anyone to take her by stealth,' he said; 'one must
+meet her in open warfare.' So Hjalte said straight out: 'Daughter of a
+King, if Olaf Haraldsson asked thee in marriage of thy father, what
+wouldst thou answer?'
+
+Then the young Princess's face lit up, as does the face of a man when he
+reaches the mountain-top and discovers the ocean. Without hesitation she
+replied at once:
+
+'If he be such a King and such a Christian as thou sayest, Hjalte, then
+I consider it would be a great happiness.'
+
+But scarcely had she said this before the light faded from her eyes. It
+was as if a cloud rose between her and the beautiful far-off vision.
+
+'Oh, Hjalte,' she said, 'thou forgettest one thing. King Olaf is our
+enemy. It is war and not wooing we may expect from him.'
+
+'Do not let that trouble thee,' said Hjalte. 'If thou only wilt, all is
+well. I know King Olaf's mind in this matter.'
+
+The Bard was so glad that he laughed when he said this; but the Princess
+grew more and more sorrowful.
+
+'No,' she said, 'neither upon me nor King Olaf does it depend, but upon
+my father, Oluf Skötkonung, and you know that he hates Olaf Haraldsson,
+and cannot bear that anyone should even mention his name. Never will he
+let me leave my father's house with an enemy; never will he give his
+daughter to Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+When the Princess had said this, she laid aside all her pride and began
+to lament her fate.
+
+'Of what good is it that I have now learnt to know Olaf Haraldsson,' she
+said, 'that I dream of him every night, and long for him every day?
+Would it not have been better if thou hadst never come hither and told
+me about him?'
+
+When the Princess had spoken these words, her eyes filled with tears;
+but when Hjalte saw her tears, he lifted his hand fervent and eager.
+
+'God wills it,' he cried. 'Ye belong to one another. Strife must
+exchange its red mantle for the white robe of peace, that your happiness
+may give joy unto the earth.'
+
+When Hjalte had said this, the Princess bowed her head before God's holy
+name, and when she raised it, it was with a newly awakened hope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When old Hjalte stepped through the low door of the Ladies' Bower, and
+went down the narrow open corridor, Astrid followed him.
+
+'Hjalte,' she cried, 'why dost thou not ask me what I would answer if
+Olaf Haraldsson asked for my hand?'
+
+It was the first time Astrid had spoken to Hjalte; but Hjalte only cast
+a hurried glance at the fair bondwoman, whose golden hair curled on her
+temples and neck, who had the broadest bracelets and the heaviest
+ear-rings, whose dress was fastened with silken cords, and whose bodice
+was so embroidered with pearls that it was as stiff as armour, and went
+on without answering.
+
+'Why dost thou only ask Princess Ingegerd?' continued Astrid. 'Why dost
+thou not also ask me? Dost thou not know that I, too, am the Svea-King's
+daughter? Dost thou not know,' she continued, when Hjalte did not
+answer, 'that although my mother was a bondwoman, she was the bride of
+the King's youth? Dost thou not know that whilst she lived no one dared
+to remind her of her birth? Oh, Hjalte, dost thou not know that it was
+only after she was dead, when the King had taken to himself a Queen,
+that everyone remembered that she was a bondwoman? It was first after I
+had a stepmother that the King began to think I was not of free birth.
+But am I not a King's daughter, Hjalte, even if my father counts me for
+so little, that he has allowed me to fall into bondage? Am I not a
+King's daughter, even if my stepmother allowed me to go in rags, whilst
+my sister went in cloth of gold? Am I not a King's daughter, even if my
+stepmother has allowed me to tend the geese and taste the whip of the
+slave? And if I am a King's daughter, why dost thou not ask me whether I
+will wed Olaf Haraldsson? See, I have golden hair that shines round my
+head like the sun. See, I have sparkling eyes; I have roses in my
+cheeks. Why should not King Olaf woo me?'
+
+She followed Hjalte across the courtyard all the way to the King's Hall;
+but Hjalte took no more heed of her words than a warrior clad in armour
+heeds a boy throwing stones. He took no more notice of her words than if
+she had been a chattering magpie in the top of a tree.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No one must think that Hjalte contented himself with having won Ingegerd
+for his King. The next day the old Icelander summoned up his courage and
+spoke to Oluf Skötkonung about Olaf Haraldsson. But he hardly had time
+to say a word; the King interrupted him as soon as he mentioned the name
+of his foe. Hjalte saw that the Princess was right. He thought he had
+never before seen such bitter hatred.
+
+'But that marriage will take place all the same,' said Hjalte. 'It is
+the will of God--the will of God.'
+
+And it really seemed as if Hjalte were right. Two or three days later a
+messenger came from King Olaf of Norway to make peace with the Swedes.
+Hjalte sought the messenger, and told him that peace between the two
+countries could be most firmly established by a marriage taking place
+between Princess Ingegerd and Olaf Haraldsson.
+
+The King's messenger hardly thought that old Hjalte was the man to
+incline a young maiden's heart to a stranger; but he thought, all the
+same, that the plan was a good one; and he promised Hjalte that he would
+lay the proposal of the marriage before King Oluf Skötkonung at the
+great Winter Ting.
+
+Immediately afterwards Hjalte left Upsala. He went from farm to farm on
+the great plain; he went far into the forests; he went even to the
+borders of the sea. He never met either man or woman without speaking to
+them about Olaf Haraldsson and Princess Ingegerd. 'Hast thou ever heard
+of a greater man or of a fairer woman?' he said. 'It is assuredly the
+will of God that they shall wander through life together.'
+
+Hjalte came upon old Vikings, who wintered at the seashore, and who had
+formerly carried off women from every coast. He talked to them about the
+beautiful Princess until they sprang up and promised him, with their
+hand on the hilt of their sword, that they would do what they could to
+help her to happiness.
+
+Hjalte went to stubborn old peasants who had never listened to the
+prayers of their own daughters, but had given them in marriage as
+shrewdness, family honour, and advantage required, and he spoke to them
+so wisely about the peace between the two countries and the marriage
+that they swore they would rather deprive the King of his kingdom than
+that this marriage should not come to pass.
+
+But to the young women Hjalte spoke so many good words about Olaf
+Haraldsson that they vowed they would never look with kindly eyes at the
+swain who did not stand by the Norwegian King's messenger at the Ting
+and help to break down the King's opposition.
+
+Thus Hjalte went about talking to people until the Winter Ting should
+assemble, and all the people, along snow-covered roads, proceeded to the
+great Ting Hills at Upsala.
+
+When the Ting was opened, the eagerness of the people was so great that
+it seemed as if the stars would fall down from the sky were this
+marriage not decided upon. And although the King twice roughly said 'No'
+both to the peace and to the wooing, it was of no avail. It was of no
+avail that he would not hear the name of King Olaf mentioned. The people
+only shouted: 'We will not have war with Norway. We will that these two,
+who by all are accounted the greatest, shall wander through life
+together.'
+
+What could old Oluf Skötkonung do when the people rose against him with
+threats, strong words, and clashing of shields? What was he to do when
+he saw nothing but swords lifted and angry men before him? Was he not
+compelled to promise his daughter away if he would keep his life and his
+crown? Must he not swear to send the Princess to Kungahälla next summer
+to meet King Olaf there?
+
+In this way the whole people helped to further Ingegerd's love. But no
+one helped Astrid to the attainment of her happiness; no one asked her
+about her love. And yet it lived--it lived like the child of the poor
+fisherman's widow, in want and need; but all the same it grew, happily
+and hopefully. It grew and thrived, for in Astrid's soul there were, as
+at the sea, fresh air and light and breezy waves.
+
+
+II
+
+In the rich city of Kungahälla, far away at the border, was the old
+castle of the kings. It was surrounded by green ramparts. Huge stones
+stood as sentinels outside the gates, and in the courtyard grew an oak
+large enough to shelter under its branches all the King's henchmen.
+
+The whole space inside the ramparts was covered with long, low wooden
+houses. They were so old that grass grew on the ridges of the roofs. The
+beams in the walls were made from the thickest trees of the forest,
+silver-white with age.
+
+In the beginning of the summer Olaf Haraldsson came to Kungahälla, and
+he gathered together in the castle everything necessary for the
+celebration of his marriage. For several weeks peasants came crowding up
+the long street, bringing gifts: butter in tubs, cheese in sacks, hops
+and salt, roots and flour.
+
+After the gifts had been brought to the castle, there was a continual
+procession of wedding guests through the street. There were great men
+and women on side-saddles, with a numerous retinue of servants and
+serfs. Then came hosts of players and singers, and the reciters of the
+Sagas. Merchants came all the way from Venderland and Gardarike, to
+tempt the King with bridal gifts.
+
+When these processions for two whole weeks had filled the town with
+noise and bustle they only awaited the last procession, the bride's.
+
+But the bridal procession was long in coming. Every day they expected
+that she would come ashore at the King's Landing-Stage, and from there,
+headed by drum and fife, and followed by merry swains and serious
+priests, proceed up the street to the King's Castle. But the bride's
+procession came not.
+
+When the bride was so long in coming, everybody looked at King Olaf to
+see if he were uneasy. But the King always showed an undisturbed face.
+
+'If it be the will of God,' the King said, 'that I shall possess this
+fair woman, she will assuredly come.'
+
+And the King waited, whilst the grass fell for the scythe, and the
+cornflowers blossomed in the rye. The King still waited when the flax
+was pulled up, and the hops ripened on the poles. He was still waiting,
+when the bramble blackened on the mountain-side, and the nip reddened
+on the naked branch of the hawthorn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hjalte had spent the whole summer at Kungahälla waiting for the
+marriage. No one awaited the arrival of the Princess more eagerly than
+he did. He assuredly awaited her with greater longing and anxiety than
+even King Olaf himself.
+
+Hjalte no longer felt at his ease with the warriors in the King's Hall.
+But lower down the river there was a landing-stage where the women of
+Kungahälla were wont to assemble to see the last of their husbands and
+sons, when they sailed for distant lands. Here they were also in the
+habit of gathering during the summer, to watch for the vessels coming up
+the river, and to weep over those who had departed. To that bridge
+Hjalte wended his way every day. He liked best to be amongst those who
+longed and sorrowed.
+
+Never had any of the women who sat waiting at Weeping Bridge gazed down
+the river with more anxious look than did Hjalte the Bard. No one looked
+more eagerly at every approaching sail. Sometimes Hjalte stole away to
+the Marie Church. He never prayed for anything for himself. He only came
+to remind the Saints about this marriage, which must come to pass, which
+God Himself had willed.
+
+Most of all Hjalte liked to speak with King Olaf Haraldsson alone. It
+was his greatest happiness to sit and tell him of every word that had
+fallen from the lips of the King's daughter. He described her every
+feature.
+
+'King Olaf,' he said to him, 'pray to God that she may come to thee.
+Every day I see thee warring against ancient heathendom which hides like
+an owl in the darkness of the forest, and in the mountain-clefts. But
+the falcon, King Olaf, will never be able to overcome the owl. Only a
+dove can do that, only a dove.'
+
+The Bard asked the King whether it was not his desire to vanquish all
+his enemies. Was it not his intention to be alone master in the land?
+But in that he would never succeed. He would never succeed until he had
+won the crown which Hjalte had chosen for him, a crown so resplendent
+with brightness and glory that everyone must bow before him who owned
+it.
+
+And last of all he asked the King if he were desirous of gaining the
+mastery over himself. But he would never succeed in overcoming the
+wilfulness of his own heart if he did not win a shield which Hjalte had
+seen in the Ladies' Bower at the King's Castle at Upsala. It was a
+shield from which shone the purity of heaven. It was a shield which
+protected from all sin and the lusts of the flesh.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But harvest came and they were still waiting for the Princess. One after
+the other the great men who had come to Kungahälla for the marriage
+festivities were obliged to depart. The last to take his leave was old
+Hjalte the Bard. It was with a heavy heart he set sail, but he was
+obliged to return to his home in distant Iceland before Christmas came.
+
+Old Hjalte had not gone further than the rocky islands outside the mouth
+of the northern river before he met a galley. He immediately ordered his
+men to stop rowing. At the first glance he recognised the dragon-headed
+ship belonging to Princess Ingegerd. Without hesitation Hjalte told his
+men to row him to the galley. He gave up his place at the rudder to
+another, and placed himself with joyous face at the prow of the boat.
+
+'It will make me happy to behold the fair maiden once more,' the Bard
+said. 'It gladdens my heart that her gentle face will be the last I
+shall see before sailing for Iceland.'
+
+All the wrinkles had disappeared from Hjalte's face when he went on
+board the dragon-ship. He greeted the brave lads who plied the oars as
+friendlily as if they were his comrades, and he handed a golden ring to
+the maiden, who, with much deference, conducted him to the women's tent
+in the stern of the ship. Hjalte's hand trembled when he lifted the
+hangings that covered the entrance to the tent. He thought this was the
+most beautiful moment of his life.
+
+'Never have I fought for a greater cause,' he said. 'Never have I longed
+so eagerly for anything as this marriage.'
+
+But when Hjalte entered the tent, he drew back a step in great
+consternation. His face expressed the utmost confusion. He saw a tall,
+beautiful woman. She advanced to meet him with outstretched hand. But
+the woman was not Ingegerd.
+
+Hjalte's eyes looked searchingly round the narrow tent to find the
+Princess. He certainly saw that the woman who stood before him was a
+King's daughter. Only the daughter of a King could look at him with such
+a proud glance, and greet him with such dignity. And she wore the band
+of royalty on her forehead, and was attired like a Queen. But why was
+she not Ingegerd? Hjalte angrily asked the strange woman:
+
+'Who art thou?'
+
+'Dost thou not know me, Hjalte? I am the King's daughter, to whom thou
+hast spoken about Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+'I have spoken with a King's daughter about Olaf Haraldsson, but her
+name was Ingegerd.'
+
+'Ingegerd is also my name.'
+
+'Thy name can be what thou likest, but thou art not the Princess. What
+is the meaning of all this? Will the Svea-King deceive King Olaf?'
+
+'He will not by any means deceive him. He sends him his daughter as he
+has promised.'
+
+Hjalte was not far from drawing his sword to slay the strange woman. He
+had his hand already on the hilt, but he bethought himself it was not
+befitting a warrior to take the life of a woman. But he would not waste
+more words over this impostor. He turned round to go.
+
+The stranger with gentle voice called him back.
+
+'Where art thou going, Hjalte? Dost thou intend to go to Kungahälla to
+report this to Olaf Haraldsson?'
+
+'That is my intention,' answered Hjalte, without looking at her.
+
+'Why, then, dost thou leave me, Hjalte? Why dost thou not remain with
+me? I, too, am going to Kungahälla.'
+
+Hjalte now turned round and looked at her.
+
+'Hast thou, then, no pity for an old man?' he said. 'I tell thee that my
+whole mind is set upon this marriage. Let me hear the full measure of my
+misfortune. Is Princess Ingegerd not coming?'
+
+Then the Princess gave over fooling Hjalte.
+
+'Come into my tent and sit down,' she said, 'and I will tell thee all
+that thou wouldest know. I see it is of no use to hide the truth from
+thee.'
+
+Then she began to tell him everything:
+
+'The summer was already drawing to a close. The blackcock's lively young
+ones had already strong feathers in their cloven tails and firmness in
+their rounded wings; they had already begun to flutter about amongst the
+close branches of the pine-forest with quick, noisy strokes.
+
+'It happened one morning that the Svea-King came riding across the
+plain; he was returning from a successful chase. There hung from the
+pommel of his saddle a shining blue-black blackcock, a tough old fellow,
+with red eyebrows, as well as four of his half-grown young ones, which
+on account of their youth were still garbed in many-coloured hues. And
+the King was very proud; he thought it was not every man's luck to make
+such a bag with falcon and hawk in one morning.
+
+'But that morning Princess Ingegerd and her maidens stood at the gates
+of the castle waiting for the King. And amongst the maidens was one,
+Astrid by name; she was the daughter of the Svea-King just as much as
+Ingegerd, although her mother was not a free woman, and she was
+therefore treated as a bondmaiden. And this young maiden stood and
+showed her sister how the swallows gathered in the fields and chose the
+leaders for their long journey. She reminded her that the summer was
+soon over--the summer that should have witnessed the marriage of
+Ingegerd--and urged her to ask the King why she might not set out on her
+journey to King Olaf; for Astrid wished to accompany her sister on the
+journey. She thought that if she could but once see Olaf Haraldsson, she
+would have pleasure from it all her life.
+
+'But when the Svea-King saw the Princess, he rode up to her.
+
+'"Look, Ingegerd," he said, "here are five blackcocks hanging from my
+saddle. In one morning I have killed five blackcocks. Who dost thou
+think can boast of better luck? Have you ever heard of a King making a
+better capture?"
+
+'But then the Princess was angered that he who barred the way for her
+happiness should come so proudly and praise his own good luck. And to
+make an end of the uncertainty that had tormented her for so many weeks,
+she replied:
+
+'"Thou, father, hast with great honour killed five blackcocks, but I
+know of a King who in one morning captured five other Kings, and that
+was Olaf Haraldsson, the hero whom thou hast selected to be my husband."
+
+'Then the Svea-King sprang off his horse in great fury, and advanced
+towards the Princess with clenched hands.
+
+'"What troll hath bewitched thee?" he asked. "What herb hath poisoned
+thee? How hath thy mind been turned to this man?"
+
+'Ingegerd did not answer; she drew back, frightened. Then the King
+became quieter.
+
+'"Fair daughter," he said to her, "dost thou not know how dear thou art
+to me? How should I, then, give thee to one whom I cannot endure? I
+should like my best wishes to go with thee on thy journey. I should like
+to sit as guest in thy hall. I tell thee thou must turn thy mind to the
+Kings of other lands, for Norway's King shall never own thee."
+
+'At these words the Princess became so confused that she could find no
+other words than these with which to answer the King:
+
+'"I did not ask thee; it was the will of the people."
+
+'The King then asked her if she thought that the Svea-King was a slave,
+who could not dispose of his own offspring, or if there were a master
+over him who had the right to give away his daughters.
+
+'"Will the Svea-King be content to hear himself called a breaker of
+oaths?" asked the Princess.
+
+'Then the Svea-King laughed aloud.
+
+'"Do not let that trouble thee. No one shall call me that. Why dost thou
+question about this, thou who art a woman? There are still men in my
+Council; they will find a way out of it."
+
+'Then the King turned towards his henchmen who had been with him to the
+chase.
+
+'"My will is bound by this promise," he said to them. "How shall I be
+released from it?"
+
+'But none of the King's men answered a word; no one knew how to counsel
+him.
+
+'Then Oluf Skötkonung became very wrath; he became like a madman.
+
+'"So much for your wisdom," he shouted again and again to his men. "I
+will be free. Why do people laud your wisdom?"
+
+'Whilst the King raged and shouted, and no one knew how to answer him,
+the maiden Astrid stepped forward from amongst the other women and made
+a proposal.
+
+'Hjalte must really believe her when she told him that it was only
+because she found it so amusing that she could not help saying it, and
+not in the least because she thought it could really be done.
+
+'"Why dost thou not send me?" she had said. "I am also thy daughter. Why
+dost thou not send me to the Norwegian King?"
+
+'But when Ingegerd heard Astrid say these words, she grew pale.
+
+'"Be silent, and go thy way!" she said angrily. "Go thy way, thou
+tattler, thou deceitful, wicked thing, to propose such a shameful thing
+to my father!"
+
+'But the King would not allow Astrid to go. On the contrary! on the
+contrary! He stretched out his arms and drew her to his breast. He both
+laughed and cried, and was as wild with joy as a child.
+
+'"Oh," he shouted, "what an idea! What a heathenish trick! Let us call
+Astrid Ingegerd, and entrap the King of Norway into marrying her. And
+afterwards when the rumour gets abroad that she is born of a bondwoman,
+many will rejoice in their hearts, and Olaf Haraldsson will be held in
+scorn and derision."
+
+'But then Ingegerd went up to the King, and prayed:
+
+"Oh, father, father! do not do this thing. King Olaf is dear at heart to
+me. Surely thou wilt not grieve me by thus deceiving him."
+
+'And she added that she would patiently do the bidding of her royal
+father, and give up all thought of marriage with Olaf Haraldsson, if he
+would only promise not to do him this injury.
+
+'But the Svea-King would not listen to her prayers. He turned to Astrid
+and caressed her, just as if she were as beautiful as revenge itself.
+
+'"Thou shalt go! thou shalt go soon--to-morrow!" he said. "All thy
+dowry, thy clothes, my dear daughter, and thy retinue, can all be
+collected in great haste. The Norwegian King will not think of such
+things; he is too taken up with joy at the thought of possessing the
+high-born daughter of the Svea-King."
+
+'Then Ingegerd understood that she could hope for no mercy. And she went
+up to her sister, put her arm round her neck, and conducted her to the
+hall. Here she placed her in her own seat of honour, whilst she herself
+sat down on a low stool at her feet. And she said to Astrid that from
+henceforth she must sit there, in order to accustom herself to the place
+she should take as Queen. For Ingegerd did not wish that King Olaf
+should have any occasion to be ashamed of his Queen.
+
+'Then the Princess sent her maidens to the wardrobes and the pantries to
+fetch the dowry she had chosen for herself. And she gave everything to
+her sister, so that Astrid should not come to Norway's King as a poor
+bondwoman. She had also settled which of the serfs and maidens should
+accompany Astrid, and at last she made her a present of her own splendid
+galley.
+
+'"Thou shalt certainly have my galley," she said. "Thou knowest there
+are many good men at the oars. For it is my will that thou shalt come
+well dowered to Norway's King, so that he may feel honoured with his
+Queen."
+
+'And afterwards the Princess had sat a long time with her sister, and
+spoken with her about King Olaf. But she had spoken of him as one speaks
+of the Saints of God, and not of kings, and Astrid had not understood
+many of her words. But this much she did understand--that the King's
+daughter wished to give Astrid all the good thoughts that dwelt in her
+own heart, in order that King Olaf might not be so disappointed as her
+father wished. And then Astrid, who was not so bad as people thought
+her, forgot how often she had suffered for her sister's sake, and she
+wished that she had been able to say, "I will not go!" She had also
+spoken to her sister about this wish, and they had cried together, and
+for the first time felt like sisters.
+
+'But it was not Astrid's nature to allow herself to be weighed down by
+sorrow and scruples. By the time she was out at sea she had forgotten
+all her sorrow and fear. She travelled as a Princess, and was waited
+upon as a Princess. For the first time since her mother's death she was
+happy.'
+
+When the King's beautiful daughter had told Hjalte all this she was
+silent for a moment, and looked at him. Hjalte had sat immovable whilst
+she was speaking, but the King's daughter grew pale when she saw the
+pain his face betrayed.
+
+'Tell me what thou thinkest, Hjalte,' she exclaimed. 'Now, we are soon
+at Kungahälla. How shall I fare there? Will the King slay me? Will he
+brand me with red-hot irons, and send me back again? Tell me the truth,
+Hjalte.'
+
+But Hjalte did not answer. He sat and talked to himself without knowing
+it. Astrid heard him murmur that at Kungahälla no one knew Ingegerd, and
+that he himself had but little inclination to turn back.
+
+But now Hjalte's moody face fell upon Astrid, and he began to question
+her. She had wished, had she not, that she could have said 'No' to this
+journey. When she came to Kungahälla, the choice lay before her. What
+did she, then, mean to do! Would she tell King Olaf who she was?
+
+This question caused Astrid not a little embarrassment. She was silent
+for a long while, but then she began to beg Hjalte to go with her to
+Kungahälla and tell the King the truth. She told Hjalte that her maidens
+and the men on board her ship had been bound to silence.
+
+'And what I shall do myself I do not know,' she said. 'How can I know
+that? I have heard all thou hast told Ingegerd about Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+When Astrid said this she saw that Hjalte was again lost in thought. She
+heard him mutter to himself that he did not think she would confess how
+things were.
+
+'But I must all the same tell her what awaits her,' he said.
+
+Then Hjalte rose, and spoke to her with the utmost gravity.
+
+'Let me tell thee yet another story, Astrid, about King Olaf, which I
+have not told thee before:
+
+'It was at the time when King Olaf was a poor sea-king, when he only
+possessed a few good ships and some faithful warriors, but none of his
+forefathers' land. It was at the time when he fought with honour on
+distant seas, chastised vikings and protected merchants, and aided
+Christian princes with his sword.
+
+'The King had a dream that one night an angel of God descended to his
+ship, set all the sails, and steered for the north. And it seemed to the
+King that they had not sailed for a longer time than it takes the dawn
+to extinguish a star before they came to a steep and rocky shore, cut up
+by narrow fjords and bordered with milk-white breakers. But when they
+reached the shore the angel stretched out his hand, and spoke in his
+silvery voice. It rang through the wind, which whistled in the sails,
+and through the waves surging round the keel.
+
+'"Thou, King Olaf," were the angel's words, "shalt possess this land for
+all time."
+
+'And when the angel had said this the dream was over.'
+
+Hjalte now tried to explain to Astrid that like as the dawn tempers the
+transition from dark night to sunny day, so God had not willed that King
+Olaf should at once understand that the dream foretold him of superhuman
+honour. The King had not understood that it was the will of God that he
+from a heavenly throne should reign forever and ever over Norway's land,
+that kings should reign and kings should pass away, but holy King Olaf
+should continue to rule his kingdom for ever.
+
+The King's humility did not let him see the heavenly message in its
+fulness of light, and he understood the words of the angel thus--that he
+and his seed should forever rule over the land the angel had shown him.
+And inasmuch as he thought he recognised in this land the kingdom of his
+forefathers, he steered his course for Norway, and, fortune helping him,
+he soon became King of that land.
+
+'And thus it is still, Astrid. Although everything indicates that in
+King Olaf dwells a heavenly strength, he himself is still in doubt, and
+thinks that he is only called to be an earthly King. He does not yet
+stretch forth his hand for the crown of the saints. But now the time
+cannot be far distant when he must fully realize his mission. It cannot
+be far distant.'
+
+And old Hjalte went on speaking, whilst the light of the seer shone in
+his soul and on his brow.
+
+'Is there any other woman but Ingegerd who would not be rejected by Olaf
+Haraldsson and driven from his side when he fully understands the words
+of the angel, that he shall be Norway's King for all time? Is there
+anyone who can, then, follow him in his holy walk except Ingegerd?'
+
+And again Hjalte turned to Astrid and asked with great severity:
+
+'Answer me now and tell me whether thou wilt speak the truth to King
+Olaf?'
+
+Astrid was now sore afraid. She answered humbly:
+
+'Why wilt thou not go with me to Kungahälla? Then I shall be compelled
+to tell everything. Canst thou not see, Hjalte, that I do not know
+myself what I shall do? If it were my intention to deceive the King,
+could I not promise thee all thou wishest? All that I needed was to
+persuade thee to go on thy way. But I am weak; I only asked thee to go
+with me.'
+
+But hardly had she said this before she saw Hjalte's face glow with
+fierce wrath.
+
+'Why should I help thee to escape the fate that awaits thee?' he asked.
+
+And then he said that he did not think he had any cause to show her
+mercy. He hated her for having sinned against her sister. The man that
+she would steal, thief as she was, belonged to Ingegerd. Even a hardened
+warrior like Hjalte must groan with pain when he thought of how Ingegerd
+had suffered. But Astrid had felt nothing. In the midst of all that
+young maiden's sorrow she had come with wicked and cruel cunning, and
+had only sought her own happiness. Woe unto Astrid! woe unto her!
+
+Hjalte had lowered his voice; it became heavy and dull; it sounded to
+Astrid as if he were murmuring an incantation.
+
+'It is thou,' he said to her, 'who hast destroyed my most beautiful
+song.' For the most beautiful song Hjalte had made was the one in which
+he had joined the most pious of all women with the greatest of all men.
+'But thou hast spoiled my song,' he said, 'and made a mockery of it; and
+I will punish thee, thou child of Hél. I will punish thee; as the Lord
+punisheth the tempter who brought sin into His world, I will punish
+thee. But do not ask me,' he continued, 'to protect thee against thine
+own self. I remember the Princess, and how she must suffer through the
+trick thou playest on King Olaf. For her sake thou shalt be punished,
+just as much as for mine. I will not go with thee to betray thee. That
+is my revenge, Astrid. I will not betray thee. Go thou to Kungahälla,
+Astrid; and if thou dost not speak of thine own accord, thou wilt become
+the King's bride. But then, thou serpent, punishment shall overtake
+thee! I know King Olaf, and I know thee. Thy life shall be such a burden
+that thou wilt wish for death every day that passes.'
+
+When Hjalte had said this he turned away from her and went his way.
+
+Astrid sat a long time silent, thinking of what she had heard. But then
+a smile came over her face. He forgot, did old Hjalte, that she had
+suffered many trials, that she had learnt to laugh at pain. But
+happiness, happiness, that she had never tried.
+
+And Astrid rose and went to the opening of the tent. She saw the angry
+Bard's ship. She thought that far, far away she could see Iceland,
+shrouded in mist, welcoming her much-travelled son with cold and
+darkness.
+
+
+III
+
+A sunny day late in the harvest, not a cloud in the sky; a day when one
+thinks the fair sun will give to the earth all the light she possesses!
+The fair sun is like a mother whose son is about to set out for a
+far-off land, and who, in the hour of the leave-taking, cannot take her
+eyes from the beloved.
+
+In the long valley where Kungahälla lies there is a row of small hills
+covered with beech-wood. And now at harvest-time the trees have garbed
+themselves in such splendid raiment that one's heart is gladdened. One
+would almost think that the trees were going a-wooing. It looks as if
+they had clothed themselves in gold and scarlet to win a rich bride by
+their splendour.
+
+The large island of Hisingen, on the other side of the river, had also
+adorned itself. But Hisingen is covered with golden-white birch-trees.
+At Hisingen the trees are clad in light colours, as if they are little
+maidens in bridal attire.
+
+But up the river, which comes rushing down towards the ocean as proudly
+and wildly as if the harvest rain had filled it with frothy wine, there
+passes the one ship after the other, rowing homewards. And when the
+ships approach Kungahälla they hoist new white sails, instead of the old
+ones of gray wadmal; and one cannot help thinking of old fairy-tales of
+kings' sons who go out seeking adventures clothed in rags, but who throw
+them off when they again enter the King's lofty hall.
+
+But all the people of Kungahälla have assembled at the landing-stages.
+Old and young are busy unloading goods from the ships. They fill the
+storehouses with salt and train-oil, with costly weapons, and
+many-coloured rugs. They haul large and small vessels on to land, they
+question the returned seamen about their voyage. But suddenly all work
+ceases, and every eye is turned towards the river.
+
+Right between the big merchant vessels a large galley is making its way,
+and people ask each other in astonishment who it can be that carries
+sails striped with purple and a golden device on the prow; they wonder
+what kind of ship it can be that comes flying over the waves like a
+bird. They praise the oarsmen, who handle the oars so evenly that they
+flash along the sides of the ship like an eagle's wings.
+
+'It must be the Swedish Princess who is coming,' they say. 'It must be
+the beautiful Princess Ingegerd, for whom Olaf Haraldsson has been
+waiting the whole summer and harvest.'
+
+And the women hasten down to the riverside to see the Princess when she
+rows past them on her way to the King's Landing-Stage. Men and boys run
+to the ships, or climb the roofs of the boathouses.
+
+When the women see the Princess standing in gorgeous apparel, they begin
+to shout to her, and to greet her with words of welcome; and every man
+who sees her radiant face tears his cap from his head and swings it high
+in the air. But on the King's Landing-Stage stands King Olaf himself,
+and when he sees the Princess his face beams with gladness, and his eyes
+light up with tender love.
+
+And as it is now so late in the year that all the flowers are faded, the
+young maidens pluck the golden-red autumnal leaves from the trees and
+strew them on the bridge and in the street; and they hasten to deck
+their houses with the bright berries of the mountain-ash and the
+dark-red leaves of the poplar.
+
+The Princess, who stands high on the ship, sees the people waving and
+greeting her in welcome. She sees the golden-red leaves over which she
+shall walk, and foremost on the landing-stage she sees the King awaiting
+her with smiles. And the Princess forgets everything she would have said
+and confessed. She forgets that she is not Ingegerd, she forgets
+everything except the one thing, that she is to be the wife of Olaf
+Haraldsson.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One Sunday Olaf Haraldsson was seated at table, and his beautiful Queen
+sat by his side. He was talking eagerly with her, resting his elbow on
+the table, and turning towards her, so that he could see her face. But
+when Astrid spoke the King lowered his eyes in order not to think of
+anything but her lovely voice, and when she had been speaking for a long
+time he began to cut the table with his knife without thinking of what
+he was doing. All King Olaf's men knew that he would not have done this
+if he had remembered that it was Sunday; but they had far too great a
+respect for King Olaf to venture to remind him that he was committing a
+sin.
+
+The longer Astrid talked, the more uneasy became his henchmen. The Queen
+saw that they exchanged troubled glances with each other, but she did
+not understand what was the matter.
+
+All had finished eating, and the food had been removed, but King Olaf
+still sat and talked with Astrid and cut the top of the table. A whole
+little heap of chips lay in front of him. Then at last his friend Björn,
+the son of Ogur from Selö, spoke.
+
+'What day is it to-morrow, Eilif?' he asked, turning to one of the
+torch-bearers.
+
+'To-morrow is Monday,' answered Eilif in a loud and clear voice.
+
+Then the King lifted his head and looked up at Eilif.
+
+'Dost thou say that to-morrow is Monday?' he asked thoughtfully.
+
+Without saying another word, the King gathered up all the chips he had
+cut off the table into his hand, went to the fireplace, seized a burning
+coal, and laid it on the chips, which soon caught fire. The King stood
+quite still and let them burn to ashes in his hand. Then all the
+henchmen rejoiced, but the young Queen grew pale as death.
+
+'What sentence will he pronounce over me when he one day finds out my
+sin,' she thought, 'he who punishes himself so hardly for so slight an
+offence?'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Agge from Gardarike lay sick on board his galley in Kungahälla harbour.
+He was lying in the narrow hold awaiting death. He had been suffering
+for a long time from pains in his foot, and now there was an open sore,
+and in the course of the last few hours it had begun to turn black.
+
+'Thou needest not die, Agge,' said Lodulf from Kunghälla, who had come
+on board to see his sick friend. 'Dost thou not know that King Olaf is
+here in the town, and that God, on account of his piety and holiness,
+has given him power to heal the sick? Send a message to him and ask him
+to come and lay his hand upon thee, and thou wilt recover.'
+
+'No, I cannot ask help from him,' answered Agge. 'Olaf Haraldsson hates
+me because I have slain his foster-brother, Reor the White. If he knew
+that my ship lay in the harbour, he would send his men to kill me.'
+
+But when Lodulf had left Agge and gone into the town, he met the young
+Queen, who had been in the forest gathering nuts.
+
+'Queen,' Lodulf cried to her, 'say this to King Olaf: "Agge from
+Gardarike, who has slain thy foster-brother, lies at the point of death
+on his ship in the harbour."'
+
+The young Queen hastened home and went immediately up to King Olaf, who
+stood in the courtyard smoothing the mane of his horse.
+
+'Rejoice, King Olaf!' she said. 'Agge from Gardarike, who slew thy
+foster-brother, lies sick on his ship in the harbour and is near death.'
+
+Olaf Haraldsson at once led his horse into the stable; then he went out
+without sword or helmet. He went quickly down one of the narrow lanes
+between the houses until he reached the harbour. There he found the ship
+which belonged to Agge. The King was at the side of the sick man before
+Agge's men thought of stopping him.
+
+'Agge,' said King Olaf, 'many a time I have pursued thee on the sea, and
+thou hast always escaped me. Now thou hast been struck down with
+sickness here in my city. This is a sign to me that God hath given thy
+life into my hands.'
+
+Agge made no answer. He was utterly feeble, and death was very near.
+Olaf Haraldsson laid his hands upon his breast and prayed to God.
+
+'Give me the life of this mine enemy,' he said.
+
+But the Queen, who had seen the King hasten down to the harbour without
+helmet and sword, went into the hall, fetched his weapons and called for
+some of his men. Then she hurried after him down to the ship. But when
+she stood outside the narrow hold, she heard King Olaf praying for the
+sick man.
+
+Astrid looked in and saw the King and Agge without betraying her
+presence. She saw that whilst the King's hands rested upon the forehead
+and breast of the dying man, the deathly pallor vanished from his face;
+he began to breathe lightly and quietly; he ceased moaning, and at last
+he fell into a sound sleep.
+
+Astrid went softly back to the King's Castle. She dragged the King's
+sword after her along the road. Her face was paler than the dying man's
+had been. Her breathing was heavy, like that of a dying person.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was the morning of All Saints' Day, and King Olaf was ready to go to
+Mass. He came out of the King's Hall and went across the courtyard
+towards the gateway. Several of the King's henchmen stood in the
+courtyard to accompany him to Mass. When the King came towards them,
+they drew up in two rows, and the King passed between them.
+
+Astrid stood in the narrow corridor outside the Women's Room and looked
+down at the King. He wore a broad golden band round his head, and was
+attired in a long mantle of red velvet. He went very quietly, and there
+was a holy peace over his face. Astrid was terrified to see how much he
+resembled the Saints and Kings that were carved in wood over the altar
+in the Marie Church.
+
+At the gateway stood a man in a broad-brimmed hat, and wearing a big
+mantle. When the King approached him he threw off his mantle, lifted a
+drawn sword, which he had hidden under it, and rushed at the King. But
+when he was quite close to him, the mild and gentle glance of the King
+fell upon him, and he suddenly stopped. He let his sword fall to the
+ground, and fell on his knees.
+
+King Olaf stood still, and looked at the man with the same clear glance;
+the man tried to turn his eyes away from him, but he could not. At last
+he burst into tears and sobs.
+
+'Oh, King Olaf! King Olaf!' he moaned. 'Thine enemies sent me hither to
+slay thee; but when I saw thy saintly face my sword fell from my hand.
+Thine eyes, King Olaf, have felled me to the ground.'
+
+Astrid sank upon her knees where she stood.
+
+'Oh God, have mercy upon me, a sinner!' she said. 'Woe unto me, because
+by lying and deceit I have become the wife of this man.'
+
+
+IV
+
+On the evening of All Saints' Day the moon shone bright and clear. The
+King had gone the round of the castle, had looked into stables and barns
+to see that all was well; he had even been to the house where the serfs
+dwelt to ascertain if they were well looked after. When he went back to
+the King's Hall, he saw a woman with a black kerchief over her head
+stealing towards the gateway. He thought he knew her, and therefore
+followed her. She went out of the gateway, over the Market Place, and
+stole down the narrow lanes to the river.
+
+Olaf Haraldsson went after her as quietly as he could. He saw her go on
+to one of the landing-stages, stand still, and look down into the water.
+She stretched out her arms towards heaven, and, with a deep sigh, she
+went so near the edge that the King saw she meant to spring into the
+river.
+
+The King approached her with the noiseless steps which a life full of
+danger had taught him. Twice the woman lifted her foot to make the
+spring, but she hesitated. Before she could make a new attempt, King
+Olaf had his arm round her waist and drew her back.
+
+'Thou unhappy one!' he said. 'Thou wouldest do that which God hath
+prohibited.'
+
+When the woman heard his voice she held her hands before her face as if
+to hide it. But King Olaf knew who she was. The rustle of her dress, the
+shape of her head, the golden rings on her arms had already told him
+that it was the Queen. The first moment Astrid had struggled to free
+herself, but she soon grew quiet, and tried to make the King believe
+that she had not intended to kill herself.
+
+'King Olaf, why dost thou secretly come behind a poor woman who hath
+gone down to the river to see how she is mirrored in the water? What
+must I think of thee?'
+
+Astrid's voice sounded composed and playful. The King stood silent.
+
+'Thou hast frightened me so that I nearly fell into the river,' Astrid
+said. 'Didst thou think, perhaps, that I would drown myself?'
+
+The King answered:
+
+'I know not what to believe; God will enlighten me.'
+
+Astrid laughed and kissed him.
+
+'What woman would take her life who is as happy as I am? Doth one take
+one's life in Paradise?'
+
+'I do not understand it,' said King Olaf, in his gentle manner. 'God
+will enlighten me. He will tell me if it be through any fault of mine
+that thou wouldest commit so great a sin.'
+
+Astrid went up to him and stroked his cheek. The reverence she felt for
+King Olaf had hitherto deterred her from showing him the full tenderness
+of her love. Now she threw her arms passionately around him and kissed
+him countless times. Then she began to speak to him in gentle, bird-like
+tones.
+
+'Wouldest thou know how truly my heart clings to thee?' she said.
+
+She made the King sit down on an overturned boat. She knelt down at his
+feet.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'I will no longer be Queen. She who loves as
+greatly as I love thee cannot be a Queen. I wish thou wouldest go far
+into the forest, and let me be thy bondwoman. Then I should have leave
+to serve thee every day. Then I would prepare thy food, make thy bed,
+and watch over thy house whilst thou slept. None other should have leave
+to serve thee, except I. When thou returnest from the chase in the
+evening, I would go to meet thee, and kneel before thee on the road and
+say: "King Olaf, my life is thine." And thou wouldest laugh, and lower
+thy spear against my breast, and say: "Yes, thy life is mine. Thou hast
+neither father nor mother; thou art mine, and thy life is mine."'
+
+As Astrid said this, she drew, as if in play, King Olaf's sword out of
+its sheath. She laid the hilt in the King's hand, but the point she
+directed towards her own heart.
+
+'Say these words to me, King Olaf,' she said, 'as if we were alone in
+the forest, and I were thy bondwoman. Say: "Thy life is mine."'
+
+'Thy life is God's,' said the King.
+
+Astrid laughed lightly.
+
+'My life is thine,' she repeated, in the tenderest voice, and the same
+moment King Olaf felt that she pressed the point of the sword against
+her breast.
+
+But the King held the sword with a firm hand, even when in play. He drew
+it to him before Astrid had time to do herself any harm. And he sprang
+up. For the first time in his life he trembled from fear. The Queen
+would die at his hand, and she had not been far from attaining her wish.
+At the same moment he had an inspiration, and he understood what was the
+cause of her despair.
+
+'She has committed a sin,' he thought. 'She has a sin upon her
+conscience.'
+
+He bent down over Astrid.
+
+'Tell me in what manner thou hast sinned,' he said.
+
+Astrid had thrown herself down on the rough planks of the bridge, crying
+in utter despair.
+
+'No one free from guilt would weep like this,' thought the King. 'But
+how can the honourable daughter of the King have brought such a heavy
+burden upon her?' he asked himself. 'How can the noble Ingegerd have a
+crime upon her conscience?'
+
+'Ingegerd, tell me how thou hast sinned,' he asked again.
+
+But Astrid was sobbing so violently that she could not answer, but
+instead she drew off her golden arm and finger rings, and handed them to
+the King with averted face. The King thought how unlike this was to the
+gentle King's daughter of whom Hjalte had spoken.
+
+'Is this Hjalte's Ingegerd that lies sobbing at my feet?' he thought.
+
+He bent down and seized Astrid by the shoulder.
+
+'Who are thou? who art thou?' he said, shaking her arm. 'I see that thou
+canst not be Ingegerd. Who art thou?'
+
+Astrid was still sobbing so violently that she could not speak. But in
+order to give the King the answer he asked for, she let down her long
+hair, twisted a lock of it round her arms, and held them towards the
+King, and sat thus bowed and with drooping head. The King thought:
+
+'She wishes me to understand that she belongs to those who wear chains.
+She confesses that she is a bondwoman.'
+
+A thought again struck the King; he now understood everything.
+
+'Has not the Svea-King a daughter who is the child of a bondwoman?' he
+asked suddenly.
+
+He received no answer to this question either, but he heard Astrid
+shudder as if from cold. King Olaf asked still one more question.
+
+'Thou whom I have made my wife,' he said, 'hast thou so low a mind that
+thou wouldest allow thyself to be used as a means of spoiling a man's
+honour? Is thy mind so mean that thou rejoicest when his enemies laugh
+at his discomfiture?'
+
+Astrid could hear from the King's voice how bitterly he suffered under
+the insult that had been offered him. She forgot her own sufferings, and
+wept no more.
+
+'Take my life,' she said.
+
+A great temptation came upon King Olaf.
+
+'Slay this wicked bondwoman,' the old Adam said within him. 'Show the
+Svea-King what it costs to make a fool of the King of Norway.'
+
+At that moment Olaf Haraldsson felt no love for Astrid. He hated her for
+having been the means of his humiliation. He knew everybody would think
+it right when he returned evil for evil, and if he did not avenge this
+insult, he would be held in derision by the Bards, and his enemies would
+no longer fear him. He had but one wish: to slay Astrid, to take her
+life. His anger was so violent that it craved for blood. If a fool had
+dared to put his fool's cap upon his head, would he not have torn it
+off, torn it to pieces, thrown it on the ground, trampled upon it? If he
+now laid Astrid a bloody corpse upon her ship, and sent her back to her
+father, people would say of King Olaf that he was a worthy descendant of
+Harald Haarfager.
+
+But King Olaf still held his sword in his hand, and under his fingers he
+felt the hilt, upon which he had once had inscribed: 'Blessed are the
+peacemakers,' 'Blessed are the meek,' 'Blessed are the merciful.' And
+every time he, in this hour of anguish, grasped his sword firmly in
+order to slay Astrid, he felt these words under his hand. He thought he
+could feel every letter. He remembered the day when he had first heard
+these words.
+
+'This I will write in letters of gold on the hilt of my sword,' he had
+said, 'so that the words may burn in my hand every time I would swing my
+sword in fury, or for an unjust cause.'
+
+He felt that the hilt of the sword now burnt in his hand. King Olaf said
+aloud to himself:
+
+'Formerly thou wert the slave of many lusts; now thou hast but one
+master, and that is God.'
+
+With these words he put back the sword into its sheath, and began to
+walk to and fro on the bridge. Astrid remained lying in the same
+position. King Olaf saw that she crouched in fear of death every time he
+went past her.
+
+'I will not slay thee,' he said; but his voice sounded hard from hatred.
+
+King Olaf continued for awhile to walk backwards and forwards on the
+bridge; then he went up to Astrid, and asked her in the same hard voice
+what her real name was, and that she was able to answer him. He looked
+at this woman whom he had so highly treasured, and who now lay at his
+feet like a wounded deer--he looked down upon her as a dead man's soul
+looks with pity at the poor body which was once its dwelling.
+
+'Oh, thou my soul,' said King Olaf, 'it was there thou dwelt in love,
+and now thou art as homeless as a beggar.' He drew nearer to Astrid,
+and spoke as if she were no longer living or could hear what he said.
+'It was told me that there was a King's daughter whose heart was so pure
+and holy that she endued with peace all who came near her. They told me
+of her gentleness, that he who saw her felt as safe as a helpless child
+does with its mother, and when the beautiful woman who now lies here
+came to me, I thought that she was Ingegerd, and she became exceeding
+dear to me. She was so beautiful and glad, and she made my own heavy
+thoughts light. And did she sometimes act otherwise than I expected the
+proud Ingegerd to do, she was too dear to me to doubt her; she stole
+into my heart with her joyousness and beauty.'
+
+He was silent for a time, and thought how dear Astrid had been to him
+and how happiness had with her come to his house.
+
+'I could forgive her,' he said aloud. 'I could again make her my Queen,
+I could in love take her in my arms; but I _dare_ not, for my soul would
+still be homeless. Ah, thou fair woman,' he said, 'why dost lying dwell
+within thee? With thee there is no security, no rest.'
+
+The King went on bemoaning himself, but now Astrid stood up.
+
+'King Olaf, do not speak thus to me,' she said; 'I will rather die.
+Understand, I am in earnest.'
+
+Then she tried to say a few words to excuse herself. She told him that
+she had gone to Kungahälla not with the intention of deceiving him, but
+in order to be a Princess for a few weeks, to be waited upon like a
+Queen, to sail on the sea. But she had intended to confess who she was
+as soon as she came to Kungahälla. There she expected to find Hjalte and
+the other great men who knew Ingegerd. She had never thought of
+deceiving him when she came, but an evil spirit had sent all those away
+who knew Ingegerd, and then the temptation had come to her.
+
+'When I saw thee, King Olaf,' she said, 'I forgot everything to become
+thine, and I thought I would gladly suffer death at thine hand had I but
+for one day been thy wife.'
+
+King Olaf answered her:
+
+'I see that what was deadly earnest to me was but a pastime to thee.
+Never hast thou thought upon what it was to come and say to a man: "I am
+she whom thou most fervently desirest; I am that high-born maiden whom
+it is the greatest honour to win." And then thou art not that woman;
+thou art but a lying bondwoman.'
+
+'I have loved thee from the first moment I heard thy name,' Astrid said
+softly.
+
+The King clenched his hand in anger against her.
+
+'Know, Astrid, that I have longed for Ingegerd as no man has ever longed
+for woman. I would have clung to her as the soul of the dead clings to
+the angel bearing him upwards. I thought she was so pure that she could
+have helped me to lead a sinless life.'
+
+And he broke out into wild longings, and said that he longed for the
+power of the holy ones of God, but that he was too weak and sinful to
+attain to perfection.
+
+'But the King's daughter could have helped me,' he said; 'she the
+saintly and gentle one would have helped me. Oh, my God,' he said,
+'whichever way I turn I see sinners, wherever I go I meet those who
+would entice me to sin. Why didst Thou not send me the King's daughter,
+who had not a single evil thought in her heart? Her gentle eye would
+have found the right path for my foot. Whenever I strayed from it her
+gentle hand would have led me back.'
+
+A feeling of utter helplessness and the weariness of despair fell upon
+Olaf Haraldsson.
+
+'It was this upon which I had set my hopes,' he said--'to have a good
+woman at my side, not to wander alone amongst wickedness and sin
+forever. Now I feel that I must succumb; I am unable to fight any
+longer. Have I not asked God,' he exclaimed, 'what place I shall have
+before His face? To what hast Thou chosen me, Thou Lord of souls? Is it
+appointed unto me to become the equal of apostles and martyrs? But now,
+Astrid, I need ask no longer; God hath not been willing to give me that
+woman who should have assisted me in my wandering. Now I know that I
+shall never win the crown of the Saints.'
+
+The King was silent in inconsolable despair; then Astrid drew nearer to
+him.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'what thou now sayest both Hjalte and Ingegerd
+have told me long ago, but I would not believe that thou wert more than
+a good and brave knight and noble King. It is only now that I have
+lived under thy roof that my soul has begun to fear thee. I have felt
+that it was worse than death to appear before thee with a lie upon my
+lips. Never have I been so terrified,' Astrid continued, 'as when I
+understood that thou wast a Saint. When I saw thee burn the chips in
+thine hand, when I saw sickness flee at thy bidding, and the sword fall
+out of thine enemy's hand when he met thee, I was terrified unto death
+when I saw that thou wast a Saint, and I resolved to die before thou
+knewest that I had deceived thee.'
+
+King Olaf did not answer. Astrid looked up at him; she saw that his eyes
+were turned towards heaven. She did not know if he had heard her.
+
+'Ah,' she said, 'this moment have I feared every day and every hour
+since I came hither. I would have died rather than live through it.'
+
+Olaf Haraldsson was still silent.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'I would gladly give my life for thee; I would
+gladly throw myself into the gray river so that thou shouldst not live
+with a lying woman at thy side. The more I saw of thy holiness the
+better I understood that I must go from thee. A Saint of God cannot have
+a lying bondwoman at his side.'
+
+The King was still silent, but now Astrid raised her eyes to his face;
+then she cried out, terror-stricken:
+
+'King Olaf, thy face shines.'
+
+Whilst Astrid spoke, God had shown King Olaf a vision. He saw all the
+stars of heaven leave their appointed places, and fly like swarming
+bees about the universe. But suddenly they all gathered above his head
+and formed a radiant crown.
+
+'Astrid,' said he, with trembling voice, 'God hath spoken to me. It is
+true what thou sayest. I shall become a Saint of God.'
+
+His voice trembled from emotion, and his face shone in the night. But
+when Astrid saw the light that surrounded his head, she arose. For her
+the last hope had faded.
+
+'Now I will go,' she said. 'Now thou knowest whom thou art. Thou canst
+never more bear me at thy side. But think gently of me. Without joy or
+happiness have I lived all my life. In rags have I gone; blows have I
+endured. Forgive me when I am gone. My love has done thee no harm.'
+
+When Astrid in silent despair crossed over the bridge, Olaf Haraldsson
+awoke from his ecstasy. He hastened after her.
+
+'Why wilt thou go?' he said. 'Why wilt thou go?'
+
+'_Must_ I not go from thee when thou art a Saint?' she whispered
+scarcely audibly.
+
+'Thou shalt not go. Now thou canst remain,' said King Olaf. 'Before, I
+was a lowly man and must fear all sin; a poor earthly King was I, too
+poor to bestow on thee my grace; but now all the glory of Heaven has
+been given to me. Art thou weak? I am the Lord's knight. Dost thou fall?
+I can lift thee up. God hath chosen me, Astrid. Thou canst not harm me,
+but I can help thee. Ah! what am I saying? In this hour God hath so
+wholly and fully shed the riches of His love in my heart that I cannot
+even see thou hast done wrong.'
+
+Gently and tenderly he lifted up the trembling form, and whilst lovingly
+supporting her, who was still sobbing and who could hardly stand
+upright, he and Astrid went back to the King's Castle.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ III
+
+ _Old_ AGNETE
+
+
+
+
+_Old_ AGNETE
+
+
+An old woman went up the mountain-path with short, tripping steps. She
+was little and thin. Her face was pale and wizened, but neither hard nor
+furrowed. She wore a long cloak and a quilled cap. She had a Prayer-Book
+in her hand and a sprig of lavender in her handkerchief.
+
+She lived in a hut far up the high mountain where no trees could grow.
+It was lying quite close to the edge of a broad glacier, which sent its
+river of ice from the snow-clad mountain peak into the depths of the
+valley. There she lived quite alone. All those who had belonged to her
+were dead.
+
+It was Sunday, and she had been to church. But whatever might be the
+cause, her going there had not made her happy, but sorrowful. The
+clergyman had spoken about death and the doomed, and that had affected
+her. She had suddenly begun to think of how she had heard in her
+childhood that many of the doomed were tormented in the region of
+eternal cold on the mountain right above her dwelling. She could
+remember many tales about these wanderers of the glaciers--these
+indefatigable shadows which were hunted from place to place by the icy
+mountain winds.
+
+All at once she felt a great terror of the mountain, and thought that
+her hut was dreadfully high up. Supposing those who moved about
+invisibly there wandered down the glaciers! And she who was quite alone!
+The word 'alone' gave to her thoughts a still sadder turn. She again
+felt the full burden of that sorrow which never left her. She thought
+how hard it was to be so far away from human beings.
+
+'Old Agnete,' she said aloud to herself, as she had got into the habit
+of doing in the lonely waste, 'you sit in your hut and spin, and spin.
+You work and toil all the hours of the day so as not to perish from
+hunger. But is there anyone to whom you give any pleasure by being
+alive? Is there anyone, old Agnete? If any of your own were
+living----Yes, then, perhaps, if you lived nearer the village, you might
+be of some use to somebody. Poor as you are, you could neither take dog
+nor cat home to you, but you could probably now and then give a beggar
+shelter. You ought not to live so far away from the highroad, old
+Agnete. If you could only once in a while give a thirsty wayfarer a
+drink, then you would know that it was of some use your being alive.'
+
+She sighed, and said to herself that not even the peasant women who gave
+her flax to spin would mourn her death. She had certainly striven to do
+her work honestly and well, but no doubt there were many who could have
+done it better. She began to cry bitterly, when the thought struck her
+that his reverence, who had seen her sitting in the same place in church
+for so many, many years, would perhaps think it a matter of perfect
+indifference whether she was dead or not.
+
+'It is as if I were dead,' she said. 'No one asks after me. I would just
+as well lie down and die. I am already frozen to death from cold and
+loneliness. I am frozen to the core of the heart, I am indeed. Ah me! ah
+me!' she said, now she had been set a-thinking; 'if there were only
+someone who really needed me, there might still be a little warmth left
+in old Agnete. But I cannot knit stockings for the mountain goats, or
+make the beds for the marmots, can I? I tell Thee,' she said, stretching
+our her hands towards heaven, 'something Thou must give me to do, or I
+shall lay me down and die.'
+
+At the same moment a tall, stern monk came towards her. He walked by her
+side because he saw that she was sorrowful, and she told him about her
+troubles. She said that her heart was nearly frozen to death, and that
+she would become like one of the wanderers on the glacier if God did not
+give her something to live for.
+
+'God will assuredly do that,' said the monk.
+
+'Do you not see that God is powerless here?' old Agnete said. 'Here
+there is nothing but an empty, barren waste.'
+
+They went higher and higher towards the snow mountains. The moss spread
+itself softly over the stones; the Alpine herbs, with their velvety
+leaves, grew along the pathway; the mountain, with its rifts and
+precipices, its glaciers and snow-drifts, towered above them, weighing
+them down. Then the monk discovered old Agnete's hut, right below the
+glacier.
+
+'Oh,' he said, 'is it there you live? Then you are not alone there; you
+have company enough. Only look!'
+
+The monk put his thumb and first finger together, held them before old
+Agnete's left eye, and bade her look through them towards the mountain.
+But old Agnete shuddered and closed her eyes.
+
+'If there is anything to see up there, then I will not look on any
+account,' she said. 'The Lord preserve us! it is bad enough without
+that.'
+
+'Good-bye, then,' said the monk; 'it is not certain that you will be
+permitted to see such a thing a second time.'
+
+Old Agnete grew curious; she opened her eyes and looked towards the
+glacier. At first she saw nothing remarkable, but soon she began to
+discern things moving about. What she had taken to be mist and vapour,
+or bluish-white shadows on the ice, were multitudes of doomed souls,
+tormented in the eternal cold.
+
+Poor old Agnete trembled like an aspen leaf. Everything was just as she
+had heard it described in days gone by. The dead wandered about there in
+endless anguish and pain. Most of them were shrouded in something long
+and white, but all had their faces and their hands bared.
+
+They could not be counted, there was such a multitude. The longer she
+looked, the more there appeared. Some walked proud and erect, others
+seemed to dance over the glacier; but she saw that they all cut their
+feet on the sharp and jagged edges of the ice.
+
+It was just as she had been told. She saw how they constantly huddled
+close together, as if to warm themselves, but immediately drew back
+again, terrified by the deathly cold which emanated from their bodies.
+
+It was as if the cold of the mountain came from them, as if it were they
+who prevented the snow from melting and made the mist so piercingly
+cold.
+
+They were not all moving; some stood in icy stoniness, and it looked as
+if they had been standing thus for years, for ice and snow had gathered
+around them so that only the upper portion of their bodies could be
+seen.
+
+The longer the little old woman gazed the quieter she grew. Fear left
+her, and she was only filled with sorrow for all these tormented beings.
+There was no abatement in their pain, no rest for their torn feet,
+hurrying over ice sharp as edged steel. And how cold they were! how they
+shivered! how their teeth chattered from cold! Those who were petrified
+and those who could move, all suffered alike from the snarling, biting,
+unbearable cold.
+
+There were many young men and women; but there was no youth in their
+faces, blue with cold. It looked as if they were playing, but all joy
+was dead. They shivered, and were huddled up like old people.
+
+But those who made the deepest impression on her were those frozen fast
+in the hard glacier, and those who were hanging from the mountain-side
+like great icicles.
+
+Then the monk removed his hand, and old Agnete saw only the barren,
+empty glaciers. Here and there were ice-mounds, but they did not
+surround any petrified ghosts. The blue light on the glacier did not
+proceed from frozen bodies; the wind chased the snowflakes before it,
+but not any ghosts.
+
+Still old Agnete was certain that she had really seen all this, and she
+asked the monk:
+
+'Is it permitted to do anything for these poor doomed ones?'
+
+He answered:
+
+'When has God forbidden Love to do good or Mercy to solace?'
+
+Then the monk went his way, and old Agnete went to her hut and thought
+it all over. The whole evening she pondered how she could help the
+doomed who were wandering on the glaciers. For the first time in many
+years she had been too busy to think of her loneliness.
+
+Next morning she again went down to the village. She smiled, and was
+well content. Old age was no longer so heavy a burden. 'The dead,' she
+said to herself, 'do not care so much about red cheeks and light steps.
+They only want one to think of them with a little warmth. But young
+people do not trouble to do that. Oh no, oh no. How should the dead
+protect themselves from the terrible coldness of death did not old
+people open their hearts to them?
+
+When she came to the village shop she bought a large package of candles,
+and from a peasant she ordered a great load of firewood; but in order to
+pay for it she had to take in twice as much spinning as usual.
+
+Towards evening, when she got home again, she said many prayers, and
+tried to keep up her courage by singing hymns. But her courage sank more
+and more. All the same, she did what she had made up her mind to do.
+
+She moved her bed into the inner room of her hut. In the front room she
+made a big fire and lighted it. In the window she placed two candles,
+and left the outer door wide open. Then she went to bed.
+
+She lay in the darkness and listened.
+
+Yes, there certainly was a step. It was as if someone had come gliding
+down the glacier. It came heavily, moaning. It crept round the hut as if
+it dared not come in. Close to the wall it stood and shivered.
+
+Old Agnete could not bear it any longer. She sprang out of bed, went
+into the outer room and closed the door. It was too much; flesh and
+blood could not stand it.
+
+Outside the hut she heard deep sighs and dragging steps, as of sore,
+wounded feet. They dragged themselves away further and further up the
+icy glacier. Now and again she also heard sobs; but soon everything was
+quiet.
+
+Then old Agnete was beside herself with anxiety. 'You are a coward, you
+silly old thing,' she said. 'Both the fire and the lights, which cost so
+much, are burning out. Shall it all have been done in vain because you
+are such a miserable coward?' And when she had said this she got out of
+bed again, crying from fear, with chattering teeth, and shivering all
+over; but into the other room she went, and the door she opened.
+
+Again she lay and waited. Now she was no longer frightened that they
+should come. She was only afraid lest she had scared them away, and that
+they dared not come back.
+
+And as she lay there in the darkness she began to call just as she used
+to do in her young days when she was tending the sheep.
+
+'My little white lambs, my lambs in the mountains, come, come! Come down
+from rift and precipice, my little white lambs!'
+
+Then it seemed as if a cold wind from the mountain came rushing into the
+room. She heard neither step nor sob, only gusts of wind that came
+rushing along the walls of the hut into the room. And it sounded as if
+someone were continually saying:
+
+'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't frighten her! don't frighten
+her!'
+
+She had a feeling as if the outside room was so overcrowded that they
+were being crushed against the walls, and that the walls were giving
+way. Sometimes it seemed as if they would lift the roof in order to gain
+more room. But the whole time there were whispers:
+
+'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't frighten her!'
+
+Then old Agnete felt happy and peaceful. She folded her hands and fell
+asleep. In the morning it seemed as if the whole had been a dream.
+Everything looked as usual in the outer room; the fire had burnt out,
+and so had the candles. There was not a vestige of tallow left in the
+candlesticks.
+
+As long as old Agnete lived she continued to do this. She spun and
+worked so that she could keep her fire burning every night. And she was
+happy because someone needed her.
+
+Then one Sunday she was not in her usual seat in the church. Two
+peasants went up to her hut to see if there was anything the matter. She
+was already dead, and they carried her body down to the village to bury
+it.
+
+When, the following Sunday, her funeral took place, just before Mass,
+there were but few who followed, neither did one see grief on any face.
+But suddenly, just as the coffin was being lowered into the grave, a
+tall, stern monk came into the churchyard, and he stood still and
+pointed to the snow-clad mountains. Then they saw the whole
+mountain-ridge shining in a red light as if lighted with joy, and round
+it wound a procession of small yellow flames, looking like burning
+candles. And these flames numbered as many as the candles which old
+Agnete had burned for the doomed. Then people said: 'Praise the Lord!
+She whom no one mourns here below has all the same found friends in the
+solitude above.'
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ IV
+
+ _The Fisherman's_ RING
+
+
+
+
+_The Fisherman's_ RING
+
+
+During the reign of the Doge Gradenigos there lived in Venice an old
+fisherman, Cecco by name. He had been an unusually strong man, and was
+still very strong for his age, but lately he had given up work and left
+it to his two sons to provide for him. He was very proud of his sons,
+and he loved them--ah, signor, how he loved them!
+
+Fate had so ordered it that their bringing up had been almost entirely
+left to him. Their mother had died early, and so Cecco had to take care
+of them. He had looked after their clothes and cooked their food; he had
+sat in the boat with needle and cotton and mended and darned. He had not
+cared in the least that people had laughed at him on that account. He
+had also, quite alone, taught them all it was necessary for them to
+know. He had made a couple of able fishermen of them, and taught them to
+honour God and San Marco.
+
+'Always remember,' he said to them, 'that Venice will never be able to
+stand in her own strength. Look at her! Has she not been built on the
+waves? Look at the low islands close to land, where the sea plays
+amongst the seaweed. You would not venture to tread upon them, and yet
+it is upon such foundation that the whole city rests. And do you not
+know that the north wind has strength enough to throw both churches and
+palaces into the sea? Do you not know that we have such powerful
+enemies, that all the princes in Christendom cannot vanquish them?
+Therefore you must always pray to San Marco, for in his strong hands
+rests the chains which hold Venice suspended over the depths of the
+sea.'
+
+And in the evening, when the moon shed its light over Venice,
+greenish-blue from the sea-mist; when they quietly glided up the Canale
+Grande and the gondolas they met were full of singers; when the palaces
+shone in their white splendour, and thousands of lights mirrored
+themselves in the dark waters--then he always reminded them that they
+must thank San Marco for life and happiness.
+
+But oh, signor! he did not forget him in the daytime either. When they
+returned from fishing and glided over the water of the lagoons,
+light-blue and golden; when the city lay before them, swimming on the
+waves; when the great ships passed in and out of the harbour, and the
+palace of the Doges shone like a huge jewel-casket, holding all the
+world's treasure--then he never forgot to tell them that all these
+things were the gift of San Marco, and that they would all vanish if a
+single Venetian were ungrateful enough to give up believing in and
+adoring him.
+
+Then, one day, the sons went out fishing on the open sea, outside Lido.
+They were in company with several others, had a splendid vessel, and
+intended being away several days. The weather was fine, and they hoped
+for a goodly haul.
+
+They left the Rialto, the large island where the city proper lies, one
+early morning, and as they passed through the lagoons they saw all the
+islands which, like fortifications, protect Venice against the sea,
+appear through the mist of the morning. There were La Gindecca and San
+Giorgio on the right, and San Michele, Muracco and San Lazzaro on the
+left. Then island followed upon island in a large circle, right on to
+the long Lido lying straight before them, and forming, as it were, the
+clasp of this string of pearls. And beyond Lido was the wide, infinite
+sea.
+
+When they were well at sea, some of them got into a small boat and rowed
+out to set their nets. It was still fine weather, although the waves
+were higher here than inside the islands. None of them, however, dreamt
+of any danger. They had a good boat and were experienced men. But soon
+those left on the vessel saw that the sea and the sky suddenly grew
+darker in the north. They understood that a storm was coming on, and
+they at once shouted to their comrades, but they were already too far
+away to hear them.
+
+The wind first reached the small boat. When the fishermen suddenly saw
+the waves rise around them, as herds of cattle on a large plain arise in
+the morning, one of the men in the boat stood up and beckoned to his
+comrades, but the same moment he fell backwards into the sea.
+Immediately afterwards a wave came which raised the boat on her bows,
+and one could see how the men, as it were, were shaken from off their
+seats and flung into the sea. It only lasted a moment, and everything
+had disappeared. Then the boat again appeared, keel upwards. The men in
+the vessel tried to reach the spot, but could not tack against the wind.
+
+It was a terrific storm which came rushing over the sea, and soon the
+fishermen in the vessel had their work set to save themselves. They
+succeeded in getting home safely, however, and brought with them the
+news of the disaster. It was Cecco's two sons and three others who had
+perished.
+
+Ah me! how strangely things come about! The same morning Cecco had gone
+down to the Rialto to the fish-market. He went about amongst the stands
+and strutted about like a fine gentleman because he had no need to work.
+He even invited a couple of old Lido fishermen to an asteri and stood
+them a beaker of wine. He grew very important as he sat there and
+bragged and boasted about his sons. His spirits rose high, and he took
+out the zecchine--the one the Doge had given him when he had saved a
+child from drowning in Canale Grande. He was very proud of this large
+gold coin, carried it always about him, and showed it to people whenever
+there was an opportunity.
+
+Suddenly a man entered the asteri and began to tell about the disaster,
+without noticing that Cecco was sitting there. But he had not been
+speaking long before Cecco threw himself over him and seized him by the
+throat.
+
+'You do not dare to tell me that they are dead!' he shrieked--'not my
+sons!'
+
+The man succeeded in getting away from him, but Cecco for a long time
+went on as if he were out of his mind. People heard him shout and groan;
+they crowded into the asteri--as many as it could hold--and stood round
+him in a circle as if he were a juggler.
+
+Cecco sat on the floor and moaned. He hit the hard stone floor with his
+fist, and said over and over again:
+
+'It is San Marco, San Marco, San Marco!'
+
+'Cecco, you have taken leave of your senses from grief,' they said to
+him.
+
+'I knew it would happen on the open sea,' Cecco said; 'outside Lido and
+Malamocco, there, I knew it would happen. There San Marco would take
+them. He bore them a grudge. I have feared it, boy. Yes,' he said,
+without hearing what they said to quiet him, 'they once laughed at him,
+once when we were lying outside Lido. He has not forgotten it; he will
+not stand being laughed at.'
+
+He looked with confused glances at the bystanders, as if to seek help.
+
+'Look here, Beppo from Malamocca,' he said, stretching out his hand
+towards a big fisherman, 'don't you believe it was San Marco?'
+
+'Don't imagine any such thing, Cecco.'
+
+'Now you shall hear, Beppo, how it happened. You see, we were lying out
+at sea, and to while away the time I told them how San Marco had come to
+Venice. The evangelist San Marco was first buried in a beautiful
+cathedral at Alexandria in Egypt. But the town got into the possession
+of unbelievers, and one day the Khalifa ordered that they should build
+him a magnificent palace at Alexandria, and take some columns from the
+Christian churches for its decoration. But just at that time there were
+two Venetian merchants at Alexandria who had ten heavily-laden vessels
+lying in the harbour. When these men entered the church where San Marco
+was buried and heard the command of the Khalifa, they said to the
+sorrowful priests: "The precious body which you have in your church may
+be desecrated by the Saracens. Give it to us; we will honour it, for San
+Marco was the first to preach on the Lagoon, and the Doge will reward
+you." And the priests gave their consent, and in order that the
+Christians of Alexandria should not object, the body of another holy man
+was placed in the Evangelist's coffin. But to prevent the Saracens from
+getting any news of the removal of the body, it was placed at the bottom
+of a large chest, and above it were packed hams and smoked bacon, which
+the Saracens could not endure. So when the Custom-house officers opened
+the lid of the chest, they at once hurried away. The two merchants,
+however, brought San Marco safely to Venice; you know, Beppo, that this
+is what they say.'
+
+'I do, Cecco.'
+
+'Yes; but just listen now,' and Cecco half arose, and in his fear spoke
+in a low voice. 'Something terrible now happened. When I told the boys
+that the holy man had been hidden underneath the bacon, they burst out
+laughing. I tried to hush them, but they only laughed the louder.
+Giacomo was lying on his stomach in the bows, and Pietro sat with his
+legs dangling outside the boat, and they both laughed so that it could
+be heard far out over the sea.'
+
+'But, Cecco, surely two children may be allowed to laugh.'
+
+'But don't you understand that is where they have perished to-day--on
+the very spot? Or can you understand why they should have lost their
+lives on that spot?'
+
+Now they all began to talk to him and comfort him. It was his grief
+which made him lose his senses. This was not like San Marco. He would
+not revenge himself upon two children. Was it not natural that when a
+boat was caught in a storm this would happen on the open sea and not in
+the harbour?
+
+Surely his sons had not lived in enmity with San Marco. They had heard
+them shout, '_Eviva San Marco!_' as eagerly as all the others, and had
+he not protected them to this very day. He had never, during the years
+that had passed, shown any sign of being angry with them.
+
+'But, Cecco,' they said, 'you will bring misfortune upon us with your
+talk about San Marco. You, who are an old man and a wise man, should
+know better than to raise his anger against the Venetians. What are we
+without him?'
+
+Cecco sat and looked at them bewildered.
+
+'Then you don't believe it?'
+
+'No one in his senses would believe such a thing.'
+
+It looked as if they had succeeded in quieting him.
+
+'I will also try not to believe it,' he said. He rose and walked towards
+the door. 'It would be too cruel, would it not?' he said. 'They were
+too handsome and too brave for anyone to hate them; I will not believe
+it.'
+
+He went home, and in the narrow street outside his door he met an old
+woman, one of his neighbours.
+
+'They are reading a Mass in the cathedral for the souls of the dead,'
+she said to Cecco, and hurried away. She was afraid of him; he looked so
+strange.
+
+Cecco took his boat and made his way through the small canals down to
+Riva degli Schiavoni. There was a wide view from there; he looked
+towards Lido and the sea. Yes, it was a hard wind, but not a storm by
+any means; there were hardly any waves. And his sons had perished in
+weather like this! It was inconceivable.
+
+He fastened his boat, and went across the Piazetta and the Market Place
+into San Marco. There were many people in the church, and they were all
+kneeling and praying in great fear; for it is much more terrible for the
+Venetians, you know, than any other people when there is a disaster at
+sea. They do not get their living from vineyards or fields, but they are
+all, everyone of them, dependent on the sea. Whenever the sea rose
+against any one of them they were all afraid, and hurried to San Marco
+to pray to him for protection.
+
+As soon as Cecco entered the cathedral he stopped. He thought of how he
+had brought his little sons there, and taught them to pray to San Marco.
+'It is he who carries us over the sea, who opens the gates of Byzance
+for us and gives us the supremacy over the islands of the East,' he
+said to them. Out of gratitude for all this the Venetians had built San
+Marco the most beautiful temple in the world, and no vessel ever
+returned from a foreign port without bringing a gift for San Marco.
+
+Then they had admired the red marble walls of the cathedral and the
+golden mosaic ceiling. It was as if no misfortune could befall a city
+that had such a sanctuary for her patron Saint.
+
+Cecco quickly knelt down and began to pray, the one _Paternoster_ after
+the other. It came back, he felt. He would send it away by prayers. He
+would not believe anything bad about San Marco.
+
+But it had been no storm at all. And so much was certain, that even if
+the Saint had not sent the storm, he had, in any case, not done anything
+to help Cecco's sons, but had allowed them to perish as if by accident.
+When this thought came upon him he began to pray; but the thought would
+not leave him.
+
+And to think that San Marco had a treasury in this cathedral full of all
+the glories of fairyland! To think that he had himself prayed to him all
+his life, and had never rowed past the Piazetta without going into the
+cathedral to invoke him!
+
+Surely it was not by a mere accident that his sons had to-day perished
+on the sea! Oh, it was miserable for the Venetians to have no one better
+to depend upon! Just fancy a Saint who revenged himself upon two
+children--a patron Saint who could not protect against a gust of wind!
+
+He stood up, and he shrugged his shoulders, and disparagingly waved his
+hand when he looked towards the tomb of the Saint in the chancel.
+
+A verger was going about with a large chased silver-gilt dish,
+collecting gifts for San Marco. He went from the one person to the
+other, and also came to Cecco.
+
+Cecco drew back as if it were the Evil One himself who handed him the
+plate. Did San Marco ask for gifts from him? Did he think he deserved
+gifts from him?
+
+All at once he seized the large golden zecchine he had in his belt, and
+flung it into the plate with such violence that the ring of it could be
+heard all over the church. It disturbed those who were praying, and made
+them turn round. And all who saw Cecco's face were terrified; he looked
+as if he were possessed of evil spirits.
+
+Cecco immediately left the church, and at first felt it as a great
+relief that he had been revenged upon the Saint. He had treated him as
+one treats a usurer who demands more than he is entitled to. 'Take this
+too,' one says, and throws his last gold piece in the fellow's face so
+that the blood runs down over his eyes. But the usurer does not strike
+again--simply stoops and picks up the zecchine. So, too, had San Marco
+done. He had accepted Cecco's zecchine, having first robbed him of his
+sons. Cecco had made him accept a gift which had been tendered with such
+bitter hatred. Would an honourable man have put up with such treatment?
+But San Marco was a coward--both cowardly and revengeful. But he was not
+likely to revenge himself upon Cecco. He was, no doubt, pleased and
+thankful he had got the zecchine. He simply accepted it and pretended
+that it had been given as piously as could be.
+
+When Cecco stood at the entrance, two vergers quickly passed him.
+
+'It rises--it rises terribly!' the one said.
+
+'What rises?' asked Cecco.
+
+'The water in the crypt. It has risen a foot in the last two or three
+minutes.'
+
+When Cecco went down the steps, he saw a small pool of water on the
+Market Place close to the bottom step. It was sea-water, which had
+splashed up from the Piazetta. He was surprised that the sea had risen
+so high, and he hurried down to the Riva, where his boat lay. Everything
+was as he had left it, only the water had risen considerably. It came
+rolling in broad waves through the five sea-gates; but the wind was not
+very strong. At the Riva there were already pools of sea-water, and the
+canals rose so that the doors in the houses facing the water had to be
+closed. The sky was all gray like the sea.
+
+It never struck Cecco that it might grow into a serious storm. He would
+not believe any such thing. San Marco had allowed his sons to perish
+without cause. He felt sure this was no real storm. He would just like
+to see if it would be a storm, and he sat down beside his boat and
+waited.
+
+Then suddenly rifts appeared in the dull-gray clouds which covered the
+sky. The clouds were torn asunder and flung aside, and large
+storm-clouds came rushing, black like warships, and from them scourging
+rain and hail fell upon the city. And something like quite a new sea
+came surging in from Lido. Ah, signor! they were not the swan-necked
+waves you have seen out there, the waves that bend their transparent
+necks and hasten towards the shore, and which, when they are pitilessly
+repulsed, float away again with their white foam-hair dispersed over the
+surface of the sea. These were dark waves, chasing each other in furious
+rage, and over their tops the bitter froth of the sea was whipped into
+mist.
+
+The wind was now so strong that the seagulls could no longer continue
+their quiet flight, but, shrieking, were thrust from their course. Cecco
+soon saw them with much trouble making their way towards the sea, so as
+not to be caught by the storm and flung against the walls. Hundreds of
+pigeons on San Marco's square flew up, beating their wings, so that it
+sounded like a new storm, and hid themselves away in all the nooks and
+corners of the church roof.
+
+But it was not the birds alone that were frightened by the storm. A
+couple of gondolas had already got loose, and were thrown against the
+shore, and were nearly shattered. And now all the gondoliers came
+rushing to pull their boats into the boathouses, or place them in
+shelter in the small canals.
+
+The sailors on the ships lying in the harbour worked with the
+anchor-chains to make the vessels fast, in order to prevent them
+drifting on to the shore. They took down the clothes hanging up to dry,
+pulled their long caps well over their foreheads, and began to collect
+all the loose articles lying about in order to bring them below deck.
+Outside Canale Grande a whole fishing-fleet came hurrying home. All the
+people from Lido and Malamocco who had sold their goods at the Rialto
+were rushing homewards, before the storm grew too violent.
+
+Cecco laughed when he saw the fishermen bending over their oars and
+straining themselves as if they were fleeing from death itself. Could
+they not see that it was only a gust of wind? They could very well have
+remained and given the Venetian women time to buy all their cattle,
+fish, and crabs.
+
+He was certainly not going to pull his boat into shelter, although the
+storm was now violent enough for any ordinary man to have taken notice
+of it. The floating bridges were lifted up high and cast on to the
+shore, whilst the washerwomen hurried home shrieking. The broad-brimmed
+hats of the signors were blown off into the canals, from whence the
+street-boys fished them out with great glee. Sails were torn from the
+masts, and fluttered in the air with a cracking sound; children were
+knocked down by the strong wind; and the clothes hanging on the lines in
+the narrow streets were torn to rags and carried far away.
+
+Cecco laughed at the storm--a storm which drove the birds away, and
+played all sorts of pranks in the street, like a boy. But, all the same,
+he pulled his boat under one of the arches of the bridge. One could
+really not allow what that wind might take it into its head to do.
+
+In the evening Cecco thought that it would have been fun to have been
+out at sea. It would have been splendid sailing with such a fresh wind.
+But on shore it was unpleasant. Chimneys were blown down; the roofs of
+the boathouses were lifted right off; it rained tiles from the houses
+into the canals; the wind shook the doors and the window-shutters,
+rushed in under the open loggias of the palaces and tore off the
+decorations.
+
+Cecco held out bravely, but he did not go home to bed. He could not take
+the boat home with him, so it was better to remain and look after it.
+But when anyone went by and said that it was terrible weather he would
+not admit it. He had experienced very different weather in his young
+days.
+
+'Storm!' he said to himself--'call this a storm? And they think,
+perhaps, that it began the same moment I threw the zecchine to San
+Marco. As if he can command a real storm!'
+
+When night came the wind and the sea grew still more violent, so that
+Venice trembled in her foundations. Doge Gradenigo and the Gentlemen of
+the High Council went in the darkness of the night to San Marco to pray
+for the city. Torch-bearers went before them, and the flames were spread
+out by the wind, so that they lay flat, like pennants. The wind tore the
+Doge's heavy brocade gown, so that two men were obliged to hold it.
+
+Cecco thought this was the most remarkable thing he had ever seen--Doge
+Gradenigo going himself to the cathedral on account of this bit of a
+wind! What would those people have done if there had been a real storm?
+
+The waves beat incessantly against the bulwarks. In the darkness of the
+night it was as if white-headed wresters sprang up from the deep, and
+with teeth and claws clung fast to the piles to tear them loose from the
+shore. Cecco fancied he could hear their angry snorts when they were
+hurled back again. But he shuddered when he heard them come again and
+again, and tear in the bulwarks.
+
+It seemed to him that the storm was far more terrible in the night. He
+heard shouts in the air, and that was not the wind. Sometimes black
+clouds came drifting like a whole row of heavy galleys, and it seemed as
+if they advanced to make an assault on the city. Then he heard
+distinctly someone speaking in one of the riven clouds over his head.
+
+'Things look bad for Venice now,' it said from the one cloud. 'Soon our
+brothers the evil spirits will come and overthrow the city.'
+
+'I am afraid San Marco will not allow it to happen,' came as a response
+from the other cloud.
+
+'San Marco has been knocked down by a Venetian, so he lies powerless,
+and cannot help anyone,' said the first.
+
+The storm carried the words down to old Cecco, and from that moment he
+was on his knees, praying San Marco for grace and forgiveness. For the
+evil spirits had spoken the truth. It did indeed look bad for Venice.
+The fair Queen of the Isles was near destruction. A Venetian had mocked
+San Marco, and therefore Venice was in danger of being carried away by
+the sea. There would be no more moonlight sails or her sea and in her
+canals, and no more barcaroles would be heard from her black gondolas.
+The sea would wash over the golden-haired signoras, over the proud
+palaces, over San Marco, resplendent with gold.
+
+If there was no one to protect these islands, they were doomed to
+destruction. Before San Marco came to Venice it had often happened that
+large portions of them had been washed away by the waves.
+
+At early dawn San Marco's Church bells began to ring. People crept to
+the church, their clothes being nearly torn off them.
+
+The storm went on increasing. The priests had resolved to go out and
+adjure the storm and the sea. The main doors of the cathedral were
+opened, and the long procession streamed out of the church. Foremost the
+cross was carried, then came the choir-boys with wax candles, and last
+in the procession were carried the banner of San Marco and the Sacred
+Host.
+
+But the storm did not allow itself to be cowed; on the contrary, it was
+as if it wished for nothing better to play with. It upset the
+choir-boys, blew out the wax candles, and flung the baldachin, which was
+carried over the Host, on to the top of the Doge's palace. It was with
+the utmost trouble that they saved San Marco's banner, with the winged
+lion, from being carried away.
+
+Cecco saw all this, and stole down to his boat moaning loudly. The whole
+day he lay near the shore, often wet by the waves and in danger of being
+washed into the sea. The whole day he was praying incessantly to God and
+San Marco. He felt that the fate of the whole city depended upon his
+prayers.
+
+There were not many people about that day, but some few went moaning
+along the Riva. All spoke about the immeasurable damage the storm had
+wrought. One could see the houses tumbling down on the Murano. It was as
+if the whole island were under water. And also on the Rialto one or two
+houses had fallen.
+
+The storm continued the whole day with unabated violence. In the evening
+a large multitude of people assembled at the Market Place and the
+Piazetta, although these were nearly covered with water. People dared
+not remain in their houses, which shook in their very foundations. And
+the cries of those who feared disaster mingled with the lamentations of
+those whom it had already overtaken. Whole dwellings were under water;
+children were drowned in their cradles. The old and the sick had been
+swept with the overturned houses into the waves.
+
+Cecco was still lying and praying to San Marco. Oh, how could the crime
+of a poor fisherman be taken in such earnest? Surely it was not his
+fault that the saint was so powerless! He would let the demons take him
+and his boat; he deserved no better fate. But not the whole city!--oh,
+God in heaven, not the whole city!
+
+'My sons!' Cecco said to San Marco. 'What do I care about my sons when
+Venice is at stake! I would willingly give a son for each tile in danger
+of being blown into the canal if I could keep them in their place at
+that price. Oh, San Marco, each little stone of Venice is worth as much
+as a promising son.'
+
+At times he saw terrible things. There was a large galley which had torn
+itself from its moorings and now came drifting towards the shore. It
+went straight against the bulwark, and struck it with the ram's head in
+her bows, just as if it had been an enemy's ship. It gave blow after
+blow, and the attack was so violent that the vessel immediately sprang a
+leak. The water rushed in, the leak grew larger, and the proud ship went
+to pieces. But the whole time one could see the captain and two or three
+of the crew, who would not leave the vessel, cling to the deck and meet
+death without attempting to escape it.
+
+The second night came, and Cecco's prayers continued to knock at the
+gate of heaven.
+
+'Let me alone suffer!' he cried. 'San Marco, it is more than a man can
+bear, thus to drag others with him to destruction. Only send thy lion
+and kill me; I shall not attempt to escape. Everything that thou wilt
+have me give up for the city, that will I willingly sacrifice.'
+
+Just as he had uttered these words he looked towards the Piazetta, and
+he thought he could no longer see San Marco's lion on the granite
+pillar. Had San Marco permitted his lion to be overthrown? old Cecco
+cried. He was nearly giving up Venice.
+
+Whilst he was lying there he saw visions and heard voices all the time.
+The demons talked and moved to and fro. He heard them wheeze like wild
+beasts every time they made their assaults on the bulwarks. He did not
+mind them much; it was worse about Venice.
+
+Then he heard in the air above him the beating of strong wings; this
+was surely San Marco's lion flying overhead. It moved backwards and
+forwards in the air; he saw and yet he did not see it. Then it seemed to
+him as if it descended on Riva degli Schiavoni, where he was lying, and
+prowled about there. He was on the point of jumping into the sea from
+fear, but he remained sitting where he was. It was no doubt he whom the
+lion sought. If that could only save Venice, then he was quite willing
+to let San Marco avenge himself upon him.
+
+Then the lion came crawling along the ground like a cat. He saw it
+making ready to spring. He noticed that it beat its wings and screwed
+its large carbuncle eyes together till they were only small fiery slits.
+
+Then old Cecco certainly did think of creeping down to his boat and
+hiding himself under the arch of the bridge, but he pulled himself
+together and remained where he was. The same moment a tall, imposing
+figure stood by his side.
+
+'Good-evening, Cecco,' said the man; 'take your boat and row me across
+to San Giorgio Maggiore.'
+
+'Yes, signor,' immediately replied the old fisherman.
+
+It was as if he had awakened from a dream. The lion had disappeared, and
+the man must be somebody who knew him, although Cecco could not quite
+remember where he had seen him before. He was glad to have company. The
+terrible heaviness and anguish that had been over him since he had
+revolted against the Saint suddenly vanished. As to rowing across to
+San Giorgio, he did not for a moment think that it could be done.
+
+'I don't believe we can even get the boat out,' he said to himself.
+
+But there was something about the man at his side that made him feel he
+must do all he possibly could to serve him; and he did succeed in
+getting out the boat. He helped the stranger into the boat and took the
+oars.
+
+Cecco could not help laughing to himself.
+
+'What are you thinking about? Don't go out further in any case,' he
+said. 'Have you ever seen the like of these waves? Do tell him that it
+is not within the power of man.'
+
+But he felt as if he could not tell the stranger that it was impossible.
+He was sitting there as quietly as if he were sailing to the Lido on a
+summer's eve. And Cecco began to row to San Giorgio Maggiore.
+
+It was a terrible row. Time after time the waves washed over them.
+
+'Oh, stop him!' Cecco said under his breath; 'do stop the man who goes
+to sea in such weather! Otherwise he is a sensible old fisherman. Do
+stop him!'
+
+Now the boat was up a steep mountain, and then it went down into a
+valley. The foam splashed down on Cecco from the waves that rushed past
+him like runaway horses, but in spite of everything he approached San
+Giorgio.
+
+'For whom are you doing all this, risking boat and life?' he said. 'You
+don't even know whether he can pay you. He does not look like a fine
+gentleman. He is no better dressed than you are.'
+
+But he only said this to keep up his courage, and not to be ashamed of
+his tractability. He was simply compelled to do everything the man in
+the boat wanted.
+
+'But in any case not right to San Giorgio, you foolhardy old man,' he
+said. 'The wind is even worse there than at the Rialto.'
+
+But he went there, nevertheless, and made the boat fast whilst the
+stranger went on shore. He thought the wisest thing he could do would be
+to slip away and leave his boat, but he did not do it. He would rather
+die than deceive the stranger. He saw the latter go into the Church of
+San Giorgio. Soon afterwards he returned, accompanied by a knight in
+full armour.
+
+'Row us now to San Nicolo in Lido,' said the stranger.
+
+'Ay, ay,' Cecco thought; 'why not to Lido?' They had already, in
+constant anguish and death, rowed to San Giorgio; why should they not
+set out for Lido?
+
+And Cecco was shocked at himself that he obeyed the stranger even unto
+death, for he now actually steered for the Lido.
+
+Being now three in the boat, it was still heavier work. He had no idea
+how he should be able to do it. 'You might have lived many years yet,'
+he said sorrowfully to himself. But the strange thing was that he was
+not sorrowful, all the same. He was so glad that he could have laughed
+aloud. And then he was proud that he could make headway. 'He knows how
+to use his oars, does old Cecco,' he said.
+
+They laid-to at Lido, and the two strangers went on shore. They walked
+towards San Nicolo in Lido, and soon returned accompanied by an old
+Bishop, with robe and stole, crosier in hand, and mitre on head.
+
+'Now row out to the open sea,' said the first stranger.
+
+Old Cecco shuddered. Should he row out to the sea, where his sons
+perished? Now he had not a single cheerful word to say to himself. He
+did not think so much of the storm, but of the terror it was to have to
+go out to the graves of his sons. If he rowed out there, he felt that he
+gave the stranger more than his life.
+
+The three men sat silently in the boat as if they were on watch. Cecco
+saw them bend forward and gaze into the night. They had reached the gate
+of the sea at Lido, and the great storm-ridden sea lay before them.
+
+Cecco sobbed within himself. He thought of two dead bodies rolling about
+in these waves. He gazed into the water for two familiar faces. But
+onward the boat went. Cecco did not give in.
+
+Then suddenly the three men rose up in the boat; and Cecco fell upon his
+knees, although he still went on holding the oars. A big ship steered
+straight against them.
+
+Cecco could not quite tell whether it was a ship or only drifting mist.
+The sails were large, spread out, as it were, towards the four corners
+of heaven; and the hull was gigantic, but it looked as if it were built
+of the lightest sea-mist. He thought he saw men on board and heard
+shouting; but the crew were like deep darkness, and the shouting was
+like the roar of the storm.
+
+However it was, it was far too terrible to see the ship steer straight
+upon them, and Cecco closed his eyes.
+
+But the three men in the boat must have averted the collision, for the
+boat was not upset. When Cecco looked up the ship had fled out to sea,
+and loud wailings pierced the night.
+
+He rose, trembling to row further. He felt so tired that he could hardly
+hold the oars. But now there was no longer any danger. The storm had
+gone down, and the waves speedily laid themselves to rest.
+
+'Now row us back to Venice,' said the stranger to the fisherman.
+
+Cecco rowed the boat to Lido, where the Bishop went on shore, and to San
+Giorgio, where the knight left them. The first powerful stranger went
+with him all the way to the Rialto.
+
+When they had landed at Riva degli Schiavoni he said to the fisherman:
+
+'When it is daylight thou shalt go to the Doge and tell him what thou
+hast seen this night. Tell him that San Marco and San Giorgio and San
+Nicolo have to-night fought the evil spirits that would destroy Venice,
+and have put them to flight.'
+
+'Yes, signor,' the fisherman answered, 'I will tell everything. But how
+shall I speak so that the Doge will believe me?'
+
+Then San Marco handed him a ring with a precious stone possessed of a
+wonderful lustre.
+
+'Show this to the Doge,' he said, 'then he will understand that it
+brings a message from me. He knows my ring, which is kept in San Marco's
+treasury in the cathedral.'
+
+The fisherman took the ring, and kissed it reverently.
+
+'Further, thou shalt tell the Doge,' said the holy man, 'that this is a
+sign that I shall never forsake Venice. Even when the last Doge has left
+Palazzo Ducali I will live and preserve Venice. Even if Venice lose her
+islands in the East and the supremacy of the sea, and no Doge ever again
+sets out on the Bucintoro, even then I will preserve the city beautiful
+and resplendent. It shall always be rich and beloved, always be lauded
+and its praises sung, always a place of joy for men to live in. Say
+this, Cecco, and the Doge will not forsake thee in thine old age.'
+
+Then he disappeared; and soon the sun rose above the gate of the sea at
+Torcello. With its first beautiful rays it shed a rosy light over the
+white city and over the sea that shone in many colours. A red glow lay
+over San Giorgio and San Marco, and over the whole shore, studded with
+palaces. And in the lovely morning radiant Venetian ladies came out on
+to the loggias and greeted with smiles the rising day.
+
+Venice was once again the beautiful goddess, rising from the sea in her
+shell of rose-coloured pearl. Beautiful as never before, she combed her
+golden hair, and threw the purple robe around her, to begin one of her
+happiest days. For a transport of bliss filled her when the old
+fisherman brought San Marco's ring to the Doge, and she heard how the
+Saint, now, and until the end of time, would hold his protecting hand
+over her.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ V
+
+ _Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA
+
+
+
+
+_Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA
+
+
+At Santa Caterina's house in Siena, on a day towards the end of April,
+in the week when her fête is being celebrated, people come to the old
+house in the Street of the Dyers, to the house with the pretty loggia
+and with the many small chambers, which have now been converted into
+chapels and sanctuaries, bringing bouquets of white lilies; and the
+rooms are fragrant with incense and violets.
+
+Walking through these rooms, one cannot help thinking that it is just as
+if she were dead yesterday, as if all those who go in and out of her
+home to-day had seen and known her.
+
+But, on the other hand, no one could really think that she had died
+recently, for then there would be more grief and tears, and not only a
+quiet sense of loss. It is more as if a beloved daughter had been
+recently married, and had left the parental home.
+
+Look only at the nearest houses. The old walls are still decorated as if
+for a fête. And in her own home garlands of flowers are still hanging
+beneath the portico and loggia, green leaves are strewn on the staircase
+and the doorstep, and large bouquets of flowers fill the rooms with
+their scent.
+
+She cannot possibly have been dead five hundred years. It looks much
+more as if she had celebrated her marriage, and had gone away to a
+country from which she would not return for many years, perhaps never.
+Are not the houses decorated with nothing but red table-cloths, red
+trappings, and red silken banners, and are there not stuck red-paper
+roses in the dark garlands of oak-leaves? and the hangings over the
+doors and the windows, are they not red with golden fringes? Can one
+imagine anything more cheerful?
+
+And notice how the old women go about in the house and examine her small
+belongings. It is as if they had seen her wear that very veil and that
+very shirt of hair. They inspect the room in which she lived, and point
+to the bedstead and the packets of letters, and they tell how at first
+she could not at all learn to write, but that it came to her all at once
+without her having learnt it. And only look at her writing--how good and
+distinct! And then they point to the little bottle she used to carry at
+her belt, so as always to have a little medicine at hand in case she met
+a sick person, and they utter a blessing over the old lantern she held
+in her hand when she went and visited the sick in the long weary nights.
+It is just as if they would say: 'Dear me--dear me! that our little
+Caterina Benincasa should be gone, that she will never come any more and
+look after us old people!' And they kiss her picture, and take a flower
+from the bouquets to keep as a remembrance.
+
+It looks as if those who were left in the home had long ago prepared
+themselves for the separation, and tried to do everything possible to
+keep alive the memory of the one who had gone away. See, there they
+have painted her on the wall; there is the whole of her little history
+represented in every detail. There she is when she cut off her beautiful
+long hair so that no man could ever fall in love with her, for she would
+never marry. Oh dear--oh dear! how much ridicule and scoffing she had
+suffered on that account! It is dreadful to think how her mother
+tormented her and treated her like a servant, and made her sleep on the
+stone floor in the hall, and would not give her any food, all because of
+her being so obstinate about that hair. But what was she to do when they
+continually tried to get her married--she who would have no other
+bridegroom than Christ? And there she is when she was kneeling in
+prayer, and her father coming into the room without her knowing it saw a
+beautiful white dove hovering over her head whilst she was praying. And
+there she is on that Christmas Eve when she had gone secretly to the
+Madonna's altar in order the more fully to rejoice over the birth of the
+Son of God, and the beautiful Madonna leaned out of her picture and
+handed the Child to her that she might be allowed to hold it for a
+moment in her arms. Oh, what a joy it had been for her!
+
+Oh dear, no; it is not at all necessary to say that our little Caterina
+Benincasa is dead. One need only say that she has gone away with the
+Bridegroom.
+
+In her home one will never forget her pious ways and doings. All the
+poor of Siena come and knock at her door because they know that it is
+the marriage-day of the little virgin, and large piles of bread lie in
+readiness for them as if she were still there. They have their pockets
+and baskets filled; had she herself been there, she could not have sent
+them away more heavily laden. She who had gone away had left so great a
+want that one almost wonders the Bridegroom had the heart to take her
+away with him.
+
+In the small chapels which have been arranged in every corner of the
+house they read Mass the whole day, and they invoke the bride and sing
+hymns in her praise.
+
+'Holy Caterina,' they say, 'on this the day of thy death, which is thine
+heavenly wedding-day, pray for us!'
+
+'Holy Caterina, thou who hadst no other love but Christ, thou who in
+life wert His affianced bride, and who in death wast received by Him in
+Paradise, pray for us!'
+
+'Holy Caterina, thou radiant heavenly bride, thou most blessed of
+virgins, thou whom the mother of God exalted to her Son's side, thou who
+on this day wast carried by angels to the kingdom of glory, pray for
+us!'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is strange how one comes to love her, how the home and the pictures
+and the love of the old and the poor seem to make her living, and one
+begins to wonder how she really was, whether she was only a saint, only
+a heavenly bride, and if it is true that she was unable to love any
+other than Christ. And then comes to one's mind an old story which
+warmed one's heart long ago, at first quite vague and without shape, but
+whilst one is sitting there under the loggia in the festively decorated
+home and watching the poor wander away with their full baskets, and
+hearing the subdued murmur from the chapels, the story becomes more and
+more distinct, and suddenly it is vivid and clear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nicola Tungo was a young nobleman of Perugia, who often came to Siena on
+account of the races. He soon found out how badly Siena was governed,
+and often said, both at the festive gatherings of the great and when he
+sat drinking in the inns, that Siena ought to rise against the Signoria
+and procure other rulers.
+
+The Signoria had not been in power for more than half a year; they did
+not feel particularly firm in their office, and did not like the
+Perugian stirring up the people. In order promptly to put a stop to it,
+they had him imprisoned, and after a short trial he was sentenced to
+death. He was placed in a cell in the Palazzo Publico whilst
+preparations were being made for his execution, which was to take place
+the next morning in the Market Place.
+
+At first he was strangely affected. To-morrow he would no more wear his
+green velvet doublet and his beautiful sword; he would no more walk down
+the street in his cap with the ostrich-feather and attract the glances
+of the young maidens, and he had a feeling of painful disappointment
+that he would never ride the new horse which he bought yesterday, and
+which he had only tried once.
+
+Suddenly he called the gaoler, and asked him to go to the gentlemen of
+the Signoria and tell them that he could not possibly allow himself to
+be killed; he had no time. He had far too much to do. Life could not do
+without him. His father was old, and he was the only son; it was through
+his descendants that the family should be continued. It was he who
+should give away his sisters in marriage, he who should build the new
+palace, he who should plant the new vineyard.
+
+He was a strong young man; he did not know what sickness was, had
+nothing but life in his veins. His hair was dark and his cheeks red. He
+could not realize that he should die.
+
+When he thought of their wanting to take him away from pleasure and
+dancing, and the carnival, and from the races next Sunday, and from the
+serenade he was going to sing to the beautiful Giulietta Lombardi, he
+became furiously angry, and his wrath was roused against the councillors
+as though they were thieves and robbers. The scoundrels--the scoundrels
+that would take his life from him!
+
+But as time went on his longings grew deeper; he longed for air and
+water and heaven and earth. He felt he would not mind being a beggar by
+the wayside; he would gladly suffer sickness and hunger and cold if only
+he were allowed to live.
+
+He wished that everything might die with him, that nothing would be left
+when he was gone; that would have been a great consolation.
+
+But that people should go to the Market Place and buy and sell, and that
+the women would fetch water from the well, and that the children would
+run in the streets the next day and all days, and that he would not be
+there to see, that he could not bear. He envied not only those who
+could live in luxury and pleasure, and were happy; he envied quite as
+much the most miserable cripple. What he wanted was life, solely life.
+
+Then the priests and the monks came to see him. It made him almost
+happy, for now he had someone upon whom he could wreak his anger. He
+first allowed them to talk a little. It amused him to hear what they had
+to say to a man so deeply wronged as he was, but when they said that he
+ought to rejoice that he was permitted to leave this life and gain the
+bliss of heaven in the fulness of his youth, then he started up and
+poured forth his wrath upon them. He scoffed at God and the joys of
+heaven--he did not want them. He would have life, and the world, and its
+pomps and vanities. He regretted every day in which he had not revelled
+in earthly enjoyment; he regretted every temptation he had resisted. God
+need not trouble Himself in the least about him; he felt no longing for
+His heaven.
+
+The priests continued to speak; he seized one of them by the throat, and
+would have killed him had not the gaoler thrown himself between them.
+They now bound and gagged him, and then preached to him; but as soon as
+he was allowed to speak he raged as before. They talked to him for many
+hours, but they saw that it was of no avail.
+
+When they could think of nothing else to do, one of them suggested they
+should send for the young Caterina Benincasa, who had shown great power
+in subduing defiant spirits. When the Perugian heard the name he
+suddenly ceased his abuse. In truth, it pleased him. It was something
+quite different, having to do with a young, beautiful maiden.
+
+'By all means send for the maiden,' he said.
+
+He knew that she was the young daughter of a dyer, and that she went
+about alone and preached in the lanes and streets of the town. Some
+thought she was mad, others said that she had visions. For him she
+might, anyhow, be better company than these dirty monks, who made him
+completely beside himself.
+
+The monks then went their way, and he was alone. Shortly afterwards the
+door was again opened, but if she for whom they had sent had really
+entered the cell, she must have walked with very light footsteps, for he
+heard nothing. He lay on the floor just as he had thrown himself down in
+his great anger; now he was too tired to raise himself, or make a
+movement, or even to look up. His arms were tied together with ropes,
+which cut deep into his flesh.
+
+He now felt that someone began to loosen his bands; a warm hand touched
+his arm, and he looked up. Beside him lay a little figure in the white
+dress of the Dominicans, with head and neck so shrouded in a white veil
+that there was not more of her face to be seen than of that of a knight
+in helmet and closed visor.
+
+She did not look so meek by any means; she was evidently a little
+annoyed. He heard her murmur something about the gaolers who had
+tightened the bands. It did not appear as if she had come for any other
+purpose than these knots. She was only taken up with loosening them so
+that they did not hurt. At last she had to bite in them, and then she
+succeeded. She untied the cord with a light hand, and then took the
+little bottle which was suspended from her belt and poured a few drops
+upon the chafed skin.
+
+He lay the whole time and looked at her, but she did not meet his
+glance; it appeared as if she could think of nothing else but what she
+had between her hands. It was as if nothing were further from her
+thoughts than that she was there to prepare him for death. He felt so
+exhausted after his passion, and at the same time so quieted by her
+presence, that he only said:
+
+'I think I will sleep.'
+
+'It is a great shame that they have not given you any straw,' she said.
+
+For a moment she looked about undecided. Then she sat down upon the
+floor, and placed his head in her lap.
+
+'Are you better now?' she said.
+
+Never in his whole life had he felt such a rest. Yet sleep he could not,
+but he lay and looked up in her face, which was like wax, and
+transparent. Such eyes he had never seen before. They were always
+looking far, far away, gazing into another world, whilst she sat quite
+motionless, so as not to disturb his sleep.
+
+'You are not sleeping, Nicola Tungo,' she said, and looked uneasy.
+
+'I cannot sleep,' he replied, 'because I am wondering who you can be.'
+
+'I am a daughter of Luca Benincasa the dyer, and his wife Lapa,' she
+said.
+
+'I know that,' he said, 'and I also know that you go about and preach in
+the streets. And I know that you have attired yourself in the dress of
+a nun, and have taken the vows of chastity. But yet I don't know who you
+are.'
+
+She turned her head away a little. Then she said, whispering like one
+who confesses her first love:
+
+'I am the Bride of Christ.'
+
+He did not laugh. On the contrary, he felt quite a pang in his heart, as
+from jealousy.
+
+'Oh, Christ!' he said, as if she had thrown herself away.
+
+She heard that his tone was contemptuous, but she thought he meant that
+she had spoken too presumptuously.
+
+'I do not understand it myself,' she said, 'but so it is.'
+
+'Is it an imagination or a dream?' he said.
+
+She turned her face towards him. The blood rose red behind the
+transparent skin. He saw suddenly that she was fair as a flower, and she
+became dear to him. He moved his lips as if to speak, but at first no
+sound came.
+
+'How can you expect me to believe that?' he said defiantly.
+
+'Is it not enough for you that I am here in the prison with you?' she
+asked, raising her voice. 'Is it any pleasure for a young girl like me
+to go to you and other evil-doers in their gloomy dungeons? Is it usual
+for a woman to stand and preach at the street corners as I do, and to be
+held in derision? Do I not require sleep as other people? And yet I must
+rise every night and go to the sick in the hospitals. Am I not timid as
+other women? And yet I must go to the high-born gentlemen at their
+castles and reason with them, I must go to the plague-smitten, I must
+see all vice and sin. When have you seen another maiden do all this? But
+I am obliged to do it.'
+
+'Poor thing!' he said, and stroked her hand gently--'poor thing!'
+
+'For I am not braver, or wiser, or stronger than others,' she said. 'It
+is just as hard for me as for other maidens. You can see that. I have
+come here to speak with you about your soul, but I do not at all know
+what I shall say to you.'
+
+It was strange how reluctantly he would allow himself to be convinced.
+
+'You may be mistaken all the same,' he said. 'How do you know that you
+can call yourself the Bride of Christ?'
+
+Her voice trembled, and it was as if she should tear out her heart when
+she replied:
+
+'It began when I was quite young; I was not more than six years old. It
+was one evening when I was walking with my brother in the meadow below
+the church of the Dominicans, and just as I looked up at the church I
+saw Christ sitting on a throne, surrounded by all His power and glory.
+He was attired in shining white garments like the Holy Father in Rome.
+His head was surrounded by all the splendour of Paradise, and around Him
+stood Pietro Paolo and the Evangelist Giovanni. And whilst I gazed upon
+Him my heart was filled with such a love and holy joy that I could
+hardly bear it. He lifted His hand and blessed me, and I sank down on
+the meadow, and was so overcome with bliss, that my brother had to take
+me in his arms and shake me. And ever since that time, Nicola Tungo, I
+have loved Jesus as a bridegroom.'
+
+He again objected.
+
+'You were a child then. You had fallen asleep in the meadow and were
+dreaming.'
+
+'Dreaming?' she repeated. 'Have I been dreaming all the time I have seen
+Him? Was it a dream when He came to me in the church in the likeness of
+a beggar and asked for alms? Then I was wide awake, at any rate. And do
+you think that for the sake of a dream only I could have borne all the
+worries I have had to bear as a young girl because I would not marry?'
+
+Nicola went on contradicting her because he could not bear the thought
+that her heart was filled with love to another.
+
+'But even if you do love Christ, maiden, how do you know that He loves
+you?'
+
+She smiled her very happiest smile and clapped her hands like a child.
+
+'Now you shall hear,' she said. 'Now I will tell you the most important
+of all. It was the last night before Lent. It was after my parents and I
+had been reconciled, and I had obtained their permission to take the vow
+of chastity and wear the dress of a nun, although I continued to live in
+their house; and it was night, as I told you, the last night of the
+carnival, when everybody turns night into day. There were fêtes in every
+street. On the walls of the big palaces hung balconies like cages,
+completely covered with silken hangings and banners, and filled with
+noble ladies. I saw all their beauty by the light of the red torches in
+their bronze-holders, the one row over the other quite up to the roof;
+and in the gaily decorated streets there was a train of carriages, with
+golden towers, and all the gods and goddesses, and all the virtues and
+beauties went by in a long procession. And everywhere there was such a
+play of masks and so much merriment that I am sure that you, sir, have
+never taken part in anything more gay. And I took refuge in my chamber,
+but still I heard laughter from the street, and never before have I
+heard people laugh like that; it was so clear and bell-like that
+everyone was obliged to join in it. And they sang songs which, I
+suppose, were wicked, but they sounded so innocent, and caused such
+pleasure, that one's heart trembled. Then, in the middle of my prayers,
+I suddenly began to wonder why I was not out amongst them, and the
+thought fascinated and tempted me, as if I were dragged along by a
+runaway horse; but never before have I prayed so intensely to Christ to
+show me what was His will with me. Suddenly all the noise ceased, a
+great and wonderful silence surrounded me, and I saw a great meadow,
+where the Mother of God sat amongst the flowers, and on her lap lay the
+Child Jesus, playing with lilies. But I hurried thither in great joy,
+and knelt before the Child, and was at the same moment filled with peace
+and quietness, and then the Holy Child placed a ring on my finger, and
+said to me, "Know, Caterina, that to-day I celebrate My betrothal with
+thee, and bind thee to Me by the strongest faith."'
+
+'Oh, Caterina!'
+
+The young Perugian had turned himself on the floor, so that he could
+bury his face in her lap. It was as if he could not bear to see how
+radiant she was whilst she was speaking, and now her eyes became bright
+as stars. A shadow of pain passed over him. For whilst she spoke a great
+sorrow had sprung up in his heart. This little maiden, this little white
+maiden, he could never win. Her love belonged to another; it could never
+be his. It was of no use even to tell her that he loved her; but he
+suffered; his whole being groaned in love's agony. How could he bear to
+live without her? It almost became a consolation to remember that he was
+sentenced to death. It was not necessary for him to live and do without
+her.
+
+Then the little woman beside him sighed deeply, and came back from the
+joys of heaven in order to think of poor human beings.
+
+'I forgot to speak to you about your soul,' she said.
+
+Then, he thought: 'This burden, at any rate, I can lighten for her.'
+
+'Sister Caterina,' he said, 'I do not know how it is, but heavenly
+consolation has come to me. In God's name I will prepare for death. Now
+you may send for the priests and monks; now I will confess to them. But
+one thing you must promise me before you go: you must come to me
+to-morrow, when I shall die, and hold my head between your hands as you
+are doing now.'
+
+When he said this she burst into tears, from a great feeling of relief,
+and an unspeakable joy filled her.
+
+'How happy you must be, Nicola Tungo!' she said. 'You will be in
+Paradise before I am;' and she stroked his face gently.
+
+He said again:
+
+'You will come to me to-morrow in the Market Place? Perhaps I shall
+otherwise be afraid; perhaps I cannot otherwise die with steadfastness.
+But when you are there I shall feel nothing but joy, and all fear will
+leave me.'
+
+'You do not seem to me any more as a poor mortal,' she said, 'but as a
+dweller of Paradise. You appear to me radiant with life, surrounded by
+incense. Bliss comes to me from you, who shall so soon meet my beloved
+Bridegroom. Be assured I shall come.'
+
+She then led him to confession and the Communion. He felt the whole time
+as if he were asleep. All the fear of death and the longing for life had
+passed away from him. He longed for the morning, when he should see her
+again; he thought only of her, and of the love with which she had
+inspired him. Death seemed to him now but a slight thing compared with
+the pain of the thought that she would never love him.
+
+The young maiden did not sleep much during the night, and early in the
+morning she went to the place of execution, to be there when he came.
+She invoked Jesu, Mother, Marie, and the Holy Caterina of Egypt, virgin
+and martyr, incessantly with prayers to save his soul. Incessantly she
+repeated: 'I will that he shall be saved--I will, I will.' But she was
+afraid that her prayers were unavailing, for she did not feel any longer
+that ecstasy which had filled her the evening before; she only felt an
+infinite pity for him who should die. She was quite overcome with grief
+and sorrow.
+
+Little by little the Market Place filled with people. The soldiers
+marched up, the executioner arrived, and much noise and talking went on
+around her; but she saw and heard nothing. She felt as if she were quite
+alone.
+
+When Nicola Tungo arrived, it was just the same with him. He had no
+thought for all the others, but saw only her. When he saw at the first
+glance that she was entirely overcome with sorrow, his face beamed, and
+he felt almost happy. He called loudly to her:
+
+'You have not slept much this night, maiden?'
+
+'No,' she said; 'I have watched in prayer for you; but now I am in
+despair, for my prayers have no power.'
+
+He knelt down before the block, and she knelt so that she could hold his
+head in her hands.
+
+'Now I am going to your Bridegroom, Caterina.'
+
+She sobbed more and more.
+
+'I can comfort you so badly,' she said.
+
+He looked at her with a strange smile.
+
+'Your tears are my best comfort.'
+
+The executioner stood with his sword drawn, but she bade him with a
+movement stand on one side, for she would speak a few words with the
+doomed man.
+
+'Before you came,' she said, 'I laid my head down on the block to try if
+I could bear it; and then I felt that I was still afraid of death, that
+I do not love Jesus enough to be willing to die in this hour; and I do
+not wish you to die either, and my prayers have no power.'
+
+When he heard this he thought: 'Had I lived I should have won her'; and
+he was glad he should die before he had succeeded in drawing the radiant
+heavenly bride down to earth. But when he had laid his head in her
+hands, a great consolation came to them both.
+
+'Nicola Tungo,' she said, 'I see heaven open. The angels descend to
+receive your soul.'
+
+A wondering smile passed over his face. Could what he had done for her
+sake make him worthy of heaven? He lifted his eyes to see what she saw;
+the same moment the sword fell.
+
+But Caterina saw the angels descend lower and lower, saw them lift his
+soul, saw them carry it to heaven.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All at once it seemed so natural that Caterina Benincasa has lived all
+these five hundred years. How could one forget that gentle little
+maiden, that great loving heart? Again and again they must sing in her
+praise, as they are now singing in the small chapels:
+
+ 'Pia Mater et humilis,
+ Naturæ memor fragilis,
+ In hujus vitæ fluctibus
+ Nos rege tuis precibus.
+ Quem vidi, quem amavi,
+ In quem credidi, quem dilexi,
+ Ora pro nobis.
+ Ut digni efficiamur promessionibus Christi!
+ Santa Caterina, ora pro nobis!'[B]
+
+ [B] Pious and gentle Mother, thou who knowest our weak nature, guide
+ us by thy prayers through this life's vicissitudes. Thou, whom I saw
+ and loved, in whom I believed and whom I adored, pray for us, that we
+ may be worthy of Christ's promises. Holy Caterina, pray for us!
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VI
+
+ _The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST
+
+
+
+
+_The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST
+
+
+The Bishop had summoned Father Verneau to appear before him. It was on
+account of a somewhat unpleasant matter. Father Verneau had been sent to
+preach in the manufacturing districts around Charleroi, but he had
+arrived there in the midst of a strike, when the workmen were rather
+excited and unmanageable. He informed the Bishop that he had immediately
+on his arrival in the Black Country received a letter from one of the
+leaders of the men to the effect that they were quite willing to hear
+him preach, but if he ventured to mention the name of God either
+directly or indirectly, there would be a disturbance in the church.
+
+'And when I went up into the pulpit and saw the congregation to whom I
+should preach,' said the Father, 'I felt no doubt but that the threat
+would be carried out.'
+
+Father Verneau was a little dried-up monk. The Bishop looked down upon
+him as being of a lower order. Such an unshaven, not too clean monk,
+with the most insignificant face, was, of course, a coward. He was,
+probably, also afraid of the Bishop.
+
+'I have been informed,' said the Bishop, 'that you carried out the
+workmen's wishes. But I need not point out----'
+
+'Monseigneur,' interrupted Father Verneau in all humility, 'I thought
+the Church, if possible, would avoid everything that might lead to a
+disturbance.'
+
+'But a Church that dare not mention the name of God----'
+
+'Has Monseigneur heard my sermon?'
+
+The Bishop walked up and down the floor to calm himself.
+
+'You know it by heart, of course?' he said.
+
+'Of course, Monseigneur.'
+
+'Let me hear it, then, as it was delivered, Father Verneau, word for
+word, exactly as you preached it.'
+
+The Bishop sat down in his arm-chair. Father Verneau remained standing.
+
+'"Citizens and citizenesses," he began in the tone of a lecturer.
+
+The Bishop started.
+
+'Yes, that is how they will be addressed, Monseigneur.'
+
+'Never mind, Father Verneau, only proceed.'
+
+The Bishop shuddered slightly; these two words had suddenly shown him
+the whole situation. He saw before him this gathering of the children of
+the Black Country, to whom Father Verneau had preached. He saw many wild
+faces, many rags, much coarse merriment. He saw these people for whom
+nothing had been done.
+
+'"Citizens and citizenesses," began Father Verneau afresh, "there is in
+this country an Empress called Maria Theresa. She is an excellent ruler,
+the best and wisest Belgium has ever had. Other rulers, my
+fellow-citizens, other rulers have successors when they die, and lose
+all power over their people. Not so the great Empress Maria Theresa.
+She may have lost the throne of Austria and Hungary; Brabant and Limburg
+may now be under other rulers, but not her good province of West
+Flanders. In West Flanders, where I have lived the last few years, no
+other ruler is known to this very day than Maria Theresa. We know King
+Leopold lives in Brussels, but that has nothing to do with us. It is
+Maria Theresa who still reigns here by the sea, more especially in the
+fishing villages. The nearer one gets to the sea, the mightier becomes
+her power. Neither the great Revolution, nor the Empire, nor the Dutch
+have had the power to overthrow her. How could they? They have done
+nothing for the children of the sea that can compare with what she has
+done. But what has she not done for the people on the dunes! What an
+invaluable treasure, my fellow-citizens, has she not bestowed upon them!
+
+'"About one hundred and fifty years ago, in the early part of her reign,
+she made a journey through Belgium. She visited Brussels and Bruges, she
+went to Liege and Louvain, and when she had at last seen enough of large
+cities and profusely ornamented town-halls, she went to the coast to see
+the sea and the dunes.
+
+'"It was not a very cheering sight for her. She saw the ocean, so vast
+and mighty that no man can fight against it. She saw the coast, helpless
+and unprotected. There lay the dunes, but the sea had washed over them
+before, and might do so again. There were also dams, but they had fallen
+down and were neglected.
+
+'"She saw harbours filled with sand; she saw marshes overgrown with
+rushes and weeds; she saw, below the dunes, fishing-huts ravaged by the
+wind--huts looking as if they had been thrown there, a prey for the sea;
+she saw poor old churches that had been moved away from the sea, lying
+between quicksands and lyme-grass, in desolate wastes.
+
+'"The great Empress sat a whole day by the sea. She was told all about
+the floods and the towns that had been washed away; she was shown the
+spot where a whole district had sunk under the sea; she was rowed out to
+the place where an old church stood at the bottom of the sea; and she
+was told about all the people who had been drowned, and of all the
+cattle that had been lost, the last time the sea had overflowed the
+dunes.
+
+'"The whole day through the Empress sat thinking: 'How shall I help
+these poor people on the dunes? I cannot forbid the sea to rise and
+fall; I cannot forbid it to undermine the shore; nor can I stay the
+storm, or prevent it from upsetting the fishermen's boats; and still
+less can I lead the fish into their nets, or transform the lyme-grass
+into nutritious wheat. There is no monarch in the world so mighty that
+he can help these poor people in their need.'
+
+'"The next day it was Sunday, and the Empress heard Mass at
+Blankenberghe. All the people from Dunkirk to Sluis had come to see her.
+But before Mass the Empress went about and spoke with the people.
+
+'"The first person she addressed was the harbour-master from Nieuport.
+'What news is there from your town?' asked the Empress. 'Nothing new,'
+answered the harbour-master, 'except that Cornelis Aertsen's boat was
+upset in the storm yesterday; and we found him this morning riding on
+the keel.' 'It was a good thing his life was saved,' said the Empress.
+'Well, I don't know,' said the harbour-master, 'for he was out of his
+mind when he came on shore.' 'Was it from fear?' asked the Empress.
+'Yes,' said the harbour-master; 'it is because we in Nieuport have
+nothing to depend upon in the hour of need. Cornelis knew that his wife
+and his small children would starve to death if he perished; and it was
+this thought, I suppose, that drove him out of his mind.' 'Then that is
+what you need here on the dunes--something to depend upon?' 'Yes, that
+is it,' said the harbour-master. 'The sea is uncertain, the harvest is
+uncertain, the fishing and the earnings are uncertain. Something to
+depend upon, that is what we need.'
+
+'"The Empress then went on, and the next she spoke to was the priest
+from Heyst. 'What news from Heyst?' said she to him. 'Nothing new,' he
+answered, 'except that Jacob van Ravesteyn has given up making ditches
+in the marshes, and dredging the harbour, and attending to the
+lighthouses, and all other useful work he had to do.' 'How is that?'
+said the Empress. 'He has inherited a sum of money,' said the priest;
+'but it was less than he had expected.' 'But now he has something
+certain,' said the Empress. 'Yes,' said the priest; 'but now he has got
+the money he dare not venture to do anything great for fear it will not
+be sufficient.' 'It is something infinitely great, then, that is needed
+to help you at Heyst?' said the Empress. 'It is,' said the priest;
+'there is infinitely much to do. And nothing can be done until we know
+that we have something infinitely great to fall back upon.'
+
+'"The Empress then went on until she came to the master-pilot from
+Middelkerke, whom she began to question about the news from his town. 'I
+do not know of anything new,' said the master-pilot, 'but that Ian van
+der Meer has quarrelled with Luca Neerwinden.' 'Indeed!' said the
+Empress. 'Yes, they have found the cod-bank they have both been looking
+for all their lives. They had heard about it from old people, and they
+had hunted for it all over the sea, and they have been the best of
+friends the whole time, but now they have found it they have fallen
+out.' 'Then it would have been better if they had never found it?' said
+the Empress. 'Yes,' answered the master-pilot, 'it would indeed have
+been better.' 'So, then, that which is to help you in Middelkerke,' said
+the Empress, 'must be hidden so well that no one can find it?' 'Just
+so,' said the master-pilot; 'well hidden it must be, for if anyone
+should find it, there would be nothing but quarrelling and strife over
+it, or else it would be all spent, and then it would be of no further
+use.'
+
+'"The Empress sighed, and felt she could do nothing.
+
+'"She then went to Mass, and the whole time she knelt and prayed that
+power might be given her to help the people. And--you must excuse me,
+citizens--when the Mass was finished, it had become clear to her that it
+was better to do a little than to do nothing. When all the people had
+come out of the church, she stood on the steps in order to address them.
+
+'"No man or woman of West Flanders will ever forget how she looked. She
+was beautiful, like an Empress, and she was attired like an Empress. She
+wore her crown and her ermine mantle, and held the sceptre in her hand.
+Her hair was dressed high and powdered, and a string of large pearls was
+entwined amongst the curls. She wore a robe of red silk, which was
+entirely covered with Flemish lace, and red, high-heeled shoes, with
+large diamond buckles. That is how she appears, she who to this day
+still reigns over our West Flanders.
+
+'"She spoke to the people of the coast, and told them her will. She told
+them of how she had thought of every way in which to help them. She said
+that they knew she could not compel the sea to quietness or chain the
+storm, that she could not lead the fish-shoals to the coast, or
+transform the lyme-grass into wheat; but what a poor mortal could do for
+them, that should be done.
+
+'"They all knelt before her whilst she spoke. Never before had they felt
+such a gentle and motherly heart beat for them. The Empress spoke to
+them in such a manner about their hard and toilsome life that tears came
+into their eyes over her pity.
+
+'"But now the Empress said she had decided to leave with them her
+Imperial money-chest, with all the treasures which it contained. That
+should be her gift to all those who lived on the dunes. That was the
+only assistance she could render them, and she asked them to forgive
+her that it was so poor; and the Empress herself had tears in her eyes
+when she said this.
+
+'"She now asked them if they would promise and swear not to use any of
+the treasure until the need amongst them was so great that it could not
+become any greater. Next, if they would swear to leave it as an
+inheritance for their descendants, if they did not require it
+themselves. And, lastly, she asked every man singly to swear that he
+would not try to take possession of the treasure for his own use without
+having first asked the consent of all his fellow-fishermen.
+
+'"If they were willing to swear? That they all were. And they blessed
+the Empress and cried from gratitude. And she cried and told them that
+she knew that what they needed was a support that would never fail them,
+a treasure that could never be exhausted, and a happiness that was
+unattainable, but that she could not give them. She had never been so
+powerless as here on the dunes.
+
+'"My fellow-citizens, without her knowing it, solely by force of the
+royal wisdom with which this great Queen was endowed, the power was
+given her to attain far more than she had intended, and it is therefore
+one can say that to this day she reigns over West Flanders.
+
+'"What a happiness, is it not, to hear of all the blessings which have
+been spread over West Flanders by the Empress's gift! The people there
+have now something to depend upon which they needed so badly, and which
+we all need. However bad things may be, there is never any despair.
+
+'"They have told me at the dunes what the Empress's money-chest is like.
+They say it is like the holy shrine of Saint Ursula at Bruges, only more
+beautiful. It is a copy of the cathedral at Vienna, and it is of pure
+gold; but on the sides the whole history of the Empress is depicted in
+the whitest alabaster. On the small side-towers are the four diamonds
+which the Empress took from the crown of the Sultan of Turkey, and in
+the gable are her initials inlaid with rubies. But when I ask them
+whether they have seen the money-chest, they reply that shipwrecked
+sailors when in peril always see it swimming before them on the waves as
+a sign that they shall not be in despair for their wives and children,
+should they be compelled to leave them. But they are the only ones who
+have seen the treasure, otherwise no one has been near enough to count
+it. And you know, citizens, that the Empress never told anyone how great
+it was. But if any of you doubt how much use it has been and is, then I
+will ask you to go to the dunes and see for yourself. There has been
+digging and building ever since that time, and the sea now lies cowed by
+bulwarks and dams, and no longer does harm. And there are green meadows
+inside the dunes, and there are flourishing towns and watering-places
+near the shore. But for every lighthouse that has been built, for every
+harbour that has been deepened, for every ship of which the keel has
+been laid, for every dam that has been raised, they have always thought:
+'If our own money should not be sufficient, we shall receive help from
+our Gracious Empress Maria Theresa.' But this has been but a spur to
+them: their own money has always sufficed.
+
+'"You know, also, that the Empress did not say where the treasure was.
+Was not this well considered, citizens? There is one who has it in his
+keeping, but only, when all are agreed upon dividing it, will he who
+keeps the treasure come forward and reveal where it is. Therefore one is
+certain that neither now nor in the future will it be unfairly divided.
+It is the same for all. Everyone knows that the Empress thinks as much
+of him as of his neighbour. There can be no strife or envy amongst the
+people of the dunes as there is amongst other men, for they all share
+alike in the treasure."'
+
+The Bishop interrupted Father Verneau.
+
+'That is enough,' he said. 'How did you continue?'
+
+'I said,' continued the monk, 'that it was very bad the good Empress had
+not also come to Charleroi. I pitied them because they did not own her
+money-chest. Considering the great things they had to accomplish,
+considering the sea which they had to tame, the quicksands which they
+had to bind, considering all this, I said to them surely there was
+nothing they needed so much.'
+
+'And then?' asked the Bishop.
+
+'One or two cabbages, your Eminence, a little hissing; but then I was
+already out of the pulpit. That was all.'
+
+'They had understood that you had spoken to them about the providence of
+God?'
+
+The monk bowed.
+
+'They had understood that you would show them that the power which they
+deride because they do not see it must be kept hidden? that it will be
+abused immediately it assumes a visible form? I congratulate you, Father
+Verneau.'
+
+The monk retired towards the door, bowing. The Bishop followed him,
+beaming benevolently.
+
+'But the money-chest--do they still believe in it at the dunes?'
+
+'As much as ever, Monseigneur.'
+
+'And the treasure--has there ever been a treasure?'
+
+'Monseigneur, I have sworn.'
+
+'But for me,' said the Bishop.
+
+'It is the priest at Blankenberghe, who has it in his keeping. He
+allowed me to see it. It is an old wooden chest with iron mountings.'
+
+'And?'
+
+'And at the bottom lie twenty bright Maria Theresa gold pieces.'
+
+The Bishop smiled, but became grave at once.
+
+'Is it right to compare such a wooden chest with God's providence?'
+
+'All comparisons are incomplete, Monseigneur; all human thoughts are
+vain.'
+
+Father Verneau bowed once again, and quietly withdrew from the
+audience-room.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VII
+
+ _The_ PEACE _of_ GOD
+
+
+
+
+_The_ PEACE _of_ GOD
+
+
+Once upon a time there was an old farmhouse. It was Christmas-eve, the
+sky was heavy with snow, and the north wind was biting. It was just that
+time in the afternoon when everybody was busy finishing their work
+before they went to the bath-house to have their Christmas bath. There
+they had made such a fire that the flames went right up the chimney, and
+sparks and soot were whirled about by the wind, and fell down on the
+snow-decked roofs of the outhouses. And as the flames appeared above the
+chimney of the bath-house, and rose like a fiery pillar above the farm,
+everyone suddenly felt that Christmas was at hand. The girl that was
+scrubbing the entrance floor began to hum, although the water was
+freezing in the bucket beside her. The men in the wood-shed who were
+cutting Christmas logs began to cut two at a time, and swung their axes
+as merrily as if log-cutting were a mere pastime.
+
+An old woman came out of the pantry with a large pile of cakes in her
+arms. She went slowly across the yard into the large red-painted
+dwelling-house, and carried them carefully into the best room, and put
+them down on the long seat. Then she spread the tablecloth on the table,
+and arranged the cakes in heaps, a large and a small cake in each heap.
+She was a singularly ugly old woman, with reddish hair, heavy drooping
+eyelids, and with a peculiar strained look about the mouth and chin, as
+if the muscles were too short. But being Christmas-eve, there was such a
+joy and peace over her that one did not notice how ugly she was.
+
+But there was one person on the farm who was not happy, and that was the
+girl who was tying up the whisks made of birch twigs that were to be
+used for the baths. She sat near the fireplace, and had a whole armful
+of fine birch twigs lying beside her on the floor, but the withes with
+which she was to bind the twigs would not keep knotted. The best room
+had a narrow, low window, with small panes, and through them the light
+from the bath-house shone into the room, playing on the floor and
+gilding the birch twigs. But the higher the fire burned the more unhappy
+was the girl. She knew that the whisks would fall to pieces as soon as
+one touched them, and that she would never hear the last of it until the
+next Christmas fire was lighted.
+
+Just as she sat there bemoaning herself, the person of whom she was most
+afraid came into the room. It was her master, Ingmar Ingmarson. He was
+sure to have been to the bath-house to see if the stove was hot enough,
+and now he wanted to see how the whisks were getting on. He was old, was
+Ingmar Ingmarson, and he was fond of everything old, and just because
+people were beginning to leave off bathing in the bath-houses and being
+whipped with birch twigs, he made a great point of having it done on his
+farm, and having it done properly.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson wore an old coat of sheep's-skin, skin trousers, and
+shoes smeared over with pitch. He was dirty and unshaven, slow in all
+his movements, and came in so softly that one might very well have
+mistaken him for a beggar. His features resembled his wife's features
+and his ugliness resembled his wife's ugliness, for they were relations,
+and from the time the girl first began to notice anything she had
+learned to feel a wholesome reverence for anybody who looked like that;
+for it was a great thing to belong to the old family of the Ingmars,
+which had always been the first in the village. But the highest to which
+a man could attain was to be Ingmar Ingmarson himself, and be the
+richest, the wisest, and the mightiest in the whole parish.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson went up to the girl, took one of the whisks, and swung
+it in the air. It immediately fell to pieces; one of the twigs landed on
+the Christmas table, another on the big four-poster.
+
+'I say, my girl,' said old Ingmar, laughing, 'do you think one uses that
+kind of whisk when one takes a bath at the Ingmar's, or are you very
+tender, my girl?'
+
+When the girl saw that her master did not take it more seriously than
+that, she took heart, and answered that she could certainly make whisks
+that would not go to pieces if she could get proper withes to bind them
+with.
+
+'Then I suppose I must try to get some for you, my girl,' said old
+Ingmar, for he was in a real Christmas humour.
+
+He went out of the room, stepped over the girl who was scouring the
+floor, and remained standing on the doorstep, to see if there were
+anyone about whom he could send to the birch-wood for some withes. The
+farm hands were still busy cutting Yule logs; his son came out of the
+barn with the Christmas sheaf; his two sons-in-law were putting the
+carts into the shed so that the yard could be tidy for the Christmas
+festival. None of them had time to leave their work.
+
+The old man then quietly made up his mind to go himself. He went across
+the yard as if he were going into the cowshed, looked cautiously round
+to make sure no one noticed him, and stole along outside the barn where
+there was a fairly good road to the wood. The old man thought it was
+better not to let anyone know where he was going, for either his son or
+his sons-in-law might then have begged him to remain at home, and old
+people like to have their own way.
+
+He went down the road, across the fields, through the small pine-forest
+into the birch-wood. Here he left the road, and waded in the snow to
+find some young birches.
+
+About the same time the wind at last accomplished what it had been busy
+with the whole day: it tore the snow from the clouds, and now came
+rushing through the wood with a long train of snow after it.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson had just stooped down and cut off a birch twig, when
+the wind came tearing along laden with snow. Just as the old man was
+getting up the wind blew a whole heap of snow in his face. His eyes were
+full of snow, and the wind whirled so violently around him that he was
+obliged to turn round once or twice.
+
+The whole misfortune, no doubt, arose from Ingmar Ingmarson being so
+old. In his young days a snowstorm would certainly not have made him
+dizzy. But now everything danced round him as if he had joined in a
+Christmas polka, and when he wanted to go home he went in the wrong
+direction. He went straight into the large pine-forest behind the
+birch-wood instead of going towards the fields.
+
+It soon grew dark, and the storm continued to howl and whirl around him
+amongst the young trees on the outskirts of the forest. The old man saw
+quite well that he was walking amongst fir-trees, but he did not
+understand that this was wrong, for there were also fir-trees on the
+other side of the birch-wood nearest the farm. But by-and-by he got so
+far into the forest that everything was quiet and still--one could not
+feel the storm, and the trees were high with thick stems--then he found
+out that he had mistaken the road, and would turn back.
+
+He became excited and upset at the thought that he _could_ lose his way,
+and as he stood there in the midst of the pathless wood he was not
+sufficiently clear-headed to know in which direction to turn. He first
+went to the one side and then to the other. At last it occurred to him
+to retrace his way in his own footprints, but darkness came on, and he
+could no longer follow them. The trees around him grew higher and
+higher. Whichever way he went, it was evident to him that he got further
+and further into the forest.
+
+It was like witchcraft and sorcery, he thought, that he should be
+running about the woods like this all the evening and be too late for
+the bathing. He turned his cap and rebound his garter, but his head was
+no clearer. It had become quite dark, and he began to think that he
+would have to remain the whole night in the woods.
+
+He leant against a tree, stood still for a little, and tried to collect
+his thoughts. He knew this forest so well, and had walked in it so much,
+that he ought to know every single tree. As a boy he had gone there and
+tended sheep. He had gone there and laid snares for the birds. In his
+young days he had helped to fell trees there. He had seen old trees cut
+down and new ones grow up. At last he thought he had an idea where he
+was, and fancied if he went that and that way he must come upon the
+right road; but all the same, he only went deeper and deeper into the
+forest.
+
+Once he felt smooth, firm ground under his feet, and knew from that,
+that he had at last come to some road. He tried now to follow this, for
+a road, he thought, was bound to lead to some place or other; but then
+the road ended at an open space in the forest, and there the snowstorm
+had it all its own way; there was neither road nor path, only drifts and
+loose snow. Then the old man's courage failed him; he felt like some
+poor creature destined to die a lonely death in the wilderness.
+
+He began to grow tired of dragging himself through the snow, and time
+after time he sat down on a stone to rest; but as soon as he sat down he
+felt he was on the point of falling asleep, and he knew he would be
+frozen to death if he did fall asleep, therefore he tried to walk and
+walk; that was the only thing that could save him. But all at once he
+could not resist the inclination to sit down. He thought if he could
+only rest, it did not matter if it did cost him his life.
+
+It was so delightful to sit down that the thought of death did not in
+the least frighten him. He felt a kind of happiness at the thought that
+when he was dead the account of his whole life would be read aloud in
+the church. He thought of how beautifully the old Dean had spoken about
+his father, and how something equally beautiful would be sure to be said
+about him. The Dean would say that he had owned the oldest farm in the
+district, and he would speak about the honour it was to belong to such a
+distinguished family, and then something would be said about
+responsibility. Of course there was responsibility in the matter; that
+he had always known. One must endure to the very last when one was an
+Ingmar.
+
+The thought rushed through him that it was not befitting for him to be
+found frozen to death in the wild forest. He would not have that handed
+down to posterity; and he stood up again and began to walk. He had been
+sitting so long that masses of snow fell from his fur coat when he
+moved. But soon he sat down again and began to dream.
+
+The thought of death now came quite gently to him. He thought about the
+whole of the funeral and all the honour they would show his dead body.
+He could see the table laid for the great funeral feast in the large
+room on the first floor, the Dean and his wife in the seats of honour,
+the Justice of the Peace, with the white frill spread over his narrow
+chest; the Major's wife in full dress, with a low silk bodice, and her
+neck covered with pearls and gold; he saw all the best rooms draped in
+white--white sheets before the windows, white over the furniture;
+branches of fir strewn the whole way from the entrance-hall to the
+church; house-cleaning and butchering, brewing and baking for a
+fortnight before the funeral; the corpse on a bier in the inmost room;
+smoke from the newly-lighted fires in the rooms; the whole house crowded
+with guests; singing over the body whilst the lid of the coffin was
+being screwed on; silver plates on the coffin; twenty loads of wood
+burned in a fortnight; the whole village busy cooking food to take to
+the funeral; all the tall hats newly ironed; all the corn-brandy from
+the autumn drunk up during the funeral feast; all the roads crowded with
+people as at fair-time.
+
+Again the old man started up. He had heard them sitting and talking
+about him during the feast.
+
+'But how did he manage to go and get frozen to death?' asked the Justice
+of the Peace. 'What could he have been doing in the large forest?'
+
+And the Captain would say that it was probably from Christmas ale and
+corn-brandy. And that roused him again. The Ingmars had never been
+drunkards. It should never be said of him that he was muddled in his
+last moments. And he began again to walk and walk; but he was so tired
+that he could scarcely stand on his legs. It was quite clear to him now
+that he had got far into the forest, for there were no paths anywhere,
+but many large rocks, of which he knew there were none lower down. His
+foot caught between two stones, so that he had difficulty in getting it
+out, and he stood and moaned. He was quite done for.
+
+Suddenly he fell over a heap of fagots. He fell softly on to the snow
+and branches, so he was not hurt, but he did not take the trouble to get
+up again. He had no other desire in the world than to sleep. He pushed
+the fagots to one side and crept under them as if they were a rug; but
+when he pushed himself under the branches he felt that underneath there
+was something warm and soft. This must be a bear, he thought.
+
+He felt the animal move, and heard it sniff; but he lay still. The bear
+might eat him if it liked, he thought. He had not strength enough to
+move a single step to get out of its way.
+
+But it seemed as if the bear did not want to harm anyone who sought its
+protection on such a night as this. It moved a little further into its
+lair, as if to make room for its visitor, and directly afterwards it
+slept again with even, snorting breath.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the meantime there was but scanty Christmas joy in the old farm of
+the Ingmars. The whole of Christmas-eve they were looking for Ingmar
+Ingmarson. First they went all over the dwelling-house and all the
+outhouses. They searched high and low, from loft to cellar. Then they
+went to the neighbouring farms and inquired for Ingmar Ingmarson.
+
+As they did not find him, his sons and his sons-in-law went into the
+fields and roads. They used the torches which should have lighted the
+way for people going to early service on Christmas morning in the search
+for him. The terrible snowstorm had hidden all traces, and the howling
+of the wind drowned the sound of their voices when they called and
+shouted. They were out and about until long after midnight, but then
+they saw that it was useless to continue the search, and that they must
+wait until daylight to find the old man.
+
+At the first pale streak of dawn everybody was up at Ingmar's farm, and
+the men stood about the yard ready to set out for the wood. But before
+they started the old housewife came and called them into the best room.
+She told them to sit down on the long benches; she herself sat down by
+the Christmas table with the Bible in front of her and began to read.
+She tried her best to find something suitable for the occasion, and
+chose the story of the man who was travelling from Jerusalem to Jericho,
+and fell among thieves.
+
+She read slowly and monotonously about the unfortunate man who was
+succoured by the good Samaritan. Her sons and sons-in-law, her daughters
+and daughters-in-law, sat around her on the benches. They all resembled
+her and each other, big and clumsy, with plain, old-fashioned faces, for
+they all belonged to the old race of the Ingmars. They had all reddish
+hair, freckled skin, and light-blue eyes with white eyelashes. They
+might be different enough from each other in some ways, but they had all
+a stern look about the mouth, dull eyes, and heavy movements, as if
+everything were a trouble to them. But one could see that they all,
+every one of them, belonged to the first people in the neighbourhood,
+and that they knew themselves to be better than other people.
+
+All the sons and daughters of the house of Ingmar sighed deeply during
+the reading of the Bible. They wondered if some good Samaritan had found
+the master of the house and taken care of him, for all the Ingmars felt
+as if they had lost part of their own soul when a misfortune happened to
+anyone belonging to the family.
+
+The old woman read and read, and came to the question: 'Who was
+neighbour unto him that fell amongst thieves?' But before she had read
+the answer the door opened and old Ingmar came into the room.
+
+'Mother, here is father,' said one of the daughters; and the answer,
+that the man's neighbour was he who had shown mercy unto him, was never
+read.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Later in the day the housewife sat again in the same place, and read her
+Bible. She was alone; the women had gone to church, and the men were
+bear-hunting in the forest. As soon as Ingmar Ingmarson had eaten and
+drunk, he took his sons with him and went out to the forest; for it is
+every man's duty to kill a bear wherever and whenever he comes across
+one. It does not do to spare a bear, for sooner or later it will get a
+taste for flesh, and then it will spare neither man nor beast.
+
+But after they were gone a great feeling of fear came over the old
+housewife, and she began to read her Bible. She read the lesson for the
+day, which was also the text for the Pastor's sermon; but she did not
+get further than this: 'Peace on earth, goodwill towards men.' She
+remained sitting and staring at these words with her dull eyes, now and
+again sighing deeply. She did not read any further, but she repeated
+time after time in her slow, drawling voice, 'Peace on earth, goodwill
+towards men.'
+
+The eldest son came into the room just as she was going to repeat the
+words afresh.
+
+'Mother!' he said softly.
+
+She heard him, but did not take her eyes from the book whilst she asked:
+
+'Are you not with the others in the forest?'
+
+'Yes,' said he, still more softly, 'I have been there.'
+
+'Come to the table,' she said, 'so that I can see you.'
+
+He came nearer, but when she looked at him she saw that he was
+trembling. He had to press his hands hard against the edge of the table
+in order to keep them still.
+
+'Have you got the bear?' she asked again.
+
+He could not answer; he only shook his head.
+
+The old woman got up and did what she had not done since her son was a
+child. She went up to him, laid her hand on his arm, and drew him to the
+bench. She sat down beside him and took his hand in hers.
+
+'Tell me now what has happened, my boy.'
+
+The young man recognised the caress which had comforted him in bygone
+days when he had been in trouble and unhappy, and he was so overcome
+that he began to weep.
+
+'I suppose it is something about father?' she said.
+
+'It is worse than that,' the son sobbed. 'Worse than that?'
+
+The young man cried more and more violently; he did not know how to
+control his voice. At last he lifted his rough hand, with the broad
+fingers, and pointed to what she had just read: 'Peace on earth. . . .'
+
+'Is it anything about that?' she asked.
+
+'Yes,' he answered.
+
+'Is it anything about the peace of Christmas?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'You wished to do an evil deed this morning?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'And God has punished us?'
+
+'God has punished us.'
+
+So at last she was told how it had happened. They had with some trouble
+found the lair of the bear, and when they had got near enough to see the
+heap of fagots, they stopped in order to load their guns. But before
+they were ready the bear rushed out of its lair straight against them.
+It went neither to the right nor to the left, but straight for old
+Ingmar Ingmarson, and struck him a blow on the top of the head that
+felled him to the ground as if he had been struck by lightning. It did
+not attack any of the others, but rushed past them into the forest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the afternoon Ingmar Ingmarson's wife and son drove to the Dean's
+house to announce his death. The son was spokesman, and the old
+housewife sat and listened with a face as immovable as a stone figure.
+
+The Dean sat in his easy-chair near his writing-table. He had entered
+the death in the register. He had done it rather slowly; he wanted time
+to consider what he should say to the widow and the son, for this was,
+indeed, an unusual case. The son had frankly told him how it had all
+happened, but the Dean was anxious to know how they themselves looked at
+it. They were peculiar people, the Ingmars.
+
+When the Dean had closed the book, the son said:
+
+'We wanted to tell you, sir, that we do not wish any account of father's
+life to be read in church.'
+
+The Dean pushed his spectacles over his forehead and looked searchingly
+at the old woman. She sat just as immovable as before. She only crumpled
+the handkerchief a little which she held in her hand.
+
+'We wish to have him buried on a week day,' continued the son.
+
+'Indeed!' said the Dean.
+
+He could hardly believe his own ears. Old Ingmar Ingmarson to be buried
+without anyone taking any notice of it! The congregation not to stand on
+railings and mounds in order to see the display when he was being
+carried to the grave!
+
+'There will not be any funeral feast. We have let the neighbours know
+that they need not think of preparing anything for the funeral.'
+
+'Indeed, indeed!' said the Dean again.
+
+He could think of nothing else to say. He knew quite well what it meant
+for such people to forego the funeral feast. He had seen both widows and
+fatherless comforted by giving a splendid funeral feast.
+
+'There will be no funeral procession, only I and my brothers.'
+
+The Dean looked almost appealingly at the old woman. Could she really be
+a party to all this? He asked himself if it could be her wishes to which
+the son had given expression. She was sitting there and allowing herself
+to be robbed of what must be dearer to her than gold and silver.
+
+'We will not have the bells rung, or any silver plates on the coffin.
+Mother and I wish it to be done in this way, but we tell you all this,
+sir, in order to hear, sir, if you think we are wronging father.'
+
+Now the old woman spoke:
+
+'We should like to hear if your Reverence thinks we are doing father a
+wrong.'
+
+The Dean remained silent, and the old woman continued, more eagerly:
+
+'I must tell your Reverence that if my husband had sinned against the
+King or the authorities, or if I had been obliged to cut him down from
+the gallows, he should all the same have had an honourable funeral, as
+his father before him, for the Ingmars are not afraid of anyone, and
+they need not go out of their way for anybody. But at Christmas God has
+made peace between man and beast, and the poor beast kept God's
+commandment, whilst we broke it, and therefore we now suffer God's
+punishment; and it is not becoming for us to show any ostentatious
+display.'
+
+The Dean rose and went up to the old woman.
+
+'What you say is right,' he said, 'and you shall follow the dictates of
+your own conscience.' And involuntarily he added, perhaps most to
+himself: 'The Ingmars are a grand family.'
+
+The old woman straightened herself a little at these words. At that
+moment the Dean saw in her the symbol of her whole race. He understood
+what it was that had made these heavy, silent people, century after
+century, the leaders of the whole parish.
+
+'It behooves the Ingmars to set the people a good example,' she said.
+'It behooves us to show that we humble ourselves before God.'
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VIII
+
+ _A_ STORY _from_ HALSTANÄS
+
+
+
+
+_A_ STORY _from_ HALSTANÄS
+
+
+In olden times there stood by the roadside an old country-house called
+Halstanäs. It comprised a long row of red-painted houses, which were of
+low structure, and right behind them lay the forest. Close to the
+dwelling-house was a large wild cherry-tree, which showered its black
+fruit over the red-tiled roof. A bell under a small belfry hung over the
+gable of the stables.
+
+Just outside the kitchen-door was a dovecote, with a neat little
+trelliswork outside the holes. From the attic a cage for squirrels was
+hanging; it consisted of two small green houses and a large wheel, and
+in front of a big hedge of lilacs stood a long row of beehives covered
+with bark.
+
+There was a pond belonging to the farm, full of fat carp and slim
+water-snakes; there was also a kennel at the entrance; there were white
+gates at the end of the avenue, and at the garden walks, and in every
+place where they could possibly have a gate. There were big lofts with
+dark lumber-rooms, where old-fashioned uniforms and ladies' head-gear a
+hundred years old were stored away; there were large chests full of silk
+gowns and bridal finery; there were old pianos and violins, guitars and
+bassoons. In bureaus and cabinets were manuscript songs and old yellow
+letters; on the walls of the entrance-hall hung guns, pistols and
+hunting-bags; on the floor were rugs, in which patches of old silken
+gowns were woven together with pieces of threadbare cotton curtains.
+There was a large porch, where the deadly nightshade summer after summer
+grew up a thin trelliswork; there were large, yellow front-doors, which
+were fastened with bolts and catches; the hall was strewn with sprigs of
+juniper, and the windows had small panes and heavy wooden shutters.
+
+One summer old Colonel Beerencreutz came on a visit to this house. It is
+supposed to have been the very year after he left Ekeby. At that time he
+had taken rooms at a farm at Svartsjö, and it was only on rare occasions
+that he went visiting. He still had his horse and gig, but he scarcely
+ever used them. He said that he had grown old in earnest now, and that
+home was the best place for old people.
+
+Beerencreutz was also loath to leave the work he had in hand. He was
+weaving rugs for his two rooms--large, many-coloured rugs in a rich and
+strangely-thought-out pattern. It took him an endless time, because he
+had his own way of weaving, for he used no loom, but stretched his wool
+from the one wall to the other right across the one room. He did this in
+order to see the whole rug at one time; but to cross the woof and
+afterwards bring the threads together to a firm web was no easy matter.
+And then there was the pattern, which he himself thought out, and the
+colours which should match. This took the Colonel more time than anyone
+would have imagined; for whilst Beerencreutz was busy getting the
+pattern right, and whilst he was working with warp and woof, he often
+sat and thought of God. Our Lord, he thought, was likewise sitting at a
+loom, still larger, and with an even more peculiar pattern to weave. And
+he knew that there must be both light and dark shades in that weaving.
+But Beerencreutz would at times sit and think so long about this, until
+he fancied he saw before him his own life and the life of the people
+whom he had known, and with whom he had lived, forming a small portion
+of God's great weaving; and he seemed to see that piece so distinctly
+that he could discern both outlines and colouring. And if one asked
+Beerencreutz what the pattern in his work really meant, he would be
+obliged to confess that it was the life of himself and his friends which
+he wove into the rug as a faint imitation of what he thought he had seen
+represented on God's loom.
+
+The Colonel, however, was accustomed to pay a little visit to some old
+friends every year just after midsummer. He had always liked best to
+travel through the country when the fields were still scented with
+clover, and blue and yellow flowers grew along the roadside in two long
+straight rows.
+
+This year the Colonel had hardly got to the great highroad before he met
+his old friend Ensign von Örneclou. And the Ensign, who was travelling
+about all the year round, and who knew all the country houses in
+Värmland, gave him some good advice.
+
+'Go to Halstanäs and call upon Ensign Vestblad,' he said to the Colonel.
+'I can only tell you, old man, I don't know a house in the whole country
+where one fares better.'
+
+'What Vestblad are you speaking about?' asked the Colonel. 'I suppose
+you don't mean the old Ensign whom the Major's wife showed the door?'
+
+'The very man,' said the Ensign. 'But Vestblad is not the same man he
+was. He has married a fine lady--a real stunning woman, Colonel--who has
+made a man of him. It was a wonderful piece of good luck for Vestblad
+that such a splendid girl should take a fancy to him. She was not
+exactly young any longer; but no more was he. You should go to
+Halstanäs, Colonel, and see what wonders love can work.'
+
+And the Colonel went to Halstanäs to see if Örneclou spoke the truth. He
+had, as a matter of fact, now and then wondered what had become of
+Vestblad; in his young days he had kicked so recklessly over the traces
+that even the Major's wife at Ekeby could not put up with him. She had
+not been able to keep him at Ekeby more than a couple of years before
+she was obliged to turn him out. Vestblad had become such a heavy
+drinker that a Cavalier could hardly associate with him. And now
+Örneclou declared that he owned a country house, and had made an
+excellent match.
+
+The Colonel consequently went to Halstanäs, and saw at the first glance
+that it was a real old country-seat. He had only to look at the avenue
+of birches with all the names cut on the fine old trees. Such birches he
+had only seen at good old country-houses. The Colonel drove slowly up to
+the house, and every moment his pleasure increased. He saw lime hedges
+of the proper kind, so close that one could walk on the top of them,
+and there were a couple of terraces with stone steps so old that they
+were half buried in the ground. When the Colonel drove past the pond, he
+saw indistinctly the dark carp in the yellowish water. The pigeons flew
+up from the road flapping their wings; the squirrel stopped its wheel;
+the watch-dog lay with its head on its paws, wagging its tail, and at
+the same time faintly growling. Close to the porch the Colonel saw an
+ant-hill, where the ants, unmolested, went to and fro--to and fro. He
+looked at the flower-beds inside the grass border. There they grew, all
+the old flowers: narcissus and pyrola, sempervivum and marigold; and on
+the bank grew small white daisies, which had been there so long that
+they now sowed themselves like weeds. Beerencreutz again said to himself
+that this was indeed a real old country-house, where both plants and
+animals and human beings throve as well as could be.
+
+When at last he drove up to the front-door he had as good a reception as
+he could wish for, and as soon as he had brushed the dust off him he was
+taken to the dining-room, and he was offered plenty of good
+old-fashioned food--the same old cakes for dessert that his mother used
+to give him when he came home from school; and any so good he had never
+tasted elsewhere.
+
+Beerencreutz looked with surprise at Ensign Vestblad. He went about
+quiet and content, with a long pipe in his mouth and a skull-cap on his
+head. He wore an old morning-coat, which he had difficulty in getting
+out of when it was time to dress for dinner. That was the only sign of
+the Bohemian left, as far as Beerencreutz could see. He went about and
+looked after his men, calculated their wages, saw how things were
+getting on in the fields and meadows, gathered a rose for his wife when
+he went through the garden, and he indulged no longer in either swearing
+or spitting. But what astonished the Colonel most of all was the
+discovery that old Ensign Vestblad kept his books. He took the Colonel
+into his office and showed him large books with red backs. And those he
+kept himself. He had lined them with red ink and black ink, written the
+headings with large letters, and put down everything, even to a stamp.
+
+But Ensign Vestblad's wife, who was a born lady, called Beerencreutz
+cousin, and they soon found out the relationship between them; and they
+talked all their relatives over. At last Beerencreutz became so intimate
+with Mrs. Vestblad that he consulted her about the rug he was weaving.
+
+It was a matter of course that the Colonel should stay the night. He was
+taken to the best spare room to the right of the hall and close to his
+host's bedroom, and his bed was a large four-poster, with heaps of
+eiderdowns.
+
+The Colonel fell asleep as soon as he got into bed, but awoke later on
+in the night. He immediately got out of bed and went and opened the
+window-shutters. He had a view over the garden, and in the light summer
+night he could see all the gnarled old apple-trees, with their
+worm-eaten leaves, and with numerous props under the decayed branches.
+He saw the large wild apple-tree, which in the autumn would give barrels
+of uneatable fruit; he saw the strawberries, which had just begun to
+ripen under their profusion of green leaves.
+
+The Colonel stood and looked at it as if he could not afford to waste
+his time in sleeping. Outside his window at the peasant farm where he
+lived all he could see was a stony hill and a couple of juniper-bushes;
+and it was natural that a man like Beerencreutz should feel more at home
+amongst well-trimmed hedges and roses in bloom.
+
+When in the quiet stillness of the night one looks out upon a garden,
+one often has a feeling that it is not real and natural. It can be so
+still that one can almost fancy one's self in the theatre; one imagines
+that the trees are painted and the roses made of paper. And it was
+something like this the Colonel felt as he stood there. 'It cannot be
+possible,' he thought, 'that all this is real. It can only be a dream.'
+But then a few rose-leaves fell softly to the ground from the big
+rose-tree just outside his window, and then he realized that everything
+was genuine. Everything was real and genuine; both day and night the
+same peace and contentment everywhere.
+
+When he went and laid down again he left the window-shutters open. He
+lay in the high bed and looked time after time at the rose-tree; it is
+impossible to describe his pleasure in looking at it. He thought what a
+strange thing it was that such a man as Vestblad should have this flower
+of Paradise outside his window.
+
+The more the Colonel thought of Vestblad the more surprised he became
+that such a foal should end his days in such a stable. He was not good
+for much at the time he was turned away from Ekeby. Who would have
+thought he would have become a staid and well-to-do man?
+
+The Colonel lay and laughed to himself, and wondered whether Vestblad
+still remembered how he used to amuse himself in the olden days when he
+was living at Ekeby. On dark and stormy nights he used to rub himself
+over with phosphorus, mount a black horse, and ride over the hills to
+the ironworks, where the smiths and the workmen lived; and if anyone
+happened to look out of his window and saw a horseman shining with a
+bluish-white light tearing past, he hastened to bar and bolt everywhere,
+saying it was best to say one's prayers twice that night, for the devil
+was abroad.
+
+Oh yes, to frighten simple folks by such tricks was a favourite
+amusement in olden days; but Vestblad had carried his jokes further than
+anyone else the Colonel knew of.
+
+An old woman on the parish had died at Viksta, which belonged to Ekeby.
+Vestblad happened to hear about this. He also heard that the corpse had
+been taken from the house and placed in a barn. At night Vestblad put on
+his fiery array, mounted his black horse, and rode to the farmstead; and
+people there who were about had seen a fiery horseman ride up to the
+barn, where the corpse lay, ride three times round it and disappear
+through the door. They had also seen the horseman come out again, ride
+three times round the house and then disappear. But in the morning, when
+they went into the barn to see the corpse, it was gone, and they
+thought the devil had been there and carried her off. This supposition
+had been enough for them. But a couple of weeks later they found the
+body, which had been thrown on to a hay-loft in the barn, and then there
+was a great outcry. They found out who the fiery horseman was, and the
+peasants were on the watch to give Vestblad a good hiding. But the
+Major's wife would not have him at her table or in her house any longer;
+she packed his knapsack and asked him to betake himself elsewhere. And
+Vestblad went out into the world and made his fortune.
+
+A strange feeling of uneasiness came over the Colonel as he lay in bed.
+He felt as if something were going to happen. He had hardly realized
+before what an ugly story it was. He had no doubt even laughed at it at
+the time. They had not been in the habit of taking much notice of what
+happened to a poor old pauper in those days; but, great God! how furious
+one would have been if anybody had done that to one's own mother!
+
+A suffocating feeling came over the Colonel; he breathed heavily. The
+thought of what Vestblad had done appeared so vile and hateful to him,
+it weighed him down like a nightmare. He was half afraid of seeing the
+dead woman, of seeing her appear from behind the bed. He felt as if she
+must be quite near. And from the four corners of the room the Colonel
+heard terrible words: 'God will not forgive it! God has never forgotten
+it!'
+
+The Colonel closed his eyes, but then he suddenly saw before him God's
+great loom, where the web was woven with the fates of men; and he
+thought he saw Ensign Vestblad's square, and it was dark on three sides;
+and he, who understood something about weaving and patterns, knew that
+the fourth side would also have to be covered with the dark shade. It
+could not be done in any other way, otherwise there would be a mistake
+in the weaving.
+
+A cold sweat broke out on his forehead; it seemed to him that he looked
+upon what was the hardest and the most immovable in all the world. He
+saw how the fate which a man has worked out in his past life will pursue
+him to the end. And to think there were actually people who thought they
+could escape it!
+
+Escape it! escape! All was noted and written down; the one colour and
+the one figure necessitated the other, and everything came about as it
+was bound to come about.
+
+Suddenly Colonel Beerencreutz sat up in bed; he would look at the
+flowers and the roses, and think that perhaps our Lord could forget
+after all. But at the moment Beerencreutz sat up in bed the bedroom door
+opened, and one of the farm-labourers--a stranger to him--put his head
+in and nodded to the Colonel.
+
+It was now so light that the Colonel saw the man quite distinctly. It
+was the most hideous face he had ever seen. He had small gray eyes like
+a pig, a flat nose, and a thin, bristly beard. One could not say that
+the man looked like an animal, for animals have nearly always good
+faces, but still, he had something of the animal about him. His lower
+jaw projected, his neck was thick, and his forehead was quite hidden by
+his rough, unkempt hair.
+
+He nodded three times to the Colonel, and every time his mouth opened
+with a broad grin; and he put out his hand, red with blood, and showed
+it triumphantly. Up to this moment the Colonel had sat up in bed as if
+paralyzed, but now he jumped up and was at the door in two steps. But
+when he reached the door, the fellow was gone and the door closed.
+
+The Colonel was just on the point of raising the alarm, when it struck
+him that the door must be fastened on the inside, on his side, as he had
+himself locked it the night before; and on examining it, he found that
+it had not been unlocked.
+
+The Colonel felt almost ashamed to think that in his old age he had
+begun to see ghosts. He went straight back to bed again.
+
+When the morning came, and he had breakfasted, the Colonel felt still
+more ashamed. He had excited himself to such an extent that he had
+trembled all over and perspired from fear. He said not a word about it.
+But later on in the day he and Vestblad went over the estate. As they
+passed a labourer who was cutting sods on a bank Beerencreutz recognised
+him again. It was the man he had seen in the night. He recognised
+feature for feature.
+
+'I would not keep that man a day longer in my service, my friend,' said
+Beerencreutz, when they had walked a short distance. And he told
+Vestblad what he had seen in the night. 'I tell you this simply to warn
+you, in order that you may dismiss the man.'
+
+But Vestblad would not; he was just the man he would not dismiss. And
+when Beerencreutz pressed him more and more, he at last confessed that
+he would not do anything to the man, because he was the son of an old
+pauper woman who had died at Viksta close to Ekeby.
+
+'You no doubt remember the story?' he added.
+
+'If that's the case, I would rather go to the end of the world than live
+another day with that man about the place,' said Beerencreutz. An hour
+after he left, and was almost angry that his warning was not heeded.
+'Some misfortune will happen before I come here again,' said the Colonel
+to Vestblad, as he took leave.
+
+Next year, at the same time, the Colonel was preparing for another visit
+to Halstanäs. But before he got so far, he heard some sad news about his
+friends. As the clock struck one, a year after the very night he had
+slept there, Ensign Vestblad and his wife had been murdered in their
+bedroom by one of their labourers--a man with a neck like a bull, a flat
+nose, and eyes like a pig.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ IX
+
+ _The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE
+
+
+
+
+_The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE
+
+
+Nowadays no one ever takes any notice of the little cross standing in
+the corner of Svartsjö Churchyard. People on their way to and from
+church go past it without giving it a glance. This is not so very
+wonderful, because it is so low and small that clover and bluebells grow
+right up to the arms of the cross, and timothy-grass to the very top of
+it. Neither does anyone think of reading the inscription which stands on
+the cross. The white letters are almost entirely washed out by the rain,
+and it never occurs to anyone to try and decipher what is still left,
+and try to make it out. But so it has not always been. The little cross
+in its time has been the cause of much surprise and curiosity. There was
+a time when not a person put his foot inside Svartsjö Churchyard without
+going up to look at it. And when one of the old people from those days
+now happens to see it, a whole story comes back to him of people and
+events that have been long forgotten. He sees before him the whole of
+Svartsjö parish in the lethargic sleep of winter, covered by even white
+snow, quite a yard deep, so that it is impossible to discern road or
+pathway, or to know where one is going. It is almost as necessary to
+have a compass here as at sea. There is no difference between sea and
+shore. The roughest ground is as even as the field which in the autumn
+yielded such a harvest of oats. The charcoal-burner living near the
+great bogs might imagine himself possessed of as much cultivated land as
+the richest peasant.
+
+The roads have left their secure course between the gray fences, and are
+running at random across the meadows and along the river. Even on one's
+own farm one may lose one's way, and suddenly discover that on one's way
+to the well one has walked over the spirea-hedge and round the little
+rose-bed.
+
+But nowhere is it so impossible to find one's way as in the churchyard.
+In the first place, the stone wall which separates it from the pastor's
+field is entirely buried under the snow, so with that it is all one; and
+secondly, the churchyard itself is only a simple large, white plain,
+where not even the smallest unevenness in the snow-cover betrays the
+many small mounds and tufts of the garden of the dead.
+
+On most of the graves are iron crosses, from which hang small, thin
+hearts of tin, which the summer wind sets in motion. These little hearts
+are now all hidden under the snow, and cannot tinkle their sad songs of
+sorrow and longing.
+
+People who work in the towns have brought back with them to their dead
+wreaths with flowers of beads and leaves of painted tin; and these
+wreaths are so highly treasured that they are kept in small glass cases
+on the graves. But now all this is hidden and buried under the snow, and
+the grave that possesses such an ornament is in no way more remarkable
+than any of the other graves.
+
+One or two lilac bushes raise their heads above the snow-cover, but
+their little stiff branches look so alike, that it is impossible to tell
+one from the other, and they are of no use whatever to anyone trying to
+find his way in the churchyard. Old women who are in the habit of going
+on Sundays to visit their graves can only get a little way down the main
+walk on account of the snow. There they stand, trying to make out where
+their own grave lies--is it near that bush, or that?--and they begin to
+long for the snow to melt. It is as if the one for whom they are
+sorrowing has gone so far away from them, now that they cannot see the
+spot where he lies.
+
+There are also a few large gravestones and crosses that are higher than
+the snow, but they are not many; and as these are also covered with
+snow, they cannot be distinguished either.
+
+There is only one pathway kept clear in the churchyard. It is the one
+leading from the entrance to the small mortuary. When anyone is to be
+buried the coffin is carried into the mortuary, and there the pastor
+reads the service and casts the earth upon the coffin. It is impossible
+to place the coffin in the ground as long as such a winter lasts. It
+must remain standing in the mortuary until God sees fit to thaw the
+earth, and the ground can be digged and made ready.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Just when the winter was at its hardest, and the churchyard quite
+inaccessible, a child died at Sander's, the ironmaster at Lerum
+ironworks.
+
+The ironworks at Lerum were large, and Sander, the ironmaster, was a
+great man in that part of the country. He had recently had a family
+grave made in the churchyard--a splendid grave, the position of which
+one could not easily forget, although the snow had laid its thick carpet
+over it. It was surrounded by heavy, hewn stones, with a massive chain
+between them, and in the middle of the grave stood a huge granite block,
+with their name inscribed upon it. There was only the one word 'Sander,'
+engraved in large letters, but it could be seen over the whole
+churchyard. But now that the child was dead, and was to be buried, the
+ironmaster said to his wife:
+
+'I will not allow this child to lie in my grave.'
+
+One can picture them both at that moment. It was in their dining-room at
+Lerum. The ironmaster was sitting at the breakfast-table alone, as was
+his wont. His wife, Ebba Sander, was sitting in a rocking-chair at the
+window, from where she had a wide view of the lake, with its small
+islands covered with birches.
+
+She had been weeping, but when her husband said this, her eyes became
+immediately dry. Her little figure seemed to shrink from fear, and she
+began to tremble.
+
+'What do you say? What are you saying?' she asked, and her voice sounded
+as if she were shivering from cold.
+
+'I object to it,' he said. 'My father and my mother lie there, and the
+name "Sander" stands on the stone. I will not allow that child to lie
+there.'
+
+'Oh,' she said, still trembling, 'is that what you have been thinking
+about? I always did think that some day you would have your revenge.'
+
+He threw down his serviette, rose from the table, and stood before her,
+broad and big. It was not his intention to assert his will with many
+words, but she could see, as he stood there, that nothing could make him
+change his mind. Stern, immovable, obstinate he was from top to toe.
+
+'I will not revenge myself,' he said, 'only I will not have it.'
+
+'You speak as if it were only a question of removing him from one bed to
+the other,' she said. 'He is dead. It does not matter to him where he
+lies, I suppose; but for me it is ruin, you know.'
+
+'I have also thought of that,' he said, 'but I cannot.'
+
+When two people have been married, and have lived together for some
+years, they do not require many words to understand one another. She
+knew it would be quite useless to try and move him.
+
+'Why did you forgive me, then?' she said, wringing her hands. 'Why did
+you let me stay with you as your wife and promise to forgive me?'
+
+He knew that he would not do her any harm. It was not his fault that he
+had now reached the limit of his forbearance.
+
+'Say to people what you like,' he said; 'I shall not say anything. You
+can say, if you like, that there is water in the vault, or that there is
+only room for father and mother and you and me.'
+
+'And you imagine that they will believe that!'
+
+'Well, you must manage that as best you can.'
+
+He was not angry; she knew that he was not. It was only as he said: on
+that point he could not give way.
+
+She went further into the room, put her hands at the back of her head,
+and sat gazing out of the window without saying anything. The terrible
+thing is that so much happens to one in life over which one has no
+control, and, above all, that something may spring up within one's self
+over which one is entirely powerless. Some years ago, when she was
+already a staid married woman, love came to her; and what a love--so
+violent that it was quite impossible for her to resist.
+
+Was not the feeling which now mastered her husband--was not that, after
+all, a desire to be revenged?
+
+He had never been angry with her. He forgave her at once when she came
+and confessed her sin.
+
+'You have been out of your senses,' he said, and allowed her to remain
+with him at Lerum as if nothing had happened.
+
+But although it is easy enough to say one forgives, it may be hard to do
+so, especially for one whose mind is slow and heavy, who ponders over
+but never forgets or gives vent to his feelings. Whatever he may say,
+and however much he may have made up his mind, something is always left
+within his heart which gnaws and longs to be satisfied with someone
+else's suffering. She had always had a strange feeling that it would
+have been better for her if he had been so enraged that he had struck
+her. Then, perhaps, things could have come right between them. All these
+years he had been morose and irritable, and she had become frightened.
+She was like a horse between the traces. She knew that behind her was
+one who held a whip over her, even if he did not use it; and now he had
+used it. He had not been able to refrain any longer. And now it was all
+over with her.
+
+Those who were about her said they had never seen such sorrow as hers.
+She seemed to be petrified. The whole time before the funeral it was as
+if there were no real life in her. One could not tell if she heard what
+was said to her, if she had any idea who was speaking to her. She did
+not eat; it was as if she felt no hunger. She went out in the bitterest
+cold; she did not feel it. But it was not grief that petrified her--it
+was fear.
+
+It never struck her for a moment to stay at home on the day of the
+funeral. She must go to the churchyard, she must walk in the funeral
+procession--must go there, feeling that all who were present expected
+that the body would be laid in the family vault of the Sanders. She
+thought she would sink into the ground at all the surprise and scorn
+which would rise up against her when the grave-digger, who headed the
+procession, led the way to an out-of-the-way grave. An outburst of
+astonishment would be heard from everybody, although it was a funeral
+procession: 'Why is the child not going to be buried in the Sanders'
+family vault?' Thoughts would go back to the vague rumours which were
+once circulated about her. 'There must have been something in them,
+after all,' people will whisper to each other. And before the mourners
+left the churchyard she would be condemned and lost. The only thing for
+her to do was to be present herself. She would go there with a quiet
+face, as if everything was as it ought to be. Then, perhaps, they might
+believe what she said to explain the matter. . . .
+
+Her husband went with her to the church; he had looked after everything,
+invited people, ordered the coffin, and arranged who should be the
+bearers. He was kind and good now that he had got his own way.
+
+It was on a Sunday. The service was over, and the mourners had assembled
+outside the porch, where the coffin was standing. The bearers had placed
+the white bands over their shoulders; all people of any position had
+joined in the procession, as did also many of the congregation. She had
+a feeling as if they had all gathered together in order to accompany a
+criminal to the scaffold.
+
+How they would all look at her when they came back from the funeral! She
+was there to prepare them for what was to happen, but she had not been
+able to utter a single word. She felt quite unable to speak quietly and
+sensibly. There was only one thing she wanted: to scream and moan so
+violently and loudly that it could be heard all over the churchyard; and
+she had to bite her lips so as not to cry out.
+
+The bells commenced to ring in the tower, and the procession began to
+move. Now all these people would find it out without the slightest
+preparation. Oh, why had she not spoken in time? She had to restrain
+herself to the utmost from shouting out and telling them that they must
+not go to the grave with the dead child. Those who are dead are dead and
+gone. Why should her whole life be spoiled for the sake of this dead
+child? They could put him in the earth, where they liked, only not in
+the churchyard. She had a confused idea that she would frighten them
+away from the churchyard; it was risky to go there; it was
+plague-smitten; there were marks of a wolf in the snow; she would
+frighten them as one frightens children.
+
+She did not know where they had digged the child's grave. She would know
+soon enough, she thought; and when the procession entered the
+churchyard, she glanced around the snow-covered ground to see where
+there was a new grave; but she saw neither path nor grave--nothing but
+the white snow. And the procession advanced towards the small mortuary.
+As many as possibly could pressed into the building and saw the earth
+cast on to the coffin. There was no question whatever about this or that
+grave. No one found out that the little one which was now laid to rest
+was never to be taken to the family vault.
+
+Had she but thought of that, had she not forgotten everything else in
+her fear and terror, then she need not have been afraid, not for a
+single moment.
+
+'In the spring,' she thought, 'when the coffin has to be placed in the
+ground, there will probably be no one there except the grave-digger;
+everybody will think that the child is lying in the Sanders' vault.' And
+she felt that she was saved.
+
+She sank down sobbing violently. People looked at her with sympathy.
+'How terribly she felt it!' they said. But she herself knew that she
+cried like one who has escaped from a mortal danger.
+
+A day or two after the funeral she was sitting in the twilight in her
+accustomed place in the dining-room, and as it grew darker she caught
+herself waiting and longing. She sat and listened for the child; that
+was the time when he always used to come in and play with her. Why did
+he not come that day? Then she started. 'Oh, he is dead, he is dead!'
+
+The next day she sat again in the twilight, and longed for him, and day
+by day this longing grew. It grew as the light does in the springtime,
+until at last it filled all the hours both of day and night.
+
+It almost goes without saying that a child like hers was more loved
+after death than whilst it was living. While it was living its mother
+had thought of nothing but regaining the trust and the love of her
+husband. And for him the child could never be a source of happiness. It
+was necessary to keep it away from him as much as possible; and the
+child had often felt he was in the way.
+
+She, who had failed in and neglected her duty, would show her husband
+that she was worth something after all. She was always about in the
+kitchen and in the weaving-room. Where could there be any room, then,
+for the little boy?
+
+But now, afterwards, she remembered how his eyes could beg and beseech.
+In the evening he liked so much to have her sitting at his bedside. He
+said he was afraid to lie in the dark; but now it struck her that that
+had probably only been an excuse to get her to stay with him. She
+remembered how he lay and tried not to fall asleep. Now she knew that he
+kept himself awake in order that he might lie a little longer and feel
+his hand in hers. He had been a shrewd little fellow, young as he was.
+He had exerted all his little brain to find out how he could get a
+little share of her love. It is incomprehensible that children can love
+so deeply. She never understood it whilst he was alive.
+
+It was really first now that she had begun to love the child. It was
+first now that she was really impressed by his beauty. She would sit and
+dream of his big, strange eyes. He had never been robust and ruddy like
+most children, but delicate and slender. But how sweet he had been! He
+seemed to her now as something wonderfully beautiful--more and more
+beautiful for every day that went. Children were indeed the best of all
+in this world. To think that there were little beings stretching out
+their hands to everybody, and thinking good of all; that never ask if a
+face be plain or pretty, but are equally willing to kiss either, loving
+equally old and young, rich and poor. And yet they were real little
+people.
+
+For every day that went she was drawn nearer and nearer to the child.
+She wished that the child had been still alive; but, on the other hand,
+she was not sure that in that case she would have been drawn so near to
+it. At times she was quite in despair at the thought that she had not
+done more for the child whilst he was alive. That was probably why he
+had been taken from her, she thought.
+
+But it was not often that she sorrowed like this. Earlier in life she
+had always been afraid lest some great sorrow should overtake her, but
+now it seemed to her that sorrow was not what she had then thought it to
+be. Sorrow was only to live over and over again through something which
+was no more. Sorrow in her case was to become familiar with her child's
+whole being, and to seek to understand him. And that sorrow had made her
+life so rich.
+
+What she was most afraid of now was that time would take him from her
+and wipe out the memory of him. She had no picture of him; perhaps his
+features little by little would fade for her. She sat every day and
+tried to think how he looked. 'Do I see him exactly as he was?' she
+said.
+
+Week by week, as the winter wore away, she began to long for the time
+when he would be taken from the mortuary and buried in the ground, so
+that she could go to his grave and speak with him. He should lie towards
+the west, that was the most beautiful, and she would deck the grave with
+roses. There should also be a hedge round the grave, and a seat where
+she could sit often and often. People would perhaps wonder at it; but
+they were not to know that her child did not lie in the family grave;
+and they were sure to think it strange that she placed flowers on an
+unknown grave and sat there for hours. What could she say to explain it?
+
+Sometimes she thought that she could, perhaps, do it in this way: First
+she would go to the big grave and place a large bouquet of flowers on
+it, and remain sitting there for some time, and afterwards she would
+steal away to the little grave; and he would be sure to be content with
+the little flower she would secretly give him. But even if he were
+satisfied with the one little flower, could she be? Could she really
+come quite near to him in this way? Would he not notice that she was
+ashamed of him? Would he not understand what a disgrace his birth had
+been to her? No, she would have to protect him from that. He must only
+think that the joy of having possessed him weighed against all the rest.
+
+At last the winter was giving way. One could see the spring was coming.
+The snow-cover began to melt, and the earth to peep out. It would still
+be a week or two before the ground was thawed, but it would not be long
+now before the dead could be taken away from the mortuary. And she
+longed--she longed so exceedingly for it.
+
+Could she still picture to herself how he looked? She tried every day;
+but it was easier when it was winter. Now, when the spring was coming,
+it seemed as if he faded away from her. She was filled with despair. If
+she were only soon able to sit by his grave and be near to him again,
+then she would be able to see him again, to love him. Would he never be
+laid in his little grave? She must be able to see him again, see him
+through her whole life; she had no one else to love.
+
+At last all her fears and scruples vanished before this great longing.
+She loved, she loved; she could not live without the dead! She knew now
+that she could not consider anybody or anything but him--him alone. And
+when the spring came in earnest, when mounds and graves once again
+appeared all over the churchyard, when the little hearts of the iron
+crosses again began to tinkle in the wind, and the beaded wreaths to
+sparkle in their glass cases, and when the earth at last was ready to
+receive the little coffin, she had ready a black cross to place on his
+grave. On the cross from arm to arm was written in plain white letters,
+
+'HERE RESTS MY CHILD,'
+
+and underneath, on the stem of the cross, stood her name.
+
+She did not mind that the whole world would know how she had sinned.
+Other things were of no consequence to her; all she thought about was
+that she would now be able to pray at the grave of her child.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ X
+
+ _The_ BROTHERS
+
+
+
+
+_The_ BROTHERS
+
+
+It is very possible that I am mistaken, but it seems to me that an
+astonishing number of people die this year. I have a feeling that I
+cannot go down the street without meeting a hearse. One cannot help
+thinking about all those who are carried to the churchyard. I always
+feel as if it were so sad for the dead who have to be buried in towns. I
+can hear how they moan in their coffins. Some complain that they have
+not had plumes on the hearse; some count up the wreaths, and are not
+satisfied; and then there are some who have only been followed by two or
+three carriages, and who are hurt by it.
+
+The dead ought never to know and experience such things; but people in
+towns do not at all understand how they ought to honour those who have
+entered into eternal rest.
+
+When I really think over it I do not know any place where they
+understand it better than at home in Svartsjö. If you die in the parish
+of Svartsjö you know you will have a coffin like that of everyone
+else--an honest black coffin which is like the coffins in which the
+country judge and the local magistrate were buried a year or two ago.
+For the same joiner makes all the coffins, and he has only one pattern;
+the one is made neither better nor worse than the other. And you know
+also, for you have seen it so many times, that you will be carried to
+the church on a waggon which has been painted black for the occasion.
+You need not trouble yourself at all about any plumes. And you know that
+the whole village will follow you to the church, and that they will
+drive as slowly and as solemnly for you as for a landed proprietor.
+
+But you will have no occasion to feel annoyed because you have not
+enough wreaths, for they do not place a single flower on the coffin; it
+shall stand out black and shining, and nothing must cover it; and it is
+not necessary for you to think whether you will have a sufficiently
+large number of people to follow you, for those who live in your town
+will be sure to follow you, every one. Nor will you be obliged to lie
+and listen if there is lamenting and weeping around your coffin. They
+never weep over the dead when they stand on the church hill outside
+Svartsjö Church. No, they weep as little over a strong young fellow who
+falls a prey to death just as he is beginning to provide for his old
+people as they will for you. You will be placed on a couple of black
+trestles outside the door of the parish room, and a whole crowd of
+people will gradually gather round you, and all the women will have
+handkerchiefs in their hands. But no one will cry; all the handkerchiefs
+will be kept tightly rolled up; not one will be applied to the eyes. You
+need not speculate as to whether people will shed as many tears over you
+as they would over others. They would cry if it were the proper thing,
+but it is not the proper thing.
+
+You can understand that if there were much sorrowing over one grave, it
+would not look well for those over whom no one sorrowed. They know what
+they were about at Svartsjö. They do as it has been the custom to do
+there for many hundred years. But whilst you stand there, on the church
+hill, you are a great and important personage, although you receive
+neither flowers nor tears. No one comes to church without asking who you
+are, and then they go quietly up to you and stand and gaze at you; and
+it never occurs to anyone to wound the dead by pitying him. No one says
+anything but that it is well for him that it is all over.
+
+It is not at all as it is in a town, where you can be buried any day. At
+Svartsjö you must be buried on a Sunday, so that you can have the whole
+parish around you. There you will have standing near your coffin both
+the girl with whom you danced at the last midsummer night's festival and
+the man with whom you exchanged horses at the last fair. You will have
+the schoolmaster who took so much trouble with you when you were a
+little lad, and who had forgotten you, although you remembered him so
+well; and you will have the old Member of Parliament who never before
+thought it worth his while to bow to you. This is not as in a town,
+where people hardly turn round when you are carried past. When they
+bring the long bands and place them under the coffin, there is not one
+who does not watch the proceedings.
+
+You cannot imagine what a churchwarden we have at Svartsjö. He is an old
+soldier, and he looks like a Field-Marshal. He has short white hair and
+twisted moustaches, and a pointed imperial; he is slim and tall and
+straight, with a light and firm step. On Sundays he wears a
+well-brushed frock-coat of fine cloth. He really looks a very fine old
+gentleman, and it is he who walks at the head of the procession. Then
+comes the verger. Not that the verger is to be compared with the
+churchwarden. It is more than probable that his Sunday hat is too large
+and old-fashioned; as likely as not he is awkward--but when is a verger
+not awkward?
+
+Then you come next in your coffin, with the six bearers, and then follow
+the clergyman and the clerk and the Town Council and the whole parish.
+All the congregation will follow you to the churchyard, you may be sure
+of that. But I will tell you something: All those who follow you look so
+small and poor. They are not fine town's-people, you know--only plain,
+simple Svartsjö folk. There is only one who is great and important, and
+that is you in your coffin--you who are dead.
+
+The others the next day will have to resume their heavy and toilsome
+work. They will have to live in poor old cottages and wear old, patched
+clothes; the others will always be plagued and worried, and dragged down
+and humbled by poverty.
+
+Those who follow you to your grave become far more sad by looking at the
+living than by thinking of you who are dead. You need not look any more
+at the velvet collar of your coat to see if it is not getting worn at
+the edges; you need not make a special fold of your silk handkerchief to
+hide that it is beginning to fray; you will never more be compelled to
+ask the village shopkeeper to let you have goods on credit; you will
+not find out that your strength is failing; you will not have to wait
+for the day when you must go on the parish.
+
+While they are following you to the grave everyone will be thinking that
+it is best to be dead--better to soar heavenwards, carried on the white
+clouds of the morning--than to be always experiencing life's manifold
+troubles. When they come to the wall of the churchyard, where the grave
+has been made, the bands are exchanged for strong ropes, and people get
+on to the loose earth and lower you down. And when this has been done
+the clerk advances to the grave and begins to sing: 'I walk towards
+death.'
+
+He sings the hymn quite alone; neither the clergyman nor any of the
+congregation help him. But the clerk must sing; however keen the north
+wind and however glaring the sun which shines straight in his face, sing
+he does.
+
+The clerk, however, is getting old now, and he has not much voice left;
+he is quite aware that it does not sound as well now as formerly when he
+sang people into their graves; but he does it all the same--it is part
+of his duty. For the day, you understand, when his voice quite fails
+him, so that he cannot sing any more, he must resign his office, and
+this means downright poverty for him. Therefore the whole gathering
+stands in apprehension while the old clerk sings, wondering whether his
+voice will last through the whole verse. But no one joins him, not a
+single person, for that would not do; it is not the custom. People never
+sing at a grave at Svartsjö. People do not sing in the church either,
+except the first hymn on Christmas Day morning.
+
+Still, if one listened very attentively, one could hear that the clerk
+does not sing alone. There really is another voice, but it sounds so
+exactly the same that the two voices blend as if they were only one. The
+other who sings is a little old man in a long, coarse gray coat. He is
+still older than the clerk, but he gives out all the voice he has to
+help him. And the voice, as I have told you, is exactly the same kind as
+the clerk's; they are so alike one cannot help wondering at it.
+
+But when one looks closer, the little gray old man is also exactly like
+the clerk; he has the same nose and chin and mouth, only somewhat older,
+and, as it were, more hardly dealt with in life. And then one
+understands that the little gray man is the clerk's brother; and then
+one knows why he helps him. For, you see, things have never gone well
+with him in this world, and he has always had bad luck; and once he was
+made a bankrupt, and brought the clerk into his misfortunes. He knows
+that it is his fault that his brother has always had to struggle. And
+the clerk, you know, has tried to help him on to his legs again, but
+with no avail, for he has not been one of those one can help. He has
+always been unfortunate; and then, he has had no strength of purpose.
+
+But the clerk has been the shining light in the family; and for the
+other it has been a case of receiving and receiving, and he has never
+been able to make any return at all. Great God! even to talk of making
+any return--he who is so poor! You should only see the little hut in
+the forest where he lives. He knows that he has always been dull and
+sad, only a burden--only a burden for his brother and for others. But
+now of late he has become a great man; now he is able to give some
+return. And that he does. Now he helps his brother, the clerk, who has
+been the sunshine and life and joy for him all his days. Now he helps
+him to sing, so that he may keep his office.
+
+He does not go to church, for he thinks that everyone looks at him
+because he has no black Sunday clothes; but every Sunday he goes up to
+the church to see whether there is a coffin on the black trestles
+outside the parish room; and if there is one he goes to the grave, in
+spite of his old gray coat, and helps his brother with his pitiful old
+voice.
+
+The little old man knows very well how badly he sings; he places himself
+behind the others, and does not push forward to the grave. But sing he
+does; it would not matter so much if the clerk's voice should fail on
+one or other note, his brother is there and helps him.
+
+At the churchyard no one laughs at the singing; but when people go home
+and have thrown off their devoutness, then they speak about the service,
+and then they laugh at the clerk's singing--laugh both at his and his
+brother's. The clerk does not mind it, it is the same to him; but his
+brother thinks about it and suffers from it; he dreads the Sunday the
+whole week, but still he comes punctually to the churchyard and does his
+duty. But you in your coffin, you do not think so badly of the singing.
+You think that it is good music. Is it not true that one would like to
+be buried in Svartsjö, if only for the sake of that singing?
+
+It says in the hymn that life is but a walk towards death, and when the
+two old men sing this--the two who have suffered for each other during
+their whole life--then one understands better than ever before how
+wearisome it is to live, and one is so entirely satisfied with being
+dead.
+
+And then the singing stops, and the clergyman throws earth on the coffin
+and says a prayer over you. Then the two old voices sing: 'I walk
+towards heaven.' And they do not sing this verse any better than the
+former; their voices grow more feeble and querulous the longer they
+sing. But for you a great and wide expanse opens, and you soar upwards
+with tremulous joy, and everything earthly fades and disappears.
+
+But still the last which you hear of things earthly tells of
+faithfulness and love. And in the midst of your trembling flight the
+poor song will awake memories of all the faithfulness and love you have
+met with here below, and this will bear you upwards. This will fill you
+with radiance and make you beautiful as an angel.
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
+ GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+In this Latin-1 text version:
+ text in italics is marked with underscores, e.g. _italics_
+ text in small capitals is shown in upper-case.
+
+Hyphenation is inconsistent, for example sheepskin, sheep-skin and
+sheep's-skin all occur. These have been left as printed.
+
+On page 184 "... and the nip reddened on the naked branch of the
+hawthorn" has been left as printed, however the original Swedish talks
+of nyponet (rosehip) and törnbuskens (rosehip and thornbush), rather
+than nip and hawthorn.
+
+Changes that have been made are:
+
+ Page 4 from: then I feel that I must speak
+ to: then I feel that I must speak.
+
+ Page 55 from: the newly-buried birl
+ to: the newly-buried girl
+
+ Page 94 from: the everlasting unrest that tormened him
+ to: the everlasting unrest that tormented him
+
+ Page 124 from: why had be been unhappy?
+ to: why had he been unhappy?
+
+ Page 229 from: found friends in the solitude above
+ to: found friends in the solitude above.
+
+ Page 264 from: Guilietta Lombardi
+ to: Giulietta Lombardi
+
+ Page 328 from: the snow had laid its thinck carpet
+ to: the snow had laid its thick carpet
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerlöf
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44630 ***
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerl&ouml;f, translated by Jessie Brochner.
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44630 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <img src="images/front_cover.jpg" alt="Front Cover" title="Front Cover" width="381" height="597" />
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h1 title="From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerl&ouml;f, translated by Jessie Brochner"><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span><br />
+<span class="dec_italic">Homestead</span></h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<div class="title_page">
+<p class="title1"><span class="dec_italic">From a SWEDISH</span></p>
+
+<p class="title2"><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+
+<p class="by"><span class="dec_italic">By</span></p>
+
+<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Selma Lagerl&ouml;f</span></p>
+
+<p class="trans_by"><span class="dec_italic">Translated by</span></p>
+
+<p class="translator"><span class="smcap">Jessie Brochner</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter_crest">
+ <img src="images/crest.jpg" alt="Publisher&apos;s logo" title="Publisher&apos;s logo" width="97" height="103" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="pub_places"><span class="smcap">Garden City</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class="smcap">New York</span></p>
+<p class="publisher">DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY<br />
+1916
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="dec_italic">Copyright, 1901, by</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Doubleday, Page &amp; Company</span>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h2><span class="dec_italic">A</span> LIST <span class="dec_italic">of the</span> STORIES</h2>
+
+<table summary="Contents">
+<tr><th class="tdl_head"></th><th class="tdr_head"><span class="dec_italic">Page</span></th></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#The_Story_of_a_Country_House" title="The Story of a Country House"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">of a</span> <span class="smcap">Country House</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1" title="Page 1">1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Queens_at_Kungahalla" title="Queens at Kungah&auml;lla"><span class="dec_italic">Queens at</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_135" title="Page 135">135</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl_in"><a href="#Site" title="On the Site of the Great Kungah&auml;lla"><span class="dec_italic">On the</span> <span class="smcap">Site</span> <span class="dec_italic">of the Great</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_135" title="Page 135">135</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl_in"><a href="#Forest" title="The Forest Queen"><span class="dec_italic">The Forest</span> <span class="smcap">Queen</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_141" title="Page 141">141</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl_in"><a href="#Sigrid" title="Sigrid Storr&auml;de"><span class="smcap">Sigrid Storr&auml;de</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_157" title="Page 157">157</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl_in"><a href="#Astrid" title="Astrid"><span class="smcap">Astrid</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_172" title="Page 172">172</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Old_Agnete" title="Old Agnete"><span class="dec_italic">Old</span> <span class="smcap">Agnete</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_219" title="Page 219">219</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#The_Fishermans_Ring" title="The Fisherman&apos;s Ring"><span class="dec_italic">The Fisherman's</span> <span class="smcap">Ring</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_231" title="Page 231">231</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Santa_Caterina_of_Siena" title="Santa Caterina of Siena"><span class="dec_italic" lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span> <span class="smcap">Caterina</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">Siena</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_257" title="Page 257">257</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Money-Chest" title="The Empress&apos;s Money-Chest"><span class="dec_italic">The Empress's</span> <span class="smcap">Money-Chest</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_277" title="Page 277">277</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Peace" title="The Peace of God"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Peace</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">God</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_291" title="Page 291">291</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Story" title="Story from Halstan&auml;s"><span class="dec_italic">A</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">from</span> <span class="smcap">Halstan&auml;s</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_309" title="Page 309">309</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Inscription" title="The Inscription on the Grave"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Inscription</span> <span class="dec_italic">on the</span> <span class="smcap">Grave</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_323" title="Page 323">323</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Brothers" title="The Brothers"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Brothers</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_339" title="Page 339">339</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="The Story of a Country House">I.<a name="The_Story_of_a_Country_House" id="The_Story_of_a_Country_House"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">of a</span> <span class="smcap">Country House</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">I</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">of a</span> <span class="smcap">Country House</span></p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">of a</span> <span class="smcap">Country House</span></p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>It was a beautiful autumn day towards the
+end of the thirties. There was in Upsala at
+that time a high, yellow, two-storied house,
+which stood quite alone in a little meadow on the
+outskirts of the town. It was a rather desolate
+and dismal-looking house, but was rendered less
+so by the Virginia-creepers which grew there in
+profusion, and which had crept so high up the
+yellow wall on the sunny side of the house that
+they completely surrounded the three windows
+on the upper story.</p>
+
+<p>At one of these windows a student was sitting,
+drinking his morning coffee. He was a tall,
+handsome fellow, of distinguished appearance.
+His hair was brushed back from his forehead; it
+curled prettily, and a lock was continually falling
+into his eyes. He wore a loose, comfortable suit,
+but looked rather smart all the same.</p>
+
+<p>His room was well furnished. There was a
+good sofa and comfortable chairs, a large writing-table,
+a capital bookcase, but hardly any
+books.</p>
+
+<p>Before he had finished his coffee another student
+entered the room. The new-comer was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+totally different-looking man. He was a short,
+broad-shouldered fellow, squarely built and
+strong, ugly, with a large head, thin hair, and
+coarse complexion.</p>
+
+<p>'Hede,' he said, 'I have come to have a serious
+talk with you.'</p>
+
+<p>'Has anything unpleasant happened to you?'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh no, not to me,' the other answered; 'it is
+really you it concerns.' He sat silent for a while,
+and looked down. 'It is so awfully unpleasant
+having to tell you.'</p>
+
+<p>'Leave it alone, then,' suggested Hede.</p>
+
+<p>He felt inclined to laugh at his friend's solemnity.</p>
+
+<p>'I can't leave it alone any longer,' said his
+visitor. 'I ought to have spoken to you long ago,
+but it is hardly my place. You understand? I
+can't help thinking you will say to yourself:
+"There's Gustaf Alin, son of one of our cottagers,
+thinks himself such a great man now that he can
+order me about."'</p>
+
+<p>'My dear fellow,' Hede said, 'don't imagine I
+think anything of the kind. My father's father
+was a peasant's son.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, but no one thinks of that now,' Alin answered.
+He sat there, looking awkward and
+stupid, resuming every moment more and more
+of his peasant manners, as if that could help him
+out of his difficulty. 'When I think of the difference
+there is between your family and mine, I feel
+as if I ought to keep quiet; but when I remember
+that it was your father who, by his help in days
+gone by, enabled me to study, then I feel that I
+must <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Punctuation added">speak.</span>'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hede looked at him with a pleasant smile.</p>
+
+<p>'You had better speak out and have done with
+it,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'The thing is,' Alin said, 'I have heard people
+say that you don't do any work. They say you
+have hardly opened a book during the four terms
+you have been at the University. They say you
+don't do anything but play on the violin the
+whole day; and that I can quite believe, for you
+never wanted to do anything else when you were
+at school in Falu, although there you were
+obliged to work.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede straightened himself a little in his chair.
+Alin grew more and more uncomfortable, but he
+continued with stubborn resolution:</p>
+
+<p>'I suppose you think that anyone owning an
+estate like Munkhyttan ought to be able to do as
+he likes&mdash;work if he likes, or leave it alone. If he
+takes his exam., good; if he does not take his
+exam., what does it matter? for in any case you
+will never be anything but a landed proprietor
+and iron-master. You will live at Munkhyttan
+all your life. I understand quite well that is what
+you must think.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede was silent, and Alin seemed to see him
+surrounded by the same wall of distinction which
+in Alin's eyes had always surrounded his father,
+the Squire, and his mother.</p>
+
+<p>'But, you see, Munkhyttan is no longer what it
+used to be when there was iron in the mine,' he
+continued cautiously. 'The Squire knew that
+very well, and that was why it was arranged before
+his death that you should study. Your poor
+mother knows it, too, and the whole parish knows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+it. The only one who does not know anything
+is you, Hede.'</p>
+
+<p>'Don't you think I know,' Hede said a little
+irritably, 'that the iron-mine cannot be worked
+any longer?'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh yes,' Alin said, 'I dare say you know that
+much, but you don't know that it is all up with
+the property. Think the matter over, and you
+will understand that one cannot live from farming
+alone at Vesterdalarne. I cannot understand
+why your mother has kept it a secret from you.
+But, of course, she has the sole control of the
+estate, so she need not ask your advice about anything.
+Everybody at home knows that she is
+hard up. They say she drives about borrowing
+money. I suppose she did not want to disturb
+you with her troubles, but thought that she could
+keep matters going until you had taken your degree.
+She will not sell the estate before you have
+finished, and made yourself a new home.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede rose, and walked once or twice up and
+down the floor. Then he stopped opposite Alin.</p>
+
+<p>'But what on earth are you driving at, Alin?
+Do you want to make me believe that we are not
+rich?'</p>
+
+<p>'I know quite well that, until lately, you have
+been considered rich people at home,' Alin said.
+'But you can understand that things must come
+to an end when it is a case of always spending and
+never earning anything. It was a different thing
+when you had the mine.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede sat down again.</p>
+
+<p>'My mother would surely have told me if there
+were anything the matter,' he said. 'I am grateful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+to you, Alin; but you have allowed yourself
+to be frightened by some silly stories.'</p>
+
+<p>'I thought that you did not know anything,'
+Alin continued obstinately. 'At Munkhyttan
+your mother saves and works in order to get
+the money to keep you at Upsala, and to make
+it cheerful and pleasant for you when you are at
+home in the vacations. And in the meantime you
+are here doing nothing, because you don't know
+there is trouble coming. I could not stand any
+longer seeing you deceiving each other. Her
+ladyship thought you were studying, and you
+thought she was rich. I could not let you destroy
+your prospects without saying anything.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede sat quietly for a moment, and meditated.
+Then he rose and gave Alin his hand with rather
+a sad smile.</p>
+
+<p>'You understand that I feel you are speaking
+the truth, even if I <em>will</em> not believe you?
+Thanks.'</p>
+
+<p>Alin joyfully shook his hand.</p>
+
+<p>'You must know, Hede, that if you will only
+work no harm is done. With your brains, you
+can take your degree in three or four years.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede straightened himself.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not be uneasy, Alin,' he said; 'I am
+going to work hard now.'</p>
+
+<p>Alin rose and went towards the door, but hesitated.
+Before he reached it he turned round.</p>
+
+<p>'There was something else I wanted,' he said.
+He again became embarrassed. 'I want you to
+lend me your violin until you have commenced
+reading in earnest.'</p>
+
+<p>'Lend you my violin?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Yes; pack it up in a silk handkerchief, and
+put it in the case, and let me take it with me,
+or otherwise you will read to no purpose. You
+will begin to play as soon as I am out of the
+room. You are so accustomed to it now you
+cannot resist if you have it here. One cannot
+get over that kind of thing unless someone helps
+one; it gets the mastery over one.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede appeared unwilling.</p>
+
+<p>'This is madness, you know,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'No, Hede, it is not. You know you have inherited
+it from the Squire. It runs in your blood.
+Ever since you have been your own master here
+in Upsala you have done nothing else but play.
+You live here in the outskirts of the town simply
+not to disturb anyone by your playing. You
+cannot help yourself in this matter. Let me have
+the violin.'</p>
+
+<p>'Well,' said Hede, 'before I could not help
+playing, but now Munkhyttan is at stake; I am
+more fond of my home than of my violin.'</p>
+
+<p>But Alin was determined, and continued to ask
+for the violin.</p>
+
+<p>'What is the good of it?' Hede said. 'If I
+want to play, I need not go many steps to borrow
+another violin.'</p>
+
+<p>'I know that,' Alin replied, 'but I don't think
+it would be so bad with another violin. It is
+your old Italian violin which is the greatest danger
+for you. And besides, I would suggest your
+locking yourself in for the first few days&mdash;only
+until you have got fairly started.'</p>
+
+<p>He begged and begged, but Hede resisted; he
+would not stand anything so unreasonable as being
+a prisoner in his own room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Alin grew crimson.</p>
+
+<p>'I must have the violin with me,' he said, 'or
+it is no use at all.' He spoke eagerly and excitedly.
+'I had not intended to say anything
+about it, but I know that it concerns more than
+Munkhyttan. I saw a young girl at the Promotion
+Ball in the spring who, people said, was engaged
+to you. I don't dance, you know, but I
+liked to watch her when she was dancing, looking
+radiant like one of the lilies of the field. And
+when I heard that she was engaged to you, I felt
+sorry for her.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why?'</p>
+
+<p>'Because I knew that you would never succeed
+if you continued as you had begun. And
+then I swore that she should not have to spend
+her whole life waiting for one who never came.
+She should not sit and wither whilst waiting for
+you. I did not want to meet her in a few years
+with sharpened features and deep wrinkles round
+her mouth&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>He stopped suddenly; Hede's glance had
+rested so searchingly upon him.</p>
+
+<p>But Gunnar Hede had already understood
+that Alin was in love with his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em>. It moved
+him deeply that Alin under these circumstances
+tried to save him, and, influenced by this feeling,
+he yielded and gave him the violin.</p>
+
+<p>When Alin had gone, Hede read desperately
+for a whole hour, but then he threw away his
+book.</p>
+
+<p>It was not of much good his reading. It would
+be three or four years before he could be finished,
+and who could guarantee that the estate would
+not be sold in the meantime?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He felt almost with terror how deeply he loved
+the old home. It was like witchery. Every
+room, every tree, stood clearly before him. He
+felt he could not part with any of it if he were
+to be happy. And he was to sit quietly with his
+books whilst all this was about to pass away from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He became more and more restless; he felt
+the blood beating in his temples as if in a fever.
+And then he grew quite beside himself because
+he could not take his violin and play himself calm
+again.</p>
+
+<p>'My God!' he said, 'Alin will drive me mad.
+First to tell me all this, and then to take away
+my violin! A man like I must feel the bow between
+his fingers in sorrow and in joy. I must
+do something; I must get money, but I have not
+an idea in my head. I cannot think without my
+violin.'</p>
+
+<p>He could not endure the feeling of being
+locked in. He was so angry with Alin, who had
+thought of this absurd plan, that he was afraid
+he might strike him the next time he came.</p>
+
+<p>Of course he would have played, if he had had
+the violin, for that was just what he needed. His
+blood rushed so wildly, that he was nearly going
+out of his mind.</p>
+
+<p>Just as Hede was longing most for his violin
+a wandering musician began to play outside. It
+was an old blind man. He played out of tune
+and without expression, but Hede was so overcome
+by hearing a violin just at this moment
+that he listened with tears in his eyes and with
+his hands folded.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The next moment he flung open the window
+and climbed to the ground by the help of the
+creepers. He had no compunction at leaving
+his work. He thought the violin had simply
+come to comfort him in his misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>Hede had probably never before begged so
+humbly for anything as he did now, when he
+asked the old blind man to lend him his violin.
+He stood the whole time with his cap in his hand,
+although the old man was blind.</p>
+
+<p>The musician did not seem to understand what
+he wanted. He turned to the young girl who
+was leading him. Hede bowed to the poor girl
+and repeated his request. She looked at him, as
+if she must have eyes for them both. The glance
+from her big eyes was so steady that Hede
+thought he could feel where it struck him. It
+began with his collar, and it noticed that the frills
+of his shirt were well starched, then it saw that
+his coat was brushed, next that his boots were
+polished.</p>
+
+<p>Hede had never before been subjected to such
+close scrutiny. He saw clearly that he would not
+pass muster before those eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not so, all the same. The young
+girl had a strange way of smiling. Her face
+was so serious, that one had the impression when
+she smiled that it was the first and only time she
+had ever looked happy; and now one of these
+rare smiles passed over her lips. She took the
+violin from the old man and handed it to
+Hede.</p>
+
+<p>'Play the waltz from "Freisch&uuml;tz," then,' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hede thought it was strange that he should
+have to play a waltz just at that moment, but, as
+a matter of fact, it was all the same to him what
+he played, if he could only have a bow in his
+hand. That was all he wanted. The violin at
+once began to comfort him; it spoke to him in
+faint, cracked tones.</p>
+
+<p>'I am only a poor man's violin,' it said; 'but
+such as I am, I am a comfort and help to a poor
+blind man. I am the light and the colour and
+the brightness in his life. It is I who must comfort
+him in his poverty and old age and blindness.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede felt that the terrible depression that had
+cowed his hopes began to give way.</p>
+
+<p>'You are young and strong,' the violin said to
+him. 'You can fight and strive; you can hold
+fast that which tries to escape you. Why are you
+downcast and without courage?'</p>
+
+<p>Hede had played with lowered eyes; now he
+threw back his head and looked at those who
+stood around him. There was quite a crowd of
+children and people from the street, who had
+come into the yard to listen to the music. It appeared,
+however, that they had not come solely
+for the sake of the music. The blind man and
+his companion were not the only ones in the
+troupe.</p>
+
+<p>Opposite Hede stood a figure in tights and
+spangles, and with bare arms crossed over his
+chest. He looked old and worn, but Hede
+could not help thinking that he looked a devil of
+a fellow with his high chest and long moustaches.
+And beside him stood his wife, little and fat, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+not so very young either, but beaming with joy
+over her spangles and flowing gauze skirts.</p>
+
+<p>During the first bars of the music they stood
+still and counted, then a gracious smile passed
+over their faces, and they took each other's
+hands and began to dance on a small carpet.
+And Hede saw that during all the equilibristic
+tricks they now performed the woman stood almost
+still, whilst her husband did all the work.
+He sprang over her, and twirled round her, and
+vaulted over her. The woman scarcely did
+anything else but kiss her hand to the spectators.</p>
+
+<p>But Hede did not really take much notice of
+them. His bow began to fly over the strings.
+It told him that there was happiness in fighting
+and overcoming. It almost deemed him happy
+because everything was at stake for him. Hede
+stood there, playing courage and hope into himself,
+and did not think of the old tight-rope
+dancers.</p>
+
+<p>But suddenly he saw that they grew restless.
+They no longer smiled; they left off kissing their
+hands to the spectators; the acrobat made mistakes,
+and his wife began to sway to and fro in
+waltz time.</p>
+
+<p>Hede played more and more eagerly. He left
+off 'Freisch&uuml;tz' and rushed into an old 'Nixie
+Polka,' one which generally sent all the people
+mad when played at the peasant festivals.</p>
+
+<p>The old tight-rope dancers quite lost their
+heads. They stood in breathless astonishment,
+and at last they could resist no longer. They
+sprang into each other's arms, and then they began
+to dance a waltz in the middle of the carpet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>How they danced! dear me, how they danced!
+They took small, tripping steps, and whirled
+round in a small circle; they hardly went outside
+the carpet, and their faces beamed with joy
+and delight. There was the happiness of youth
+and the rapture of love over these two old people.</p>
+
+<p>The whole crowd was jubilant at seeing them
+dance. The serious little companion of the blind
+man smiled all over her face, and Hede grew
+much excited.</p>
+
+<p>Just fancy what an effect his violin could have!
+It made people quite forget themselves. It was
+a great power to have at his disposal. Any moment
+he liked he could take possession of his
+kingdom. Only a couple of years' study abroad
+with a great master, and he could go all over the
+world, and by his playing earn riches and honour
+and fame.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Hede that these acrobats must
+have come to tell him this. That was the road
+he should follow; it lay before him clear and
+smooth. He said to himself: 'I will&mdash;I <em>will</em> become
+a musician! I <em>must</em> be one! This is better
+than studying. I can charm my fellow-men with
+my violin; I can become rich.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede stopped playing. The acrobats at once
+came up and complimented him. The man said
+his name was Blomgren. That was his real
+name; he had other names when he performed.
+He and his wife were old circus people. Mrs.
+Blomgren in former days had been called Miss
+Viola, and had performed on horseback; and
+although they had now left the circus, they were
+still true artists&mdash;artists body and soul. That he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+had probably already noticed; that was why they
+could not resist his violin.</p>
+
+<p>Hede walked about with the acrobats for a
+couple of hours. He could not part with the
+violin, and the old artists' enthusiasm for their
+profession appealed to him. He was simply testing
+himself. 'I want to find out whether there
+is the proper stuff for an artist in me. I want to
+see if I can call forth enthusiasm. I want to
+see whether I can make children and idlers follow
+me from house to house.'</p>
+
+<p>On their way from house to house Mr. Blomgren
+threw an old threadbare mantle around him,
+and Mrs. Blomgren enveloped herself in a brown
+cloak. Thus arrayed, they walked at Hede's side
+and talked.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blomgren would not speak of all the
+honour he and Mrs. Blomgren had received during
+the time they had performed in a real circus;
+but the <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">directeur</span></em> had given Mrs. Blomgren her
+dismissal under the pretence that she was getting
+too stout. Mr. Blomgren had not been dismissed:
+he had himself resigned his position.
+Surely no one could think that Mr. Blomgren
+would remain with a <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">directeur</span></em> who had dismissed
+his wife!</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Blomgren loved her art, and for her sake
+Mr. Blomgren had made up his mind to live as a
+free artist, so that she could still continue to perform.
+During the winter, when it was too cold
+to give performances in the street, they performed
+in a tent. They had a very comprehensive
+repertoire. They gave pantomimes, and
+were jugglers and conjurers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The circus had cast them off, but Art had not,
+said Mr. Blomgren. They served Art always.
+It was well worth being faithful to Art, even unto
+death. Always artists&mdash;always. That was Mr.
+Blomgren's opinion, and it was also Mrs. Blomgren's.</p>
+
+<p>Hede walked quietly and listened. His
+thoughts flew restlessly from plan to plan. Sometimes
+events happen which become like symbols,
+like signs, which one must obey. There must be
+some meaning in what had now happened to
+him. If he could only understand it rightly, it
+might help him towards arriving at a wise resolution.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blomgren asked the student to notice the
+young girl who was leading the blind man. Had
+he ever before seen such eyes? Did he not think
+that such eyes must mean something? Could
+one have those eyes without being intended for
+something great?</p>
+
+<p>Hede turned round and looked at the little pale
+girl. Yes, she had eyes like stars, set in a sad
+and rather thin face.</p>
+
+<p>'Our Lord knows always what He is about,'
+said Mrs. Blomgren; 'and I also believe that He
+has some reason for letting such an artist as Mr.
+Blomgren perform in the street. But what was
+He thinking about when He gave that girl those
+eyes and that smile?'</p>
+
+<p>'I will tell you something,' said Mr. Blomgren;
+'she has not the slightest talent for Art.
+And with those eyes!'</p>
+
+<p>Hede had a suspicion that they were not talking
+to him, but simply for the benefit of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+young girl. She was walking just behind them,
+and could hear every word.</p>
+
+<p>'She is not more than thirteen years old, and
+not by any means too old to learn something;
+but, impossible&mdash;impossible, without the slightest
+talent! If one does not want to waste one's
+time, sir, teach her to sew, but not to stand on
+her head. Her smile makes people quite mad
+about her,' Mr. Blomgren continued. 'Simply
+on account of her smile she has had many offers
+from families wishful to adopt her. She could
+grow up in a well-to-do home if she would only
+leave her grandfather. But what does she want
+with a smile that makes people mad about her,
+when she will never appear either on horseback
+or on a trapeze?'</p>
+
+<p>'We know other artists,' said Mrs. Blomgren,
+'who pick up children in the street and train them
+for the profession when they cannot perform any
+longer themselves. There is more than one who
+has been lucky enough to create a star and obtain
+immense salaries for her. But Mr. Blomgren
+and I have never thought of the money; we have
+only thought of some day seeing Ingrid flying
+through a hoop whilst the whole circus resounded
+with applause. For us it would have
+been as if we were beginning life over again.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why do we keep her grandfather?' said Mr.
+Blomgren. 'Is he an artist fit for us? We
+could, no doubt, have got a previous member of
+a Hofkapell if we had wished. But we love that
+child; we cannot do without her; we keep the
+old man for her sake.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it not naughty of her that she will not allow
+us to make an artist of her?' they said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hede turned round. The little girl's face wore
+an expression of suffering and patience. He
+could see that she knew that anyone who could
+not dance on the tight-rope was a stupid and
+contemptible person.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment they came to another
+house, but before they began their performance
+Hede sat down on an overturned wheelbarrow
+and began to preach. He defended the poor
+little girl. He reproached Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren
+for wishing to hand her over to the great,
+cruel public, who would love and applaud her
+for a time, but when she grew old and worn out,
+they would let her trudge along the streets in
+rain and cold. No; he or she was artist enough,
+who made a fellow-being happy. Ingrid should
+only have eyes and smiles for one, should keep
+them for one only; and this one should never
+leave her, but give her a safe home as long as he
+lived.</p>
+
+<p>Tears came into Hede's eyes whilst he spoke.
+He spoke more to himself than to the others.
+He felt it suddenly as something terrible to be
+thrust out into the world, to be severed from the
+quiet home-life. He saw that the great, star-like
+eyes of the girl began to sparkle. It seemed as
+if she had understood every single word. It
+seemed as if she again felt the right to live.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Blomgren and his wife had become
+very serious. They pressed Hede's hand and
+promised him that they would never again try
+and persuade the little girl to become an artist.
+She should be allowed to lead the life she wished.
+He had touched them. They were artists&mdash;artists<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+body and soul; they understood what he
+meant when he spoke of love and faithfulness.</p>
+
+<p>Then Hede parted from them and went home.
+He no longer tried to find any secret meaning
+in his adventure. After all, it had meant nothing
+more than that he should save this poor sorrowful
+child from always grieving over her incapacity.</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>Munkhyttan, the home of Gunnar Hede, was
+situated in a poor parish in the forests of Vesterdalarne.
+It was a large, thinly-populated parish,
+with which Nature had dealt very stingily. There
+were stony, forest-covered hills, and many
+small lakes. The people could not possibly
+have earned a livelihood there had they not had
+the right to travel about the country as pedlars.
+But to make up for it, the whole of this poor
+district was full of old tales of how poor peasant
+lads and lassies had gone into the world with a
+pack of goods on their backs, to return in gilded
+coaches, with the boxes under the seats filled
+with money.</p>
+
+<p>One of the very best stories was about Hede's
+grandfather. He was the son of a poor musician,
+and had grown up with his violin in his
+hand, and when he was seventeen years old he
+had gone out into the world with his pack on
+his back. But wherever he went his violin had
+helped him in his business. He had by turns
+gathered people together by his music and sold
+them silk handkerchiefs, combs, and pins. All<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+his trading had been brought about with music
+and merriment, and things had gone so well with
+him that he had at last been able to buy Munkhyttan,
+with its mine and ironworks, from the
+poverty-stricken Baron who then owned the
+property. Then he became the Squire, and the
+pretty daughter of the Baron became his wife.</p>
+
+<p>From that time the old family, as they were
+always called, had thought of nothing else but
+beautifying the place. They removed the main
+building on to the beautiful island which lay on
+the edge of a small lake, round which lay their
+fields and their mines. The upper story had
+been added in their time, for they wanted to have
+plenty of room for their numerous guests; and
+they had also added the two large flights of
+steps outside. They had planted ornamental
+trees all over the fir-covered island. They had
+made small winding pathways in the stony soil,
+and on the most beautiful spots they had built
+small pavilions, hanging like large birds'-nests
+over the lake. The beautiful French roses that
+grew on the terrace, the Dutch furniture, the
+Italian violin, had all been brought to the house
+by them. And it was they who had built the
+wall protecting the orchard from the north wind,
+and the conservatory.</p>
+
+<p>The old family were merry, kind-hearted, old-fashioned
+people. The Squire's wife certainly
+liked to be a little aristocratic; but that was not at
+all in the old Squire's line. In the midst of all
+the luxury which surrounded him he never
+forgot what he had been, and in the room where
+he transacted his business, and where people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+came and went, the pack and the red-painted,
+home-made violin were hung right above the
+old man's desk.</p>
+
+<p>Even after his death the pack and the violin
+remained in the same place. And every time
+the old man's son and grandson saw them their
+hearts swelled with gratitude. It was these two
+poor implements that had created Munkhyttan,
+and Munkhyttan was the best thing in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the reason might be&mdash;and it was
+probably because it seemed natural to the place
+that one lived a good, genial life there, free from
+trouble&mdash;Hede's family clung to the place with
+greater love than was good for it. And more
+especially Gunnar Hede was so strongly attached
+to it that people said that it was incorrect
+to say of him that he owned an estate.
+On the contrary, it was an old estate in Vesterdalarne
+that owned Gunnar Hede.</p>
+
+<p>If he had not made himself a slave of an old
+rambling manor-house and some acres of land
+and forest, and some stunted apple-trees, he
+would probably have continued his studies, or,
+better still, gone abroad to study music, which,
+after all, was no doubt his proper vocation in
+this world. But when he returned from Upsala,
+and it became clear to him that they really would
+have to sell the estate if he could not soon earn
+a lot of money, he decided upon giving up all
+his other plans, and made up his mind to go
+out into the world as a pedlar, as his grandfather
+before him had done.</p>
+
+<p>His mother and his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em> besought him
+rather to sell the place than to sacrifice himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+for it in this manner, but he was not to be moved.
+He put on peasant's attire, bought goods, and
+began to travel about the country as a pedlar.
+He thought that if he only traded a couple of
+years he could earn enough to pay the debt and
+save the estate.</p>
+
+<p>And as far as the latter was concerned he
+was successful enough. But he brought upon
+himself a terrible misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>When he had walked about with his pack for
+a year or so he thought that he would try and
+earn a large sum of money at one stroke. He
+went far north and bought a large flock of
+goats, about a couple of hundred. And he
+and a comrade intended to drive them down to
+a large fair in Vermland, where goats cost twice
+as much as in the north. If he succeeded in
+selling all his goats, he would do a very good
+business.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the beginning of November, and
+there had not yet been any snow, when Hede
+and his comrade set out with their goats. The
+first day everything went well with them, but
+the second day, when they came to the great
+Fifty-Mile Forest, it began to snow. Much
+snow fell, and it stormed and blew severely. It
+was not long before it became difficult for the
+animals to make their way through the snow.
+Goats are certainly both plucky and hardy animals,
+and the herd struggled on for a considerable
+time; but the snow-storm lasted two days
+and two nights, and it was terribly cold.</p>
+
+<p>Hede did all he could to save the animals,
+but after the snow began to fall he could get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+them neither food nor water. And when they
+had worked their way through deep snow for
+a whole day they became very footsore. Their
+feet hurt them, and they would not go any
+longer. The first goat that threw itself down
+by the roadside and would not get up again
+and follow the herd Hede lifted on to his
+shoulder so as not to leave it behind. But when
+another and again another lay down he could
+not carry them. There was nothing to do but
+to look the other way and go on.</p>
+
+<p>Do you know what the Fifty-Mile Forest is
+like? Not a farmhouse, not a cottage, mile after
+mile, only forest; tall-stemmed fir-trees, with
+bark as hard as wood, and high branches; no
+young trees with soft bark and soft twigs that
+the animals could eat. If there had been no
+snow, they could have got through the forest
+in a couple of days; now they could not get
+through it at all. All the goats were left there,
+and the men too nearly perished. They did
+not meet a single human being the whole time.
+No one helped them.</p>
+
+<p>Hede tried to throw the snow to one side
+so that the goats could eat the moss; but the
+snow fell so thickly, and the moss was frozen
+fast to the ground. And how could he get food
+for two hundred animals in this way?</p>
+
+<p>He bore it bravely until the goats began to
+moan. The first day they were a lively, rather
+noisy herd. He had had hard work to make
+them all keep together, and prevent them from
+butting each other to death. But when they
+seemed to understand that they could not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+saved their nature changed, and they completely
+lost their courage. They all began to bleat and
+moan, not faintly and peevishly, as goats usually
+do, but loudly, louder and louder as the danger
+increased. And when Hede heard their cries he
+felt quite desperate.</p>
+
+<p>They were in the midst of the wild, desolate
+forest; there was no help whatever obtainable.
+Goat after goat dropped down by the roadside.
+The snow gathered round them and covered
+them. When Hede looked back at this row of
+drifts by the wayside, each hiding the body of
+an animal, of which one could still see the projecting
+horns and the hoofs, then his brain began
+to give way.</p>
+
+<p>He rushed at the animals, which allowed
+themselves to be covered by the snow, swung
+his whip over them, and hit them. It was the
+only way to save them, but they did not stir.
+He took them by the horns and dragged them
+along. They allowed themselves to be dragged,
+but they did not move a foot themselves. When
+he let go his hold of their horns, they licked
+his hands, as if beseeching him to help them.
+As soon as he went up to them they licked his
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>All this had such a strong effect upon Hede
+that he felt he was on the point of going out
+of his mind.</p>
+
+<p>It is not certain, however, that things would
+have gone so badly with him had he not, after
+it was all over in the forest, gone to see one
+whom he loved dearly. It was not his mother,
+but his sweetheart. He thought himself that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+he had gone there because he ought to tell
+her at once that he had lost so much money
+that he would not be able to marry for many
+years. But no doubt he went to see her solely
+to hear her say that she loved him quite as
+much in spite of his misfortunes. He thought
+that she could drive away the memory of the
+Fifty-Mile Forest.</p>
+
+<p>She could, perhaps, have done this, but she
+would not. She was already displeased because
+Hede went about with a pack and looked like
+a peasant; she thought that for that reason
+alone it was difficult to love him as much as
+before. Now, when he told her that he must
+still go on doing this for many years, she said
+that she could no longer wait for him. This
+last blow was too much for Hede; his mind
+gave way.</p>
+
+<p>He did not grow quite mad, however; he retained
+so much of his senses that he could attend
+to his business. He even did better than others,
+for it amused people to make fun of him; he
+was always welcome at the peasants' houses.
+People plagued and teased him, but that was
+in a way good for him, as he was so anxious
+to become rich. And in the course of a few
+years he had earned enough to pay all his debts,
+and he could have lived free from worry on his
+estate. But this he did not understand; he
+went about half-witted and silly from farm to
+farm, and he had no longer any idea to what
+class of people he really belonged.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>Raglanda was the name of a parish in the
+north of East Vermland, near the borders of
+Dalarne, where the Dean had a large house,
+but the pastor only a small and poor one. But
+poor as they were at the small parsonage, they
+had been charitable enough to adopt a poor
+girl. She was a little girl, Ingrid by name,
+and she had come to the parsonage when she
+was thirteen years old.</p>
+
+<p>The pastor had accidentally seen her at a
+fair, where she sat crying outside the tent of
+some acrobats. He had stopped and asked her
+why she was crying, and she had told him that
+her blind grandfather was dead, and that she
+had no relatives left. She now travelled with
+a couple of acrobats, and they were good to
+her, but she cried because she was so stupid
+that she could never learn to dance on the tight-rope
+and help to earn any money.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sorrowful grace over the child
+which touched the pastor's heart. He said at
+once to himself that he could not allow such a
+little creature to go to the bad amongst these
+wandering tramps. He went into the tent, where
+he saw Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren, and offered to
+take the child home with him. The old acrobats
+began to weep, and said that although the girl
+was entirely unfitted for the profession, they
+would so very much like to keep her; but at
+the same time they thought she would be happier
+in a real home with people who lived in the same
+place all the year round, and therefore they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+willing to give her up to the pastor if he would
+only promise them that she should be like one
+of his own children.</p>
+
+<p>This he had promised, and from that time the
+young girl had lived at the parsonage. She was
+a quiet, gentle child, full of love and tender care
+for those around her. At first her adopted
+parents loved her very dearly, but as she grew
+older she developed a strong inclination to lose
+herself in dreams and fancies. She lived in a
+world of visions, and in the middle of the day
+she could let her work fall and be lost in dreams.
+But the pastor's wife, who was a clever and
+hard-working woman, did not approve of this.
+She found fault with the young girl for being
+lazy and slow, and tormented her by her severity
+so that she became timid and unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>When she had completed her nineteenth year,
+she fell dangerously ill. They did not quite
+know what was the matter with her, for this
+happened long ago, when there was no doctor
+at Raglanda, but the girl was very ill. They
+soon saw she was so ill that she could not live.</p>
+
+<p>She herself did nothing but pray to God that
+He would take her away from this world. She
+would so like to die, she said.</p>
+
+<p>Then it seemed as if our Lord would try
+whether she was in earnest. One night she felt
+that she grew stiff and cold all over her body,
+and a heavy lethargy fell upon her. 'I think
+this must be death,' she said to herself.</p>
+
+<p>But the strange thing was that she did not
+quite lose consciousness. She knew that she lay
+as if she were dead, knew that they wrapped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+her in her shroud and laid her in her coffin,
+but she felt no fear of being buried, although
+she was still alive. She had but the one thought
+that she was happy because she was about to
+die and leave this troublesome life.</p>
+
+<p>The only thing she was uneasy about was
+lest they should discover that she was not really
+dead and would not bury her. Life must have
+been very bitter to her, inasmuch as she felt
+no fear of death whatever.</p>
+
+<p>But no one discovered that she was living.
+She was conveyed to the church, carried to the
+churchyard, and lowered into the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The grave, however, was not filled in; she
+had been buried before the service on Sunday
+morning, as was the custom at Raglanda. The
+mourners had gone into church after the funeral,
+and the coffin was left in the open grave; but
+as soon as the service was over they would
+come back, and help the grave-digger to fill
+in the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl knew everything that happened,
+but felt no fear. She had not been able
+to make the slightest movement to show that
+she was alive, even if she had wanted to; but
+even if she had been able to move, she would
+not have done so; the whole time she was happy
+because she was as good as dead.</p>
+
+<p>But, on the other hand, one could hardly say
+that she was alive. She had neither the use of
+her mind nor of her senses. It was only that
+part of the soul which dreams dreams during
+the night that was still living within her.</p>
+
+<p>She could not even think enough to realize<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+how terrible it would be for her to awake when
+the grave was filled in. She had no more power
+over her mind than has one who dreams.</p>
+
+<p>'I should like to know,' she thought, 'if there
+is anything in the whole wide world that could
+make me wish to live.'</p>
+
+<p>As soon as that thought rushed through her
+it seemed to her as if the lid of the coffin, and
+the handkerchief which had been placed over
+her face, became transparent, and she saw before
+her riches and beautiful raiment, and lovely
+gardens with delicious fruits.</p>
+
+<p>'No, I do not care for any of these things,'
+she said, and she closed her eyes for their
+glories.</p>
+
+<p>When she again looked up they had disappeared,
+but instead she saw quite distinctly a
+little angel of God sitting on the edge of the
+grave.</p>
+
+<p>'Good-morning, thou little angel of God,' she
+said to him.</p>
+
+<p>'Good-morning, Ingrid,' the angel said.
+'Whilst thou art lying here doing nothing, I
+would like to speak a little with thee about days
+gone by.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid heard distinctly every word the angel
+said; but his voice was not like anything she
+had ever heard before. It was more like a
+stringed instrument; it was not like singing,
+but like the tones of a violin or the clang of
+a harp.</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' the angel said, 'dost thou remember,
+whilst thy grandfather was still living, that thou
+once met a young student, who went with thee<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+from house to house playing the whole day on
+thy grandfather's violin?'</p>
+
+<p>The girl's face was lighted by a smile.</p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou think I have forgotten this?' she
+said. 'Ever since that time no day has passed
+when I have not thought of him.'</p>
+
+<p>'And no night when thou hast not dreamt
+of him?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, not a night when I have not dreamt of
+him.'</p>
+
+<p>'And thou wilt die, although thou rememberest
+him so well,' said the angel. 'Then thou
+wilt never be able to see him again.'</p>
+
+<p>When he said this it was as if the dead girl
+felt all the happiness of love, but even that could
+not tempt her.</p>
+
+<p>'No, no,' she said; 'I am afraid to live; I
+would rather die.'</p>
+
+<p>Then the angel waved his hand, and Ingrid
+saw before her a wide waste of desert. There
+were no trees, and the desert was barren and
+dry and hot, and extended in all directions
+without any limits. In the sand there lay, here
+and there, objects which at the first glance
+looked like pieces of rock, but when she examined
+them more closely, she saw they were
+the immense living animals of fairy tales, with
+huge claws and great jaws, with sharp teeth;
+they lay in the sand, watching for prey. And
+between these terrible animals the student came
+walking along. He went quite fearlessly, without
+suspecting that the figures around him were
+living.</p>
+
+<p>'But warn him! do warn him!' Ingrid said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+to the angel in unspeakable fear. 'Tell him that
+they are living, and that he must take care.'</p>
+
+<p>'I am not allowed to speak to him,' said the
+angel with his clear voice; 'thou must thyself
+warn him.'</p>
+
+<p>The apparently dead girl felt with horror that
+she lay powerless, and could not rush to save
+the student. She made one futile effort after
+the other to raise herself, but the impotence of
+death bound her. But then at last, at last, she
+felt her heart begin to beat, the blood rushed
+through her veins, the stiffness of death was
+loosened in her body. She arose and hastened
+towards him.</p>
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>It is quite certain the sun loves the open
+places outside the small village churches. Has
+no one ever noticed that one never sees so
+much sunshine as during the morning service
+outside a small, whitewashed church? Nowhere
+else does one see such radiant streams of light,
+nowhere else is the air so devoutly quiet. The
+sun simply keeps watch that no one remains
+on the church hill gossiping. It wants them all
+to sit quietly in church and listen to the sermon&mdash;that
+is why it sends such a wealth of sunny
+rays on to the ground outside the church wall.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps one must not take it for granted
+that the sun keeps watch outside the small
+churches every Sunday; but so much is certain,
+that the morning Ingrid had been placed
+in the grave in the churchyard at Raglanda,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+it spread a burning heat over the open space
+outside the church. Even the flint stones
+looked as if they might take fire as they lay
+and sparkled in the wheel-ruts. The short,
+down-trodden grass curled, so that it looked
+like dry moss, whilst the yellow dandelions
+which grew amongst the grass spread themselves
+out on their long stems, so that they
+became as large as asters.</p>
+
+<p>A man from Dalarne came wandering along
+the road&mdash;one of those men who go about selling
+knives and scissors. He was clad in a
+long, white sheep-skin coat, and on his back
+he had a large black leather pack. He had
+been walking with this burden for several hours
+without finding it too hot, but when he had
+left the highroad, and came to the open place
+outside the church, he stopped and took off
+his hat in order to dry the perspiration from
+his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>As the man stood there bare-headed, he
+looked both handsome and clever. His forehead
+was high and white, with a deep wrinkle
+between the eyebrows; the mouth was well
+formed, with thin lips. His hair was parted
+in the middle; it was cut short at the back,
+but hung over his ears, and was inclined to
+curl. He was tall, and strongly, but not coarsely,
+built; in every respect well proportioned. But
+what was wrong about him was his glance,
+which was unsteady, and the pupils of his eyes
+rolled restlessly, and were drawn far into the
+sockets, as if to hide themselves. There was
+something drawn about the mouth, something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+dull and heavy, which did not seem to belong
+to the face.</p>
+
+<p>He could not be quite right, either, or he
+would not have dragged that heavy pack about
+on a Sunday. If he had been quite in his
+senses, he would have known that it was of
+no use, as he could not sell anything in any
+case. None of the other men from Dalarne
+who walked about from village to village bent
+their backs under this burden on a Sunday,
+but they went to the house of God free and
+erect as other men.</p>
+
+<p>But this poor fellow probably did not know
+it was a holy day until he stood in the sunshine
+outside the church and heard the singing.
+He was sensible enough at once to understand
+that he could not do any business, and
+then his brain began to work as to how he
+should spend the day.</p>
+
+<p>He stood for a long time and stared in front
+of him. When everything went its usual course,
+he had no difficulty in managing. He was not
+so bad but that he could go from farm to farm
+all through the week and attend to his business,
+but he never could get accustomed to
+the Sunday&mdash;that always came upon him as a
+great, unexpected trouble.</p>
+
+<p>His eyes became quite fixed, and the muscles
+of his forehead swelled.</p>
+
+<p>The first thought that took shape in his brain
+was that he should go into the church and
+listen to the singing, but he would not accept
+this suggestion. He was very fond of singing,
+but he dared not go into the church. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+was not afraid of human beings, but in some
+churches there were such quaint, uncanny pictures,
+which represented creatures of which he
+would rather not think.</p>
+
+<p>At last his brain worked round to the thought
+that, as this was a church, there would probably
+also be a churchyard, and when he could
+take refuge in a churchyard all was well. One
+could not offer him anything better. If on his
+wanderings he saw a churchyard, he always went
+in and sat there awhile, even if it were in the
+middle of a workaday week.</p>
+
+<p>Now that he wanted to go to the churchyard
+a new difficulty suddenly arose. The
+burial-place at Raglanda does not lie quite
+near the church, which is built on a hill, but
+on the other side of the road; and he could
+not get to the entrance of the churchyard without
+passing along the road where the horses
+of the church-goers were standing tied up.</p>
+
+<p>All the horses stood with their heads deep
+in bundles of hay and nosebags, chewing. There
+was no question of their being able to do the
+man any harm, but he had his own ideas as
+to the danger of going past such a long row of
+animals.</p>
+
+<p>Two or three times he made an attempt, but
+his courage failed him, so that he was obliged
+to turn back. He was not afraid that the
+horses would bite or kick. It was quite enough
+for him that they were so near that they could
+see him. It was quite enough that they could
+shake their bridles and scrape the earth with
+their hoofs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last a moment came when all the horses
+were looking down, and seemed to be eating
+for a wager. Then he began to make his way
+between them. He held his sheepskin cloak
+tightly around him so that it should not flap
+and betray him, and he went on tiptoe as lightly
+as he could. When a horse raised its eyelid
+and looked at him, he at once stopped and
+curtsied. He wanted to be polite in this great
+danger, but surely animals were amenable to
+reason, and could understand that he could not
+bow when he had a pack full of hardware upon
+his back; he could only curtsy.</p>
+
+<p>He sighed deeply, for in this world it was
+a sad and troublesome thing to be so afraid of
+all four-footed animals as he was. He was
+really not afraid of any other animals than
+goats, and he would not have been at all afraid
+of horses and dogs and cats had he only been
+quite sure that they were not a kind of transformed
+goats. But he never was quite sure of
+that, so as a matter of fact it was just as bad
+for him as if he had been afraid of all kinds of
+four-footed animals.</p>
+
+<p>It was no use his thinking of how strong he
+was, and that these small peasant horses never
+did any harm to anyone: he who has become
+possessed of such fears cannot reason with himself.
+Fear is a heavy burden, and it is hard for
+him who must always carry it.</p>
+
+<p>It was strange that he managed to get past
+all the horses. The last few steps he took in
+two long jumps, and when he got into the
+churchyard he closed the gate after him, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+began to threaten the horses with his clenched
+fist.</p>
+
+<p>'You wretched, miserable, accursed goats!'</p>
+
+<p>He did that to all animals. He could not
+help calling them goats, and that was very stupid
+of him, for it had procured him a name which
+he did not like. Everyone who met him called
+him the 'Goat.' But he would not own to this
+name. He wanted to be called by his proper
+name, but apparently no one knew his real name
+in that district.</p>
+
+<p>He stood a little while at the gate, rejoicing
+at having escaped from the horses, but he soon
+went further into the churchyard. At every
+cross and every stone he stopped and curtsied,
+but this was not from fear: this was simply
+from joy at seeing these dear old friends. All
+at once he began to look quite gentle and mild.
+They were exactly the same crosses and stones
+he had so often seen before. They looked just
+as usual. How well he knew them again! He
+must say 'Good-morning' to them.</p>
+
+<p>How nice it was in the churchyard! There
+were no animals about there, and there were
+no people to make fun of him. It was best
+there, when it was quite quiet as now; but
+even if there were people, they did not disturb
+him. He certainly knew many pretty meadows
+and woods which he liked still better, but there
+he was never left in peace. They could not by
+any means compare with the churchyard. And
+the churchyard was better than the forest, for
+in the forest the loneliness was so great that
+he was frightened by it. Here it was quiet, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+in the depths of the forest; but he was not
+without company. Here people were sleeping
+under every stone and every mound; just the
+company he wanted in order not to feel lonely
+and strange.</p>
+
+<p>He went straight to the open grave. He
+went there partly because there were some
+shady trees, and partly because he wanted company.
+He thought, perhaps, that the dead who
+had so recently been laid in the grave might
+be a better protection against his loneliness than
+those who had passed away long ago.</p>
+
+<p>He bent his knees, with his back to the great
+mound of earth at the edge of the grave, and
+succeeded in pushing the pack upwards, so that
+it stood firmly on the mound, and he then
+loosened the heavy straps that fastened it. It
+was a great day&mdash;a holiday. He also took off
+his coat. He sat down on the grass with a
+feeling of great pleasure, so close to the grave
+that his long legs, with the stockings tied under
+the knee, and the heavy laced shoes dangled over
+the edge of the grave.</p>
+
+<p>For a while he sat still, with his eyes steadily
+fixed upon the coffin. When one was possessed
+by such fear as he was, one could not
+be too careful. But the coffin did not move
+in the least; it was impossible to suspect it of
+containing any snare.</p>
+
+<p>He was no sooner certain of this than he put
+his hand into a side-pocket of the pack and took
+out a violin and bow, and at the same time he
+nodded to the dead in the grave. As he was
+so quiet he should hear something pretty.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This was something very unusual for him.
+There were not many who were allowed to hear
+him play. No one was ever allowed to hear
+him play at the farms, where they set the dogs
+at him and called him the 'Goat'; but sometimes
+he would play in a house where they
+spoke softly, and went about quietly, and did
+not ask him if he wanted to buy any goat-skins.
+At such places he took out his violin
+and treated them to some music; and this was
+a great favour&mdash;the greatest he could bestow
+upon anybody.</p>
+
+<p>As he sat there and played at the edge of
+the grave it did not sound amiss; he did not
+play a wrong note, and he played so softly and
+gently that it could hardly be heard at the next
+grave. The strange thing about it was that it
+was not the man who could play, but it was
+his violin that could remember some small
+melodies. They came forth from the violin as
+soon as he let the bow glide over it. It might
+not, perhaps, have meant so much to others,
+but for him, who could not remember a single
+tune, it was the most precious gift of all to possess
+such a violin that could play by itself.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst he played he sat with a beaming
+smile on his face. It was the violin that
+spoke and spoke; he only listened. Was it not
+strange that one heard all these beautiful things
+as soon as one let the bow glide over the strings?
+The violin did that. It knew how it ought to
+be, and the Dalar man only sat and listened.
+Melodies grew out of that violin as grass grows
+out of the earth. No one could understand how
+it happened. Our Lord had ordered it so.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man intended to remain sitting
+there the whole day, and let the dear tunes grow
+out of the violin like small white and many-coloured
+flowers. He would play a whole
+meadowful of flowers, play a whole long valleyful,
+a whole wide plain.</p>
+
+<p>But she who lay in the coffin distinctly heard
+the violin, and upon her it had a strange effect.
+The tones had made her dream, and what she
+had seen in her dreams caused her such emotion
+that her heart began to beat, her blood to flow,
+and she awoke.</p>
+
+<p>But all she had lived through while she lay
+there, apparently dead, the thoughts she had had,
+and also her last dream&mdash;everything vanished
+in the same moment she awoke to consciousness.
+She did not even know that she was lying
+in her coffin, but thought she was still lying ill
+at home in her bed. She only thought it strange
+that she was still alive. A little while ago, before
+she fell asleep, she had been in the pangs of
+death. Surely, all must have been over with
+her long ago. She had taken leave of her
+adopted parents, and of her brothers and sisters,
+and of the servants. The Dean had been there
+himself to administer the last Communion, for
+her adopted father did not think he could bear
+to give it to her himself. For several days she
+had put away all earthly thoughts from her mind.
+It was incomprehensible that she was not dead.</p>
+
+<p>She wondered why it was so dark in the room
+where she lay. There had been a light all the
+other nights during her illness. And then they
+had let the blankets fall off the bed. She was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+lying there getting as cold as ice. She raised
+herself a little to pull the blankets over her.
+In doing so she knocked her head against the
+lid of the coffin, and fell back with a little scream
+of pain. She had knocked herself rather severely,
+and immediately became unconscious
+again. She lay as motionless as before, and it
+seemed as if life had again left her.</p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man, who had heard both the
+knock and the cry, immediately laid down his
+violin and sat listening; but there was nothing
+more to be heard&mdash;nothing whatever. He began
+again to look at the coffin as attentively
+as before. He sat nodding his head, as if he
+would say 'Yes' to what he was himself thinking
+about, namely, that nothing in this world
+was to be depended upon. Here he had had
+the best and most silent of comrades, but had
+he not also been disappointed in him?</p>
+
+<p>He sat and looked at the coffin, as if trying
+to see right through it. At last, when it continued
+quite still, he took his violin again and
+began to play. But the violin would not play
+any longer. However gently and tenderly he
+drew his bow, there came forth no melody. This
+was so sad that he was nearly crying. He had
+intended to sit still and listen to his violin the
+whole day, and now it would not play any more.</p>
+
+<p>He could quite understand the reason. The
+violin was uneasy and afraid of what had moved
+in the coffin. It had forgotten all its melodies,
+and thought only of what it could be that had
+knocked at the coffin-lid. That is how it is
+one forgets everything when one is afraid. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+saw that he would have to quiet the violin if he
+wanted to hear more.</p>
+
+<p>He had felt so happy, more so than for many
+years. If there was really anything bad in the
+coffin, would it not be better to let it out? Then
+the violin would be glad, and beautiful flowers
+would again grow out of it.</p>
+
+<p>He quickly opened his big pack, and began
+to rummage amongst his knives and saws and
+hammers until he found a screw-driver. In
+another moment he was down in the grave on
+his knees and unscrewing the coffin-lid. He
+took out one screw after the other, until at last
+he could raise the lid against the side of the
+grave; at the same moment the handkerchief
+fell from off the face of the apparently dead girl.
+As soon as the fresh air reached Ingrid, she
+opened her eyes. Now she saw that it was
+light. They must have removed her. Now
+she was lying in a yellow chamber with a green
+ceiling, and a large chandelier was hanging from
+the ceiling. The chamber was small, but the
+bed was still smaller. Why had she the sensation
+of her arms and legs being tied? Was
+it because she should lie still in the little narrow
+bed? It was strange that they had placed a
+hymn-book under her chin; they only did that
+with corpses. Between her fingers she had a
+little bouquet. Her adopted mother had cut
+a few sprigs from her flowering myrtle, and
+laid them in her hands. Ingrid was very much
+surprised. What had come to her adopted
+mother? She saw that they had given her a
+pillow with broad lace, and a fine hem-stitched<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+sheet. She was very glad of that; she liked to
+have things nice. Still, she would rather have
+had a warm blanket over her. It could surely
+not be good for a sick person to lie without a
+blanket. Ingrid was nearly putting her hands
+to her eyes and beginning to cry, she was so
+bitterly cold. At the same moment she felt
+something hard and cold against her cheek.
+She could not help smiling. It was the old,
+red wooden horse, the old three-legged Camilla,
+that lay beside her on the pillow. Her little
+brother, who could never sleep at night without
+having it with him in his bed, had put it in
+her bed. It was very sweet of her little brother.
+Ingrid felt still more inclined to cry when she
+understood that her little brother had wanted
+to comfort her with his wooden horse.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not get so far as crying. The
+truth all at once flashed upon her. Her little
+brother had given her the wooden horse, and
+her mother had given her her white myrtle flowers,
+and the hymn-book had been placed under
+her chin, because they had thought she was dead.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid took hold of the sides of the coffin
+with both hands and raised herself. The little
+narrow bed was a coffin, and the little narrow
+chamber was a grave. It was all very difficult
+to understand. She could not understand that
+this concerned her, that it was she who had
+been swathed like a corpse and placed in the
+grave. She must be lying all the same in her
+bed, and be seeing or dreaming all this. She
+would soon find out that this was no reality,
+but that everything was as usual.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All at once she found the explanation of the
+whole thing&mdash;'I often have such strange dreams.
+This is only a vision'&mdash;and she sighed, relieved
+and happy. She laid herself down in her coffin
+again; she was so sure that it was her own
+bed, for that was not very wide either.</p>
+
+<p>All this time the Dalar man stood in the
+grave, quite close to the foot of the coffin. He
+only stood a few feet from her, but she had not
+seen him; that was probably because he had
+tried to hide himself in the corner of the grave
+as soon as the dead in the coffin had opened
+her eyes and begun to move. She could, perhaps,
+have seen him, although he held the coffin-lid
+before him as a screen, had there not been
+something like a white mist before her eyes so
+that she could only see things quite near her
+distinctly. Ingrid could not even see that there
+were earthen walls around her. She had taken
+the sun to be a large chandelier, and the shady
+lime-trees for a roof. The poor Dalar man stood
+and waited for the thing that moved in the coffin
+to go away. It did not strike him that it would
+not go unrequested. Had it not knocked because
+it wanted to get out? He stood for a long time
+with his head behind the coffin-lid and waited,
+that it should go. He peeped over the lid when
+he thought that now it must have gone. But
+it had not moved; it remained lying on its bed
+of shavings.</p>
+
+<p>He could not put up with it any longer; he
+must really make an end of it. It was a long
+time since his violin had spoken so prettily as
+to-day, he longed to sit again quietly with it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+Ingrid, who had nearly fallen asleep again, suddenly
+heard herself addressed in the sing-song
+Dalar dialect:</p>
+
+<p>'Now, I think it is time you got up.'</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he had said this he hid his head.
+He shook so much over his boldness that he
+nearly let the lid fall.</p>
+
+<p>But the white mist which had been before
+Ingrid's eyes disappeared completely when she
+heard a human being speaking. She saw a man
+standing in the corner, at the foot of the coffin,
+holding a coffin-lid before him. She saw at
+once that she could not lie down again and think
+it was a vision. Surely he was a reality, which
+she must try and make out. It certainly looked
+as if the coffin were a coffin, and the grave a
+grave, and that she herself a few minutes ago
+was nothing but a swathed and buried corpse.
+For the first time she was terror-stricken at what
+had happened to her. To think that she could
+really have been dead that moment! She could
+have been a hideous corpse, food for worms.
+She had been placed in the coffin for them to
+throw earth upon her; she was worth no more
+than a piece of turf; she had been thrown aside
+altogether. The worms were welcome to eat
+her; no one would mind about that.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid needed so badly to have a fellow-creature
+near her in her great terror. She had
+recognized the Goat directly he put up his head.
+He was an old acquaintance from the parsonage;
+she was not in the least afraid of him. She
+wanted him to come close to her. She did not
+mind in the least that he was an idiot. He was,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+at any rate, a living being. She wanted him to
+come so near to her that she could feel she belonged
+to the living and not to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, for God's sake, come close to me!' she
+said, with tears in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>She raised herself in the coffin and stretched
+out her arms to him.</p>
+
+<p>But the Dalar man only thought of himself.
+If she were so anxious to have him near her, he
+resolved to make his own terms.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' he said, 'if you will go away.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid at once tried to comply with his request,
+but she was so tightly swathed in the
+sheet that she found it difficult to get up.</p>
+
+<p>'You must come and help me,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>She said this, partly because she was obliged
+to do it, and partly because she was afraid that
+she had not quite escaped death. She must be
+near someone living.</p>
+
+<p>He actually went near her, squeezing himself
+between the coffin and the side of the grave.
+He bent over her, lifted her out of the coffin,
+and put her down on the grass at the side of
+the open grave.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid could not help it. She threw her arms
+round his neck, laid her head on his shoulder
+and sobbed. Afterwards she could not understand
+how she had been able to do this, and
+that she was not afraid of him. It was partly
+from joy that he was a human being&mdash;a living
+human being&mdash;and partly from gratitude, because
+he had saved her.</p>
+
+<p>What would have become of her if it had not
+been for him? It was he who had raised the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+coffin-lid, who had brought her back to life.
+She certainly did not know how it had all happened,
+but it was surely he who had opened
+the coffin. What would have happened to her
+if he had not done this? She would have
+awakened to find herself imprisoned in the
+black coffin. She would have knocked and
+shouted; but who would have heard her six
+feet below the ground? Ingrid dared not think of
+it; she was entirely absorbed with gratitude
+because she had been saved. She must have
+someone she could thank. She must lay her
+head on someone's breast and cry from gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>The most extraordinary thing, almost, that
+happened that day was, that the Dalar man did
+not repulse her. But it was not quite clear to
+him that she was alive. He thought she was
+dead, and he knew it was not advisable to offend
+anyone dead. But as soon as he could manage,
+he freed himself from her and went down into
+the grave again. He placed the lid carefully on
+the coffin, put in the screws and fastened it as
+before. Then he thought the coffin would be
+quite still, and the violin would regain its peace
+and its melodies.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime Ingrid sat on the grass and
+tried to collect her thoughts. She looked
+towards the church and discovered the horses
+and the carriages on the hillside. Then she
+began to realize everything. It was Sunday;
+they had placed her in the grave in the morning,
+and now they were in church.</p>
+
+<p>A great fear now seized Ingrid. The service<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+would, perhaps, soon be over, and then all the
+people would come out and see her. And she
+had nothing on but a sheet! She was almost
+naked. Fancy, if all these people came and saw
+her in this state! They would never forget the
+sight. And she would be ashamed of it all her
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Where should she get some clothes? For a
+moment she thought of throwing the Dalar
+man's fur coat round her, but she did not think
+that that would make her any more like other
+people.</p>
+
+<p>She turned quickly to the crazy man, who
+was still working at the coffin-lid.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh,' she said, 'will you let me creep into
+your pack?'</p>
+
+<p>In a moment she stood by the great leather
+pack, which contained goods enough to fill a
+whole market-stall, and began to open it.</p>
+
+<p>'You must come and help me.'</p>
+
+<p>She did not ask in vain. When the Dalar
+man saw her touching his wares he came up at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>'Are you touching my pack?' he asked threateningly.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid did not notice that he spoke angrily;
+she considered him to be her best friend all
+the time.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, dear good man,' she said, 'help me to
+hide, so that people will not see me. Put your
+wares somewhere or other, and let me creep
+into the pack, and carry me home. Oh, do do
+it! I live at the Parsonage, and it is only a
+little way from here. You know where it is.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The man stood and looked at her with stupid
+eyes. She did not know whether he had understood
+a word of what she said. She repeated
+it, but he made no sign of obeying her. She
+began again to take the things out of the pack.
+Then he stamped on the ground and tore the
+pack from her.</p>
+
+<p>However should Ingrid be able to make him
+do what she wanted?</p>
+
+<p>On the grass beside her lay a violin and a
+bow. She took them up mechanically&mdash;she did
+not know herself why. She had probably been
+so much in the company of people playing the
+violin that she could not bear to see an instrument
+lying on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as she touched the violin he let go
+the pack, and tore the violin from her. He was
+evidently quite beside himself when anyone
+touched his violin. He looked quite malicious.</p>
+
+<p>What in the world could she do to get away
+before people came out of church?</p>
+
+<p>She began to promise him all sorts of things,
+just as one promises children when one wants
+them to be good.</p>
+
+<p>'I will ask father to buy a whole dozen of
+scythes from you. I will lock up all the dogs
+when you come to the Parsonage. I will ask
+mother to give you a good meal.'</p>
+
+<p>But there was no sign of his giving way. She
+bethought herself of the violin, and said in her
+despair:</p>
+
+<p>'If you will carry me to the Parsonage, I will
+play for you.'</p>
+
+<p>At last a smile flashed across his face. That
+was evidently what he wanted.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I will play for you the whole afternoon; I
+will play for you as long as you like.'</p>
+
+<p>'Will you teach the violin new melodies?'
+he asked.</p>
+
+<p>'Of course I will.'</p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid now became both surprised and
+unhappy, for he took hold of the pack and pulled
+it towards him. He dragged it over the graves,
+and the sweet-williams and southernwood that
+grew on them were crushed under it as if it
+were a roller. He dragged it to a heap of
+branches and wizened leaves and old wreaths
+lying near the wall round the churchyard. There
+he took all the things out of the pack, and hid
+them well under the heap. When it was empty
+he returned to Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'Now you can get in,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid stepped into the pack, and crouched
+down on the wooden bottom. The man fastened
+all the straps as carefully as when he went about
+with his usual wares, bent down so that he nearly
+went on his knees, put his arms through the
+braces, buckled a couple of straps across his
+chest, and stood up. When he had gone a few
+steps he began to laugh. His pack was so light
+that he could have danced with it.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was only about a mile from the church to
+the Parsonage. The Dalar man could walk it
+in twenty minutes. Ingrid's only wish was that
+he would walk so quickly that she could get
+home before the people came back from church.
+She could not bear the idea of so many people
+seeing her. She would like to get home when
+only her mother and the maid-servants were there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ingrid had taken with her the little bouquet
+of flowers from her adopted mother's myrtle.
+She was so pleased with it that she kissed it
+over and over again. It made her think more
+kindly of her adopted mother than she had ever
+done before. But in any case she would, of
+course, think kindly of her now. One who has
+come straight from the grave must think kindly
+and gently of everything living and moving on
+the face of the earth.</p>
+
+<p>She could now understand so well that the
+Pastor's wife was bound to love her own children
+more than her adopted daughter. And
+when they were so poor at the Parsonage that
+they could not afford to keep a nursemaid, she
+could see now that it was quite natural that
+she should look after her little brothers and
+sisters. And when her brothers and sisters
+were not good to her, it was because they had
+become accustomed to think of her as their
+nurse. It was not so easy for them to remember
+that she had come to the Parsonage to be
+their sister.</p>
+
+<p>And, after all, it all came from their being
+poor. When father some day got another living,
+and became Dean, or even Rector, everything
+would surely come right. Then they would love
+her again, as they did when she first came to
+them. The good old times would be sure to
+come back again. Ingrid kissed her flowers.
+It had not been mother's intention, perhaps, to
+be hard; it was only worry that had made her
+so strange and unkind.</p>
+
+<p>But now it would not matter how unkind they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+were to her. In the future nothing could hurt
+her, for now she would always be glad, simply
+because she was alive. And if things should
+ever be really bad again, she would only think
+of mother's myrtle and her little brother's horse.</p>
+
+<p>It was happiness enough to know that she was
+being carried along the road alive. This morning
+no one had thought that she would ever again
+go over these roads and hills. And the fragrant
+clover and the little birds singing and the beautiful
+shady trees, which had all been a source of
+joy for the living, had not even existed for her.
+But she had not much time for reflection, for in
+twenty minutes the Dalar man had reached the
+Parsonage.</p>
+
+<p>No one was at home but the Pastor's wife and
+the maid-servants, just as Ingrid had wished.
+The Pastor's wife had been busy the whole
+morning cooking for the funeral feast. She soon
+expected the guests, and everything was nearly
+ready. She had just been into the bedroom to
+put on her black dress. She glanced down the
+road to the church, but there were still no carriages
+to be seen. So she went once again into
+the kitchen to taste the food.</p>
+
+<p>She was quite satisfied, for everything was as
+it ought to be, and one cannot help being glad
+for that, even if one is in mourning. There was
+only one maid in the kitchen, and that was the
+one the Pastor's wife had brought with her from
+her old home, so she felt she could speak to her
+in confidence.</p>
+
+<p>'I must confess, Lisa,' she said, 'I think anyone
+would be pleased with having such a funeral.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'If she could only look down and see all the
+fuss you make of her,' Lisa said, 'she would be
+pleased.'</p>
+
+<p>'Ah!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I don't think she
+would ever be pleased with me.'</p>
+
+<p>'She is dead now,' said the girl, 'and I am not
+the one to say anything against one who is hardly
+yet under the ground.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have had to bear many a hard word from
+my husband for her sake,' said the mistress.</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor's wife felt she wanted to speak with
+someone about the dead girl. Her conscience
+had pricked her a little on her account, and this
+was why she had arranged such a grand funeral
+feast. She thought her conscience might leave
+her alone now she had had so much trouble over
+the funeral, but it did not do so by any means.
+Her husband also reproached himself, and said
+that the young girl had not been treated like one
+of their own children, and that they had promised
+she should be when they adopted her; and
+he said it would have been better if they had
+never taken her, when they could not help letting
+her see that they loved their own children more.
+And now the Pastor's wife felt she must talk to
+someone about the young girl, to hear whether
+people thought she had treated her badly.</p>
+
+<p>She saw that Lisa began to stir the pan violently,
+as if she had difficulty in controlling her
+anger. She was a clever girl, who thoroughly
+understood how to get into her mistress's good
+books.</p>
+
+<p>'I must say,' Lisa began, 'that when one has
+a mother who always looks after one, and takes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+care that one is neat and clean, one might at
+least try to obey and please her. And when one
+is allowed to live in a good Parsonage, and to
+be educated respectably, one ought at least to
+give some return for it, and not always go idling
+about and dreaming. I should like to know what
+would have happened if you had not taken the
+poor thing in. I suppose she would have been
+running about with those acrobats, and have died
+in the streets, like any other poor wretch.'</p>
+
+<p>A man from Dalarne came across the yard;
+he had his pack on his back, although it was Sunday.
+He came very quietly through the open
+kitchen-door, and curtsied when he entered, but
+no one took any notice of him. Both the mistress
+and the maid saw him, but as they knew
+him, they did not think it necessary to interrupt
+their conversation.</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor's wife was anxious to continue it;
+she felt she was about to hear what she needed to
+ease her conscience.</p>
+
+<p>'It is perhaps as well she is gone,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, ma'am,' the servant said eagerly; 'and
+I am sure the Pastor thinks just the same. In
+any case he soon will. And the mistress will
+see that now there will be more peace in the
+house, and I am sure the master needs it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I was obliged
+to be careful. There were always so many
+clothes to be got for her, that it was quite dreadful.
+He was so afraid that she should not get as
+much as the others that she sometimes even had
+more. And it cost so much, now that she was
+grown up.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I suppose, ma'am, Greta will get her muslin
+dress?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes; either Greta will have it, or I shall use
+it myself.'</p>
+
+<p>'She does not leave much behind her, poor
+thing!'</p>
+
+<p>'No one expects her to leave anything,' said
+her adopted mother. 'I should be quite content
+if I could remember ever having had a kind word
+from her.'</p>
+
+<p>This is only the kind of thing one says when
+one has a bad conscience, and wants to excuse
+one's self. Her adopted mother did not really
+mean what she said.</p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man behaved exactly as he always
+did when he came to sell his wares. He stood
+for a little while looking round the kitchen; then
+he slowly pushed the pack on to a table, and unfastened
+the braces and the straps; then he
+looked round to see if there were any cats or
+dogs about. He then straightened his back, and
+began to unfasten the two leather flaps, which
+were fastened with numerous buckles and knots.</p>
+
+<p>'He need not trouble about opening his pack
+to-day,' Lisa said; 'it is Sunday, and he knows
+quite well we don't buy anything on Sundays.'</p>
+
+<p>She, however, took no notice of the crazy fellow,
+who continued to unfasten his straps. She
+turned round to her mistress. This was a good
+opportunity for insinuating herself.</p>
+
+<p>'I don't even know whether she was good to
+the children. I have often heard them cry in
+the nursery.'</p>
+
+<p>'I suppose it was the same with them as it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+was with their mother,' said the Pastor's wife;
+'but now, of course, they cry because she is
+dead.'</p>
+
+<p>'They don't understand what is best for them,'
+said the servant; 'but the mistress can be certain
+that before a month is gone there will be no one
+to cry over her.'</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment they both turned round
+from the kitchen range, and looked towards the
+table, where the Dalar man stood opening his
+big pack. They had heard a strange noise, something
+like a sigh or a sob. The man was just
+opening the inside lid, and out of the pack rose
+the newly-buried <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has birl">girl</span>, exactly the same as when
+they laid her in the coffin.</p>
+
+<p>And yet she did not look quite the same. She
+looked almost more dead now than when she was
+laid in her coffin. Then she had nearly the same
+colour as when she was alive; now her face was
+ashy-gray, there was a bluish-black shadow
+round her mouth, and her eyes lay deep in her
+head. She said nothing, but her face expressed
+the greatest despair, and she held out beseechingly,
+and as if to avert their anger, the bouquet
+of myrtle which she had received from her
+adopted mother.</p>
+
+<p>This sight was more than flesh and blood could
+stand. Her mother fell fainting to the ground;
+the maid stood still for a moment, gazing at the
+mother and daughter, covered her eyes with her
+hands, and rushed into her own room and locked
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>'It is not me she has come for; this does not
+concern me.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid turned round to the Dalar man.</p>
+
+<p>'Put me in your pack again, and take me away.
+Do you hear? Take me away. Take me back to
+where you found me.'</p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man happened to look through the
+window. A long row of carts and carriages was
+coming up the avenue and into the yard. Ah,
+indeed! then he was not going to stay. He did
+not like that at all.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid crouched down at the bottom of the
+pack. She said not another word, but only
+sobbed. The flaps and the lids were fastened,
+and she was again lifted on to his back and carried
+away. Those who were coming to the funeral
+feast laughed at the Goat, who hastened away,
+curtsying and curtsying to every horse he met.</p>
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<p>Anna Stina was an old woman who lived in
+the depths of the forest. She gave a helping hand
+at the Parsonage now and then, and always
+managed opportunely to come down the hillside
+when they were baking or washing. She was a
+nice, clever old woman, and she and Ingrid were
+good friends. As soon as the young girl was able
+to collect her thoughts, she made up her mind to
+take refuge with her.</p>
+
+<p>'Listen,' she said to the Dalar man. 'When
+you get onto the highroad, turn into the forest;
+then go straight on until you come to a gate; there
+you must turn to the left; then you must go
+straight on until you come to the large gravel-pit.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+From there you can see a house: take me there,
+and I will play to you.'</p>
+
+<p>The short and harsh manner in which she gave
+her orders jarred upon her ears, but she was
+obliged to speak in this way in order to be obeyed;
+it was the only chance she had. What right had
+she to order another person about&mdash;she who had
+not even the right to be alive?</p>
+
+<p>After all this she would never again be able to
+feel as if she had any right to live. This was the
+most dreadful part of all that had happened to
+her: that she could have lived in the Parsonage
+for six years, and not even been able to make herself
+so much loved that they wished to keep her
+alive. And those whom no one loves have no
+right to live. She could not exactly say how she
+knew it was so, but it was as clear as daylight.
+She knew it from the feeling that the same moment
+she heard that they did not care about her
+an iron hand seemed to have crushed her heart as
+if to make it stop. Yes, it was life itself that had
+been closed for her. And the same moment she
+had come back from death, and felt the delight of
+being alive burn brightly and strongly within her,
+just at that moment the one thing that gave her
+the right of existing had been torn from her.</p>
+
+<p>This was worse than sentence of death. It was
+much more cruel than an ordinary sentence of
+death. She knew what it was like. It was like
+felling a tree&mdash;not in the usual manner, when the
+trunk is cut through, but by cutting its roots and
+leaving it standing in the ground to die by itself.
+There the tree stands, and cannot understand why
+it no longer gets nourishment and support. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+struggles and strives to live, but the leaves get
+smaller and smaller, it sends forth no fresh shoots,
+the bark falls off, and it must die, because it is severed
+from the spring of life. Thus it is it must die.</p>
+
+<p>At last the Dalar man put down his pack on the
+stone step outside a little house in the midst of the
+wild forest. The door was locked, but as soon as
+Ingrid had got out of the pack she took the key
+from under the doorstep, opened the door, and
+walked in.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid knew the house thoroughly and all it
+contained. It was not the first time she had come
+there for comfort; it was not the first time she had
+come and told old Anna Stina that she could not
+bear living at home any longer&mdash;that her adopted
+mother was so hard to her that she would not go
+back to the Parsonage. But every time she came
+the old woman had talked her over and quieted
+her. She had made her some terrible coffee from
+roasted peas and chicory, without a single coffee-bean
+in it, but which had all the same given her
+new courage, and in the end she had made her
+laugh at everything, and encouraged her so much,
+that she had simply danced down the hillside on
+her way home.</p>
+
+<p>Even if Anna Stina had been at home, and had
+made some of her terrible coffee, it would probably
+not have helped Ingrid this time. But the
+old woman was down at the Parsonage to the
+funeral feast, for the Pastor's wife had not forgotten
+to invite any of those of whom Ingrid had
+been fond. That, too, was probably the result of
+an uneasy conscience.</p>
+
+<p>But in Anna's room everything was as usual.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+And when Ingrid saw the sofa with the wooden
+seat, and the clean, scoured table, and the cat, and
+the coffee-kettle, although she did not feel comforted
+or cheered, she felt that here was a place
+where she could give vent to her sorrow. It was
+a relief that here she need not think of anything
+but crying and moaning.</p>
+
+<p>She went straight to the settle, threw herself on
+the wooden seat, and lay there crying, she did not
+know for how long.</p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man sat outside on the stone step;
+he did not want to go into the house on account of
+the cat. He expected that Ingrid would come
+out and play to him. He had taken the violin out
+long ago. As it was such a long time before she
+came, he began to play himself. He played softly
+and gently, as was his wont. It was barely possible
+for the young girl to hear him playing.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid had one fit of shivering after the other.
+This was how she had been before she fell ill.
+She would no doubt be ill again. It was also best
+that the fever should come and put an end to her
+in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>When she heard the violin, she rose and looked
+round with bewildered glance. Who was that
+playing? Was that her student? Had he come
+at last? It soon struck her, however, that it was
+the Dalar man, and she lay down again with a
+sigh. She could not follow what he was playing.
+But as soon as she closed her eyes the violin assumed
+the student's voice. She also heard what
+he said; he spoke with her adopted mother and
+defended her. He spoke just as nicely as he had
+done to Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren. Ingrid needed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+love so much, he said. That was what she
+had missed. That was why she had not always
+attended to her work, but allowed dreams to
+fill her mind. But no one knew how she could
+work and slave for those who loved her. For
+their sake she could bear sorrow and sickness, and
+contempt and poverty; for them she would be as
+strong as a giant, and as patient as a slave.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid heard him distinctly and she became
+quiet. Yes, it was true. If only her adopted
+mother had loved her, she would have seen what
+Ingrid was worth. But as she did not love her,
+Ingrid was paralyzed in her efforts. Yes, so it
+had been.</p>
+
+<p>Now the fever had left her, she only lay and
+listened to what the student said. She slept a
+little now and then; time after time she thought
+she was lying in her grave, and then it was always
+the student who came and took her out of the coffin.
+She lay and disputed with him.</p>
+
+<p>'When I am dreaming it is you who come,' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>'It is always I who come to you, Ingrid,' he
+said. 'I thought you knew that. I take you out
+of the grave; I carry you on my shoulders; I
+play you to sleep. It is always I.'</p>
+
+<p>What disturbed and awoke her was the thought
+that she had to get up and play for the Dalar man.
+Several times she rose up to do it, but could not.
+As soon as she fell back upon the settle she began
+to dream. She sat crouching in the pack and the
+student carried her through the forest. It was
+always he.</p>
+
+<p>'But it was not you,' she said to him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Of course it was I,' he said, smiling at her
+contradicting him. 'You have been thinking
+about me every day for all these years; so you
+can understand I could not help saving you when
+you were in such great danger.'</p>
+
+<p>Of course she saw the force of his argument;
+and then she began to realize that he was right,
+and that it was he. But this was such infinite bliss
+that she again awoke. Love seemed to fill her
+whole being. It could not have been more real
+had she seen and spoken with her beloved.</p>
+
+<p>'Why does he never come in real life?' she
+said, half aloud. 'Why does he only come in my
+dreams?'</p>
+
+<p>She did not dare to move, for then love would
+fly away. It was as if a timid bird had settled on
+her shoulder, and she was afraid of frightening
+it away. If she moved, the bird would fly away,
+and sorrow would overcome her.</p>
+
+<p>When at last she really awoke, it was twilight.
+She must have slept the whole afternoon and evening.
+At that time of the year it was not dark until
+after ten o'clock. The violin had ceased playing,
+and the Dalar man had probably gone away.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina had not yet come back. She would
+probably be away the whole night. It did not
+matter to Ingrid; all she wanted was to lie down
+again and sleep. She was afraid of all the sorrow
+and despair that would overwhelm her as soon as
+she awoke. But then she got something new to
+think about. Who could have closed the door?
+who had spread Anna Stina's great shawl over
+her? and who had placed a piece of dry bread
+beside her on the seat? Had he, the Goat, done<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+all this for her? For a moment she thought she
+saw dream and reality standing side by side, trying
+which could best console her. And the dream
+stood joyous and smiling, showering over her all
+the bliss of love to comfort her. But life, poor,
+hard, and bitter though it was, also brought its
+kindly little mite to show that it did not mean to
+be so hard upon her as perhaps she thought.</p>
+
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+<p>Ingrid and Anna Stina were walking through
+the dark forest. They had been walking for four
+days, and had slept three nights in the S&auml;ter huts.
+Ingrid was weak and weary; her face was transparently
+pale; her eyes were sunken, and shone
+feverishly. Old Anna Stina now and then secretly
+cast an anxious look at her, and prayed to God
+that He would sustain her so that she might not
+die by the wayside. Now and then the old
+woman could not help looking behind her with
+uneasiness. She had an uncomfortable feeling
+that the old man with his scythe came stealthily
+after them through the forest to reclaim the
+young girl who, both by the word of God and the
+casting of earth upon her, had been consecrated
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>Old Anna Stina was little and broad, with a
+large, square face, which was so intelligent that
+it was almost good-looking. She was not superstitious&mdash;she
+lived quite alone in the midst of the
+forest without being afraid either of witches or
+evil spirits&mdash;but as she walked there by the side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+of Ingrid she felt as distinctly as if someone had
+told her that she was walking beside a being who
+did not belong to this world. She had had that
+sensation ever since she had found Ingrid lying in
+her house that Monday morning.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina had not returned home on the Sunday
+evening, for down at the Parsonage the Pastor's
+wife had been taken very ill, and Anna Stina,
+who was accustomed to nurse sick people, had
+stayed to sit up with her. The whole night she
+had heard the Pastor's wife raving about Ingrid's
+having appeared to her; but that the old woman
+had not believed. And when she returned home
+the next day and found Ingrid, the old woman
+would at once have gone down to the Parsonage
+again to tell them that it was not a ghost they had
+seen; but when she had suggested this to Ingrid,
+it had affected her so much that she dared not do
+it. It was as if the little life which burnt in her
+would be extinguished, just as the flame of a candle
+is put out by too strong a draught. She could
+have died as easily as a little bird in its cage.
+Death was prowling around her. There was
+nothing to be done but to nurse her very tenderly
+and deal very gently with her if her life was to be
+preserved.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman hardly knew what to think of
+Ingrid. Perhaps she was a ghost; there seemed
+to be so little life in her. She quite gave up trying
+to talk her to reason. There was nothing else for
+it but giving in to her wishes that no one should
+hear anything about her being alive. And then
+the old woman tried to arrange everything as
+wisely as possible. She had a sister who was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+housekeeper on a large estate in Dalarne, and she
+made up her mind to take Ingrid to her, and persuade
+her sister, Stafva, to give the girl a situation
+at the Manor House. Ingrid would have to be
+content with being simply a servant. There was
+nothing else for it.</p>
+
+<p>They were now on their way to the Manor
+House. Anna Stina knew the country so well
+that they were not obliged to go by the highroad,
+but could follow the lonely forest paths. But they
+had also undergone much hardship. Their shoes
+were worn and in pieces, their skirts soiled and
+frayed at the bottom, and a branch had torn a
+long rent in Ingrid's sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the fourth day they came to a
+hill from which they could look down into a deep
+valley. In the valley was a lake, and near the
+edge of the lake was a high, rocky island, upon
+which stood a large white building. When Anna
+Stina saw the house, she said it was called Munkhyttan,
+and that it was there her sister lived.</p>
+
+<p>They made themselves as tidy as they could on
+the hillside. They arranged the handkerchiefs
+which they wore on their heads, dried their shoes
+with moss, and washed themselves in a forest
+stream, and Anna Stina tried to make a fold in Ingrid's
+sleeve so that the rent could not be seen.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman sighed when she looked at
+Ingrid, and quite lost courage. It was not only
+that she looked so strange in the clothes she had
+borrowed from Anna Stina, and which did not at
+all fit her, but her sister Stafva would never take
+her into her service, she looked so wretched and
+pitiful. It was like engaging a breath of wind.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+The girl could be of no more use than a sick
+butterfly.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as they were ready, they went down the
+hill to the lake. It was only a short distance.
+Then they came to the land belonging to the
+Manor House.</p>
+
+<p>Was that a country house?</p>
+
+<p>There were large neglected fields, upon which
+the forest encroached more and more. There
+was a bridge leading on to the island, so shaky
+that they hardly thought it would keep together
+until they were safely over. There was an avenue
+leading from the bridge to the main building,
+covered with grass, like a meadow, and a tree
+which had been blown down had been left lying
+across the road.</p>
+
+<p>The island was pretty enough, so pretty that a
+castle might very well have been built there. But
+nothing but weeds grew in the garden, and in the
+large park the trees were choking each other, and
+black snakes glided over the green, wet walks.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina felt uneasy when she saw how neglected
+everything was, and went along mumbling
+to herself: 'What does all this mean? Is Stafva
+dead? How can she stand everything looking
+like this? Things were very different thirty years
+ago, when I was last here. What in the world
+can be the matter with Stafva?' She could not
+imagine that there could be such neglect in any
+place where Stafva lived.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid walked behind her, slowly and reluctantly.
+The moment she put her foot on the
+bridge she felt that there were not two walking
+there, but three. Someone had come to meet her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+there, and had turned back to accompany her.
+Ingrid heard no footsteps, but he who accompanied
+them appeared indistinctly by her side.
+She could see there was someone.</p>
+
+<p>She became terribly afraid. She was just going
+to beg Anna Stina to turn back and tell her that
+everything seemed so strange here that she dare
+not go any further. But before she had time to
+say anything, the stranger came quite close to her,
+and she recognised him. Before, she only saw
+him indistinctly; now she saw him so clearly
+that she could see it was the student.</p>
+
+<p>It no longer seemed weird and ghost-like that
+he walked there. It was only strangely delightful
+that he came to receive her. It was as if it were
+he who had brought her there, and would, by
+coming to welcome her, show that it was.</p>
+
+<p>He walked with her over the bridge, through
+the avenue, quite up to the main building.</p>
+
+<p>She could not help turning her head every
+moment to the left. It was there she saw his face,
+quite close to her cheek. It was really not a face
+that she saw, only an unspeakably beautiful smile
+that drew tenderly near her. But if she turned
+her head quite round to see it properly, it was no
+longer there. No, there was nothing one could
+see distinctly. But as soon as she looked straight
+before her, it was there again, quite close to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Her invisible companion did not speak to her,
+he only smiled. But that was enough for her. It
+was more than enough to show her that there was
+one in the world who kept near her with tender
+love.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She felt his presence as something so real, that
+she firmly believed he protected her and watched
+over her. And before this happy consciousness
+vanished all the despair which her adopted mother's
+hard words had called forth.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid felt herself again given back to life. She
+had the right to live, as there was one who loved
+her.</p>
+
+<p>And this was why she entered the kitchen at
+Munkhyttan with a faint blush on her cheeks, and
+with radiant eyes, fragile, weak, and transparent,
+but sweet as a newly-opened rose.</p>
+
+<p>She still went about as if in a dream, and did not
+know much about where she was; but what surprised
+her so much that it nearly awakened her
+was to see a new Anna Stina standing by the fireplace.
+She stood there, little and broad, with a
+large, square face, exactly like the other. But
+why was she so fine, with a white cap with strings
+tied in a large bow under her chin, and with a
+black bombazine dress? Ingrid's head was so
+confused, that it was some time before it occurred
+to her that this must be Miss Stafva.</p>
+
+<p>She felt that Anna Stina looked uneasily at her,
+and she tried to pull herself together and say
+'Good-day.' But the only thing her mind could
+grasp was the thought that he had come to her.</p>
+
+<p>Inside the kitchen there was a small room, with
+blue-checked covering on the furniture. They
+were taken into that room, and Miss Stafva gave
+them coffee and something to eat.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina at once began to talk about
+their errand. She spoke for a long time; said
+that she knew her sister stood so high in her ladyship's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+favour that she left it to her to engage the
+servants. Miss Stafva said nothing, but she gave
+a look at Ingrid as much as to say that it would
+hardly have been left with her if she had chosen
+servants like her.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina praised Ingrid, and said she was a
+good girl. She had hitherto served in a parsonage,
+but now that she was grown up she wanted
+really to learn something, and that was why Anna
+Stina had brought her to one who could teach her
+more than any other person she knew.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Stafva did not reply to this remark either.
+But her glance plainly showed that she was surprised
+that anyone who had had a situation in a
+parsonage had no clothes of her own, but was
+obliged to borrow old Anna Stina's.</p>
+
+<p>Then old Anna Stina began to tell how she lived
+quite alone in the forest, deserted by all her relatives.
+And this young girl had come running up
+the hill many an evening and many an early
+morning to see her. She had therefore thought
+and hoped that she could now help her to get a
+good situation.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Stafva said it was a pity that they had gone
+such a long way to find a place. If she were a
+clever girl, she could surely get a situation in
+some good family in their own neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina could now clearly see that Ingrid's
+prospects were not good, and therefore she began
+in a more solemn vein:</p>
+
+<p>'Here you have lived, Stafva, and had a good,
+comfortable home all your life, and I have had to
+fight my way in great poverty. But I have never
+asked you for anything before to-day. And now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+you will send me away like a beggar, to whom
+one gives a meal and nothing more.'</p>
+
+<p>Miss Stafva smiled a little; then she said:</p>
+
+<p>'Sister Anna Stina, you are not telling me the
+truth. I, too, come from Raglanda, and I should
+like to know at what peasant's house in that
+parish grow such eyes and such a face.'</p>
+
+<p>And she pointed at Ingrid, and continued:</p>
+
+<p>'I can quite understand, Anna Stina, that you
+would like to help one who looks like that. But I
+do not understand how you can think that your
+sister Stafva has not more sense than to believe
+the stories you choose to tell her.'</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina was so frightened that she could not
+say a word, but Ingrid made up her mind to confide
+in Miss Stafva, and began at once to tell her
+whole story in her soft, beautiful voice.</p>
+
+<p>And Ingrid had hardly told of how she had
+been lying in the grave, and that a Dalar man had
+come and saved her, before old Miss Stafva grew
+red and quickly bent down to hide it. It was only
+a second, but there must have been some cause for
+it, for from that moment she looked so kind.</p>
+
+<p>She soon began to ask full particulars about it;
+more especially she wanted to know about the
+crazy man, whether Ingrid had not been afraid of
+him. Oh no, he did no harm. He was not mad,
+Ingrid said; he could both buy and sell. He was
+only frightened of some things.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid thought the hardest of all was to tell
+what she had heard her adopted mother say. But
+she told everything, although there were tears in
+her voice.</p>
+
+<p>Then Miss Stafva went up to her, drew back the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+handkerchief from her head, and looked into her
+eyes. Then she patted her lightly on the cheek.</p>
+
+<p>'Never mind that, little miss,' she said. 'There
+is no need for me to know about that. Now sister
+and Miss Ingrid must excuse me,' she said soon
+after, 'but I must take up her ladyship's coffee. I
+shall soon be down again, and you can tell me
+more.'</p>
+
+<p>When she returned, she said she had told her
+ladyship about the young girl who had lain in the
+grave, and now her mistress wanted to see her.</p>
+
+<p>They were taken upstairs, and shown into her
+ladyship's boudoir.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina remained standing at the door of
+the fine room. But Ingrid was not shy; she went
+straight up to the old lady and put out her hand.
+She had often been shy with others who looked
+much less aristocratic; but here, in this house,
+she did not feel embarrassed. She only felt so
+wonderfully happy that she had come there.</p>
+
+<p>'So it is you, my child, who have been buried,'
+said her ladyship, nodding friendlily to her. 'Do
+you mind telling me your story, my child? I sit
+here quite alone, and never hear anything, you
+know.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Ingrid began again to tell her story. But
+she had not got very far before she was interrupted.
+Her ladyship did exactly the same as
+Miss Stafva had done. She rose, pushed the
+handkerchief back from Ingrid's forehead and
+looked into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' her ladyship said to herself, 'that I can
+understand. I can understand that he must obey
+those eyes.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For the first time in her life Ingrid was praised
+for her courage. Her ladyship thought she had
+been very brave to place herself in the hands of a
+crazy fellow.</p>
+
+<p>She <em>was</em> afraid, she said, but she was still more
+afraid of people seeing her in that state. And he
+did no harm; he was almost quite right, and then
+he was so good.</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship wanted to know his name, but
+Ingrid did not know it. She had never heard of
+any other name but the Goat. Her ladyship asked
+several times how he managed when he came to
+do business. Had she not laughed at him, and did
+she not think that he looked terrible&mdash;the Goat?
+It sounded so strange when her ladyship said 'the
+Goat.' There was so much bitterness in her voice
+when she said it, and yet she said it over and over
+again.</p>
+
+<p>No; Ingrid did not think so, and she never
+laughed at unfortunate people. The old lady
+looked more gentle than her words sounded.</p>
+
+<p>'It appears you know how to manage mad people,
+my child,' she said. 'That is a great gift.
+Most people are afraid of such poor creatures.'
+She listened to all Ingrid had to say, and sat meditating.
+'As you have not any home, my child,'
+she said, 'will you not stay here with me? You
+see, I am an old woman living here by myself, and
+you can keep me company, and I shall take care
+that you have everything you want. What do
+you say to it, my child? There will come a time,
+I suppose,' continued her ladyship, 'when we
+shall have to inform your parents that you are still
+living; but for the present everything shall remain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+as it is, so that you can have time to rest
+both body and mind. And you shall call me
+"Aunt"; but what shall I call you?'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid&mdash;Ingrid Berg.'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' said her ladyship thoughtfully. 'I
+would rather have called you something else. As
+soon as you entered the room with those star-like
+eyes, I thought you ought to be called Mignon.'</p>
+
+<p>When it dawned upon the young girl that here
+she would really find a home, she felt more sure
+than ever that she had been brought here in some
+supernatural manner, and she whispered her
+thanks to her invisible protector before she
+thanked her ladyship, Miss Stafva, and Anna
+Stina.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Ingrid slept in a four-poster, on luxurious
+featherbeds three feet high, and had hem-stitched
+sheets, and silken quilts embroidered with Swedish
+crowns and French lilies. The bed was so
+broad that she could lie as she liked either way,
+and so high that she must mount two steps to get
+into it. At the top sat a Cupid holding the
+brightly-coloured hangings, and on the posts sat
+other Cupids, which held them up in festoons.</p>
+
+<p>In the same room where the bed stood was an
+old curved chest of drawers inlaid with olive-wood,
+and from it Ingrid might take as much
+sweetly-scented linen as she liked. There was
+also a wardrobe containing many gay and pretty
+silk and muslin gowns that only hung there and
+waited until it pleased her to put them on.</p>
+
+<p>When she awoke in the morning there stood by
+her bedside a tray with a silver coffee-set and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+old Indian china. And every morning she
+set her small white teeth in fine white bread and
+delicious almond-cakes; every day she was
+dressed in a fine muslin gown with a lace fichu.
+Her hair was dressed high at the back, but round
+her forehead there was a row of little light curls.</p>
+
+<p>On the wall between the windows hung a mirror,
+with a narrow glass in a broad frame, where
+she could see herself, and nod to her picture, and
+ask:</p>
+
+<p>'Is it you? Is it really you? How have you
+come here?'</p>
+
+<p>In the daytime, when Ingrid had left the chamber
+with the four-poster, she sat in the drawing-room
+and embroidered or painted on silk, and
+when she was tired of that, she played a little on
+the guitar and sang, or talked with the old lady,
+who taught her French, and amused herself by
+training her to be a fine lady.</p>
+
+<p>But she had come to an enchanted castle&mdash;she
+could not get away from that idea. She had
+had that feeling the first moment, and it was
+always coming back again. No one arrived at
+the house, no one left it. In this big house only
+two or three rooms were kept in order; in the
+others no one ever went. No one walked in the
+garden, no one looked after it. There was only
+one man-servant, and an old man who cut the firewood.
+And Miss Stafva had only two servants,
+who helped her in the kitchen and in the dairy.</p>
+
+<p>But there was always dainty food on the
+table, and her ladyship and Ingrid were always
+waited upon and dressed like fine ladies of rank.</p>
+
+<p>If nothing thrived on the old estate, there was,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+at any rate, fertile soil for dreams, and even if
+they did not nurse and cultivate flowers there, Ingrid
+was not the one to neglect her dream-roses.
+They grew up around her whenever she was
+alone. It seemed to her then as if red dream-roses
+formed a canopy over her.</p>
+
+<p>Round the island where the trees bent low over
+the water, and sent long branches in between the
+reeds, and where shrubs and lofty trees grew luxuriantly,
+was a pathway where Ingrid often
+walked. It looked so strange to see so many letters
+carved on the trees, to see the old seats and
+summer-houses; to see the old tumble-down pavilions,
+which were so worm-eaten that she dared
+not go into them; to think that real people had
+walked here, that here they had lived, and longed,
+and loved, and that this had not always been an
+enchanted castle.</p>
+
+<p>Down here she felt even more the witchery of
+the place. Here the face with the smile came to
+her. Here she could thank him, the student, because
+he had brought her to a home where she
+was so happy, where they loved her, and made
+her forget how hardly others had treated her.
+If it had not been he who had arranged all this
+for her, she could not possibly have been allowed
+to remain here; it was quite impossible.</p>
+
+<p>She knew that it must be he. She had never
+before had such wild fancies. She had always
+been thinking of him, but she had never felt that
+he was so near her that he took care of her. The
+only thing she longed for was that he himself
+should come, for of course he would come some
+day. It was impossible that he should not come.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+In these avenues he had left behind part of his
+soul.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Summer went, and autumn; Christmas was
+drawing near.</p>
+
+<p>'Miss Ingrid,' said the old housekeeper one
+day, in a rather mysterious manner, 'I think I
+ought to tell you that the young master who owns
+Munkhyttan is coming home for Christmas. In
+any case, he generally comes,' she added, with a
+sigh.</p>
+
+<p>'And her ladyship, who has never even mentioned
+that she has a son,' said Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>But she was not really surprised. She might
+just as well have answered that she had known
+it all along.</p>
+
+<p>'No one has spoken to you about him, Miss
+Ingrid,' said the housekeeper, 'for her ladyship
+has forbidden us to speak about him.'</p>
+
+<p>And then Miss Stafva would not say any
+more.</p>
+
+<p>Neither did Ingrid want to ask any more. Now
+she was afraid of hearing something definite.
+She had raised her expectations so high that she
+was herself afraid they would fail. The truth
+might be well worth hearing, but it might also
+be bitter, and destroy all her beautiful dreams.
+But from that day he was with her night and day.
+She had hardly time to speak to others. She
+must always be with him.</p>
+
+<p>One day she saw that they had cleared the
+snow away from the avenue. She grew almost
+frightened. Was he coming now?</p>
+
+<p>The next day her ladyship sat from early morn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>ing
+in the window looking down the avenue. Ingrid
+had gone further into the room. She was
+so restless that she could not remain at the window.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you know whom I am expecting to-day,
+Ingrid?'</p>
+
+<p>The young girl nodded; she dared not depend
+upon her voice to answer.</p>
+
+<p>'Has Miss Stafva told you that my son is peculiar?'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>'He is very peculiar&mdash;he&mdash;I cannot speak
+about it. I cannot&mdash;you must see for yourself.'</p>
+
+<p>It sounded heartrending. Ingrid grew very
+uneasy. What was there with this house that
+made everything so strange? Was it something
+terrible that she did not know about? Was her
+ladyship not on good terms with her son? What
+was it, what was it?</p>
+
+<p>The one moment in an ecstasy of joy, the next
+in a fever of uncertainty, she was obliged to call
+forth the long row of visions in order again to
+feel that it must be he who came. She could not
+at all say why she so firmly believed that he must
+be the son just of this house. He might, for the
+matter of that, be quite another person. Oh,
+how hard it was that she had never heard his
+name!</p>
+
+<p>It was a long day. They sat waiting in silence
+until evening came.</p>
+
+<p>The man came driving a cartload of Christmas
+logs, and the horse remained in the yard
+whilst the wood was unloaded.</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' said her ladyship in a commanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+and hasty tone, 'run down to Anders and tell him
+that he must be quick and get the horse into the
+stable. Quick&mdash;quick!'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid ran down the stairs and on to the veranda;
+but when she came out she forgot to call
+to the man. Just behind the cart she saw a tall
+man in a sheepskin coat, and with a large pack
+on his back. It was not necessary for her to see
+him standing curtsying and curtsying to recognise
+him. But, but&mdash;&mdash;She put her hand to her
+head and drew a deep breath. How would all
+these things ever become clear to her? Was it
+for that fellow's sake her ladyship had sent her
+down? And the man, why did he pull the horse
+away in such great haste? And why did he take
+off his cap and salute? What had that crazy man
+to do with the people of this house?</p>
+
+<p>All at once the truth flashed upon Ingrid so
+crushingly and overwhelmingly that she could
+have screamed. It was not her beloved who had
+watched over her; it was this crazy man. She
+had been allowed to remain here because she had
+spoken kindly of him, because his mother wanted
+to carry on the good work which he had commenced.</p>
+
+<p>The Goat&mdash;that was the young master.</p>
+
+<p>But to her no one came. No one had brought
+her here; no one had expected her. It was all
+dreams, fancies, illusions! Oh, how hard it was!
+If she had only never expected him!</p>
+
+<p>But at night, when Ingrid lay in the big bed
+with the brightly-coloured hangings, she dreamt
+over and over again that she saw the student
+come home. 'It was not you who came,' she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+said. 'Yes, of course it was I,' he replied. And
+in her dreams she believed him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>One day, the week after Christmas, Ingrid sat
+at the window in the boudoir embroidering. Her
+ladyship sat on the sofa knitting, as she always
+did now. There was silence in the room.</p>
+
+<p>Young Hede had been at home for a week.
+During all that time Ingrid had never seen him.
+In his home, too, he lived like a peasant, slept in
+the men-servants' quarters, and had his meals in
+the kitchen. He never went to see his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid knew that both her ladyship and Miss
+Stafva expected that she should do something
+for Hede, that at the least she would try and persuade
+him to remain at home. And it grieved her
+that it was impossible for her to do what they
+wished. She was in despair about herself and
+about the utter weakness that had come over her
+since her expectations had been so shattered.</p>
+
+<p>To-day Miss Stafva had just come in to say
+that Hede was getting his pack ready to start.
+He was not even staying as long as he generally
+did at Christmas, she said with a reproachful look
+at Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid understood all they had expected from
+her, but she could do nothing. She sewed and
+sewed without saying anything.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Stafva went away, and there was again
+silence in the room. Ingrid quite forgot that she
+was not alone; a feeling of drowsiness suddenly
+came over her, whilst all her sad thoughts wove
+themselves into a strange fancy.</p>
+
+<p>She thought she was walking up and down the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+whole of the large house. She went through a
+number of rooms and salons; she saw them before
+her with gray covers over the furniture. The
+paintings and the chandeliers were covered with
+gauze, and on the floors was a layer of thick dust,
+which whirled about when she went through the
+rooms. But at last she came to a room where she
+had never been before; it was quite a small chamber,
+where both walls and ceiling were black.
+But when she came to look more closely at them,
+she saw that the chamber was neither painted
+black, nor covered with black material, but it was
+so dark on account of the walls and the ceiling being
+completely covered with bats. The whole room
+was nothing but a huge nest for bats. In one of
+the windows a pane was broken, so one could
+understand how the bats had got in in such incredible
+numbers that they covered the whole
+room. They hung there in their undisturbed
+winter sleep; not one moved when she entered.
+But she was seized by such terror at this sight
+that she began to shiver and shake all over. It
+was dreadful to see the quantity of bats she so distinctly
+saw hanging there. They all had black
+wings wrapped around them like cloaks; they all
+hung from the walls by a single long claw in undisturbable
+sleep. She saw it all so distinctly that
+she wondered if Miss Stafva knew that the bats
+had taken possession of a whole room. In her
+thoughts she then went to Miss Stafva and asked
+her whether she had been into that room and seen
+all the bats.</p>
+
+<p>'Of course I have seen them,' said Miss Stafva.
+'It is their own room. I suppose you know, Miss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+Ingrid, that there is not a single old country
+house in all Sweden where they have not to give
+up a room to the bats?'</p>
+
+<p>'I have never heard that before,' Ingrid said.</p>
+
+<p>'When you have lived as long in the world as I
+have, Miss Ingrid, you will find out that I am
+speaking the truth,' said Miss Stafva.</p>
+
+<p>'I cannot understand that people will put up
+with such a thing,' Ingrid said.</p>
+
+<p>'We are obliged to,' said Miss Stafva. 'Those
+bats are Mistress Sorrow's birds, and she has
+commanded us to receive them.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid saw that Miss Stafva did not wish to
+say anything more about that matter, and she began
+to sew again; but she could not help speculating
+over who that Mistress Sorrow could be
+who had so much power here that she could compel
+Miss Stafva to give up a whole room to the
+bats.</p>
+
+<p>Just as she was thinking about all this, she saw
+a black sledge, drawn by black horses, pull up
+outside the veranda. She saw Miss Stafva come
+out and make a low curtsy. An old lady in a
+long black velvet cloak, with many small capes
+on the shoulders, alighted from the sledge. She
+was bent, and had difficulty in walking. She
+could hardly lift her feet sufficiently to walk up
+the steps.</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' said her ladyship, looking up from
+her knitting, 'I think I heard Mistress Sorrow
+arrive. It must have been her jingle I heard.
+Have you noticed that she never has sledge-bells
+on her horses, but only quite a small jingle? But
+one can hear it&mdash;one can hear it! Go down into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+the hall, Ingrid, and bid Mistress Sorrow welcome.'</p>
+
+<p>When Ingrid came down into the front hall,
+Mistress Sorrow stood talking with Miss Stafva
+on the veranda. They did not notice her.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid saw with surprise that the round-backed
+old lady had something hidden under all her
+capes which looked like crape; it was put well
+up and carefully hidden. Ingrid had to look very
+closely before she discovered that they were two
+large bat's wings which she tried to hide. The
+young girl grew still more curious and tried to
+see her face, but she stood and looked into the
+yard, so it was impossible. So much, however,
+Ingrid did see when she put out her hand to the
+housekeeper&mdash;that one of her fingers was much
+longer than the others, and at the end of it was a
+large, crooked claw.</p>
+
+<p>'I suppose everything is as usual here?' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, honoured Mistress Sorrow,' said Miss
+Stafva.</p>
+
+<p>'You have not planted any flowers, nor pruned
+any trees? You have not mended the bridge,
+nor weeded the avenue?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, honoured mistress.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is quite as it should be,' said the honoured
+mistress. 'I suppose you have not had the
+audacity to search for the vein of ore, or to cut
+down the forest which is encroaching on the
+fields?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, honoured mistress.'</p>
+
+<p>'Or to clean the wells?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, nor to clean the wells.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'This is a nice place,' said Mistress Sorrow;
+'I always like being here. In a few years things
+will be in such a state that my birds can live all
+over the house. You are really very good to my
+birds, Miss Stafva.'</p>
+
+<p>At this praise the housekeeper made a deep
+curtsy.</p>
+
+<p>'How are things otherwise at the house?' said
+Mistress Sorrow. 'What sort of a Christmas
+have you had?'</p>
+
+<p>'We have kept Christmas as we always do,'
+said Miss Stafva. 'Her ladyship sits knitting in
+her room day after day, thinks of nothing but her
+son, and does not even know that it is a festival.
+Christmas Eve we allowed to pass like any other
+day&mdash;no presents and no candles.'</p>
+
+<p>'No Christmas tree, no Christmas fare?'</p>
+
+<p>'Nor any going to church; not so much as a
+candle in the windows on Christmas morning.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why should her ladyship honour God's Son
+when God will not heal her son?' said Mistress
+Sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>'No, why should she?'</p>
+
+<p>'He is at home at present, I suppose? Perhaps
+he is better now?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, he is no better. He is as much afraid
+of things as ever.'</p>
+
+<p>'Does he still behave like a peasant? Does
+he never go into the rooms?'</p>
+
+<p>'We cannot get him to go into the rooms;
+he is afraid of her ladyship, as the honoured mistress
+knows.'</p>
+
+<p>'He has his meals in the kitchen, and sleeps
+in the men-servants' room?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Yes, he does.'</p>
+
+<p>'And you have no idea how to cure him?'</p>
+
+<p>'We know nothing, we understand nothing.'</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Sorrow was silent for a moment;
+when she spoke again there was a hard, sharp
+ring in her voice:</p>
+
+<p>'This is all right as far as it goes, Miss Stafva;
+but I am not quite satisfied with you, all the
+same.'</p>
+
+<p>The same moment she turned round and
+looked sharply at Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid shuddered. Mistress Sorrow had a little,
+wrinkled face, the under part of which was
+so doubled up that one could hardly see the
+lower jaw. She had teeth like a saw, and thick
+hair on the upper lip. Her eyebrows were one
+single tuft of hair, and her skin was quite
+brown.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid thought Miss Stafva could not see what
+she saw: Mistress Sorrow was not a human
+being; she was only an animal.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Sorrow opened her mouth and
+showed her glittering teeth when she looked at
+Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'When this girl came here,' she said to Miss
+Stafva, 'you thought she had been sent by God.
+You thought you could see from her eyes that
+she had been sent by Our Lord to save him.
+She knew how to manage mad people. Well,
+how has it worked?'</p>
+
+<p>'It has not worked at all. She has not done
+anything.'</p>
+
+<p>'No, I have seen to that,' said Mistress Sorrow.
+'It was my doing that you did not tell her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+why she was allowed to stay here. Had she
+known that, she would not have indulged in
+such rosy dreams about seeing her beloved. If
+she had not had such expectations, she would
+not have had such a bitter disappointment. Had
+disappointment not paralyzed her, she could perhaps
+have done something for this mad fellow.
+But now she has not even been to see him. She
+hates him because he is not the one she expected
+him to be. That is my doing, Miss Stafva, my
+doing.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes; the honoured mistress knows her business,'
+said Miss Stafva.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Sorrow took her lace handkerchief
+and dried her red-rimmed eyes. It looked as if
+it were meant for an expression of joy.</p>
+
+<p>'You need not make yourself out to be any
+better than you are, Miss Stafva,' she said. 'I
+know you do not like my having taken that room
+for my birds. You do not like the thought of
+my having the whole house soon. I know that.
+You and your mistress had intended to cheat
+me. But it is all over now.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' said Miss Stafva, 'the honoured mistress
+can be quite easy. It is all over. The
+young master is leaving to-day. He has packed
+up his pack, and then we always know he is
+about to leave. Everything her ladyship and I
+have been dreaming about the whole autumn is
+over. Nothing has been done. We thought she
+might at least have persuaded him to remain at
+home, but in spite of all we have done for her,
+she has not done anything for us.'</p>
+
+<p>'No, she has only been a poor help, I know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+that,' said Mistress Sorrow. 'But, all the same,
+she must be sent away now. That was really
+what I wanted to see her ladyship about.'</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Sorrow began to drag herself up the
+steps on her tottering legs. At every step she
+raised her wings a little, as if they should help
+her. She would, no doubt, much rather have
+flown.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid went behind her. She felt strangely
+attracted and fascinated. If Mistress Sorrow
+had been the most beautiful woman in the world,
+she could not have felt a greater inclination to
+follow her.</p>
+
+<p>When she went into the boudoir she saw Mistress
+Sorrow sitting on the sofa by the side of
+her ladyship, whispering confidentially with her,
+as if they were old friends.</p>
+
+<p>'You must be able to see that you cannot
+keep her with you,' said Mistress Sorrow impressively.
+'You, who cannot bear to see a
+flower growing in your garden, can surely not
+stand having a young girl about in the house.
+It always brings a certain amount of brightness
+and life, and that would not suit you.'</p>
+
+<p>'No; that is just what I have been sitting and
+thinking about.'</p>
+
+<p>'Get her a situation as lady's companion
+somewhere or other, but don't keep her here.'</p>
+
+<p>She rose to say good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>'That was all I wanted to see you about,' she
+said. 'But how are you yourself?'</p>
+
+<p>'Knives and scissors cut my heart all day
+long,' said her ladyship. 'I only live in him as
+long as he is at home. It is worse than usual,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+much worse this time. I cannot bear it much
+longer.'.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid started; it was her ladyship's bell that
+rang. She had been dreaming so vividly that
+she was quite surprised to see that her ladyship
+was alone, and that the black sledge was not
+waiting before the door.</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship had rung for Miss Stafva, but
+she did not come. She asked Ingrid to go down
+to her room and call her.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid went, but the little blue-checked room
+was empty. The young girl was going into the
+kitchen to ask for the housekeeper, but before
+she had time to open the door she heard Hede
+talking. She stopped outside; she could not
+persuade herself to go in and see him.</p>
+
+<p>She tried, however, to argue with herself. It
+was not his fault that he was not the one she had
+been expecting. She must try to do something
+for him; she must persuade him to remain at
+home. Before, she had not had such a feeling
+against him. He was not so very bad.</p>
+
+<p>She bent down and peeped through the keyhole.
+It was the same here as at other places.
+The servants tried to lead him on in order to
+amuse themselves by his strange talk. They
+asked him whom he was going to marry. Hede
+smiled; he liked to be asked about that kind of
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>'She is called Grave-Lily&mdash;don't you know
+that?' he said.</p>
+
+<p>The servant said she did not know that she
+had such a fine name.</p>
+
+<p>'But where does she live?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Neither has she home nor has she farm,'
+Hede said. 'She lives in my pack.'</p>
+
+<p>The servant said that was a queer home, and
+asked about her parents.</p>
+
+<p>'Neither has she father nor has she mother,'
+Hede said. 'She is as fine as a flower; she has
+grown up in a garden.'</p>
+
+<p>He said all this with a certain amount of clearness,
+but when he wanted to describe how beautiful
+his sweetheart was he could not get on at
+all. He said a number of words, but they were
+strangely mixed together. One could not follow
+his thoughts, but evidently he himself derived
+much pleasure from what he said. He sat
+smiling and happy.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid hurried away. She could not bear it
+any longer. She could not do anything for him.
+She was afraid of him. She disliked him. But
+she had not got further than the stairs before
+her conscience pricked her. Here she had received
+so much kindness, and she would not
+make any return.</p>
+
+<p>In order to master her dislike she tried in her
+own mind to think of Hede as a gentleman. She
+wondered how he had looked when he wore good
+clothes, and had his hair brushed back. She
+closed her eyes for a moment and thought. No,
+it was impossible, she could not imagine him as
+being any different from what he was. The
+same moment she saw the outlines of a beloved
+face by her side. It appeared at her left side
+wonderfully distinct. This time the face did not
+smile. The lips trembled as if in pain, and unspeakable
+suffering was written in sharp lines
+round the mouth.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ingrid stopped half-way up the stairs and
+looked at it. There it was, light and fleeting, as
+impossible to grasp and hold fast as a sun-spot
+reflected by the prism of a chandelier, but just
+as visible, just as real. She thought of her recent
+dream, but this was different&mdash;this was reality.</p>
+
+<p>When she had looked a little at the face, the
+lips began to move; they spoke, but she could
+not hear a sound. Then she tried to see what
+they said, tried to read the words from the lips,
+as deaf people do, and she succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not let me go,' the lips said; 'do not let
+me go.'</p>
+
+<p>And the anguish with which it was said! If a
+fellow-creature had been lying at her feet begging
+for life, it could not have affected her more.
+She was so overcome that she shook. It was
+more heart-rending than anything she had ever
+heard in her whole life. Never had she thought
+that anyone could beg in such fearful anguish.
+Again and again the lips begged, 'Do not let
+me go!' And for every time the anguish was
+greater.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid did not understand it, but remained
+standing, filled with unspeakable pity. It seemed
+to her that more than life itself must be at stake
+for one who begged like this, that his very soul
+must be at stake.</p>
+
+<p>The lips did not move any more; they stood
+half open in dull despair. When they assumed
+this expression she uttered a cry and stumbled.
+She recognised the face of the crazy fellow as
+she had just seen it.</p>
+
+<p>'No, no, no!' she said. 'It cannot be so! It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+must not! it cannot! It is not possible that it
+is he!'</p>
+
+<p>The same moment the face vanished. She
+must have sat for a whole hour on the cold staircase,
+crying in helpless despair. But at last hope
+sprang up in her, strong and fair. She again
+took courage to raise her head. All that had
+happened seemed to show that she should save
+him. It was for that she had come here. She
+should have the great, great happiness of saving
+him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the little boudoir her ladyship was talking
+to Miss Stafva. It sounded so pitiful to hear her
+asking the housekeeper to persuade her son to
+remain a few days longer. Miss Stafva tried to
+appear hard and severe.</p>
+
+<p>'Of course, I can ask him,' she said; 'but
+your ladyship knows that no one can make him
+stay longer than he wants.'</p>
+
+<p>'We have money enough, you know. There
+is not the slightest necessity for him to go. Can
+you not tell him that?' said her ladyship.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment Ingrid came in. The
+door opened noiselessly. She glided through
+the room with light, airy steps; her eyes were radiant,
+as if she beheld something beautiful afar off.</p>
+
+<p>When her ladyship saw her she frowned a
+little. She also felt an inclination to be cruel, to
+give pain.</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' she said, 'come here; I must speak
+with you about your future.'</p>
+
+<p>The young girl had fetched her guitar and
+was about to leave the room. She turned round
+to her ladyship.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'My future?' she said, putting her hand to her
+forehead. 'My future is already decided, you
+know,' she continued, with the smile of a martyr;
+and without saying any more she left the room.</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship and Stafva looked in surprise at
+each other. They began to discuss where they
+should send the young girl. But when Miss
+Stafva came down to her room she found Ingrid
+sitting there, singing some little songs and playing
+on the guitar, and Hede sat opposite her,
+listening, his face all sunshine.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Ever since Ingrid had recognised the student
+in the poor crazy fellow, she had no other
+thought but that of trying to cure him; but this
+was a difficult task, and she had no idea whatever
+as to how she should set about it. To begin
+with, she only thought of how she could persuade
+him to remain at Munkhyttan; and this
+was easy enough. Only for the sake of hearing
+her play the violin or the guitar a little every day
+he would now sit patiently from morning till
+evening in Miss Stafva's room waiting for her.</p>
+
+<p>She thought it would be a great thing if she
+could get him to go into the other rooms, but
+that she could not. She tried keeping in her
+room, and said she would not play any more for
+him if he did not come to her. But after she
+had remained there two days, he began to pack
+up his pack to go away, and then she was obliged
+to give in.</p>
+
+<p>He showed great preference for her, and distinctly
+showed that he liked her better than
+others; but she did not make him less frightened.
+She begged him to leave off his sheep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>skin
+coat, and wear an ordinary coat. He consented
+at once, but the next day he had it on
+again. Then she hid it from him; but he then
+appeared in the man-servant's skin coat. So
+then they would rather let him keep his own.
+He was still as frightened as ever, and took great
+care no one came too near him. Even Ingrid
+was not allowed to sit quite close to him.</p>
+
+<p>One day she said to him that now he must
+promise her something: he must give over curtsying
+to the cat. She would not ask him to do
+anything so difficult as give up curtsying to
+horses and dogs, but surely he could not be
+afraid of a little cat.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, he said; the cat was a goat.</p>
+
+<p>'It can't be a goat,' she said; 'it has no horns,
+you know.'</p>
+
+<p>He was pleased to hear that. It seemed as if
+at last he had found something by which he could
+distinguish a goat from other animals.</p>
+
+<p>The next day he met Miss Stafva's cat.</p>
+
+<p>'That goat has no horns,' he said; and laughed
+quite proudly.</p>
+
+<p>He went past it, and sat down on the sofa to
+listen to Ingrid playing. But after he had sat a
+little while he grew restless, and he rose, went
+up to the cat, and curtsied.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was in despair. She took him by his
+arm and shook him. He ran straight out of the
+room, and did not appear until the next day.</p>
+
+<p>'Child, child,' said her ladyship, 'you do exactly
+as I did; you try the same as I did. It will
+end by your frightening him so that he dare not
+see you any more. It is better to leave him in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+peace. We are satisfied with things as they are
+if he will only remain at home.'</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing else for Ingrid to do but
+wring her hands in sorrow that such a fine,
+lovable fellow should be concealed in this crazy
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid thought again and again, had she
+really only come here to play her grandfather's
+tunes to him? Should they go on like that all
+through life? Would it never be otherwise?</p>
+
+<p>She also told him many stories, and in the
+midst of a story his face would lighten up, and
+he would say something wonderfully subtle and
+beautiful. A sane person would never have
+thought of anything like it. And no more was
+needed to make her courage rise, and then she
+began again with these endless experiments.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was late one afternoon, and the moon was
+just about to rise. White snow lay on the
+ground, and bright gray ice covered the lake.
+The trees were blackish-brown, and the sky was
+a flaming red after the sunset.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was on her way to the lake to skate.
+She went along a narrow path where the snow
+was quite trodden down. Gunnar Hede went
+behind her. There was something cowed in his
+bearing that made one think of a dog following
+its master.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid looked tired; there was no brightness
+in her eyes, and her complexion was gray.</p>
+
+<p>As she walked along she wondered whether
+the day, which was now so nearly over, was
+content with itself&mdash;if it were from joy it had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+lighted the great flaming red sunset far away in
+the west.</p>
+
+<p>She knew she could light no bonfire over this
+day, nor over any other day. In the whole
+month that had passed since she recognised Gunnar
+Hede she had gained nothing.</p>
+
+<p>And to-day a great fear had come upon her.
+It seemed to her as if she might perhaps lose
+her love over all this. She was nearly forgetting
+the student, only for thinking of the poor fellow.
+All that was bright and beautiful and youthful
+vanished from her love. Nothing was left but
+dull, heavy earnest.</p>
+
+<p>She was quite in despair as she walked towards
+the lake. She felt she did not know what ought
+to be done&mdash;felt that she must give it all up.
+Oh, God, to have him walking behind her apparently
+strong and hale, and yet so helplessly,
+incurably sick!</p>
+
+<p>They had reached the lake, and she was putting
+on her skates. She also wanted him to
+skate, and helped him to put on his skates; but
+he fell as soon as he got on to the ice. He
+scrambled to the bank and sat down on a stone,
+and she skated away from him.</p>
+
+<p>Just opposite the stone upon which Gunnar
+Hede was sitting was an islet overgrown with
+birches and poplars, and behind it the radiant
+evening sky, which was still flaming red. And
+the fine, light, leafless tops of the trees stood
+against the glorious sky with such beauty that it
+was impossible not to notice it.</p>
+
+<p>Is it not a fact that one always recognises a
+place by a single feature? One does not exactly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+know how even the most familiar spot looks from
+all sides. And Munkhyttan one always knew
+by the little islet. If one had not seen the place
+for many years, one would know it again by this
+islet, where the dark tree-tops were lifted towards
+the sunset.</p>
+
+<p>Hede sat quite still, and looked at the islet and
+at the branches of the trees and at the gray ice
+which surrounded it.</p>
+
+<p>This was the view he knew best of all; there
+was nothing on the whole estate he knew so well,
+for it was always this islet that attracted the eye.
+And soon he was sitting looking at the islet
+without thinking about it, just as one does with
+things one knows so well. He sat for a long
+time gazing. Nothing disturbed him, not a
+human being, not a gust of wind, no strange object.
+He could not see Ingrid; she had skated
+far away on the ice.</p>
+
+<p>A rest and peace fell upon Gunnar Hede such
+as one only feels in home surroundings. Security
+and peace came to him from the little islet; it
+quieted the everlasting unrest that <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has tormened">tormented</span>
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Hede always imagined he was amongst
+enemies, and always thought of defending himself.
+For many years he had not felt that peace
+which made it possible for him to forget himself.
+But now it came upon him.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Gunnar Hede was sitting thus and not
+thinking of anything, he happened mechanically
+to make a movement as one may do when one
+finds one's self in accustomed circumstances. As
+he sat there with the shining ice before him and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+with skates on his feet, he got up and skated on
+to the lake, and he thought as little of what he
+was doing as one thinks of how one is holding
+fork or spoon when eating.</p>
+
+<p>He glided over the ice; it was glorious skating.
+He was a long way off the shore before he realized
+what he was doing.</p>
+
+<p>'Splendid ice!' he thought. 'I wonder why I
+did not come down earlier in the day. It is a
+good thing I was more here yesterday,' he said.
+'I will really not waste a single day during the
+rest of my vacation.'</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it was because Gunnar Hede happened
+to do something he was in the habit of
+doing before he was ill that his old self awakened
+within him.</p>
+
+<p>Thoughts and associations connected with his
+former life began to force themselves upon his
+consciousness, and at the same time all the
+thoughts connected with his illness sank into oblivion.</p>
+
+<p>It had been his habit when skating to take a
+wide turn on the lake in order to see beyond a
+certain point. He did so now without thinking,
+but when he had turned the point he knew he
+had skated there to see if there was a light in
+his mother's window.</p>
+
+<p>'She thinks it is time I was coming home, but
+she must wait a little; the ice is too good.'</p>
+
+<p>But it was mostly vague sensations of pleasure
+over the exercise and the beautiful evening that
+were awakened within him. A moonlight evening
+like this was just the time for skating; he
+was so fond of this peaceful transition from day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+to night. It was still light, but the stillness of
+night was already there, the best both of day and
+of night.</p>
+
+<p>There was another skater on the ice; it was a
+young girl. He was not sure if he knew her, but
+he skated towards her to find out. No; it was
+no one he knew, but he could not help making a
+remark when he passed her about the splendid
+ice.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger was probably a young girl from
+the town. She was evidently not accustomed to
+be addressed in this unceremonious manner; she
+looked quite frightened when he spoke to her.
+He certainly was queerly dressed; he was
+dressed quite like a peasant.</p>
+
+<p>Well, he did not want to frighten her away.
+He turned off and skated further up the lake; the
+ice was big enough for them both.</p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid had nearly screamed with astonishment.
+He had come towards her skating elegantly,
+with his arms crossed, the brim of his
+hat turned up, and his hair thrown back, so that
+it did not fall over his ears.</p>
+
+<p>He had spoken with the voice of a gentleman,
+almost without the slightest Dalar accent. She
+did not stop to think about it. She skated quickly
+towards the shore. She came breathless into the
+kitchen. She did not know how to say it shortly
+and quickly enough.</p>
+
+<p>'Miss Stafva, the young master has come
+home!'</p>
+
+<p>The kitchen was empty; neither the housekeeper
+nor the servants were there. Nor was
+there anybody in the housekeeper's room. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>grid
+rushed through the whole house, went into
+rooms where no one ever went. The whole
+time she cried out, 'Miss Stafva, Miss Stafva!
+the young master has come home!'</p>
+
+<p>She was quite beside herself, and went on calling
+out, even when she stood on the landing upstairs,
+surrounded by the servants, Miss Stafva,
+and her ladyship herself. She said it over and
+over again. She was too much excited to stop.
+They all understood what she meant. They
+stood there quite as much overcome as she was.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid turned restlessly from the one to the
+other. She ought to give explanations and
+orders, but about what? That she could so lose
+her presence of mind! She looked wildly questioning
+at her ladyship.</p>
+
+<p>'What was it I wanted?'</p>
+
+<p>The old lady gave some orders in a low,
+trembling voice. She almost whispered.</p>
+
+<p>'Light the candles and make a fire in the
+young master's room. Lay out the young master's
+clothes.'</p>
+
+<p>It was neither the place nor the time for Miss
+Stafva to be important. But there was all the
+same a certain superior ring in her voice as she
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>'There is always a fire in the young master's
+room. The young master's clothes are always in
+readiness for him.'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid had better go up to her room,' said her
+ladyship.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl did just the opposite. She
+went into the drawing-room, placed herself at
+the window, sobbed and shook, but did not her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>self
+know that she was not still. She impatiently
+dried the tears from her eyes, so that she could
+see over the snowfield in front of the house. If
+only she did not cry, there was nothing she could
+miss seeing in the clear moonlight. At last he
+came.</p>
+
+<p>'There he is! there he is!' she cried to her
+ladyship. 'He walks quickly! he runs! Do
+come and see!'</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship sat quite still before the fire. She
+did not move. She strained her ears to hear,
+just as much as the other strained her eyes to
+see. She asked Ingrid to be quiet, so that she
+could hear how he walked. Ah, yes, she would
+be quiet. Her ladyship should hear how he
+walked. She grasped the window-sill, as if that
+could help her.</p>
+
+<p>'You <em>shall</em> be quiet,' she whispered, 'so that
+her ladyship can hear how he walks.'</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship sat bending forward, listening
+with all her soul. Did she already hear his steps
+in the court-yard? She probably thought he
+would go towards the kitchen. Did she hear
+that it was the front steps that creaked? Did
+she hear that it was the door to the front hall that
+opened? Did she hear how quickly he came up
+the stairs, two or three steps at a time? Had his
+mother heard that? It was not the dragging step
+of a peasant, as it had been when he left the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>It was almost more than they could bear, to
+hear him coming towards the door of the drawing-room.
+Had he come in then, they would no
+doubt both have screamed. But he turned down
+the corridor to his own rooms.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship fell back in her chair, and her
+eyes closed. Ingrid thought her ladyship would
+have liked to die at that moment. Without opening
+her eyes, she put out her hand. Ingrid went
+softly up and took it; the old lady drew her
+towards her.</p>
+
+<p>'Mignon, Mignon,' she said; 'that was the
+right name after all. But,' she continued, 'we
+must not cry. We must not speak about it. Take
+a stool and come and sit down by the fire. We
+must be calm, my little friend. Let us speak
+about something else. We must be perfectly calm
+when he comes in.'</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour afterwards Hede came in; the
+tea was on the table, and the chandelier was
+lighted. He had dressed; every trace of the
+peasant had disappeared. Ingrid and her ladyship
+pressed each other's hands.</p>
+
+<p>They had been sitting trying to imagine how
+he would look when he came in. It was impossible
+to say what he might say or do, said her
+ladyship. One never had known what he might
+do. But in any case they would both be quite
+calm. A feeling of great happiness had come
+over her, and that had quieted her. She was
+resting, free from all sorrow, in the arms of
+angels carrying her upwards, upwards.</p>
+
+<p>But when Hede came in, there was no sign of
+confusion about him.</p>
+
+<p>'I have only come to tell you,' he said, 'that I
+have got such a headache, that I shall have to go
+to bed at once. I felt it already when I was on
+the ice.'</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship made no reply. Everything was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+so simple; she had never thought it would be
+like that. It took her a few moments to realize
+that he did not know anything about his illness,
+that he was living somewhere in the past.</p>
+
+<p>'But perhaps I can first drink a cup of tea,'
+he said, looking a little surprised at their silence.</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship went to the tea-tray. He looked
+at her.</p>
+
+<p>'Have you been crying, mother? You are so
+quiet.'</p>
+
+<p>'We have been sitting talking about a sad
+story, I and my young friend here,' said her
+ladyship, pointing to Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'I beg your pardon,' he said. 'I did not see
+you had visitors.'</p>
+
+<p>The young girl came forward towards the
+light, beautiful as one would be who knew that
+the gates of heaven the next moment would open
+before her.</p>
+
+<p>He bowed a little stiffly. He evidently did not
+know who she was. Her ladyship introduced
+them to each other. He looked curiously at Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'I think I saw Miss Berg on the ice,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>He knew nothing about her&mdash;had never
+spoken to her before.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>A short, happy time followed. Gunnar Hede
+was certainly not quite himself; but those around
+him were happy in the belief that he soon would
+be. His memory was partly gone. He knew
+nothing about certain periods of his life; he
+could not play the violin; he had almost forgotten
+all he knew; and his power of thinking was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+weak; and he preferred neither to read nor to
+write. But still he was very much better. He
+was not frightened; he was fond of his mother;
+he had again assumed the manners and habits
+of a gentleman. One can easily understand that
+her ladyship and all her household were delighted.</p>
+
+<p>Hede was in the best of spirits&mdash;bright and
+joyous all day long. He never speculated over
+anything, put to one side everything he could
+not understand, never spoke about anything that
+necessitated mental exertion, but talked merrily
+and cheerfully. He was most happy when he
+was engaged in bodily exercise. He took Ingrid
+out with him sledging and skating. He did not
+talk much to her, but she was happy to be with
+him. He was kind to Ingrid, as he was to everyone
+else, but not in the least in love with her.
+He often wondered about his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em>&mdash;wondered
+why she never wrote. But after a short time
+that trouble, too, left him. He always put away
+from him anything that worried him.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid thought that he would never get really
+well by doing like this. He must some time be
+made to think&mdash;to face his own thoughts, which
+he was afraid of doing now. But she dared not
+compel him to do this, and there was no one else
+who dared. If he began to care for her a little,
+perhaps she might dare. She thought all they
+now wanted, every one of them, was a little happiness.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was just at that time that a little child died
+at the Parsonage at Raglanda where Ingrid had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+been brought up; and the grave-digger was
+about to dig the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The man dug the grave quite close to the spot
+where the previous summer he had dug the
+grave for Ingrid. And when he had got a few
+feet into the ground he happened to lay bare a
+corner of her coffin. The grave-digger could not
+help smiling a little to himself. Of course he had
+heard that the dead girl lying in this coffin had
+appeared. She was supposed to have unscrewed
+her coffin-lid on the very day of her funeral, risen
+from the grave, and appeared at the Parsonage.
+The Pastor's wife was not so much liked but that
+people in the parish rather enjoyed telling this
+story about her. The grave-digger thought that
+people should only know how securely the dead
+were lying in the ground, and how fast the coffin-lids.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>He interrupted himself in the midst of this
+thought. On the corner of the coffin which was
+exposed the lid was not quite straight, and one
+of the screws was not quite fast. He did not
+say anything, he did not think anything, but
+stopped digging and whistled the whole reveille
+of the Vermland Regiment&mdash;for he was an old
+soldier. Then he thought he had better examine
+the thing properly. It would never do for a
+grave-digger to have thoughts about the dead
+which might come and trouble him during the
+dark autumn nights. He hastily removed some
+more earth. Then he began to hammer on the
+coffin with his shovel. The coffin answered quite
+distinctly that it was empty&mdash;empty.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour after the grave-digger was at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+Parsonage. There was no end to the questionings
+and surmises. So much they were all
+agreed upon&mdash;that the young girl had been in
+the Dalar man's pack. But what had become of
+her afterwards?</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina stood at the oven in the Parsonage
+and looked after the baking, for of course there
+was baking to be done for the new funeral. She
+stood for a long time listening to all this talk
+without saying a word. All she took care of
+was that the cakes were not burnt. She put
+sheet-tins in and took sheet-tins out, and it was
+dangerous to approach her as she stood there
+with the long baker's shovel. But suddenly she
+took off her kitchen-apron, wiped the worst of
+the sweat and the soot from her face, and was
+talking with the Pastor in his study almost before
+she knew how it had come about.</p>
+
+<p>After this it was not so very wonderful that one
+day in March the Pastor's little red-painted
+sledge, ornamented with green tulips, and drawn
+by the Pastor's little red horse, pulled up at
+Munkhyttan. Ingrid was of course obliged to
+go back with the Pastor home to her mother. The
+Pastor had come to fetch her. He did not say
+much about their being glad that she was alive,
+but one could see how happy he was. He had
+never been able to forgive himself that they had
+not been more kind to their adopted daughter.
+And now he was radiant at the thought that he
+was allowed to make a new beginning and make
+everything good for her this time.</p>
+
+<p>They did not speak a word about the reason
+why she had run away. It was of no use bring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>ing
+that up again so long after. But Ingrid understood
+that the Pastor's wife had had a hard
+time, and had suffered many pangs of conscience,
+and that they wanted to have her back again in
+order to be good to her. She felt that she was
+almost obliged to go back to the Parsonage to
+show that she had no ill-feeling against her
+adopted parents.</p>
+
+<p>They all thought it was the most natural thing
+that she should go to the Parsonage for a week
+or two. And why should she not? She could
+not make the excuse that they needed her at
+Munkhyttan. She could surely be away for
+some weeks without it doing Gunnar Hede any
+harm. She felt it was hard, but it was best she
+should go away, as they all thought it was the
+right thing.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps she had hoped they would ask her not
+to go away. She took her seat in the sledge
+with the feeling that her ladyship or Miss Stafva
+would surely come and lift her out of it, and carry
+her into the house again. It was impossible to
+realize that she was actually driving down the
+avenue, that she was turning into the forest, and
+that Munkhyttan was disappearing behind her.</p>
+
+<p>But supposing it was from pure goodness that
+they let her go? They thought, perhaps, that
+youth, with its craving for pleasure, wanted to
+get away from the loneliness of Munkhyttan.
+They thought, perhaps, she was tired of being
+the keeper of a crazy man. She raised her hand,
+and was on the point of seizing the reins and
+turning the horse. Now that she was several
+miles from the house it struck her that that was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+why they had let her go. She would have liked
+so much to have gone back and asked them.</p>
+
+<p>In her utter loneliness she felt as if she were
+groping about in the wild forest. There was not
+a single human being who answered her or advised
+her. She received just as much answer
+from fir and pine, and squirrel and owl, as she
+did from any human being.</p>
+
+<p>It was really a matter of utter indifference to
+her how they treated her at the Parsonage. They
+were very kind to her, as far as she knew, but
+it really did not matter. If she had come to a
+palace full of everything one could most desire,
+that would likewise have been the same to her.
+No bed is soft enough to give rest unto one
+whose heart is full of longing.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning she had asked them every
+day, as modestly as she could, if they would not
+let her go home, now that she had had the great
+happiness of seeing her mother and her brothers
+and sisters. But the roads were really too bad.
+She must stay with them until the frost had disappeared.
+It was not a matter of life and death,
+they supposed, to go back to that place.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid could not understand why it annoyed
+people when she said she wanted to go back to
+Munkhyttan. But this seemed to be the case
+with her father and her mother and everybody
+else in the parish. One had no right, it appeared,
+to long for any other place in the world,
+when one was at Raglanda.</p>
+
+<p>She soon saw it was best not to speak about
+her going away. There were so many difficulties
+in the way whenever she spoke about it. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+was not enough that the roads were still in the
+same bad condition; they surrounded her with
+walls and ramparts and moats. She would knit
+and weave, and plant out in the forcing-frames.
+And surely she would not go away until after
+the large birthday party at the Dean's? And she
+could not think of leaving till after Karin Landberg's
+wedding.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing for her to do but to lift her
+hands in supplication to the spring, and beg it to
+make haste with its work, beg for sunshine and
+warmth, beg the gentle sun to do its very best
+for the great border forest, send small piercing
+rays between the fir-trees, and melt the snow beneath
+them. Dear, dear sun! It did not matter
+if the snow were not melted in the valley, if only
+the snow would vanish from the mountains, if
+only the forest paths became passable, if only
+the S&auml;ter girls were able to go to their huts, if
+only the bogs became dry, if only it became
+possible to go by the forest road, which was half
+the distance of the highroad.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid knew one who would not wait for carriage,
+or ask for money to drive, if only the road
+through the forest became passable. She knew
+one who would leave the Parsonage some moonlight
+night, and who would do it without asking
+a single person's permission.</p>
+
+<p>She thought she had waited for the spring before.
+That everybody does. But now Ingrid
+knew that she had never before longed for it.
+Oh no, no! She had never before known what
+it was to long. Before she had waited for green
+leaves and anemones, and the song of the thrush<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+and the cuckoo. But that was childishness&mdash;nothing
+more. They did not long for the spring
+who only thought of what was beautiful. One
+should take the first bit of earth that peeped
+through the snow, and kiss it. One should pluck
+the first coarse leaf of the nettle simply to burn
+into one that now the spring had come.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody was very good to her. But although
+they did not say anything, they seemed
+to think that she was always thinking of leaving
+them.</p>
+
+<p>'I can't understand why you want to go back
+to that place and look after that crazy fellow,'
+said Karin Landberg one day. It seemed as if
+she could read Ingrid's thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, she has given up thinking of that now,'
+said the Pastor's wife, before the young girl had
+time to answer.</p>
+
+<p>When Karin was gone the Pastor's wife said:</p>
+
+<p>'People wonder that you want to leave us.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was silent.</p>
+
+<p>'They say that when Hede began to improve
+perhaps you fell in love with him.'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh no! Not after he had begun to improve,'
+Ingrid said, feeling almost inclined to laugh.</p>
+
+<p>'In any case, he is not the sort of person one
+could marry,' said her adopted mother. 'Father
+and I have been speaking about it, and we think
+it is best that you should remain with us.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is very good of you that you want to keep
+me,' Ingrid said. And she was touched that now
+they wanted to be so kind to her.</p>
+
+<p>They did not believe her, however obedient
+she was. She could not understand what little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+bird it was that told them about her longing.
+Now her adopted mother had told her that she
+must not go back to Munkhyttan. But even
+then she could not leave the matter alone.</p>
+
+<p>'If they really wanted you,' she said, 'they
+would write for you.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid again felt inclined to laugh. That
+would be the strangest thing of all, should there
+be a letter from the enchanted castle. She
+would like to know if her adopted mother
+thought that the King of the Mountain wrote
+for the maiden who had been swallowed by the
+mountain to come back when she had gone to
+see her mother?</p>
+
+<p>But if her adopted mother had known how
+many messages she had received she would
+probably have been even more uneasy. There
+came messages to her in her dreams by nights,
+and there came messages to her in her visions by
+day. He let Ingrid know that he was in need of
+her. He was so ill&mdash;so ill!</p>
+
+<p>She knew that he was nearly going out of his
+mind again, and that she must go to him. If
+anyone had told her this, she would simply have
+answered that she knew it.</p>
+
+<p>The large star-like eyes looked further and
+further away. Those who saw that look would
+never believe that she meant to stay quietly and
+patiently at home.</p>
+
+<p>It is not very difficult either to see whether a
+person is content or full of longing. One only
+needs to see a little gleam of happiness in the
+eyes when he or she comes in from work and sits
+down by the fire. But in Ingrid's eyes there was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+no gleam of happiness, except when she saw the
+mountain stream come down through the forest,
+broad and strong. It was that that should prepare
+the way for her.</p>
+
+<p>It happened one day that Ingrid was sitting
+alone with Karin Landberg, and she began to
+tell her about her life at Munkhyttan. Karin
+was quite shocked. How could Ingrid stand
+such a life?</p>
+
+<p>Karin Landberg was to be married very soon.
+And she was now at that stage when she could
+speak of nothing but her lover. She knew nothing
+but what he had taught her, and she could
+do nothing without first consulting him.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to her that Oluf had said something
+about Gunnar Hede which would help to
+frighten Ingrid if she had begun to like that
+crazy fellow. And then she began to tell her how
+mad he had really been. For Oluf had told her
+that when he was at the fair last autumn some
+gentlemen had said that they did not think the
+Goat was mad at all. He only pretended to be
+in order to attract customers. But Oluf had
+maintained that he was mad, and in order to
+prove it went to the market and bought a
+wretched little goat. And then it was plain
+enough to see that he was mad. Oluf had only
+put the goat in front of him on the counter
+where his knives and things lay, and he had run
+away and left both his pack and his wares, and
+they had all laughed so awfully when they saw
+how frightened he was. And it was impossible
+that Ingrid could care for anyone who had been
+so crazy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was, no doubt, unwise of Karin Landberg
+that she did not look at Ingrid whilst she told
+this story. If she had seen how she frowned,
+she would perhaps have taken warning.</p>
+
+<p>'And you will marry anyone who could do
+such a thing!' Ingrid said. 'I think it would be
+better to marry the Goat himself.'</p>
+
+<p>This Ingrid said in downright earnest, and it
+seemed so strange to Karin that she, who was
+always so gentle, should have said anything so
+unkind, that it quite worried her. For several
+days she was quite unhappy, because she feared
+Oluf was not what she would like him to be. It
+simply embittered Karin's life until she made up
+her mind to tell Oluf everything; but he was so
+nice and good, that he quite reassured her.</p>
+
+<p>It is not an easy task to wait for the spring in
+Vermland. One can have sun and warmth in the
+evening, and the next morning find the ground
+white with snow. Gooseberry-bushes and lawns
+may be green, but the trees of the birch-forest
+are bare, and seem as if they will never spring
+out.</p>
+
+<p>At Whitsuntide there was spring in the air,
+but Ingrid's prayers had been of no avail. Not a
+single S&auml;ter girl had taken up her abode in the
+forest, not a fen was dry; it was impossible to go
+through the forest.</p>
+
+<p>On Whit-Sunday Ingrid and her adopted
+mother went to church. As it was such a great
+festival, they had driven to church. In olden
+days Ingrid had very much enjoyed driving up
+to the church in full gallop, whilst people along
+the roadside politely took off their hats, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+those who were standing on the road rushed to
+the side as if they were quite frightened. But at
+the present moment she could not enjoy anything.
+'Longing takes the fragrance from the
+rose, and the light from the full moon,' says an
+old proverb.</p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid was glad for what she heard in
+church. It did her good to hear how the disciples
+were comforted in their longing. She was
+glad that Jesus thought of comforting those who
+longed so greatly for Him.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Ingrid and the rest of the congregation
+were in church a tall Dalar man came walking
+down the road. He wore a sheepskin coat, and
+had a large pack on his back, like one who cannot
+tell winter from summer, or Sunday from
+any other day. He did not go into the church,
+but stole timidly past the horses that were tied
+to the railings, and went into the churchyard.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down on a grave and thought of all the
+dead who were still sleeping, and of one of the
+dead who had awakened to life again. He was
+still sitting there when the people left the church.
+Karin Landberg's Oluf was one of the first to
+leave the church, and when he happened to look
+across the churchyard he discovered the Dalar
+man. It is hard to say whether it was curiosity
+or some other motive that prompted him, but
+he went up to talk to him. He wanted to see if
+it were possible that he who was supposed to
+have been cured had become mad again.</p>
+
+<p>And it was possible. He told him at once
+that he sat there waiting for her who was
+called Grave-Lily. She was to come and play to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+him. She played so beautifully that the sun and
+the stars danced.</p>
+
+<p>Then Karin Landberg's Oluf told him that
+she for whom he was waiting was standing outside
+the church. If he stood up, he could see
+her. She would, no doubt, be glad to see him.</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor's wife and Ingrid were just getting
+into the carriage, when a tall Dalar man came
+running up to them. He came at a great pace
+in spite of all the horses he must curtsy to, and
+he beckoned eagerly to the young girl.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Ingrid saw him she stood quite
+still. She could not have told whether she was
+most glad to see him again or most grieved that
+he had again gone out of his mind; she only
+forgot everything else in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes began to sparkle. In that moment
+she saw nothing of the poor wretched man. She
+only felt that she was once again near the beautiful
+soul of the man for whom she had longed
+so terribly.</p>
+
+<p>There were a great many people about, and
+they could not help looking at her. They could
+not take their eyes from her face. She did not
+move; she stood waiting for him. But those
+who saw how radiant she was with happiness
+must have thought that she was waiting for
+some great and noble man, instead of a poor,
+half-witted fellow.</p>
+
+<p>They said afterwards that it almost seemed as
+if there were some affinity between his soul and
+hers&mdash;some secret affinity which lay so deeply
+hidden beneath their consciousness that no
+human being could understand it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But when Hede was only a step or two from
+Ingrid her adopted mother took her resolutely
+round the waist and lifted her into the carriage.
+She would not have a scene between the two
+just outside the church, with so many people
+present. And as soon as they were in the carriage
+the man sent his horses off at full gallop.</p>
+
+<p>A wild, terrified cry was heard as they drove
+away. The Pastor's wife thanked God that she
+had got the young girl into the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>It was still early in the afternoon when a
+peasant came to the Parsonage to speak with the
+Pastor. He came to speak about the crazy Dalar
+man. He had now gone quite raving mad, and
+they had been obliged to bind him. What did
+the Pastor advise them to do? What should
+they do with him?</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor could give them no other advice
+but to take him home. He told the peasant who
+he was, and where he lived.</p>
+
+<p>Later on in the evening he told Ingrid everything.
+It was best to tell her the truth, and
+trust to her own common-sense.</p>
+
+<p>But when night came it became clear to her
+that she had not time to wait for the spring. The
+poor girl set out for Munkhyttan by the highroad.
+She would no doubt be able to get there
+by that road, although she knew that it was
+twice as long as the way through the forest.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was Whit-Monday, late in the afternoon.
+Ingrid walked along the highroad. There was a
+wide expanse of country, with low mountains
+and small patches of birch forest between the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+fields. The mountain-ash and the bird-cherry
+were in bloom; the light, sticky leaves of the
+aspen were just out. The ditches were full of
+clear, rippling water which made the stones at
+the bottom glisten and sparkle.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid walked sorrowfully along, thinking of
+him whose mind had again given way, wondering
+whether she could do anything for him,
+whether it was of any use that she had left her
+home in this manner.</p>
+
+<p>She was tired and hungry; her shoes had begun
+to go to pieces. Perhaps it would be better
+for her to turn back. She could never get to
+Munkhyttan.</p>
+
+<p>The further she walked, the more sorrowful
+she became. She could not help thinking that
+it could be of no use her coming now that he
+had gone quite out of his mind. There was no
+doubt it was too late now; it was quite hopeless
+to do anything for him.</p>
+
+<p>But as soon as she thought of turning back
+she saw Gunnar Hede's face close to her cheek,
+as she had so often seen it before. It gave her
+new courage; she felt as if he were calling for
+her. She again felt hopeful and confident of
+being able to help him.</p>
+
+<p>Just as Ingrid raised her head, looking a little
+less downcast, a queer little procession came
+towards her.</p>
+
+<p>There was a little horse, drawing a little cart;
+a fat woman sat in the cart, and a tall, thin
+man, with long, thin moustaches walked by the
+side of it.</p>
+
+<p>In the country, where no one understood any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>thing
+about art, Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren always
+went in for looking like ordinary people. The
+little cart in which they travelled about was well
+covered over, and no one could suspect that it
+only contained fireworks and conjuring apparatus
+and marionettes.</p>
+
+<p>No one could suspect that the fat woman
+who sat on the top of the load, looking like a
+well-to-do shopkeeper's wife, was formerly Miss
+Viola, who once sprang through the air, or that
+the man who walked by her side, and looked
+like a pensioned soldier, was the same Mr.
+Blomgren who occasionally, to break the monotony
+of the journey, took it into his head to
+turn a somersault over the horse, and play the
+ventriloquist with thrushes and siskins that sang
+in the trees by the roadside, so that he made
+them quite mad.</p>
+
+<p>The horse was very small, and had formerly
+drawn a roundabout, and therefore it would
+never go unless it heard music. On that account
+Mrs. Blomgren generally sat playing the
+Jews'-harp, but as soon as they met anyone, she
+put it in her pocket, so that no one should discover
+they were artists, for whom country
+people have no respect whatever. Owing to this
+they did not travel very fast, but they were not
+in any hurry either.</p>
+
+<p>The blind man, who played the violin, had to
+walk some little distance behind the others in order
+not to betray the fact of his belonging to the
+company. The blind man was led by a little dog;
+he was not allowed to have a child to lead him,
+for that would always have reminded Mr. and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+Mrs. Blomgren of a little girl who was called Ingrid.
+That would have been too sad.</p>
+
+<p>And now they were all in the country on account
+of the spring. For however much money
+Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren were making in the
+towns, they felt they <em>must</em> be in the country at
+that time of the year, for Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren
+were artists.</p>
+
+<p>They did not recognise Ingrid, and she went
+past them without taking any notice of them, for
+she was in a hurry; she was afraid of their detaining
+her. But directly afterwards she felt that
+it was heartless and unkind of her, and turned
+back.</p>
+
+<p>If Ingrid could have felt glad about anything,
+she would have been glad by seeing the old people's
+joy at meeting her. You may be sure they
+had plenty to talk about. The little horse turned
+its head time after time to see what was wrong
+with the roundabout.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, it was Ingrid who talked the
+most. The two old people saw at once that she
+had been crying, and they were so concerned that
+she was obliged to tell them everything that had
+happened to her.</p>
+
+<p>But it was a relief to Ingrid to speak. The old
+people had their own way of taking things; they
+clapped their hands when she told them how she
+had got out of the grave and how she had frightened
+the Pastor's wife. They caressed her and
+praised her because she had run away from the
+Parsonage. For them nothing was dull or sad,
+but everything was bright and hopeful. They
+simply had no standard by which to measure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+reality, and therefore its hardness could not affect
+them. They compared everything they heard
+with the pieces from marionette theatres and pantomimes.
+Of course, one also put a little sorrow
+and misery into the pantomime, but that was only
+done to heighten the effect. And, of course,
+everything would end well. In the pantomimes
+it always ended well.</p>
+
+<p>There was something infectious in all this
+hopefulness. Ingrid knew they did not at all understand
+how great her trouble was, but it was
+cheering all the same to listen to them.</p>
+
+<p>But they were also of real help to Ingrid. They
+told her that they had had dinner a short time
+since at the inn at Tors&auml;ker, and just as they were
+getting up from the table some peasants came
+driving up with a man who was mad. Mrs.
+Blomgren could not bear to see mad people, and
+wanted to go away at once, and Mr. Blomgren
+had consented. But supposing it was Ingrid's
+madman! And they had hardly said the words
+before Ingrid said that it was very likely, and
+wanted to set off at once.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blomgren then asked his wife in his own
+ceremonious manner if they were not in the country
+solely on account of the spring, and if it were
+not just the same where they went. And old Mrs.
+Blomgren asked him equally ceremoniously in
+her turn if he thought she would leave her beloved
+Ingrid before she had reached the harbour
+of her happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Then the old roundabout horse was turned,
+and conversation grew more difficult, because
+they again had to play on the Jews'-harp. As<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+soon as Mrs. Blomgren wished to say anything,
+she was obliged to hand the instrument to Mr.
+Blomgren, and when Mr. Blomgren wanted to
+speak, he gave it back again to his wife. And
+the little horse stood still every time the instrument
+passed from mouth to mouth.</p>
+
+<p>The whole time they did their best to comfort
+Ingrid. They related all the fairy tales they had
+seen represented at the dolls' theatre. They comforted
+her with the 'Enchanted Princess,' they
+comforted her with 'Cinderella,' they comforted
+her with all the fairy tales under the sun.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren watched Ingrid when
+they saw that her eyes grew brighter. 'Artist's
+eyes,' they said, nodding contentedly to each
+other. 'What did we say? Artist's eyes!'</p>
+
+<p>In some incomprehensible manner they had
+got the idea that Ingrid had become one of them,
+an artist. They thought she was playing a part
+in a drama. It was a triumph for them in their
+old age.</p>
+
+<p>On they went as fast as they could. The old
+couple were only afraid that the madman would
+not be at the inn any longer. But he was there,
+and the worst of it was, no one knew how to get
+him away.</p>
+
+<p>The two peasants from Raglanda who had
+brought him had taken him to one of the rooms
+and locked him in whilst they were waiting for
+fresh horses. When they left him his arms had
+been tied behind him, but he had somehow managed
+to free his hands from the cord, and when
+they came to fetch him he was free, and, beside
+himself with rage, had seized a chair, with which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+he threatened to strike anyone who approached
+him. They could do nothing but beat a hasty retreat
+and lock the door. The peasants now only
+waited for the landlord and his men to return and
+help them to bind him again.</p>
+
+<p>All the hope which Ingrid's old friends had reawakened
+within her was, however, not quenched.
+She quite saw that Gunnar Hede was worse than
+he had ever been before, but that was what she
+had expected. She still hoped. It was not their
+fairy tales, it was their great love that had given
+her new hope.</p>
+
+<p>She asked the men to let her go to the madman.
+She said she knew him, and he would not
+do her any harm; but the peasants said they were
+not mad. The man in the room would kill anybody
+who went in.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid sat down to think. She thought how
+strange it was that she should meet Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren just to-day. Surely that meant something.
+She would never have met them if it had
+not been for some purpose. And Ingrid thought
+of how Hede had regained his senses the last
+time. Could she not again make him do something
+which would remind him of olden days, and
+drive away his mad thoughts? She thought and
+thought.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren sat on a seat outside
+the inn, looking more unhappy than one would
+have thought was possible. They were not far
+from crying.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid, their 'child,' came up to them with a
+smile&mdash;such a smile as only she could have&mdash;and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+stroked their old, wrinkled cheeks, and said it
+would please her so much if they would let her
+see a performance like those she used to see every
+day in the olden time. It would be such a comfort
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>At first they said no, for they were not at all in
+proper artist humour, but when she had expended
+a few smiles upon them they could not resist her.
+They went to their cart and unpacked their costumes.</p>
+
+<p>When they were ready they called for the blind
+man, and Ingrid selected the place where the performance
+was to be held. She would not let them
+perform in the yard, but took them into the garden
+belonging to the inn, for there was a garden
+belonging to this inn. It was mostly full of beds
+for vegetables which had not yet come up, but
+here and there was an apple-tree in bloom. And
+Ingrid said she would like them to perform under
+one of the apple-trees in bloom.</p>
+
+<p>Some lads and servant-girls came running
+when they heard the violin, so there was a small
+audience. But it was hard work for Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren to perform. Ingrid had asked too
+much of them; they were really much too sad.</p>
+
+<p>And it was very unfortunate that Ingrid had
+taken them out into the garden. She had evidently
+not remembered that the rooms in the inn
+faced this way. Mrs. Blomgren was very nearly
+running away when she heard a window in one
+of the rooms quickly opened. Supposing the
+madman had heard the music, and supposing he
+jumped out of the window and came to them?</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Blomgren was somewhat reassured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+when she saw who had opened the window. It
+was a young gentleman with a pleasant face. He
+was in shirt-sleeves, but otherwise very decently
+dressed. His eye was quiet, his lips smiled, and
+he stroked his hair back from his forehead with
+his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blomgren was working, and was so taken
+up with the performance that he did not notice
+anything. Mrs. Blomgren, who had nothing else
+to do but kiss her hands in all directions, had
+time to observe everything.</p>
+
+<p>It was astonishing how radiant Ingrid suddenly
+looked. Her eyes shone as never before,
+and her face was so white that light seemed to
+come from it. And all this radiancy was directed
+towards the man in the window.</p>
+
+<p>He did not hesitate long. He stood up on the
+window-sill and jumped down to them, and he
+went up to the blind man and asked him to lend
+him his violin. Ingrid at once took the violin
+from the blind man and gave it to him.</p>
+
+<p>'Play the waltz from "Freisch&uuml;tz,"' she said.</p>
+
+<p>Then the man began to play, and Ingrid smiled,
+but she looked so unearthly that Mrs. Blomgren
+almost thought that she would dissolve into a
+sunbeam, and fly away from them. But as soon
+as Mrs. Blomgren heard the man play she knew
+him again.</p>
+
+<p>'Is that how it is?' she said to herself. 'Is it
+he? That was why she wanted to see two old
+people perform.'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede, who had been walking up and
+down his room in such a rage that he felt inclined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+to kill someone, had suddenly heard a blind man
+playing outside his window, and that had taken
+him back to an incident in his former life.</p>
+
+<p>He could not at first understand where his
+own violin was, but then he remembered that Alin
+had taken it away with him, and now the only
+thing left for him to do was to try and borrow the
+blind man's violin to play himself quiet again; he
+was so excited. And as soon as he had got the
+violin in his hand he began to play. It never occurred
+to him that he could not play. He had no
+idea that for several years he had only been able
+to play some poor little tunes.</p>
+
+<p>He thought all the time he was in Upsala, outside
+the house with the Virginia-creepers, and he
+expected the acrobats would begin to dance as
+they had done last time. He endeavoured to
+play with more life to make them do so, but his
+fingers were stiff and awkward; the bow would
+not properly obey them. He exerted himself so
+much that the perspiration stood on his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>At last, however, he got hold of the right tune&mdash;the
+same they had danced to the last time. He
+played it so enticingly, so temptingly, that it
+ought to have melted their hearts. But the old
+acrobats did not begin to dance. It was a long
+time since they had met the student at Upsala;
+they did not remember how enthusiastic they
+were then. They had no idea what he expected
+them to do.</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede looked at Ingrid for an explanation
+why they did not dance. When he looked at
+her there was such an unearthly radiance in her
+eyes that in his astonishment he gave up playing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+He stood a moment looking round the small
+crowd. They all looked at him with such strange,
+uneasy glances. It was impossible to play with people
+staring at him so. He simply went away from
+them. There were some apple-pears in bloom at
+the other end of the garden, so he went there.</p>
+
+<p>He saw now that nothing fitted in with the ideas
+he had just had that Alin had locked him in, and
+that he was at Upsala. The garden was too large,
+and the house was not covered with red creepers.
+No, it could not be Upsala. But he did not mind
+very much where he was. It seemed to him as if
+he had not played for centuries, and now he had
+got hold of a violin. Now he would play. He
+placed the violin against his cheek, and began.
+But again he was stopped by the stiffness in his
+fingers. He could only play the very simplest
+things.</p>
+
+<p>'I shall have to begin at the beginning,' he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>And he smiled and played a little minuet. It
+was the first thing he had learnt. His father had
+played it to him, and he had afterwards played it
+from ear. He saw all at once the whole scene before
+him, and he heard the words:</p>
+
+<p>'The little Prince should learn to dance, but he
+broke his little leg.'</p>
+
+<p>Then he tried to play several other small
+dances. They were some he had played as a
+school boy. They had asked him to play at the
+dancing-lessons at the young ladies' boarding-school.
+He could see the girls dance and swing
+about, and could hear the dancing-mistress beat
+the time with her foot.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then he grew bolder. He played first violin in
+one of Mozart's quartettes. When he learnt that,
+he was in the Sixth Form at the Latin school at
+Falun. Some old gentlemen had practised this
+quartette for a concert, but the first violin had
+been taken ill, and he was asked to take his part,
+young as he was. He remembered how proud he
+had been.</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede only thought of getting his fingers
+into practice when he played these childish
+exercises. But he soon noticed that something
+strange was happening to him. He had a distinct
+sensation that in his brain there was some great
+darkness that hid his past. As soon as he tried
+to remember anything, it was as if he were trying
+to find something in a dark room; but when he
+played, some of the darkness vanished. Without
+his having thought of it, the darkness had vanished
+so much that he could now remember his
+childhood and school life.</p>
+
+<p>Then he made up his mind to let himself be led
+by the violin; perhaps it could drive away all the
+darkness. And so it did, for every piece he
+played the darkness vanished a little. The violin
+led him through the one year after the other,
+awoke in him memories of studies, friends and
+pleasures. The darkness stood like a wall before
+him, but when he advanced against it, armed with
+the violin, it vanished step by step. Now and
+then he looked round to see whether it closed
+again behind him. But behind him was bright
+day.</p>
+
+<p>The violin came to a series of duets for piano
+and violin. He only played a bar or two of each.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+But a large portion of the darkness vanished; he
+remembered his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em> and his engagement. He
+would like to have dwelt a little over this, but
+there was still much darkness left to be played
+away. He had no time.</p>
+
+<p>He glided into a hymn. He had heard it once
+when he was unhappy. He remembered he was
+sitting in a village church when he heard it. But
+why <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has had be">had he</span> been unhappy? Because he went
+about the country selling goods like a poor pedlar.
+It was a hard life. It was sad to think
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>The bow went over the strings like a whirlwind,
+and again cut through a large portion of the
+darkness. Now he saw the Fifty-Mile Forest, the
+snow-covered animals, the weird shapes, the drifts
+made of them. He remembered the journey to
+see his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em>, remembered that she had broken
+the engagement. All this became clear to him at
+one time.</p>
+
+<p>He really felt neither sorrow nor joy over anything
+he remembered. The most important thing
+was that he did remember. This of itself was an
+unspeakable pleasure. But all at once the bow
+stopped, as if of its own accord. It would not
+lead him any further. And yet there was more&mdash;much
+more&mdash;that he must remember. The darkness
+still stood like a solid wall before him.</p>
+
+<p>He compelled the bow to go on. And it played
+two quite common tunes, the poorest he had ever
+heard. How could his bow have learned such
+tunes? The darkness did not vanish in the least
+for these tunes. They really taught him nothing;
+but from them came a terror which he could not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+remember having ever felt before&mdash;an inconceivable,
+awful fear, the mad terror of a doomed soul.</p>
+
+<p>He stopped playing; he could not bear it.
+What was there in these tunes&mdash;what was there?
+The darkness did not vanish for them, and the
+awful thing was, that it seemed to him that when
+he did not advance against the darkness with the
+violin and drive it before him, it came gliding
+towards him to overwhelm him.</p>
+
+<p>He had been standing playing, with his eyes
+half closed; now he opened them and looked into
+the world of reality. He saw Ingrid, who had
+been standing listening to him the whole time.
+He asked her, not expecting an answer, but simply
+to keep back the darkness for a moment:</p>
+
+<p>'When did I last play this tune?'</p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid stood trembling. She had made up
+her mind, whatever happened, now he should
+hear the truth. Afraid she was, but at the same
+time full of courage, and quite decided as to what
+she meant to do. He should not again escape
+her, not be allowed to slip away from her. But
+in spite of her courage she did not dare to tell him
+straight out that these were the tunes he had
+played whilst he was out of his mind; she evaded
+the question.</p>
+
+<p>'That was what you used to play at Munkhyttan
+last winter,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>Hede felt as if he were surrounded by nothing
+but mysteries. Why did this young girl say '<em><span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">du</span></em>'
+to him? She was not a peasant girl.<a name="FNanchor_A" id="FNanchor_A"></a><a href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> Her hair<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+was dressed like other young ladies', on the top of
+the head and in small curls. Her dress was home-woven,
+but she wore a lace collar. She had small
+hands and a refined face. This face, with the
+large, dreamy eyes, could not belong to a peasant
+girl. Hede's memory could not tell him anything
+about her. Why did she, then, say '<em><span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">du</span></em>' to
+him? How did she know that he had played
+these tunes at home?</p>
+
+<p>'What is your name?' he said. 'Who are
+you?'</p>
+
+<p>'I am Ingrid, whom you saw at Upsala many
+years ago, and whom you comforted because she
+could not learn to dance on the tight-rope.'</p>
+
+<p>This went back to the time he could partly remember.
+Now he did remember her.</p>
+
+<p>'How tall and pretty you have grown, Ingrid!'
+he said. 'And how fine you have become!
+What a beautiful brooch you have!'</p>
+
+<p>He had been looking at her brooch for some
+time. He thought he knew it; it was like a
+brooch of enamel and pearls his mother used to
+wear. The young girl answered at once.</p>
+
+<p>'Your mother gave it to me. You must have
+seen it before.'</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede put down the violin and went up
+to Ingrid. He asked her almost violently:</p>
+
+<p>'How is it possible&mdash;how can you wear her
+brooch? How is it that I don't know anything
+about your knowing my mother?'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was frightened. She grew almost gray
+with terror. She knew already what the next
+question would be.</p>
+
+<p>'I know nothing, Ingrid. I don't know why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+I am here. I don't know why you are here. Why
+don't I know all this?'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, don't ask me!'</p>
+
+<p>She went back a step or two, and stretched out
+her hands as if to protect herself.</p>
+
+<p>'Won't you tell me?'</p>
+
+<p>'Don't ask! don't ask!'</p>
+
+<p>He seized her roughly by the wrist to compel
+her to tell the truth.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me! I am in my full senses! Why is
+there so much I can't remember?'</p>
+
+<p>She saw something wild and threatening in his
+eyes. She knew now that she would be obliged
+to tell him. But she felt as if it were impossible
+to tell a man that he had been mad. It was much
+more difficult than she had thought. It was impossible&mdash;impossible!</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me!' he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>But she could hear from his voice that he would
+not hear it. He was almost ready to kill her if
+she told him. Then she summoned up all her
+love, and looked straight into Gunnar Hede's
+eyes, and said:</p>
+
+<p>'You have not been quite right.'</p>
+
+<p>'Not for a long time?'</p>
+
+<p>'I don't quite know&mdash;not for three or four
+years.'</p>
+
+<p>'Have I been out of my mind?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, no! You have bought and sold and gone
+to the fairs.'</p>
+
+<p>'In what way have I been mad?'</p>
+
+<p>'You were frightened.'</p>
+
+<p>'Of whom was I frightened?'</p>
+
+<p>'Of animals.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Of goats, perhaps?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, mostly of goats.'</p>
+
+<p>He had stood clutching her by the wrist the
+whole time. He now flung her hand away from
+him&mdash;simply flung it. He turned away from Ingrid
+in a rage, as if she had maliciously told him
+an infamous lie.</p>
+
+<p>But this feeling gave way for something else
+which excited him still more. He saw before his
+eyes, as distinctly as if it had been a picture, a tall
+Dalar man, weighed down by a huge pack. He
+was going into a peasant's house, but a wretched
+little dog came rushing at him. He stopped and
+curtsied and curtsied, and did not dare to go in
+until a man came out of the house, laughing, and
+drove the dog away.</p>
+
+<p>When he saw this he again felt that terrible
+fear. In this anguish the vision disappeared, but
+then he heard voices. They shouted and shrieked
+around him. They laughed. Derision was showered
+upon him. Worst and loudest were the
+shrill voices of children. One word, one name
+came over and over again: it was shouted,
+shrieked, whispered, wheezed into his ear&mdash;'The
+Goat! the Goat!' And that all meant him, Gunnar
+Hede. All that he had lived in. He felt in
+full consciousness the same unspeakable fear he
+had suffered whilst out of his mind. But now it
+was not fear for anything outside himself&mdash;now
+he was afraid of himself.</p>
+
+<p>'It was I! it was I!' he said, wringing his
+hands. The next moment he was kneeling
+against a low seat. He laid his head down and
+cried, cried: 'It was I!' He moaned and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+sobbed. 'It was I!' How could he have courage
+to bear this thought&mdash;a madman, scorned
+and laughed at by all? 'Ah! let me go mad
+again!' he said, hitting the seat with his fist.
+'This is more than a human being can bear.'</p>
+
+<p>He held his breath a moment. The darkness
+came towards him as the saviour he invoked. It
+came gliding towards him like a mist. A smile
+passed over his lips. He could feel the muscles
+of his face relax, feel that he again had the look
+of a madman. But that was better. The other
+he could not bear. To be pointed at, jeered at,
+scorned, mad! No, it was better to be so again
+and not to know it. Why should he come back
+to life? Everyone must loathe him. The first
+light, fleeting clouds of the great darkness began
+to enwrap him.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid stood there, seeing and hearing all his
+anguish, not knowing but that all would soon be
+lost again. She saw clearly that madness was
+again about to seize him. She was so frightened,
+so frightened, all her courage had gone. But before
+he again lost his senses, and became so
+scared that he allowed no one to come near him,
+she would at least take leave of him and of all
+her happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede felt that Ingrid came and knelt
+down beside him, laid her arm round his neck,
+put her cheek to his, and kissed him. She did not
+think herself too good to come near him, the
+madman, did not think herself too good to kiss
+him.</p>
+
+<p>There was a faint hissing in the darkness. The
+mist lifted, and it was as if serpents had raised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+their heads against him, and now wheezed with
+anger that they could not reach to sting him.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not be so unhappy,' Ingrid said. 'Do not
+be so unhappy. No one thinks of the past, if you
+will only get well.'</p>
+
+<p>'I want to be mad again,' he said. 'I cannot
+bear it. I cannot bear to think how I have been.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, you can,' said Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'No; that no one can forget,' he moaned. 'I
+was so dreadful! No one can love me.'</p>
+
+<p>'I love you,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>'You kissed me in order that I should not go
+out of my mind again. You pity me.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will kiss you again,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>'You say that now because you think I am in
+need of hearing it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Are you in need of hearing that someone loves
+you?'</p>
+
+<p>'If I am&mdash;if I am? Ah, child,' he said, and tore
+himself away from her, 'how can I possibly bear
+it, when I know that everyone who sees me
+thinks: "That fellow has been mad; he has gone
+about curtsying for dogs and cats."'</p>
+
+<p>Then he began again. He lay crying with his
+face in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>'It is better to go out of one's mind again. I
+can hear them shouting after me, and I see myself,
+and the anguish, the anguish, the anguish&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>But then Ingrid's patience came to an end.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, that is right,' she cried; 'go out of your
+mind again. I call that manly to go mad in order
+to escape a little anguish.'</p>
+
+<p>She sat biting her lips, struggling with her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+tears, and as she could not get the words out
+quickly enough, she seized him by the shoulder
+and shook him. She was enraged and quite beside
+herself with anger because he would again
+escape her, because he did not struggle and
+fight.</p>
+
+<p>'What do you care about me? What do you
+care about your mother? You go mad, and then
+you will have peace.' She shook him again by
+the arm. 'To be saved from anguish, you say,
+but you don't care about one who has been waiting
+for you all her life. If you had any thought
+for anyone but yourself, you would fight against
+this and get well; but you have no thought for
+others. You can come so touchingly in visions
+and dreams and beg for help, but in reality you
+will not have any help. You imagine that your
+sufferings are greater than anyone else's, but
+there are others who have suffered more than
+you.'</p>
+
+<p>At last Gunnar Hede raised his eyes, and
+looked her straight in the face. She was anything
+but beautiful at this moment. Tears were
+streaming down her cheeks, and her lips trembled,
+whilst she tried to get out the words between her
+sobs. But in his eyes her emotion only made her
+more beautiful. A wonderful peace came over
+him, and a great and humble thankfulness.
+Something great and wonderful had come to him
+in his deepest humiliation. It must be a great
+love&mdash;a great love.</p>
+
+<p>He had sat bemoaning his wretchedness, and
+Love came and knocked at his door. He would
+not merely be tolerated when he came back to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+life; people would not only with difficulty refrain
+from laughing at him.</p>
+
+<p>There was one who loved him and longed for
+him. She spoke hardly to him, but he heard love
+trembling in every single word. He felt as if she
+were offering him thrones and kingdoms. She
+told him that whilst he had been out of his mind
+he had saved her life. He had awakened her from
+the dead, had helped her, protected her. But this
+was not enough for her; she would possess him
+altogether.</p>
+
+<p>When she kissed him he had felt a life-giving
+balm enter his sick soul, but he had hardly dared
+to think that it was love that made her. But he
+could not doubt her anger and her tears. He
+was beloved&mdash;he, poor wretched creature! he
+who had been held in derision by everybody! and
+before the great and humble bliss which now
+filled Gunnar Hede vanished the last darkness. It
+was drawn aside like a heavy curtain, and he saw
+plainly before him the region of terror through
+which he had wandered. But there, too, he had
+met Ingrid; there he had lifted her from the
+grave; there he had played for her at the hut in
+the forest; there she had striven to heal him.</p>
+
+<p>But only the memory of her came back: the
+feelings with which she had formerly inspired him
+now awoke. Love filled his whole being; he felt
+the same burning longing that he had felt in the
+churchyard at Raglanda when she was taken from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>In that region of terror, in that great desert,
+there had at any rate grown one flower that had
+comforted him with fragrance and beauty, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+now he felt that love would dwell with him forever.
+The wild flower of the desert had been
+transplanted into the garden of life, and had taken
+root and grown and thriven, and when he felt this
+he knew he was saved; he knew that the darkness
+had found its master.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was silent. She was tired, as one is tired
+after hard work; but she was also content, for
+she felt she had carried out her work in the best
+possible manner. She knew she had conquered.</p>
+
+<p>At last Gunnar Hede broke the silence.</p>
+
+<p>'I promise you that I will not give in,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'Thank you,' Ingrid answered.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing more was said.</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede thought he would never be able
+to tell her how much he loved her. It could never
+be told in words, only shown every day and every
+hour of his life.</p>
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_A" id="Footnote_A" href="#FNanchor_A"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> The peasants in the Dalar district used formerly to address
+everybody by the pronoun <em><span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">du</span></em> (thou), even when speaking to
+the King; this custom is now, however, not so general.&mdash;I.B.</p></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Queens at Kungah&auml;lla">II. <a name="Queens_at_Kungahalla" id="Queens_at_Kungahalla"><span class="dec_italic">Queens at</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">II</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">Queens at</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">Queens at</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="Site" id="Site"><span class="dec_italic">On the</span> <span class="smcap">Site</span> <span class="dec_italic">of the Great</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></a></h3>
+
+<p>Should a stranger who had heard about
+the old city of Kungah&auml;lla ever visit the site
+on the northern river where it once lay, he
+would assuredly be much surprised. He would
+ask himself whether churches and fortifications
+could melt away like snow, or if the earth had
+opened and swallowed them up. He stands on
+a spot where formerly there was a mighty city,
+and he cannot find a street or a landing-stage.
+He sees neither ruins nor traces of devastating
+fires; he only sees a country seat, surrounded by
+green trees and red outbuildings. He sees nothing
+but broad meadows and fields, where the
+plough does its work year after year without being
+hindered either by brick foundations or old
+pavements.</p>
+
+<p>He would probably first of all go down to the
+river. He would not expect to see anything of
+the great ships that went to the Baltic ports or to
+distant Spain, but he would in all likelihood think
+that he might find traces of the old ship-yards, of
+the large boat-houses and landing-stages. He
+presumes that he will find some of the old kilns
+where they used to refine salt; he will see the
+worn-out pavement on the main street that led to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+the harbour. He will inquire about the German
+pier and the Swedish pier; he would like to see
+the Weeping Bridge where the women of Kungah&auml;lla
+took leave of their husbands and sons when
+they went to distant lands, but when he comes
+down to the river's edge he sees nothing but a
+forest of waving reeds. He sees a road full of
+holes leading down to the ferry; he sees a couple
+of common barges and a little flat-bottomed ferryboat
+that is taking a peasant cart over to Hisingen,
+but no big ships come gliding up the river.
+He does not even see any dark hulls lying and
+rotting at the bottom of the river.</p>
+
+<p>As he does not find anything remarkable down
+at the harbour, he will probably begin to look for
+the celebrated Convent Hill. He expects to see
+traces of the palisading and ramparts which in
+olden days surrounded it. He is hoping to see
+the ruins of the high walls and the long cloisters.
+He says to himself that anyhow there must be
+ruins of that magnificent church where the cross
+was kept&mdash;that miracle-working cross which had
+been brought from Jerusalem. He thinks of the
+number of monuments covering the holy hills
+which rise over other ancient cities, and his heart
+begins to beat with glad expectation. But when
+he comes to the old Convent Hill which rises
+above the fields, he finds nothing but clusters of
+murmuring trees; he finds neither walls, nor towers,
+nor gables perforated with pointed arched
+windows. Garden seats and benches he will find
+under the shadow of the trees, but no cloisters
+decorated with pillars, no hewn gravestones.</p>
+
+<p>Well, if he has not found anything here, he will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+in any case try to find the old King's Hall. He
+thinks about the large halls from which Kungah&auml;lla
+is supposed to have derived its name. It
+might be that there was something left of the
+timber&mdash;a yard thick&mdash;that formed the walls, or
+of the deep cellars under the great hall where the
+Norwegian kings celebrated their banquets. He
+thinks of the smooth green courtyard of the
+King's Hall, where the kings used to ride their
+silver-shod chargers, and where the queens used
+to milk the golden-horned cows. He thinks of
+the lofty ladies' bower; of the brewing-room, with
+its large boilers; of the huge kitchen, where half
+an ox at a time was placed in the pot, and where a
+whole hog was roasted on the spit. He thinks of
+the serfs' house, of the falcon's cages, of the great
+pantries&mdash;house by house all round the courtyard,
+moss-grown with age, decorated with
+dragons' heads. Of such a number of buildings
+there must be some traces left, he thinks.</p>
+
+<p>But should he then inquire for the old King's
+Hall, he will be taken to a modern country-house,
+with glass veranda and conservatories. The
+King's seat has vanished, and with it all the drinking-horns,
+inlaid with silver, and the shields, covered
+with skin. One cannot even show him the
+well-kept courtyard, with its short, close grass,
+and with narrow paths of black earth. He sees
+strawberry-beds and hedges of rose-trees; he
+sees happy children and young girls dancing under
+apple and pear trees. But he does not see
+strong men wrestling, or knights playing at ball.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps he asks about the great oak on the
+Market Place, beneath which the Kings sat in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+judgment, and where the twelve stones of judgment
+were set up. Or about the long street,
+which was said to be seven miles long! Or about
+the rich merchants' houses, separated by dark
+lanes, each having its own landing-stage and
+boathouse down by the river. Or about the
+Marie Church in the Market Place, where the
+seamen brought their offerings of small, full-rigged
+ships, and the sorrowful, small silver
+hearts.</p>
+
+<p>But there is nothing left to show him of all
+these things. Cows and sheep graze where the
+long street used to be. Rye and barley grow on
+the Market Place, and stables and barns stand
+where people used to flock round the tempting
+market-stalls.</p>
+
+<p>How can he help feeling disappointed? Is
+there not a single thing to be found, he says, not
+a single relic left? And he thinks perhaps that
+they have been deceiving him. The great Kungah&auml;lla
+can never have stood here, he says. It
+must have stood in some other place.</p>
+
+<p>Then they take him down to the riverside, and
+show him a roughly-hewn stone block, and they
+scrape away the silver-gray lichen, so that he can
+see there are some figures hewn in the stone. He
+will not be able to understand what they represent;
+they will be as incomprehensible to him as
+the spots in the moon. But they will assure him
+that they represent a ship and an elk, and that
+they were cut in the stone in the olden days
+to commemorate the foundation of the city.</p>
+
+<p>And should he still not be able to understand,
+they will tell him what is the meaning of the inscription
+on the stone.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="Forest" id="Forest"><span class="dec_italic">The Forest</span> <span class="smcap">Queen</span></a></h3>
+
+<p>Marcus Antonius Poppius was a Roman
+merchant of high standing. He traded with distant
+lands; and from the harbour at Ostia he
+sent well-equipped triremas to Spain, to Britain,
+and even to the north coast of Germany. Fortune
+favoured him, and he amassed immense
+riches, which he hoped to leave as an inheritance
+to his only son. Unfortunately, this only son
+had not inherited his father's ability. This happens,
+unfortunately, all the world over. A rich
+man's only son. Need one say more? It is,
+and always will be, the same story.</p>
+
+<p>One would almost think that the gods give rich
+men these incorrigible idlers, these dull, pale, languid
+fools of sons, to show man what unutterable
+folly it is to amass riches. When will the eyes of
+mankind be opened? When will men listen to
+the warning voice of the gods?</p>
+
+<p>Young Silvius Antonius Poppius, at the age of
+twenty, had already tried all the pleasures of life.
+He was also fond of letting people see that he was
+tired of them; but in spite of that, one did not notice
+any diminution in the eagerness with which
+he sought them. On the contrary, he was quite
+in despair when a singularly persistent ill-luck began
+to pursue him, and to interfere with all his
+pleasures. His Numidian horses fell lame the
+day before the great chariot race of the year; his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+illicit love affairs were found out; his cleverest
+cook died from malaria. This was more than
+enough to crush a man whose strength had not
+been hardened by exertion and toil. Young
+Poppius felt so unhappy that he made up his mind
+to take his own life. He seemed to think that this
+was the only way in which he could cheat the God
+of Misfortune who pursued him and made his life
+a burden.</p>
+
+<p>One can understand that an unhappy creature
+commits suicide in order to escape the persecution
+of man; but only a fool like Silvius Antonius
+could think of adopting such means to flee from
+the gods. One recalls involuntarily the story of
+the man who, to escape from the lion, sprang right
+into its open jaws.</p>
+
+<p>Young Silvius was much too effeminate to
+choose a bloody death. Neither had he any inclination
+to die from a painful poison. After careful
+consideration, he resolved to die the gentle
+death of the waves.</p>
+
+<p>But when he went down to the Tiber to drown
+himself he could not make up his mind to give his
+body to the dirty, sluggish water of the river.
+For a long time he stood undecided, staring into
+the stream. Then he was seized by the magic
+charm which lies dreamily over a river. He felt
+that great, holy longing which fills these never-resting
+wanderers of nature; he would see the sea.</p>
+
+<p>'I will die in the clear blue sea, through which
+the sun's rays penetrate right to the bottom,' said
+Silvius Antonius. 'My body shall rest upon a
+couch of pink coral. The foamy waves which I
+set in motion when I sink into the deep shall be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+snow-white and fresh; they shall not be like the
+sooty froth which lies quivering at the river-side.'</p>
+
+<p>He immediately hurried home, had his horses
+harnessed and drove to Ostia. He knew that one
+of his father's ships was lying in the harbour
+ready to sail. Young Poppius drove his horses
+at a furious pace, and he succeeded in getting on
+board just as the anchor was being weighed. Of
+course he did not think it necessary to take any
+baggage with him. He did not even trouble to
+ask the skipper for what place the craft was
+bound. To the sea they were going, in any case&mdash;that
+was enough for him.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was it very long before the young suicide
+reached the goal of his desire. The trirema
+passed the mouth of the Tiber, and the Mediterranean
+lay before Silvius Antonius, its sparkling
+waves bathed in sun. Its beauty made Silvius
+Antonius believe in the poet's assertion that the
+swelling ocean is but a thin veil which covers the
+most beautiful world. He felt bound to believe
+that he who boldly makes his way through this
+cover will immediately reach the sea-god's palace
+of pearls. The young man congratulated himself
+that he had chosen this manner of death. And
+one could scarcely call it that; it was impossible
+to believe that this beautiful water could kill. It
+was only the shortest road to a land where pleasure
+is not a delusion, leaving nothing but distaste
+and loathing. He could only with difficulty suppress
+his eagerness. But the whole deck was
+full of sailors. Even Silvius could understand
+that if he now sprang into the sea the consequence
+would simply be that one of his father's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+sailors would quickly spring overboard and fish
+him out.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the sails were set and the oarsmen
+were well in swing, the skipper came up to him
+and saluted him with the greatest politeness.</p>
+
+<p>'You intend, then, to go with me to Germany,
+my Silvius?' he said. 'You do me great honour.'</p>
+
+<p>Young Poppius suddenly remembered that
+this man used never to return from a voyage without
+bringing him some curious thing or other
+from the barbarous countries he had visited.
+Sometimes it was a couple of pieces of wood with
+which the savages made fire; sometimes it was
+the black horn of an ox, which they used as a
+drinking-vessel; sometimes a necklace of bear's
+teeth, which had been a great chief's mark of distinction.</p>
+
+<p>The good man beamed with joy at having his
+master's son on board his ship. He saw in it a
+new proof of the wisdom of old Poppius, in sending
+his son to distant lands, instead of letting him
+waste more time amongst the effeminate young
+Roman idlers.</p>
+
+<p>Young Poppius did not wish to undeceive him.
+He was afraid that if he disclosed his intention
+the skipper would at once turn back with him.</p>
+
+<p>'Verily, Galenus,' he said, 'I would gladly accompany
+you on this voyage, but I fear I must
+ask you to put me ashore at Baj&aelig;. I made up my
+mind too late. I have neither clothes nor money.'</p>
+
+<p>But Galenus assured him that that need was
+soon remedied. Was he not upon his father's
+well-appointed vessel? He should not want for
+anything&mdash;neither warm fur tunic when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+weather was cold, or light Syrian clothing of the
+kind that seamen wear when they cruise in fair
+weather in the friendly seas between the islands.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Three months after their departure from Ostia,
+Galenus's trirema rowed in amongst a cluster of
+rocky islands. Neither the skipper nor any of his
+crew were quite clear as to where they really
+were, but they were glad to take shelter for a
+time from the storms that raged on the open sea.</p>
+
+<p>One could almost think that Silvius Antonius
+was right in his belief that some deity persecuted
+him. No one on the ship had ever before experienced
+such a voyage. The luckless sailors
+said to each other that they had not had fair
+weather for two days since they left Ostia. The
+one storm had followed upon the other. They
+had undergone the most terrible sufferings. They
+had suffered hunger and thirst, whilst they, day
+and night, exhausted and almost fainting from
+want of sleep, had had to manage sails and oars.
+The fact of the seamen being unable to trade had
+added to their despondency. How could they
+approach the coast and display their wares on the
+shore to effect an exchange in such weather? On
+the contrary, every time they saw the coast appear
+through the obstinate heavy mist that surrounded
+them, they had been compelled to put
+out to sea again for fear of the foam-decked rocks.
+One night, when they struck on a rock, they had
+been obliged to throw the half of their cargo into
+the sea. And as for the other half, they dared not
+think about it, as they feared it was completely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+spoiled by the breakers which had rolled over the
+ship.</p>
+
+<p>Certain it was that Silvius Antonius had proved
+himself not to be lucky at sea either. Silvius
+Antonius was still living; he had not drowned
+himself. It is difficult to say why he prolonged an
+existence which could not be of any more pleasure
+to him now than when he first made up his
+mind to cut it short. Perhaps he had hoped that
+the sea would have taken possession of him without
+he himself doing anything to bring it about.
+Perhaps his love for the sea had passed away during
+its bursts of anger; perhaps he had resolved
+to die in the opal-green perfumed water of his
+bath.</p>
+
+<p>But had Galenus and his men known why the
+young man had come on board, they would assuredly
+have bitterly complained that he had not
+carried out his intention, for they were all convinced
+that it was his presence which had called
+forth their misfortunes. Many a dark night Galenus
+had feared that the sailors would throw him
+into the sea. More than one of them related that
+in the terrible stormy nights he had seen dark
+hands stretching out of the water, grasping after
+the ship. And they did not think it was necessary
+to cast lots to find out who it was that these hands
+wanted to draw down into the deep. Both the
+skipper and the crew did Silvius Antonius the
+special honour to think that it was for his sake
+these storms rent the air and scourged the sea.</p>
+
+<p>If Silvius during this time had behaved like a
+man, if he had taken his share of their work and
+anxiety, then perhaps some of his companions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+might have had pity upon him as a being who had
+brought upon himself the wrath of the gods. But
+the young man had not understood how to win
+their sympathy. He had only thought of seeking
+shelter for himself from the wind, and of sending
+them to fetch furs and rugs from the stores for his
+protection from the cold.</p>
+
+<p>But for the moment all complaints over his
+presence had ceased. As soon as the storm had
+succeeded in driving the trirema into the quiet
+waters between the islands, its rage was spent.
+It behaved like a sheep-dog that becomes silent
+and keeps quiet as soon as it sees the sheep on the
+right way to the fold. The heavy clouds disappeared
+from the sky; the sun shone. For the first
+time during the voyage the sailors felt the joys
+of summer spreading over Nature.</p>
+
+<p>Upon these storm-beaten men the sunshine and
+the warmth had almost an intoxicating effect.
+Instead of longing for rest and sleep, they became
+as merry as happy children in the morning.
+They expected they would find a large continent
+behind all these rocks and boulders. They hoped
+to find people, and&mdash;who could tell?&mdash;on this
+foreign coast, which had probably never before
+been visited by a Roman ship, their wares would
+no doubt find a ready sale. In that case they
+might after all do some good business, and bring
+back with them skins of bear and elk, and large
+quantities of white wax and golden amber.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the trirema slowly made its way between
+the rocks, which grew higher and higher
+and richer with verdure and trees, the crew made
+haste to decorate it so that it could attract the at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>tention
+of the barbarians. The ship, which, even
+without any decoration, was a beautiful specimen
+of human handiwork, soon rivalled in splendour
+the most gorgeous bird. Recently tossed about
+by storms and ravaged by tempests, it now bore
+on its topmast a golden sceptre and sails striped
+with purple. In the bows a resplendent figure of
+Neptune was raised, and in the stern a tent of
+many-coloured silken carpets. And do not think
+the sailors neglected to hang the sides of the ship
+with rugs, the fringes of which trailed in the
+water, or to wind the long oars of the ship with
+golden ribbons. Neither did the crew of the ship
+wear the clothes they had worn during the
+voyage, and which the sea and the storm had
+done their best to destroy. They arrayed themselves
+in white garments, wound purple scarves
+round their waists, and placed glittering bands in
+their hair.</p>
+
+<p>Even Silvius Antonius roused himself from his
+apathy. It was as if he was glad of having at last
+found something to do which he thoroughly understood.
+He was shaved, had his hair trimmed,
+and his whole person rubbed over with fragrant
+scents. Then he put on a flowing robe, hung a
+mantle over his shoulders, and chose from the
+large casket of jewels which Galenus opened for
+him rings and bracelets, necklaces, and a golden
+belt. When he was ready he flung aside the purple
+curtains of the silken tent, and laid himself on
+a couch in the opening of the tent in order to be
+seen by the people on the shore.</p>
+
+<p>During these preparations the sea became
+narrower and narrower, and the sailors dis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>covered
+that they were entering the mouth of
+a river. The water was fresh, and there was
+land on both sides. The trirema glided slowly
+onwards up the sparkling river. The weather
+was brilliant, and the whole of nature was
+gloriously peaceful. And how the magnificent
+merchantman enlivened the great solitude!</p>
+
+<p>On both sides of the river primeval forests,
+high and thick, met their view. Pine-trees grew
+right to the water's edge. The river in its eternal
+course had washed away the earth from the
+roots, and the hearts of the seamen were moved
+with solemn awe at the sight, not only of these
+venerable trees, but even more by that of the
+naked roots, which resembled the mighty limbs
+of a giant. 'Here,' they thought, 'man will
+never succeed in planting corn; here the ground
+will never be cleared for the building of a city,
+or even a farmstead. For miles round the earth
+is woven through with this network of roots,
+hard as steel. This alone is sufficient to make
+the dominion of the forest everlasting and unchangeable.'</p>
+
+<p>Along the river the trees grew so close, and
+their branches were so entangled, that they
+formed firm, impenetrable walls. These walls of
+prickly firs were so strong and high that no fortified
+city need wish for stronger defences. But
+here and there there was, all the same, an opening
+in this wall of firs. It was the paths the wild
+beasts had made on their way to the river to
+drink. Through these openings the strangers
+could obtain a glimpse of the interior of the forest.
+They had never seen anything like it. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+sunless twilight there grew trees with trunks
+of greater circumference than the gate-towers on
+the walls of Rome. There was a multitude of
+trees, fighting with each other for light and air.
+Trees strove and struggled, trees were crippled
+and weighed down by other trees. Trees took
+root in the branches of other trees. Trees strove
+and fought as if they had been human beings.</p>
+
+<p>But if man or beast moved in this world of
+trees they must have other modes of making
+their way than those which the Romans knew,
+for from the ground right up to the top of the
+forest was a network of stiff bare branches.
+From these branches fluttered long tangles of
+gray lichen, transforming the trees into weird
+beings with hair and beard. And beneath them
+the ground was covered with rotten and rotting
+trunks, and one's feet would have sunk into the
+decayed wood as into melting snow.</p>
+
+<p>The forest sent forth a fragrance which had
+a drowsy effect upon the men on board the
+ship. It was the strong odour of resin and wild
+honey that blended with the sickly smell from
+the decayed wood, and from innumerable gigantic
+red and yellow mushrooms.</p>
+
+<p>There was no doubt something awe-inspiring
+in all this, but it was also elevating to see nature
+in all its power before man had yet interfered
+with its dominion. It was not long before one
+of the sailors began to sing a hymn to the God
+of the Forest, and involuntarily the whole crew
+joined in. They had quite given up all thought
+of meeting human beings in this forest-world.
+Their hearts were filled with pious thoughts;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+they thought of the forest god and his nymphs.
+They said to themselves that when Pan was
+driven from the woods of Hellas he must have
+taken refuge here in the far north. With pious
+songs they entered his kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Every time there was a pause in the song
+they heard a gentle music from the forest. The
+tops of the fir-trees, vibrating in the noonday
+heat, sang and played. The sailors often discontinued
+their song in order to listen, if Pan
+was not playing upon his flute.</p>
+
+<p>The oarsmen rowed slower and slower. The
+sailors gazed searchingly into the golden-green
+and black-violet water flowing under the fir-trees.
+They peered between the tall reeds which
+quivered and rustled in the wash of the ship.
+They were in such a state of expectation that
+they started at the sight of the white water-lilies
+that shone in the dark water between the
+reeds.</p>
+
+<p>And again they sang the song, 'Pan, thou
+ruler of the forest!' They had given up all
+thoughts of trading. They felt that they stood
+at the entrance to the dwelling of the gods.
+All earthly cares had left them. Then, all of
+a sudden, at the outlet of one of the tracks, there
+stood an elk, a royal deer with broad forehead
+and a forest of antlers on its horns.</p>
+
+<p>There was a breathless silence on the trirema.
+They stemmed the oars to slacken speed. Silvius
+Antonius arose from his purple couch.</p>
+
+<p>All eyes were fixed upon the elk. They
+thought they could discern that it carried something
+on its back, but the darkness of the forest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+and the drooping branches made it impossible
+to see distinctly.</p>
+
+<p>The huge animal stood for a long time and
+scented the air, with its muzzle turned towards
+the trirema. At last it seemed to understand
+that there was no danger. It made a step towards
+the water. Behind the broad horns one
+could now discern more distinctly something
+light and white. They wondered if the elk carried
+on its back a harvest of wild roses.</p>
+
+<p>The crew gently plied their oars. The trirema
+drew nearer to the animal, which gradually
+moved towards the edge of the reeds.</p>
+
+<p>The elk strode slowly into the water, put down
+its feet carefully, so as not to be caught by the
+roots at the bottom. Behind the horns one
+could now distinctly see the face of a maiden,
+surrounded by fair hair. The elk carried on its
+back one of those nymphs whom they had been
+expectantly awaiting, and whom they felt sure
+would be found in this primeval world.</p>
+
+<p>A holy enthusiasm filled the men on the
+trirema. One of them, who hailed from Sicily,
+remembered a song which he had heard in his
+youth, when he played on the flowery plains
+around Syracuse. He began to sing softly:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou who in sheltered wood wanders, white like the moon.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And when the weather-beaten men understood
+the words, they tried to subdue the storm-like
+roar in their voices in order to sing:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name.'<br /></span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span></div></div>
+
+<p>They steered the ship nearer and nearer the
+reeds. They did not heed that it had already
+once or twice touched the bottom.</p>
+
+<p>But the young forest maiden sat and played
+hide-and-seek between the horns. One moment
+she hid herself, the next she peeped out. She
+did not stop the elk; she drove it further into
+the river.</p>
+
+<p>When the elk had gone some little distance,
+she stroked it to make it stop. Then she bent
+down and gathered two or three water-lilies.
+The men on the ship looked a little foolishly at
+each other. The nymph had, then, come solely
+for the purpose of plucking the white water-lilies
+that rocked on the waters of the river. She had
+not come for the sake of the Roman seamen.</p>
+
+<p>Then Silvius Antonius drew a ring from off
+his finger, sent up a shout that made the nymph
+look up, and threw her the ring. She stretched
+out her hand and caught it. Her eyes sparkled.
+She stretched out her hands for more. Silvius
+Antonius again threw a ring.</p>
+
+<p>Then she flung the water-lilies back into the
+river and drove the elk further into the water.
+Now and again she stopped, but then a ring
+came flying from Silvius Antonius, and enticed
+her further.</p>
+
+<p>All at once she overcame her hesitation. The
+colour rose in her cheeks. She came nearer to
+the ship without it being necessary to tempt her.
+The water was already up to the shoulders of
+the elk. She came right under the side of the
+vessel.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors hung over the gunwales to help<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+the beautiful nymph, should she wish to go on
+board the trirema.</p>
+
+<p>But she saw only Silvius Antonius, as he stood
+there, decked with pearls and rings, and fair as
+the sunrise. And when the young Roman saw
+that the eyes of the nymph were fastened upon
+him, he leant over even further than the others.
+They cried to him that he should take care, lest
+he should lose his balance and fall into the sea.
+But this warning came too late. It is not known
+whether the nymph, with a quick movement,
+drew Silvius Antonius to her, or how it really
+happened, but before anyone thought of grasping
+him, he was overboard.</p>
+
+<p>All the same, there was no danger of Silvius
+Antonius drowning. The nymph stretched forth
+her lovely arms and caught him in them. He
+hardly touched the surface of the water. At the
+same moment her steed turned, rushed through
+the water, and disappeared in the forest. And
+loudly rang the laugh of the wild rider as she
+carried off Silvius Antonius.</p>
+
+<p>Galenus and his men stood for a moment
+horror-stricken. Then some of the men involuntarily
+threw off their clothes to swim to the
+shore; but Galenus stopped them.</p>
+
+<p>'Without doubt this is the will of the gods,'
+he said. 'Now we see the reason why they have
+brought Silvius Antonius Poppius through a
+thousand storms to this unknown land. Let us
+be glad that we have been an instrument in their
+hands; and let us not seek to hinder their
+will.'</p>
+
+<p>The seamen obediently took their oars and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+rowed down the river, softly singing to their
+even stroke the song of Arethusa's flight.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>When one has finished this story, surely the
+stranger must be able to understand the inscription
+on the old stone. He must be able to see
+both the elk with its many-antlered horns, and
+the trirema with its long oars. One does not
+expect that he shall be able to see Silvius Antonius
+Poppius and the beautiful queen of the
+primeval forest, for in order to see them he
+must have the eyes of the relaters of fairy-tales
+of bygone days. He will understand that the
+inscription hales from the young Roman himself,
+and that this also applies to the whole of the
+old story. Silvius Antonius has handed it down
+to his descendants word for word. He knew
+that it would gladden their hearts to know that
+they sprang from the world-famed Romans.</p>
+
+<p>But the stranger, of course, need not believe
+that any of Pan's nymphs have wandered here
+by the river's side. He understands quite well
+that a tribe of wild men have wandered about
+in the primeval forest, and that the rider of the
+elk was the daughter of the King who ruled over
+these people; and that the maiden who carried
+off Silvius Antonius would only rob him of his
+jewels, and that she did not at all think of Silvius
+Antonius himself, scarcely knew, perhaps, that
+he was a human being like herself. And the
+stranger can also understand that the name of
+Silvius Antonius would have been forgotten long
+ago in this country had he remained the fool he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+was. He will hear how misfortune and want
+roused the young Roman, so that from being
+the despised slave of the wild men he became
+their King. It was he who attacked the forest
+with fire and steel. He erected the first firmly-timbered
+house. He built vessels and planted
+corn. He laid the foundation of the power and
+glory of great Kungah&auml;lla.</p>
+
+<p>And when the stranger hears this, he looks
+around the country with a more contented
+glance than before. For even if the site of the
+city has been turned into fields and meadows,
+and even if the river no longer boasts of busy
+craft, still, this is the ground that has enabled
+him to breathe the air of the land of dreams, and
+shown him visions of bygone days.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="Sigrid" id="Sigrid"><span class="smcap">Sigrid Storr&auml;de</span></a></h3>
+
+<p>Once upon a time there was an exceedingly
+beautiful spring. It was the very spring that the
+Swedish Queen Sigrid Storr&auml;de summoned the
+Norwegian King Olaf Trygveson to meet her at
+Kungah&auml;lla in order to settle about their marriage.</p>
+
+<p>It was strange that King Olaf would marry
+Queen Sigrid; for although she was fair and
+well-gifted, she was a wicked heathen, whilst
+King Olaf was a Christian, who thought of
+nothing but building churches and compelling
+the people to be baptized. But maybe the King
+thought that God the Almighty would convert
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But it was even more strange that when Storr&auml;de
+had announced to King Olaf's messenger
+that she would set out for Kungah&auml;lla as soon
+as the sea was no longer ice-bound, spring should
+come almost immediately. Cold and snow disappeared
+at the time when winter is usually at
+its height. And when Storr&auml;de made known
+that she would begin to equip her ships, the ice
+vanished from the fjords, the meadows became
+green, and although it was yet a long time to
+Lady-day, the cattle could already be put out
+to grass.</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen rowed between the rocks of
+East Gothland into the Baltic, she heard the
+cuckoo's song, although it was so early in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+year that one could scarcely expect to hear the
+lark.</p>
+
+<p>And great joy prevailed everywhere when Storr&auml;de
+proceeded on her way. All the trolls who
+had been obliged to flee from Norway during
+King Olaf's reign because they could not bear
+the sound of the church bells came on the rocks
+when they saw Storr&auml;de sailing past. They
+pulled up young birch-trees by the roots and
+waved them to the Queen, and then they went
+back to their rocky dwellings, where their wives
+were sitting, full of longing and anxiety, and
+said:</p>
+
+<p>'Woman, thou shalt not be cast down any
+longer. Storr&auml;de is now sailing to King Olaf.
+Now we shall soon return to Norway.'</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen sailed past Kullen, the Kulla
+troll came out of his cave, and he made the black
+mountain open, so that she saw the gold and
+silver veins which twisted through it, and it made
+the Queen happy to see his riches.</p>
+
+<p>When Storr&auml;de went past the Holland rivers,
+the Nixie came down from his waterfall, swam
+right out to the mouth of the river, and played
+upon his harp, so that the ship danced upon the
+waves.</p>
+
+<p>When she sailed past the Nidinge rocks, the
+mermen lay there and blew upon their seashell
+horns, and made the water splash in frothy
+pillars. And when the wind was against them,
+the most loathsome trolls came out of the deep
+to help Storr&auml;de's ship over the waves. Some
+lay at the stern and pushed, others took ropes of
+seaweed in their mouth and harnessed themselves
+before the ship like horses.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The wild heathen, whom King Olaf would not
+allow to remain in the country on account of
+their great wickedness, came rowing towards the
+Queen's ship, with sails furled, and with their
+pole-axes raised as if for attack. But when they
+recognised the Queen, they allowed her to pass
+unhurt, and shouted after her:</p>
+
+<p>'We empty a beaker to thy wedding, Storr&auml;de.'</p>
+
+<p>All the heathen who lived along the coast laid
+firewood upon their stone altars, and sacrificed
+both sheep and goats to the old gods, in order
+that they should aid Storr&auml;de in her expedition
+to the Norwegian King.</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen sailed up the northern river,
+a mermaid swam alongside the ship, stretched
+her white arm out of the water, and gave her a
+large clear pearl.</p>
+
+<p>'Wear this, Storr&auml;de,' she said; 'then King
+Olaf will be so bewitched by thy beauty that he
+will never be able to forget thee.'</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen had sailed a short distance
+up the river, she heard such a roar and such a
+rushing noise that she expected to find a waterfall.
+The further she proceeded, the louder grew
+the noise. But when she rowed past the Golden
+Isle, and passed into a broad bay, she saw at
+the riverside the great Kungah&auml;lla.</p>
+
+<p>The town was so large, that as far as she could
+see up the river there was house after house, all
+imposing and well timbered, with many outhouses.
+Narrow lanes between the gray wooden
+walls led down to the river; there were large
+courtyards before the dwelling-houses, well-laid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+pathways went from each house down to its
+boathouse and landing-stage.</p>
+
+<p>Storr&auml;de commanded her men to row quite
+slowly. She herself stood on the poop of the
+ship and looked towards the shore.</p>
+
+<p>'Never before have I seen the like of this,' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>She now understood that the roar she had
+heard was nothing but the noise of the work
+which went on at Kungah&auml;lla in the spring, when
+the ships were being made ready for their long
+cruises. She heard the smiths hammering with
+huge sledge-hammers, the baker's shovel clattered
+in the ovens; beams were hoisted on to
+heavy lighters with much crashing noise; young
+men planed oars and stripped the bark from the
+trees which were to be used for masts.</p>
+
+<p>She saw green courtyards, where handmaidens
+were twining ropes for the seafaring men, and
+where old men sat mending the gray wadmal
+sails. She saw the boat-builders tarring the new
+boats. Enormous nails were driven into strong
+oaken planks. The hulls of the ships were
+hauled out of the boathouses to be tightened;
+old ships were done up with freshly-painted
+dragon-heads; goods were stowed away; people
+took a hurried leave of each other; heavily-filled
+ships' chests were carried on board. Ships that
+were ready to sail left the shore. Storr&auml;de saw
+that the vessels rowing up the river were heavily
+laden with herrings and salt, but those making
+for the open sea were laden high up the masts
+with costly oak timber, hides, and skins.</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen saw all this she laughed with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+joy. She thought that she would willingly marry
+King Olaf in order to rule over such a city.
+Storr&auml;de rowed up to the King's Landing-Stage.
+There King Olaf stood ready to receive her, and
+when she advanced to meet him he thought that
+she was the fairest woman he had ever seen.</p>
+
+<p>They then proceeded to the King's Hall, and
+there was great harmony and friendship between
+them. When they went to table Storr&auml;de
+laughed and talked the whole time the Bishop
+was saying grace, and the King laughed and
+talked also, because he saw that it pleased Storr&auml;de.
+When the meal was finished, and they all
+folded their hands to listen to the Bishop's
+prayer, Storr&auml;de began to tell the King about
+her riches. She continued doing this as long as
+the prayer lasted, and the King listened to Storr&auml;de,
+and not to the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>The King placed Storr&auml;de in the seat of
+honour, whilst he sat at her feet; and Storr&auml;de
+told him how she had caused two minor kings
+to be burnt to death for having had the presumption
+to woo her. The King was glad at
+hearing this, and thought that all minor kings
+who had the audacity to woo a woman like Storr&auml;de
+should share the same fate.</p>
+
+<p>When the bells rang for Evensong, the King
+rose to go to the Marie Church to pray, as was
+his wont. But then Storr&auml;de called for her bard,
+and he sang the lay of Brynhild Budles-dotter,
+who caused Sigurd Fofnersbane to be slain; and
+King Olaf did not go to church, but instead sat
+and looked into Storr&auml;de's radiant eyes, under the
+thick, black, arched eyebrows; and he under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>stood
+that Storr&auml;de was Brynhild, and that she
+would kill him if ever he forsook her. He also
+thought that she was no doubt a woman who
+would be willing to burn on the pile with him.
+And whilst the priests were saying Mass and
+praying in the Marie Church at Kungah&auml;lla,
+King Olaf sat thinking that he would ride to
+Valhalla with Sigrid Storr&auml;de before him on the
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>That night the ferryman who conveyed people
+over the G&ouml;ta River was busier than he had ever
+been before. Time after time he was called to
+the other side, but when he crossed over there
+was never anybody to be seen. But all the same
+he heard steps around him, and the boat was
+so full that it was nearly sinking. He rowed the
+whole night backwards and forwards, and did
+not know what it could all mean. But in the
+morning the whole shore was full of small footprints,
+and in the footprints the ferryman found
+small withered leaves, which on closer examination
+proved to be pure gold, and he understood
+they were the Brownies and Dwarfs who had
+fled from Norway when it became a Christian
+country, and who had now come back again.
+And the giant who lived in the Fortin mountain
+right to the east of Kungah&auml;lla threw one big
+stone after the other at the Marie Church the
+whole night through; and had not the giant
+been so strong that all the stones went too far
+and fell down at Hisingen, on the other side of
+the river, a great disaster would assuredly have
+happened.</p>
+
+<p>Every morning King Olaf was in the habit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+of going to Mass, but the day Storr&auml;de was at
+Kungah&auml;lla he thought he had not the time.
+As soon as he arose, he at once wanted to go
+down to the harbour, where her ship lay, in order
+to ask her if she would drink the wedding-cup
+with him before eventide.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop had caused the bells to be rung
+the whole morning, and when the King left the
+King's Hall, and went across the Market Place,
+the church doors were thrown open, and beautiful
+singing was heard from within. But the King
+went on as if he had not heard anything. The
+Bishop ordered the bells to be stopped, the
+singing ceased, and the candles were extinguished.</p>
+
+<p>It all happened so suddenly that the King
+involuntarily stopped and looked towards the
+church, and it seemed to him that the church
+was more insignificant than he had ever before
+thought. It was smaller than the houses in the
+town; the peat roof hung heavily over its low
+walls without windows; the door was low, with
+a small projecting roof covered with fir-bark.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the King stood thinking, a slender
+young woman came out of the dark church door.
+She wore a red robe and a blue mantle, and
+she bore in her arms a child with fair locks. Her
+dress was poor, and yet it seemed to the King
+that he had never before seen a more noble-looking
+woman. She was tall, dignified, and fair of
+face.</p>
+
+<p>The King saw with emotion that the young
+woman pressed the child close to her, and carried
+it with such care, that one could see it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+the most precious thing she possessed in the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>As the woman stood in the doorway she turned
+her gentle face round and looked back, looked
+into the poor, dark little church with great longing
+in look and mien. When she again turned
+round towards the Market Place there were tears
+in her eyes. But just as she was about to step
+over the threshold into the Market Place her
+courage failed her. She leant against the doorposts
+and looked at the child with a troubled
+glance, as if to say:</p>
+
+<p>'Where in all the wide world shall we find a
+roof over our heads?'</p>
+
+<p>The King stood immovable, and looked at the
+homeless woman. What touched him the most
+was to see the child, who lay in her arms free from
+sorrow, stretch out his hand with a flower towards
+her, as if to win a smile from her. And
+then he saw she tried to drive away the sorrow
+from her face and smile at her son.</p>
+
+<p>'Who can that woman be?' thought the King.
+'It seems to me that I have seen her before.
+She is undoubtedly a high-born woman who is
+in trouble.'</p>
+
+<p>However great a hurry the King was in to
+go to Storr&auml;de, he could not take his eyes away
+from the woman. It seemed to him that he had
+seen these tender eyes and this gentle face before,
+but where, he could not call to mind. The
+woman still stood in the church door, as if she
+could not tear herself away. Then the King
+went up to her and asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Why art thou so sorrowful?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I am turned out of my home,' answered the
+woman, pointing to the little dark church.</p>
+
+<p>The King thought she meant that she had
+taken refuge in the church because she had no
+other place to go to. He again asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Who hath turned thee out?'</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with an unutterably sorrowful
+glance.</p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou not know?' she asked.</p>
+
+<p>But then the King turned away from her. He
+had no time to stand guessing riddles, he
+thought. It appeared as if the woman meant
+that it was he who had turned her out. He did
+not understand what she could mean.</p>
+
+<p>The King went on quickly. He went down to
+the King's Landing-Stage, where Storr&auml;de's
+ship was lying. At the harbour the Queen's
+servants met the King. Their clothes were
+braided with gold, and they wore silver helmets
+on their heads.</p>
+
+<p>Storr&auml;de stood on her ship looking towards
+Kungah&auml;lla, rejoicing in its power and wealth.
+She looked at the city as if she already regarded
+herself as its Queen. But when the King saw
+Storr&auml;de, he thought at once of the gentle
+woman who, poor and sorrowful, had been
+turned out of the church.</p>
+
+<p>'What is this?' he thought. 'It seems to me
+as if she were fairer than Storr&auml;de.'</p>
+
+<p>When Storr&auml;de greeted him with smiles, he
+thought of the tears that sparkled in the eyes of
+the other woman. The face of the strange
+woman was so clear to King Olaf that he could
+not help comparing it, feature for feature, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+Storr&auml;de's. And when he did that all Storr&auml;de's
+beauty vanished. He saw that Storr&auml;de's eyes
+were cruel and her mouth sensual. In each of
+her features he saw a sin. He could still see
+she was beautiful, but he no longer took pleasure
+in her countenance. He began to loathe her
+as if she were a beautiful poisonous snake.</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen saw the King come a victorious
+smile passed over her lips.</p>
+
+<p>'I did not expect thee so early, King Olaf,'
+she said. 'I thought thou wast at Mass.'</p>
+
+<p>The King felt an irresistible inclination to contradict
+Storr&auml;de, and do everything she did not
+want.</p>
+
+<p>'Mass has not yet begun,' he said. 'I have
+come to ask thee to go with me to the house of
+my God.'</p>
+
+<p>When the King said this he saw an angry look
+in Storr&auml;de's eyes, but she continued to smile.</p>
+
+<p>'Rather come to me on my ship,' she said,
+'and I will show thee the presents I have
+brought for thee.'</p>
+
+<p>She took up a sword inlaid with gold, as if to
+tempt him; but the King thought all the
+time that he could see the other woman at her
+side, and it appeared to him that Storr&auml;de stood
+amongst her treasures like a foul dragon.</p>
+
+<p>'Answer me first,' said the King, 'if thou wilt
+go with me to church.'</p>
+
+<p>'What have I to do in thy church?' she asked
+mockingly.</p>
+
+<p>Then she saw that the King's brow darkened,
+and she perceived that he was not of the same
+mind as the day before. She immediately<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+changed her manner, and became gentle and
+submissive.</p>
+
+<p>'Go thou to church as much as thou likest,
+even if I do not go. There shall be no discord
+between us on that account.'</p>
+
+<p>The Queen came down from the ship and went
+up to the King. She held in her hand a sword
+and a mantle trimmed with fur which she would
+give him. But in the same moment the King
+happened to look towards the harbour. At some
+distance he saw the other woman; her head
+was bowed, and she walked with weary steps,
+but she still bore the child in her arms.</p>
+
+<p>'What art thou looking so eagerly after, King
+Olaf?' Storr&auml;de asked.</p>
+
+<p>Then the other woman turned round and
+looked at the King, and as she looked at him
+it appeared to him as if a ring of golden light
+surrounded her head and that of the child, more
+beautiful than the crown of any King or Queen.
+Then she immediately turned round and walked
+again towards the town, and he saw her no more.</p>
+
+<p>'What art thou looking so eagerly after?'
+again asked Storr&auml;de.</p>
+
+<p>But when King Olaf now turned to the Queen
+she appeared to him old and ugly, and full of
+the world's sin and wickedness, and he was terrified
+at the thought that he might have fallen
+into her snares.</p>
+
+<p>He had taken off his glove to give her his
+hand; but he now took the glove and threw it
+in her face instead.</p>
+
+<p>'I will not own thee, foul woman and heathen
+dog that thou art!' he said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Storr&auml;de drew backwards. But she soon
+regained the command over herself, and answered:</p>
+
+<p>'That blow may prove thy destruction, King
+Olaf Trygveson.'</p>
+
+<p>And she was white as H&eacute;l when she turned
+away from him and went on board her ship.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Next night King Olaf had a strange dream.
+What he saw in his dream was not the earth, but
+the bottom of the sea. It was a grayish-green
+field, over which there were many fathoms of
+water. He saw fish swimming after their prey;
+he saw ships gliding past on the surface of the
+water, like dark clouds; and he saw the disc of
+the sun, dull as a pale moon.</p>
+
+<p>Then he saw the woman he had seen at the
+church-door wandering along the bottom of the
+sea. She had the same stooping gait and the
+same worn garments as when he first saw her,
+and her face was still sorrowful. But as she
+wandered along the bottom of the sea the water
+divided before her. He saw that it rose into
+pillars, as if in deep reverence, forming itself into
+arches, so that she walked in the most glorious
+temple.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the King saw that the water which
+surrounded the woman began to change colour.
+The pillars and the arches first became pale pink;
+but they soon assumed a darker colour. The
+whole sea around was also red, as if it had been
+changed into blood.</p>
+
+<p>At the bottom of the sea, where the woman
+walked, the King saw broken swords and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+arrows, and bows and spears in pieces. At first
+there were not many, but the longer she
+walked in the red water the more closely they
+were heaped together.</p>
+
+<p>The King saw with emotion that the woman
+went to one side in order not to tread upon a
+dead man who lay stretched upon the bed of
+green seaweed. The man, who had a deep cut
+in his head, wore a coat of mail, and had a sword
+in his hand. It seemed to the King that the
+woman closed her eyes so as not to see the dead
+man. She moved towards a fixed goal without
+hesitation or doubt. But he who dreamt could
+not turn his eyes away.</p>
+
+<p>He saw the bottom of the sea covered with
+wreckage. He saw heavy anchors, thick ropes
+twined about like snakes, ships with their sides
+riven asunder; golden dragon-heads from the
+bows of ships stared at him with red, threatening
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'I should like to know who has fought a battle
+here and left all this as a prey to destruction,'
+thought the dreamer.</p>
+
+<p>Everywhere he saw dead men. They were
+hanging on the ships' sides, or had sunk into
+the green seaweed. But he did not give himself
+time to look at them, for his eyes were obliged
+to follow the woman, who continued to walk onwards.</p>
+
+<p>At last the King saw her stop at the side of
+a dead man. He was clothed in a red mantle,
+had a bright helmet on his head, a shield on his
+arm, and a naked sword in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>The woman bent over him and whispered to
+him, as if awaking someone sleeping:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf! King Olaf!'</p>
+
+<p>Then he who was dreaming saw that the man
+at the bottom of the sea was himself. He could
+distinctly see that he was the dead man.</p>
+
+<p>As the dead did not move, the woman knelt
+by his side and whispered into his ear:</p>
+
+<p>'Now Storr&auml;de hath sent her fleet against thee
+and avenged herself. Dost thou repent what
+thou hast done, King Olaf?'</p>
+
+<p>And again she asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Now thou sufferest the bitterness of death
+because thou hast chosen me instead of Storr&auml;de.
+Dost thou repent? dost thou repent?'</p>
+
+<p>Then at last the dead opened his eyes, and the
+woman helped him to rise. He leant upon her
+shoulder, and she walked slowly away with him.</p>
+
+<p>Again King Olaf saw her wander and wander,
+through night and day, over sea and land. At
+last it seemed to him that they had gone further
+than the clouds and higher than the stars. Now
+they entered a garden, where the earth shone
+as light and the flowers were clear as dewdrops.</p>
+
+<p>The King saw that when the woman entered
+the garden she raised her head, and her step grew
+lighter. When they had gone a little further into
+the garden her garments began to shine. He
+saw that they became, as of themselves, bordered
+with golden braid, and coloured with the
+hues of the rainbow. He saw also that a halo
+surrounded her head that cast a light over her
+countenance.</p>
+
+<p>But the slain man who leant upon her shoulder
+raised his head, and asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Who art thou?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou not know, King Olaf?' she answered;
+and an infinite majesty and glory
+encompassed her.</p>
+
+<p>But in the dream King Olaf was filled with
+a great joy because he had chosen to serve the
+gentle Queen of Heaven. It was a joy so great
+that he had never before felt the like of it, and it
+was so strong that it awoke him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>When King Olaf awoke his face was bathed
+in tears, and he lay with his hands folded in
+prayer.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="Astrid" id="Astrid"><span class="smcap">Astrid</span></a></h3>
+
+<h4>I</h4>
+
+<p>In the midst of the low buildings forming the
+old Castle of the Kings at Upsala towered the
+Ladies' Bower. It was built on poles, like
+a dovecote. The staircase leading up to it was
+as steep as a ladder, and one entered it by a very
+low door. The walls inside were covered with
+runes, signifying love and longing; the sills of
+the small loopholes were worn by the maidens
+leaning on their elbows and looking down into
+the courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>Old Hjalte, the bard, had been a guest at the
+King's Castle for some time, and he went up
+every day to the Ladies' Bower to see Princess
+Ingegerd, and talk with her about Olaf Haraldsson,
+the King of Norway, and every time Hjalte
+came Ingegerd's bondwoman Astrid sat and listened
+to his words with as much pleasure as the
+Princess. And whilst Hjalte talked, both the
+maidens listened so eagerly that they let their
+hands fall in their laps and their work rest.</p>
+
+<p>Anyone seeing them would not think much
+spinning or weaving could be done in the
+Ladies' Bower. No one would have thought
+that they gathered all Hjalte's words as if they
+were silken threads, and that each of his listeners
+made from them her own picture of King Olaf.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+No one could know that in their thoughts they
+wove the Bard's words each into her own radiant
+picture.</p>
+
+<p>But so it was. And the Princess's picture was
+so beautiful that every time she saw it before
+her she felt as if she must fall on her knees and
+worship it. For she saw the King sitting on
+his throne, crowned and great; she saw a red,
+gold-embroidered mantle hanging from his
+shoulders to his feet. She saw no sword in his
+hand, but holy writings; and she also saw that
+his throne was supported by a chained troll.
+His face shone for her, white like wax, surrounded
+by long, soft locks, and his eyes beamed
+with piety and peace. Oh, she became nearly
+afraid when she saw the almost superhuman
+strength that shone from that pale face. She
+understood that King Olaf was not only a King,
+she saw that he was a saint, and the equal of the
+angels.</p>
+
+<p>But quite different was the picture which
+Astrid had made of the King. The fair-haired
+bondwoman, who had experienced both hunger
+and cold and suffered much hardship, but who
+all the same was the one who filled the Ladies'
+Bower with merriment and laughter, had in her
+mind an entirely different picture of the King.
+She could not help that every time she heard
+him spoken about she saw before her the wood-cutter's
+son who at eventide came out of the
+wood with the axe over his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>'I can see thee&mdash;I can see thee so well,'
+Astrid said to the picture, as if it were a living
+being. 'Tall thou art not, but broad of shoulders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+and light and agile, and because thou hast
+walked about in the dark forest the whole long
+summer day thou takest the last few steps in
+one spring, and laughest when thou reachest
+the road. Then thy white teeth shine, and thy
+hair flies about, and that I love to see. I can
+see thee; thou hast a fair, ruddy face and freckles
+on thy nose, and thou hast blue eyes, which become
+dark and stern in the deep forest; but
+when thou comest so far that thou seest the
+valley and thy home, they become light and
+gentle. As soon as thou seest thine own hut
+down in the valley, thou raisest thy cap for a
+greeting, and then I see thy forehead. Is not
+that forehead befitting a King? Should not that
+broad forehead be able to wear both crown and
+helmet?'</p>
+
+<p>But however different these two pictures were,
+one thing is certain: just as much as the Princess
+loved the holy picture she had conjured
+forth, so did the poor bondwoman love the bold
+swain whom she saw coming from the depths of
+the forest to meet her.</p>
+
+<p>And had Hjalte the Bard been able to see
+these pictures he would have assuredly praised
+them both. He would assuredly have said that
+they both were like the King. For that is King
+Olaf's good fortune, he would have been sure to
+say, that he is a fresh and merry swain at the
+same time that he is God's holy warrior. For
+old Hjalte loved King Olaf, and although he
+had wandered from court to court he had never
+been able to find his equal.</p>
+
+<p>'Where can I find anyone to make me forget<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+Olaf Haraldsson?' he was wont to say. 'Where
+shall I find a greater hero?'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte the Bard was a rough old man and
+severe of countenance. Old as he was, his hair
+was still black, he was dark of complexion, and
+his eyes were keen, and his song had always
+tallied with his appearance. His tongue never
+uttered other words than those of strife; he had
+never made other lays than songs of war.</p>
+
+<p>Old Hjalte's heart had hitherto been like the
+stony waste outside the wood-cutter's hut; it had
+been like a rocky plain, where only poor ferns
+and dry mugworts could grow. But now
+Hjalte's roving life had brought him to the
+Court at Upsala, and he had seen the Princess
+Ingegerd. He had seen that she was the noblest
+of all the women he had met in his life&mdash;in truth,
+the Princess was just as much fairer than all
+other women as King Olaf was greater than all
+other men.</p>
+
+<p>Then the thought suddenly arose within
+Hjalte that he would try to awaken love between
+the Swedish Princess and the Norwegian
+King. He asked himself why she, who was the
+best amongst women, should not be able to love
+King Olaf, the most glorious amongst men?
+And after that thought had taken root in Hjalte's
+heart he gave up making his stern war-songs.
+He gave up trying to win praise and honour
+from the rough warriors at the Court of Upsala,
+and sat for many hours with the women in the
+Ladies' Bower, and one would never have
+thought that it was Hjalte who spoke. One
+would never have believed that he possessed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+such soft and fair and gentle words which he
+now used in speaking about King Olaf.</p>
+
+<p>No one would have known Hjalte again; he
+was entirely transformed ever since the thought
+of the marriage had arisen within him. When
+the beautiful thought took root in Hjalte's soul,
+it was as if a blushing rose, with soft and fragrant
+petals, had sprung up in the midst of a
+wilderness.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>One day Hjalte sat with the Princess in the
+Ladies' Bower. All the maidens were absent
+except Astrid. Hjalte thought that now he had
+spoken long enough about Olaf Haraldsson.
+He had said all the fair words he could about
+him, but had it been of any avail? What did
+the Princess think of the King? Then he began
+to lay snares for the Princess to find out what
+she thought of King Olaf.</p>
+
+<p>'I can see from a look or a blush,' he thought.</p>
+
+<p>But the Princess was a high-born lady; she
+knew how to conceal her thoughts. She neither
+blushed nor smiled, neither did her eyes betray
+her. She would not let Hjalte divine what she
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>When the Bard looked into her noble face he
+was ashamed of himself.</p>
+
+<p>'She is too good for anyone to take her by
+stealth,' he said; 'one must meet her in open
+warfare.' So Hjalte said straight out: 'Daughter
+of a King, if Olaf Haraldsson asked thee in
+marriage of thy father, what wouldst thou answer?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then the young Princess's face lit up, as does
+the face of a man when he reaches the mountain-top
+and discovers the ocean. Without hesitation
+she replied at once:</p>
+
+<p>'If he be such a King and such a Christian as
+thou sayest, Hjalte, then I consider it would be
+a great happiness.'</p>
+
+<p>But scarcely had she said this before the light
+faded from her eyes. It was as if a cloud rose
+between her and the beautiful far-off vision.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, Hjalte,' she said, 'thou forgettest one
+thing. King Olaf is our enemy. It is war and
+not wooing we may expect from him.'</p>
+
+<p>'Do not let that trouble thee,' said Hjalte.
+'If thou only wilt, all is well. I know King
+Olaf's mind in this matter.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bard was so glad that he laughed when
+he said this; but the Princess grew more and
+more sorrowful.</p>
+
+<p>'No,' she said, 'neither upon me nor King
+Olaf does it depend, but upon my father, Oluf
+Sk&ouml;tkonung, and you know that he hates Olaf
+Haraldsson, and cannot bear that anyone should
+even mention his name. Never will he let me
+leave my father's house with an enemy; never
+will he give his daughter to Olaf Haraldsson.'</p>
+
+<p>When the Princess had said this, she laid aside
+all her pride and began to lament her fate.</p>
+
+<p>'Of what good is it that I have now learnt to
+know Olaf Haraldsson,' she said, 'that I dream
+of him every night, and long for him every day?
+Would it not have been better if thou hadst
+never come hither and told me about him?'</p>
+
+<p>When the Princess had spoken these words,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+her eyes filled with tears; but when Hjalte saw
+her tears, he lifted his hand fervent and eager.</p>
+
+<p>'God wills it,' he cried. 'Ye belong to one
+another. Strife must exchange its red mantle
+for the white robe of peace, that your happiness
+may give joy unto the earth.'</p>
+
+<p>When Hjalte had said this, the Princess bowed
+her head before God's holy name, and when she
+raised it, it was with a newly awakened hope.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>When old Hjalte stepped through the low door
+of the Ladies' Bower, and went down the narrow
+open corridor, Astrid followed him.</p>
+
+<p>'Hjalte,' she cried, 'why dost thou not ask
+me what I would answer if Olaf Haraldsson
+asked for my hand?'</p>
+
+<p>It was the first time Astrid had spoken to
+Hjalte; but Hjalte only cast a hurried glance
+at the fair bondwoman, whose golden hair curled
+on her temples and neck, who had the broadest
+bracelets and the heaviest ear-rings, whose dress
+was fastened with silken cords, and whose bodice
+was so embroidered with pearls that it was as
+stiff as armour, and went on without answering.</p>
+
+<p>'Why dost thou only ask Princess Ingegerd?'
+continued Astrid. 'Why dost thou not also ask
+me? Dost thou not know that I, too, am the
+Svea-King's daughter? Dost thou not know,'
+she continued, when Hjalte did not answer, 'that
+although my mother was a bondwoman, she was
+the bride of the King's youth? Dost thou not
+know that whilst she lived no one dared to remind
+her of her birth? Oh, Hjalte, dost thou<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+not know that it was only after she was dead,
+when the King had taken to himself a Queen,
+that everyone remembered that she was a bondwoman?
+It was first after I had a stepmother
+that the King began to think I was not of free
+birth. But am I not a King's daughter, Hjalte,
+even if my father counts me for so little, that he
+has allowed me to fall into bondage? Am I not
+a King's daughter, even if my stepmother allowed
+me to go in rags, whilst my sister went
+in cloth of gold? Am I not a King's daughter,
+even if my stepmother has allowed me to tend the
+geese and taste the whip of the slave? And if I
+am a King's daughter, why dost thou not ask
+me whether I will wed Olaf Haraldsson? See, I
+have golden hair that shines round my head like
+the sun. See, I have sparkling eyes; I have
+roses in my cheeks. Why should not King Olaf
+woo me?'</p>
+
+<p>She followed Hjalte across the courtyard all
+the way to the King's Hall; but Hjalte took no
+more heed of her words than a warrior clad in
+armour heeds a boy throwing stones. He took
+no more notice of her words than if she had
+been a chattering magpie in the top of a tree.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>No one must think that Hjalte contented himself
+with having won Ingegerd for his King.
+The next day the old Icelander summoned up his
+courage and spoke to Oluf Sk&ouml;tkonung about
+Olaf Haraldsson. But he hardly had time to
+say a word; the King interrupted him as soon as
+he mentioned the name of his foe. Hjalte saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+that the Princess was right. He thought he had
+never before seen such bitter hatred.</p>
+
+<p>'But that marriage will take place all the
+same,' said Hjalte. 'It is the will of God&mdash;the
+will of God.'</p>
+
+<p>And it really seemed as if Hjalte were right.
+Two or three days later a messenger came from
+King Olaf of Norway to make peace with the
+Swedes. Hjalte sought the messenger, and told
+him that peace between the two countries could
+be most firmly established by a marriage taking
+place between Princess Ingegerd and Olaf Haraldsson.</p>
+
+<p>The King's messenger hardly thought that old
+Hjalte was the man to incline a young maiden's
+heart to a stranger; but he thought, all the same,
+that the plan was a good one; and he promised
+Hjalte that he would lay the proposal of the
+marriage before King Oluf Sk&ouml;tkonung at the
+great Winter Ting.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately afterwards Hjalte left Upsala.
+He went from farm to farm on the great plain;
+he went far into the forests; he went even to the
+borders of the sea. He never met either man or
+woman without speaking to them about Olaf
+Haraldsson and Princess Ingegerd. 'Hast thou
+ever heard of a greater man or of a fairer
+woman?' he said. 'It is assuredly the will of
+God that they shall wander through life together.'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte came upon old Vikings, who wintered
+at the seashore, and who had formerly carried
+off women from every coast. He talked to them
+about the beautiful Princess until they sprang<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+up and promised him, with their hand on the
+hilt of their sword, that they would do what they
+could to help her to happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte went to stubborn old peasants who
+had never listened to the prayers of their own
+daughters, but had given them in marriage as
+shrewdness, family honour, and advantage required,
+and he spoke to them so wisely about the
+peace between the two countries and the marriage
+that they swore they would rather deprive
+the King of his kingdom than that this marriage
+should not come to pass.</p>
+
+<p>But to the young women Hjalte spoke so
+many good words about Olaf Haraldsson that
+they vowed they would never look with kindly
+eyes at the swain who did not stand by the Norwegian
+King's messenger at the Ting and help
+to break down the King's opposition.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Hjalte went about talking to people until
+the Winter Ting should assemble, and all the
+people, along snow-covered roads, proceeded to
+the great Ting Hills at Upsala.</p>
+
+<p>When the Ting was opened, the eagerness of
+the people was so great that it seemed as if the
+stars would fall down from the sky were this
+marriage not decided upon. And although the
+King twice roughly said 'No' both to the peace
+and to the wooing, it was of no avail. It was
+of no avail that he would not hear the name of
+King Olaf mentioned. The people only shouted:
+'We will not have war with Norway. We will
+that these two, who by all are accounted the
+greatest, shall wander through life together.'</p>
+
+<p>What could old Oluf Sk&ouml;tkonung do when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+people rose against him with threats, strong
+words, and clashing of shields? What was he to
+do when he saw nothing but swords lifted and
+angry men before him? Was he not compelled
+to promise his daughter away if he would keep his
+life and his crown? Must he not swear to send
+the Princess to Kungah&auml;lla next summer to meet
+King Olaf there?</p>
+
+<p>In this way the whole people helped to further
+Ingegerd's love. But no one helped Astrid to the
+attainment of her happiness; no one asked her
+about her love. And yet it lived&mdash;it lived like the
+child of the poor fisherman's widow, in want and
+need; but all the same it grew, happily and hopefully.
+It grew and thrived, for in Astrid's soul
+there were, as at the sea, fresh air and light and
+breezy waves.</p>
+
+<h4>II</h4>
+
+<p>In the rich city of Kungah&auml;lla, far away at the
+border, was the old castle of the kings. It was
+surrounded by green ramparts. Huge stones
+stood as sentinels outside the gates, and in the
+courtyard grew an oak large enough to shelter
+under its branches all the King's henchmen.</p>
+
+<p>The whole space inside the ramparts was covered
+with long, low wooden houses. They were
+so old that grass grew on the ridges of the roofs.
+The beams in the walls were made from the thickest
+trees of the forest, silver-white with age.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning of the summer Olaf Haraldsson
+came to Kungah&auml;lla, and he gathered together
+in the castle everything necessary for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+celebration of his marriage. For several weeks
+peasants came crowding up the long street, bringing
+gifts: butter in tubs, cheese in sacks, hops
+and salt, roots and flour.</p>
+
+<p>After the gifts had been brought to the castle,
+there was a continual procession of wedding
+guests through the street. There were great men
+and women on side-saddles, with a numerous
+retinue of servants and serfs. Then came hosts
+of players and singers, and the reciters of the
+Sagas. Merchants came all the way from Venderland
+and Gardarike, to tempt the King with
+bridal gifts.</p>
+
+<p>When these processions for two whole weeks
+had filled the town with noise and bustle they
+only awaited the last procession, the bride's.</p>
+
+<p>But the bridal procession was long in coming.
+Every day they expected that she would come
+ashore at the King's Landing-Stage, and from
+there, headed by drum and fife, and followed by
+merry swains and serious priests, proceed up the
+street to the King's Castle. But the bride's procession
+came not.</p>
+
+<p>When the bride was so long in coming, everybody
+looked at King Olaf to see if he were uneasy.
+But the King always showed an undisturbed face.</p>
+
+<p>'If it be the will of God,' the King said, 'that I
+shall possess this fair woman, she will assuredly
+come.'</p>
+
+<p>And the King waited, whilst the grass fell for
+the scythe, and the cornflowers blossomed in the
+rye. The King still waited when the flax was
+pulled up, and the hops ripened on the poles. He
+was still waiting, when the bramble blackened on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+the mountain-side, and the <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Possibly hip">nip</span> reddened on the
+naked branch of the <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Possibly rosebush">hawthorn</span>.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Hjalte had spent the whole summer at Kungah&auml;lla
+waiting for the marriage. No one awaited
+the arrival of the Princess more eagerly than he
+did. He assuredly awaited her with greater longing
+and anxiety than even King Olaf himself.</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte no longer felt at his ease with the warriors
+in the King's Hall. But lower down the
+river there was a landing-stage where the women
+of Kungah&auml;lla were wont to assemble to see the
+last of their husbands and sons, when they sailed
+for distant lands. Here they were also in the
+habit of gathering during the summer, to watch
+for the vessels coming up the river, and to weep
+over those who had departed. To that bridge
+Hjalte wended his way every day. He liked best
+to be amongst those who longed and sorrowed.</p>
+
+<p>Never had any of the women who sat waiting
+at Weeping Bridge gazed down the river with
+more anxious look than did Hjalte the Bard. No
+one looked more eagerly at every approaching
+sail. Sometimes Hjalte stole away to the Marie
+Church. He never prayed for anything for himself.
+He only came to remind the Saints about
+this marriage, which must come to pass, which
+God Himself had willed.</p>
+
+<p>Most of all Hjalte liked to speak with King Olaf
+Haraldsson alone. It was his greatest happiness
+to sit and tell him of every word that had fallen
+from the lips of the King's daughter. He described
+her every feature.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf,' he said to him, 'pray to God
+that she may come to thee. Every day I see
+thee warring against ancient heathendom which
+hides like an owl in the darkness of the forest,
+and in the mountain-clefts. But the falcon, King
+Olaf, will never be able to overcome the owl.
+Only a dove can do that, only a dove.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bard asked the King whether it was not
+his desire to vanquish all his enemies. Was it
+not his intention to be alone master in the land?
+But in that he would never succeed. He would
+never succeed until he had won the crown which
+Hjalte had chosen for him, a crown so resplendent
+with brightness and glory that everyone must
+bow before him who owned it.</p>
+
+<p>And last of all he asked the King if he were
+desirous of gaining the mastery over himself.
+But he would never succeed in overcoming the
+wilfulness of his own heart if he did not win a
+shield which Hjalte had seen in the Ladies'
+Bower at the King's Castle at Upsala. It was
+a shield from which shone the purity of heaven.
+It was a shield which protected from all sin and
+the lusts of the flesh.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>But harvest came and they were still waiting
+for the Princess. One after the other the great
+men who had come to Kungah&auml;lla for the marriage
+festivities were obliged to depart. The last
+to take his leave was old Hjalte the Bard. It
+was with a heavy heart he set sail, but he was
+obliged to return to his home in distant Iceland
+before Christmas came.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Old Hjalte had not gone further than the rocky
+islands outside the mouth of the northern river
+before he met a galley. He immediately ordered
+his men to stop rowing. At the first glance he
+recognised the dragon-headed ship belonging to
+Princess Ingegerd. Without hesitation Hjalte
+told his men to row him to the galley. He gave
+up his place at the rudder to another, and placed
+himself with joyous face at the prow of the boat.</p>
+
+<p>'It will make me happy to behold the fair
+maiden once more,' the Bard said. 'It gladdens
+my heart that her gentle face will be the last I
+shall see before sailing for Iceland.'</p>
+
+<p>All the wrinkles had disappeared from Hjalte's
+face when he went on board the dragon-ship.
+He greeted the brave lads who plied the oars
+as friendlily as if they were his comrades, and
+he handed a golden ring to the maiden, who,
+with much deference, conducted him to the
+women's tent in the stern of the ship. Hjalte's
+hand trembled when he lifted the hangings that
+covered the entrance to the tent. He thought
+this was the most beautiful moment of his life.</p>
+
+<p>'Never have I fought for a greater cause,' he
+said. 'Never have I longed so eagerly for anything
+as this marriage.'</p>
+
+<p>But when Hjalte entered the tent, he drew
+back a step in great consternation. His face expressed
+the utmost confusion. He saw a tall,
+beautiful woman. She advanced to meet him with
+outstretched hand. But the woman was not Ingegerd.</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte's eyes looked searchingly round the
+narrow tent to find the Princess. He certainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+saw that the woman who stood before him was
+a King's daughter. Only the daughter of a King
+could look at him with such a proud glance, and
+greet him with such dignity. And she wore the
+band of royalty on her forehead, and was attired
+like a Queen. But why was she not Ingegerd?
+Hjalte angrily asked the strange woman:</p>
+
+<p>'Who art thou?'</p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou not know me, Hjalte? I am the
+King's daughter, to whom thou hast spoken
+about Olaf Haraldsson.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have spoken with a King's daughter about
+Olaf Haraldsson, but her name was Ingegerd.'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingegerd is also my name.'</p>
+
+<p>'Thy name can be what thou likest, but thou
+art not the Princess. What is the meaning of
+all this? Will the Svea-King deceive King
+Olaf?'</p>
+
+<p>'He will not by any means deceive him. He
+sends him his daughter as he has promised.'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte was not far from drawing his sword
+to slay the strange woman. He had his hand
+already on the hilt, but he bethought himself it
+was not befitting a warrior to take the life of a
+woman. But he would not waste more words
+over this impostor. He turned round to go.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger with gentle voice called him
+back.</p>
+
+<p>'Where art thou going, Hjalte? Dost thou
+intend to go to Kungah&auml;lla to report this to Olaf
+Haraldsson?'</p>
+
+<p>'That is my intention,' answered Hjalte, without
+looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>'Why, then, dost thou leave me, Hjalte? Why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+dost thou not remain with me? I, too, am going
+to Kungah&auml;lla.'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte now turned round and looked at her.</p>
+
+<p>'Hast thou, then, no pity for an old man?'
+he said. 'I tell thee that my whole mind is set
+upon this marriage. Let me hear the full
+measure of my misfortune. Is Princess Ingegerd
+not coming?'</p>
+
+<p>Then the Princess gave over fooling Hjalte.</p>
+
+<p>'Come into my tent and sit down,' she said,
+'and I will tell thee all that thou wouldest know.
+I see it is of no use to hide the truth from
+thee.'</p>
+
+<p>Then she began to tell him everything:</p>
+
+<p>'The summer was already drawing to a close.
+The blackcock's lively young ones had already
+strong feathers in their cloven tails and firmness
+in their rounded wings; they had already begun
+to flutter about amongst the close branches of
+the pine-forest with quick, noisy strokes.</p>
+
+<p>'It happened one morning that the Svea-King
+came riding across the plain; he was returning
+from a successful chase. There hung from the
+pommel of his saddle a shining blue-black blackcock,
+a tough old fellow, with red eyebrows,
+as well as four of his half-grown young ones,
+which on account of their youth were still garbed
+in many-coloured hues. And the King was very
+proud; he thought it was not every man's luck
+to make such a bag with falcon and hawk in
+one morning.</p>
+
+<p>'But that morning Princess Ingegerd and her
+maidens stood at the gates of the castle waiting
+for the King. And amongst the maidens was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+one, Astrid by name; she was the daughter of
+the Svea-King just as much as Ingegerd,
+although her mother was not a free woman, and
+she was therefore treated as a bondmaiden. And
+this young maiden stood and showed her sister
+how the swallows gathered in the fields and chose
+the leaders for their long journey. She reminded
+her that the summer was soon over&mdash;the summer
+that should have witnessed the marriage of Ingegerd&mdash;and
+urged her to ask the King why she
+might not set out on her journey to King Olaf;
+for Astrid wished to accompany her sister on
+the journey. She thought that if she could but
+once see Olaf Haraldsson, she would have pleasure
+from it all her life.</p>
+
+<p>'But when the Svea-King saw the Princess, he
+rode up to her.</p>
+
+<p>'"Look, Ingegerd," he said, "here are five
+blackcocks hanging from my saddle. In one
+morning I have killed five blackcocks. Who
+dost thou think can boast of better luck? Have
+you ever heard of a King making a better capture?"</p>
+
+<p>'But then the Princess was angered that he
+who barred the way for her happiness should
+come so proudly and praise his own good luck.
+And to make an end of the uncertainty that had
+tormented her for so many weeks, she replied:</p>
+
+<p>'"Thou, father, hast with great honour killed
+five blackcocks, but I know of a King who in
+one morning captured five other Kings, and that
+was Olaf Haraldsson, the hero whom thou hast
+selected to be my husband."</p>
+
+<p>'Then the Svea-King sprang off his horse in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+great fury, and advanced towards the Princess
+with clenched hands.</p>
+
+<p>'"What troll hath bewitched thee?" he asked.
+"What herb hath poisoned thee? How hath thy
+mind been turned to this man?"</p>
+
+<p>'Ingegerd did not answer; she drew back,
+frightened. Then the King became quieter.</p>
+
+<p>'"Fair daughter," he said to her, "dost thou
+not know how dear thou art to me? How should
+I, then, give thee to one whom I cannot endure?
+I should like my best wishes to go with thee on
+thy journey. I should like to sit as guest in
+thy hall. I tell thee thou must turn thy mind
+to the Kings of other lands, for Norway's King
+shall never own thee."</p>
+
+<p>'At these words the Princess became so confused
+that she could find no other words than
+these with which to answer the King:</p>
+
+<p>'"I did not ask thee; it was the will of the
+people."</p>
+
+<p>'The King then asked her if she thought that
+the Svea-King was a slave, who could not dispose
+of his own offspring, or if there were a
+master over him who had the right to give away
+his daughters.</p>
+
+<p>'"Will the Svea-King be content to hear
+himself called a breaker of oaths?" asked the
+Princess.</p>
+
+<p>'Then the Svea-King laughed aloud.</p>
+
+<p>'"Do not let that trouble thee. No one shall
+call me that. Why dost thou question about
+this, thou who art a woman? There are still
+men in my Council; they will find a way out
+of it."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Then the King turned towards his henchmen
+who had been with him to the chase.</p>
+
+<p>'"My will is bound by this promise," he said
+to them. "How shall I be released from it?"</p>
+
+<p>'But none of the King's men answered a word;
+no one knew how to counsel him.</p>
+
+<p>'Then Oluf Sk&ouml;tkonung became very wrath;
+he became like a madman.</p>
+
+<p>'"So much for your wisdom," he shouted
+again and again to his men. "I will be free.
+Why do people laud your wisdom?"</p>
+
+<p>'Whilst the King raged and shouted, and no
+one knew how to answer him, the maiden Astrid
+stepped forward from amongst the other women
+and made a proposal.</p>
+
+<p>'Hjalte must really believe her when she told
+him that it was only because she found it so
+amusing that she could not help saying it, and
+not in the least because she thought it could
+really be done.</p>
+
+<p>'"Why dost thou not send me?" she had said.
+"I am also thy daughter. Why dost thou not
+send me to the Norwegian King?"</p>
+
+<p>'But when Ingegerd heard Astrid say these
+words, she grew pale.</p>
+
+<p>'"Be silent, and go thy way!" she said
+angrily. "Go thy way, thou tattler, thou deceitful,
+wicked thing, to propose such a shameful
+thing to my father!"</p>
+
+<p>'But the King would not allow Astrid to go.
+On the contrary! on the contrary! He stretched
+out his arms and drew her to his breast. He
+both laughed and cried, and was as wild with joy
+as a child.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'"Oh," he shouted, "what an idea! What
+a heathenish trick! Let us call Astrid Ingegerd,
+and entrap the King of Norway into marrying
+her. And afterwards when the rumour gets
+abroad that she is born of a bondwoman, many
+will rejoice in their hearts, and Olaf Haraldsson
+will be held in scorn and derision."</p>
+
+<p>'But then Ingegerd went up to the King, and
+prayed:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, father, father! do not do this thing.
+King Olaf is dear at heart to me. Surely thou
+wilt not grieve me by thus deceiving him."</p>
+
+<p>'And she added that she would patiently do
+the bidding of her royal father, and give up all
+thought of marriage with Olaf Haraldsson, if
+he would only promise not to do him this injury.</p>
+
+<p>'But the Svea-King would not listen to her
+prayers. He turned to Astrid and caressed her,
+just as if she were as beautiful as revenge itself.</p>
+
+<p>'"Thou shalt go! thou shalt go soon&mdash;to-morrow!"
+he said. "All thy dowry, thy clothes,
+my dear daughter, and thy retinue, can all be
+collected in great haste. The Norwegian King
+will not think of such things; he is too taken up
+with joy at the thought of possessing the high-born
+daughter of the Svea-King."</p>
+
+<p>'Then Ingegerd understood that she could
+hope for no mercy. And she went up to her
+sister, put her arm round her neck, and conducted
+her to the hall. Here she placed her in
+her own seat of honour, whilst she herself sat
+down on a low stool at her feet. And she said
+to Astrid that from henceforth she must sit there,
+in order to accustom herself to the place she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+should take as Queen. For Ingegerd did not
+wish that King Olaf should have any occasion to
+be ashamed of his Queen.</p>
+
+<p>'Then the Princess sent her maidens to the
+wardrobes and the pantries to fetch the dowry
+she had chosen for herself. And she gave everything
+to her sister, so that Astrid should not come
+to Norway's King as a poor bondwoman. She
+had also settled which of the serfs and maidens
+should accompany Astrid, and at last she made
+her a present of her own splendid galley.</p>
+
+<p>'"Thou shalt certainly have my galley," she
+said. "Thou knowest there are many good men
+at the oars. For it is my will that thou shalt come
+well dowered to Norway's King, so that he may
+feel honoured with his Queen."</p>
+
+<p>'And afterwards the Princess had sat a long
+time with her sister, and spoken with her about
+King Olaf. But she had spoken of him as one
+speaks of the Saints of God, and not of kings,
+and Astrid had not understood many of her
+words. But this much she did understand&mdash;that
+the King's daughter wished to give Astrid all
+the good thoughts that dwelt in her own heart,
+in order that King Olaf might not be so disappointed
+as her father wished. And then Astrid,
+who was not so bad as people thought
+her, forgot how often she had suffered for her
+sister's sake, and she wished that she had been
+able to say, "I will not go!" She had also
+spoken to her sister about this wish, and they had
+cried together, and for the first time felt like
+sisters.</p>
+
+<p>'But it was not Astrid's nature to allow herself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+to be weighed down by sorrow and scruples. By
+the time she was out at sea she had forgotten
+all her sorrow and fear. She travelled as a
+Princess, and was waited upon as a Princess.
+For the first time since her mother's death she
+was happy.'</p>
+
+<p>When the King's beautiful daughter had told
+Hjalte all this she was silent for a moment, and
+looked at him. Hjalte had sat immovable whilst
+she was speaking, but the King's daughter grew
+pale when she saw the pain his face betrayed.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me what thou thinkest, Hjalte,' she exclaimed.
+'Now, we are soon at Kungah&auml;lla.
+How shall I fare there? Will the King slay me?
+Will he brand me with red-hot irons, and send
+me back again? Tell me the truth, Hjalte.'</p>
+
+<p>But Hjalte did not answer. He sat and talked
+to himself without knowing it. Astrid heard
+him murmur that at Kungah&auml;lla no one knew
+Ingegerd, and that he himself had but little inclination
+to turn back.</p>
+
+<p>But now Hjalte's moody face fell upon Astrid,
+and he began to question her. She had wished,
+had she not, that she could have said 'No' to
+this journey. When she came to Kungah&auml;lla,
+the choice lay before her. What did she, then,
+mean to do! Would she tell King Olaf who she
+was?</p>
+
+<p>This question caused Astrid not a little
+embarrassment. She was silent for a long while,
+but then she began to beg Hjalte to go with her
+to Kungah&auml;lla and tell the King the truth. She
+told Hjalte that her maidens and the men on
+board her ship had been bound to silence.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'And what I shall do myself I do not know,'
+she said. 'How can I know that? I have heard
+all thou hast told Ingegerd about Olaf Haraldsson.'</p>
+
+<p>When Astrid said this she saw that Hjalte was
+again lost in thought. She heard him mutter to
+himself that he did not think she would confess
+how things were.</p>
+
+<p>'But I must all the same tell her what awaits
+her,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then Hjalte rose, and spoke to her with the
+utmost gravity.</p>
+
+<p>'Let me tell thee yet another story, Astrid,
+about King Olaf, which I have not told thee before:</p>
+
+<p>'It was at the time when King Olaf was a poor
+sea-king, when he only possessed a few good
+ships and some faithful warriors, but none of his
+forefathers' land. It was at the time when he
+fought with honour on distant seas, chastised
+vikings and protected merchants, and aided
+Christian princes with his sword.</p>
+
+<p>'The King had a dream that one night an angel
+of God descended to his ship, set all the sails, and
+steered for the north. And it seemed to the King
+that they had not sailed for a longer time than it
+takes the dawn to extinguish a star before they
+came to a steep and rocky shore, cut up by
+narrow fjords and bordered with milk-white
+breakers. But when they reached the shore the
+angel stretched out his hand, and spoke in his
+silvery voice. It rang through the wind, which
+whistled in the sails, and through the waves surging
+round the keel.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'"Thou, King Olaf," were the angel's words,
+"shalt possess this land for all time."</p>
+
+<p>'And when the angel had said this the dream
+was over.'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte now tried to explain to Astrid that like
+as the dawn tempers the transition from dark
+night to sunny day, so God had not willed that
+King Olaf should at once understand that the
+dream foretold him of superhuman honour. The
+King had not understood that it was the will of
+God that he from a heavenly throne should reign
+forever and ever over Norway's land, that kings
+should reign and kings should pass away, but
+holy King Olaf should continue to rule his kingdom
+for ever.</p>
+
+<p>The King's humility did not let him see the
+heavenly message in its fulness of light, and he
+understood the words of the angel thus&mdash;that he
+and his seed should forever rule over the land
+the angel had shown him. And inasmuch as he
+thought he recognised in this land the kingdom
+of his forefathers, he steered his course for Norway,
+and, fortune helping him, he soon became
+King of that land.</p>
+
+<p>'And thus it is still, Astrid. Although everything
+indicates that in King Olaf dwells a
+heavenly strength, he himself is still in doubt,
+and thinks that he is only called to be an earthly
+King. He does not yet stretch forth his hand
+for the crown of the saints. But now the time
+cannot be far distant when he must fully realize
+his mission. It cannot be far distant.'</p>
+
+<p>And old Hjalte went on speaking, whilst the
+light of the seer shone in his soul and on his
+brow.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Is there any other woman but Ingegerd who
+would not be rejected by Olaf Haraldsson and
+driven from his side when he fully understands
+the words of the angel, that he shall be Norway's
+King for all time? Is there anyone who can,
+then, follow him in his holy walk except Ingegerd?'</p>
+
+<p>And again Hjalte turned to Astrid and asked
+with great severity:</p>
+
+<p>'Answer me now and tell me whether thou
+wilt speak the truth to King Olaf?'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid was now sore afraid. She answered
+humbly:</p>
+
+<p>'Why wilt thou not go with me to Kungah&auml;lla?
+Then I shall be compelled to tell
+everything. Canst thou not see, Hjalte, that I
+do not know myself what I shall do? If it were
+my intention to deceive the King, could I not
+promise thee all thou wishest? All that I needed
+was to persuade thee to go on thy way. But I
+am weak; I only asked thee to go with me.'</p>
+
+<p>But hardly had she said this before she saw
+Hjalte's face glow with fierce wrath.</p>
+
+<p>'Why should I help thee to escape the fate
+that awaits thee?' he asked.</p>
+
+<p>And then he said that he did not think he had
+any cause to show her mercy. He hated her for
+having sinned against her sister. The man that
+she would steal, thief as she was, belonged to
+Ingegerd. Even a hardened warrior like Hjalte
+must groan with pain when he thought of how
+Ingegerd had suffered. But Astrid had felt
+nothing. In the midst of all that young maiden's
+sorrow she had come with wicked and cruel cun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>ning,
+and had only sought her own happiness.
+Woe unto Astrid! woe unto her!</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte had lowered his voice; it became heavy
+and dull; it sounded to Astrid as if he were murmuring
+an incantation.</p>
+
+<p>'It is thou,' he said to her, 'who hast destroyed
+my most beautiful song.' For the most beautiful
+song Hjalte had made was the one in which
+he had joined the most pious of all women with
+the greatest of all men. 'But thou hast spoiled
+my song,' he said, 'and made a mockery of it;
+and I will punish thee, thou child of H&eacute;l. I will
+punish thee; as the Lord punisheth the tempter
+who brought sin into His world, I will punish
+thee. But do not ask me,' he continued, 'to protect
+thee against thine own self. I remember the
+Princess, and how she must suffer through the
+trick thou playest on King Olaf. For her sake
+thou shalt be punished, just as much as for mine.
+I will not go with thee to betray thee. That is
+my revenge, Astrid. I will not betray thee. Go
+thou to Kungah&auml;lla, Astrid; and if thou dost not
+speak of thine own accord, thou wilt become the
+King's bride. But then, thou serpent, punishment
+shall overtake thee! I know King Olaf,
+and I know thee. Thy life shall be such a burden
+that thou wilt wish for death every day that
+passes.'</p>
+
+<p>When Hjalte had said this he turned away
+from her and went his way.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid sat a long time silent, thinking of what
+she had heard. But then a smile came over her
+face. He forgot, did old Hjalte, that she had
+suffered many trials, that she had learnt to laugh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+at pain. But happiness, happiness, that she had
+never tried.</p>
+
+<p>And Astrid rose and went to the opening of
+the tent. She saw the angry Bard's ship. She
+thought that far, far away she could see Iceland,
+shrouded in mist, welcoming her much-travelled
+son with cold and darkness.</p>
+
+<h4>III</h4>
+
+<p>A sunny day late in the harvest, not a cloud
+in the sky; a day when one thinks the fair sun
+will give to the earth all the light she possesses!
+The fair sun is like a mother whose son is about
+to set out for a far-off land, and who, in the hour
+of the leave-taking, cannot take her eyes from
+the beloved.</p>
+
+<p>In the long valley where Kungah&auml;lla lies there
+is a row of small hills covered with beech-wood.
+And now at harvest-time the trees have garbed
+themselves in such splendid raiment that one's
+heart is gladdened. One would almost think
+that the trees were going a-wooing. It looks
+as if they had clothed themselves in gold and
+scarlet to win a rich bride by their splendour.</p>
+
+<p>The large island of Hisingen, on the other
+side of the river, had also adorned itself. But
+Hisingen is covered with golden-white birch-trees.
+At Hisingen the trees are clad in light
+colours, as if they are little maidens in bridal attire.</p>
+
+<p>But up the river, which comes rushing down
+towards the ocean as proudly and wildly as if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+the harvest rain had filled it with frothy wine,
+there passes the one ship after the other, rowing
+homewards. And when the ships approach
+Kungah&auml;lla they hoist new white sails, instead
+of the old ones of gray wadmal; and one cannot
+help thinking of old fairy-tales of kings' sons
+who go out seeking adventures clothed in rags,
+but who throw them off when they again enter
+the King's lofty hall.</p>
+
+<p>But all the people of Kungah&auml;lla have assembled
+at the landing-stages. Old and young
+are busy unloading goods from the ships. They
+fill the storehouses with salt and train-oil, with
+costly weapons, and many-coloured rugs. They
+haul large and small vessels on to land, they
+question the returned seamen about their voyage.
+But suddenly all work ceases, and every
+eye is turned towards the river.</p>
+
+<p>Right between the big merchant vessels a
+large galley is making its way, and people ask
+each other in astonishment who it can be that
+carries sails striped with purple and a golden
+device on the prow; they wonder what kind of
+ship it can be that comes flying over the waves
+like a bird. They praise the oarsmen, who
+handle the oars so evenly that they flash along
+the sides of the ship like an eagle's wings.</p>
+
+<p>'It must be the Swedish Princess who is coming,'
+they say. 'It must be the beautiful Princess
+Ingegerd, for whom Olaf Haraldsson has been
+waiting the whole summer and harvest.'</p>
+
+<p>And the women hasten down to the riverside
+to see the Princess when she rows past them on
+her way to the King's Landing-Stage. Men and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+boys run to the ships, or climb the roofs of the
+boathouses.</p>
+
+<p>When the women see the Princess standing
+in gorgeous apparel, they begin to shout to her,
+and to greet her with words of welcome; and
+every man who sees her radiant face tears his
+cap from his head and swings it high in the air.
+But on the King's Landing-Stage stands King
+Olaf himself, and when he sees the Princess his
+face beams with gladness, and his eyes light up
+with tender love.</p>
+
+<p>And as it is now so late in the year that all
+the flowers are faded, the young maidens pluck
+the golden-red autumnal leaves from the trees
+and strew them on the bridge and in the street;
+and they hasten to deck their houses with the
+bright berries of the mountain-ash and the dark-red
+leaves of the poplar.</p>
+
+<p>The Princess, who stands high on the ship,
+sees the people waving and greeting her in welcome.
+She sees the golden-red leaves over which
+she shall walk, and foremost on the landing-stage
+she sees the King awaiting her with smiles. And
+the Princess forgets everything she would have
+said and confessed. She forgets that she is not
+Ingegerd, she forgets everything except the one
+thing, that she is to be the wife of Olaf Haraldsson.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>One Sunday Olaf Haraldsson was seated at
+table, and his beautiful Queen sat by his side.
+He was talking eagerly with her, resting his
+elbow on the table, and turning towards her, so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+that he could see her face. But when Astrid
+spoke the King lowered his eyes in order not to
+think of anything but her lovely voice, and when
+she had been speaking for a long time he began
+to cut the table with his knife without thinking
+of what he was doing. All King Olaf's men
+knew that he would not have done this if he had
+remembered that it was Sunday; but they had
+far too great a respect for King Olaf to venture
+to remind him that he was committing a sin.</p>
+
+<p>The longer Astrid talked, the more uneasy became
+his henchmen. The Queen saw that they
+exchanged troubled glances with each other, but
+she did not understand what was the matter.</p>
+
+<p>All had finished eating, and the food had been
+removed, but King Olaf still sat and talked with
+Astrid and cut the top of the table. A whole
+little heap of chips lay in front of him. Then at
+last his friend Bj&ouml;rn, the son of Ogur from
+Sel&ouml;, spoke.</p>
+
+<p>'What day is it to-morrow, Eilif?' he asked,
+turning to one of the torch-bearers.</p>
+
+<p>'To-morrow is Monday,' answered Eilif in a
+loud and clear voice.</p>
+
+<p>Then the King lifted his head and looked up
+at Eilif.</p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou say that to-morrow is Monday?'
+he asked thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>Without saying another word, the King gathered
+up all the chips he had cut off the table into
+his hand, went to the fireplace, seized a burning
+coal, and laid it on the chips, which soon caught
+fire. The King stood quite still and let them
+burn to ashes in his hand. Then all the hench<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>men
+rejoiced, but the young Queen grew pale as
+death.</p>
+
+<p>'What sentence will he pronounce over me
+when he one day finds out my sin,' she thought,
+'he who punishes himself so hardly for so slight
+an offence?'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Agge from Gardarike lay sick on board his
+galley in Kungah&auml;lla harbour. He was lying in
+the narrow hold awaiting death. He had been
+suffering for a long time from pains in his foot,
+and now there was an open sore, and in the
+course of the last few hours it had begun to turn
+black.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou needest not die, Agge,' said Lodulf
+from Kungh&auml;lla, who had come on board to see
+his sick friend. 'Dost thou not know that King
+Olaf is here in the town, and that God, on account
+of his piety and holiness, has given him
+power to heal the sick? Send a message to him
+and ask him to come and lay his hand upon thee,
+and thou wilt recover.'</p>
+
+<p>'No, I cannot ask help from him,' answered
+Agge. 'Olaf Haraldsson hates me because I
+have slain his foster-brother, Reor the White.
+If he knew that my ship lay in the harbour, he
+would send his men to kill me.'</p>
+
+<p>But when Lodulf had left Agge and gone into
+the town, he met the young Queen, who had
+been in the forest gathering nuts.</p>
+
+<p>'Queen,' Lodulf cried to her, 'say this to
+King Olaf: "Agge from Gardarike, who has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+slain thy foster-brother, lies at the point of death
+on his ship in the harbour."'</p>
+
+<p>The young Queen hastened home and went
+immediately up to King Olaf, who stood in the
+courtyard smoothing the mane of his horse.</p>
+
+<p>'Rejoice, King Olaf!' she said. 'Agge from
+Gardarike, who slew thy foster-brother, lies sick
+on his ship in the harbour and is near death.'</p>
+
+<p>Olaf Haraldsson at once led his horse into the
+stable; then he went out without sword or
+helmet. He went quickly down one of the narrow
+lanes between the houses until he reached
+the harbour. There he found the ship which
+belonged to Agge. The King was at the side
+of the sick man before Agge's men thought of
+stopping him.</p>
+
+<p>'Agge,' said King Olaf, 'many a time I have
+pursued thee on the sea, and thou hast always
+escaped me. Now thou hast been struck down
+with sickness here in my city. This is a sign to
+me that God hath given thy life into my hands.'</p>
+
+<p>Agge made no answer. He was utterly feeble,
+and death was very near. Olaf Haraldsson laid
+his hands upon his breast and prayed to God.</p>
+
+<p>'Give me the life of this mine enemy,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>But the Queen, who had seen the King hasten
+down to the harbour without helmet and sword,
+went into the hall, fetched his weapons and called
+for some of his men. Then she hurried after
+him down to the ship. But when she stood outside
+the narrow hold, she heard King Olaf praying
+for the sick man.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid looked in and saw the King and Agge
+without betraying her presence. She saw that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+whilst the King's hands rested upon the forehead
+and breast of the dying man, the deathly pallor
+vanished from his face; he began to breathe
+lightly and quietly; he ceased moaning, and at
+last he fell into a sound sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid went softly back to the King's Castle.
+She dragged the King's sword after her along
+the road. Her face was paler than the dying
+man's had been. Her breathing was heavy, like
+that of a dying person.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was the morning of All Saints' Day, and
+King Olaf was ready to go to Mass. He came
+out of the King's Hall and went across the courtyard
+towards the gateway. Several of the King's
+henchmen stood in the courtyard to accompany
+him to Mass. When the King came towards
+them, they drew up in two rows, and the King
+passed between them.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid stood in the narrow corridor outside
+the Women's Room and looked down at the
+King. He wore a broad golden band round his
+head, and was attired in a long mantle of red
+velvet. He went very quietly, and there was a
+holy peace over his face. Astrid was terrified
+to see how much he resembled the Saints and
+Kings that were carved in wood over the altar
+in the Marie Church.</p>
+
+<p>At the gateway stood a man in a broad-brimmed
+hat, and wearing a big mantle. When
+the King approached him he threw off his
+mantle, lifted a drawn sword, which he had hidden
+under it, and rushed at the King. But when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+he was quite close to him, the mild and gentle
+glance of the King fell upon him, and he suddenly
+stopped. He let his sword fall to the
+ground, and fell on his knees.</p>
+
+<p>King Olaf stood still, and looked at the man
+with the same clear glance; the man tried to
+turn his eyes away from him, but he could not.
+At last he burst into tears and sobs.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, King Olaf! King Olaf!' he moaned.
+'Thine enemies sent me hither to slay thee; but
+when I saw thy saintly face my sword fell from
+my hand. Thine eyes, King Olaf, have felled
+me to the ground.'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid sank upon her knees where she stood.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh God, have mercy upon me, a sinner!' she
+said. 'Woe unto me, because by lying and deceit
+I have become the wife of this man.'</p>
+
+<h4>IV</h4>
+
+<p>On the evening of All Saints' Day the moon
+shone bright and clear. The King had gone the
+round of the castle, had looked into stables
+and barns to see that all was well; he had even
+been to the house where the serfs dwelt to ascertain
+if they were well looked after. When he
+went back to the King's Hall, he saw a woman
+with a black kerchief over her head stealing
+towards the gateway. He thought he knew her,
+and therefore followed her. She went out of
+the gateway, over the Market Place, and stole
+down the narrow lanes to the river.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Olaf Haraldsson went after her as quietly as
+he could. He saw her go on to one of the
+landing-stages, stand still, and look down into
+the water. She stretched out her arms towards
+heaven, and, with a deep sigh, she went so near
+the edge that the King saw she meant to spring
+into the river.</p>
+
+<p>The King approached her with the noiseless
+steps which a life full of danger had taught him.
+Twice the woman lifted her foot to make the
+spring, but she hesitated. Before she could make
+a new attempt, King Olaf had his arm round
+her waist and drew her back.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou unhappy one!' he said. 'Thou wouldest
+do that which God hath prohibited.'</p>
+
+<p>When the woman heard his voice she held her
+hands before her face as if to hide it. But King
+Olaf knew who she was. The rustle of her dress,
+the shape of her head, the golden rings on her
+arms had already told him that it was the Queen.
+The first moment Astrid had struggled to free
+herself, but she soon grew quiet, and tried to
+make the King believe that she had not intended
+to kill herself.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf, why dost thou secretly come behind
+a poor woman who hath gone down to the
+river to see how she is mirrored in the water?
+What must I think of thee?'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid's voice sounded composed and playful.
+The King stood silent.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou hast frightened me so that I nearly fell
+into the river,' Astrid said. 'Didst thou think,
+perhaps, that I would drown myself?'</p>
+
+<p>The King answered:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I know not what to believe; God will enlighten
+me.'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid laughed and kissed him.</p>
+
+<p>'What woman would take her life who is as
+happy as I am? Doth one take one's life in
+Paradise?'</p>
+
+<p>'I do not understand it,' said King Olaf, in
+his gentle manner. 'God will enlighten me. He
+will tell me if it be through any fault of mine that
+thou wouldest commit so great a sin.'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid went up to him and stroked his cheek.
+The reverence she felt for King Olaf had hitherto
+deterred her from showing him the full tenderness
+of her love. Now she threw her arms passionately
+around him and kissed him countless
+times. Then she began to speak to him in gentle,
+bird-like tones.</p>
+
+<p>'Wouldest thou know how truly my heart
+clings to thee?' she said.</p>
+
+<p>She made the King sit down on an overturned
+boat. She knelt down at his feet.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf,' she said, 'I will no longer be
+Queen. She who loves as greatly as I love thee
+cannot be a Queen. I wish thou wouldest go far
+into the forest, and let me be thy bondwoman.
+Then I should have leave to serve thee every
+day. Then I would prepare thy food, make thy
+bed, and watch over thy house whilst thou slept.
+None other should have leave to serve thee, except
+I. When thou returnest from the chase
+in the evening, I would go to meet thee, and
+kneel before thee on the road and say: "King
+Olaf, my life is thine." And thou wouldest laugh,
+and lower thy spear against my breast, and say:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+"Yes, thy life is mine. Thou hast neither father
+nor mother; thou art mine, and thy life is mine."'</p>
+
+<p>As Astrid said this, she drew, as if in play,
+King Olaf's sword out of its sheath. She laid
+the hilt in the King's hand, but the point she
+directed towards her own heart.</p>
+
+<p>'Say these words to me, King Olaf,' she said,
+'as if we were alone in the forest, and I were thy
+bondwoman. Say: "Thy life is mine."'</p>
+
+<p>'Thy life is God's,' said the King.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid laughed lightly.</p>
+
+<p>'My life is thine,' she repeated, in the tenderest
+voice, and the same moment King Olaf felt
+that she pressed the point of the sword against
+her breast.</p>
+
+<p>But the King held the sword with a firm hand,
+even when in play. He drew it to him before
+Astrid had time to do herself any harm. And he
+sprang up. For the first time in his life he
+trembled from fear. The Queen would die at his
+hand, and she had not been far from attaining
+her wish. At the same moment he had an inspiration,
+and he understood what was the cause
+of her despair.</p>
+
+<p>'She has committed a sin,' he thought. 'She
+has a sin upon her conscience.'</p>
+
+<p>He bent down over Astrid.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me in what manner thou hast sinned,'
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid had thrown herself down on the rough
+planks of the bridge, crying in utter despair.</p>
+
+<p>'No one free from guilt would weep like this,'
+thought the King. 'But how can the honourable
+daughter of the King have brought such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+heavy burden upon her?' he asked himself.
+'How can the noble Ingegerd have a crime upon
+her conscience?'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingegerd, tell me how thou hast sinned,' he
+asked again.</p>
+
+<p>But Astrid was sobbing so violently that she
+could not answer, but instead she drew off her
+golden arm and finger rings, and handed them
+to the King with averted face. The King
+thought how unlike this was to the gentle King's
+daughter of whom Hjalte had spoken.</p>
+
+<p>'Is this Hjalte's Ingegerd that lies sobbing at
+my feet?' he thought.</p>
+
+<p>He bent down and seized Astrid by the
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>'Who are thou? who art thou?' he said, shaking
+her arm. 'I see that thou canst not be Ingegerd.
+Who art thou?'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid was still sobbing so violently that she
+could not speak. But in order to give the King
+the answer he asked for, she let down her long
+hair, twisted a lock of it round her arms, and held
+them towards the King, and sat thus bowed and
+with drooping head. The King thought:</p>
+
+<p>'She wishes me to understand that she belongs
+to those who wear chains. She confesses that
+she is a bondwoman.'</p>
+
+<p>A thought again struck the King; he now
+understood everything.</p>
+
+<p>'Has not the Svea-King a daughter who is
+the child of a bondwoman?' he asked suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>He received no answer to this question either,
+but he heard Astrid shudder as if from cold.
+King Olaf asked still one more question.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Thou whom I have made my wife,' he said,
+'hast thou so low a mind that thou wouldest
+allow thyself to be used as a means of spoiling
+a man's honour? Is thy mind so mean that thou
+rejoicest when his enemies laugh at his discomfiture?'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid could hear from the King's voice how
+bitterly he suffered under the insult that had
+been offered him. She forgot her own sufferings,
+and wept no more.</p>
+
+<p>'Take my life,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>A great temptation came upon King Olaf.</p>
+
+<p>'Slay this wicked bondwoman,' the old Adam
+said within him. 'Show the Svea-King what it
+costs to make a fool of the King of Norway.'</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Olaf Haraldsson felt no love
+for Astrid. He hated her for having been the
+means of his humiliation. He knew everybody
+would think it right when he returned evil for
+evil, and if he did not avenge this insult, he
+would be held in derision by the Bards, and his
+enemies would no longer fear him. He had but
+one wish: to slay Astrid, to take her life. His
+anger was so violent that it craved for blood.
+If a fool had dared to put his fool's cap upon
+his head, would he not have torn it off, torn it
+to pieces, thrown it on the ground, trampled
+upon it? If he now laid Astrid a bloody corpse
+upon her ship, and sent her back to her father,
+people would say of King Olaf that he was a
+worthy descendant of Harald Haarfager.</p>
+
+<p>But King Olaf still held his sword in his
+hand, and under his fingers he felt the hilt, upon
+which he had once had inscribed: 'Blessed are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+the peacemakers,' 'Blessed are the meek,'
+'Blessed are the merciful.' And every time he,
+in this hour of anguish, grasped his sword firmly
+in order to slay Astrid, he felt these words under
+his hand. He thought he could feel every letter.
+He remembered the day when he had first heard
+these words.</p>
+
+<p>'This I will write in letters of gold on the hilt
+of my sword,' he had said, 'so that the words
+may burn in my hand every time I would swing
+my sword in fury, or for an unjust cause.'</p>
+
+<p>He felt that the hilt of the sword now burnt in
+his hand. King Olaf said aloud to himself:</p>
+
+<p>'Formerly thou wert the slave of many lusts;
+now thou hast but one master, and that is God.'</p>
+
+<p>With these words he put back the sword into
+its sheath, and began to walk to and fro on the
+bridge. Astrid remained lying in the same position.
+King Olaf saw that she crouched in fear
+of death every time he went past her.</p>
+
+<p>'I will not slay thee,' he said; but his voice
+sounded hard from hatred.</p>
+
+<p>King Olaf continued for awhile to walk backwards
+and forwards on the bridge; then he went
+up to Astrid, and asked her in the same hard
+voice what her real name was, and that she was
+able to answer him. He looked at this woman
+whom he had so highly treasured, and who now
+lay at his feet like a wounded deer&mdash;he looked
+down upon her as a dead man's soul looks with
+pity at the poor body which was once its dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, thou my soul,' said King Olaf, 'it was
+there thou dwelt in love, and now thou art as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+homeless as a beggar.' He drew nearer to
+Astrid, and spoke as if she were no longer living
+or could hear what he said. 'It was told me
+that there was a King's daughter whose heart
+was so pure and holy that she endued with peace
+all who came near her. They told me of her
+gentleness, that he who saw her felt as safe as a
+helpless child does with its mother, and when
+the beautiful woman who now lies here came
+to me, I thought that she was Ingegerd, and she
+became exceeding dear to me. She was so
+beautiful and glad, and she made my own heavy
+thoughts light. And did she sometimes act
+otherwise than I expected the proud Ingegerd
+to do, she was too dear to me to doubt her; she
+stole into my heart with her joyousness and
+beauty.'</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a time, and thought how
+dear Astrid had been to him and how happiness
+had with her come to his house.</p>
+
+<p>'I could forgive her,' he said aloud. 'I could
+again make her my Queen, I could in love take
+her in my arms; but I <em>dare</em> not, for my soul
+would still be homeless. Ah, thou fair woman,'
+he said, 'why dost lying dwell within thee? With
+thee there is no security, no rest.'</p>
+
+<p>The King went on bemoaning himself, but
+now Astrid stood up.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf, do not speak thus to me,' she
+said; 'I will rather die. Understand, I am in
+earnest.'</p>
+
+<p>Then she tried to say a few words to excuse
+herself. She told him that she had gone to
+Kungah&auml;lla not with the intention of deceiving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+him, but in order to be a Princess for a few
+weeks, to be waited upon like a Queen, to sail
+on the sea. But she had intended to confess who
+she was as soon as she came to Kungah&auml;lla.
+There she expected to find Hjalte and the other
+great men who knew Ingegerd. She had never
+thought of deceiving him when she came, but
+an evil spirit had sent all those away who knew
+Ingegerd, and then the temptation had come
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>'When I saw thee, King Olaf,' she said, 'I
+forgot everything to become thine, and I thought
+I would gladly suffer death at thine hand had I
+but for one day been thy wife.'</p>
+
+<p>King Olaf answered her:</p>
+
+<p>'I see that what was deadly earnest to me was
+but a pastime to thee. Never hast thou thought
+upon what it was to come and say to a man: "I
+am she whom thou most fervently desirest; I am
+that high-born maiden whom it is the greatest
+honour to win." And then thou art not that
+woman; thou art but a lying bondwoman.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have loved thee from the first moment I
+heard thy name,' Astrid said softly.</p>
+
+<p>The King clenched his hand in anger against
+her.</p>
+
+<p>'Know, Astrid, that I have longed for Ingegerd
+as no man has ever longed for woman. I
+would have clung to her as the soul of the dead
+clings to the angel bearing him upwards. I
+thought she was so pure that she could have
+helped me to lead a sinless life.'</p>
+
+<p>And he broke out into wild longings, and said
+that he longed for the power of the holy ones of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+God, but that he was too weak and sinful to attain
+to perfection.</p>
+
+<p>'But the King's daughter could have helped
+me,' he said; 'she the saintly and gentle one
+would have helped me. Oh, my God,' he said,
+'whichever way I turn I see sinners, wherever
+I go I meet those who would entice me to sin.
+Why didst Thou not send me the King's daughter,
+who had not a single evil thought in her heart?
+Her gentle eye would have found the right path
+for my foot. Whenever I strayed from it her
+gentle hand would have led me back.'</p>
+
+<p>A feeling of utter helplessness and the weariness
+of despair fell upon Olaf Haraldsson.</p>
+
+<p>'It was this upon which I had set my hopes,'
+he said&mdash;'to have a good woman at my side, not
+to wander alone amongst wickedness and sin forever.
+Now I feel that I must succumb; I am
+unable to fight any longer. Have I not asked
+God,' he exclaimed, 'what place I shall have
+before His face? To what hast Thou chosen me,
+Thou Lord of souls? Is it appointed unto me
+to become the equal of apostles and martyrs?
+But now, Astrid, I need ask no longer; God hath
+not been willing to give me that woman who
+should have assisted me in my wandering. Now
+I know that I shall never win the crown of the
+Saints.'</p>
+
+<p>The King was silent in inconsolable despair;
+then Astrid drew nearer to him.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf,' she said, 'what thou now sayest
+both Hjalte and Ingegerd have told me long ago,
+but I would not believe that thou wert more than
+a good and brave knight and noble King. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+only now that I have lived under thy roof that
+my soul has begun to fear thee. I have felt that
+it was worse than death to appear before thee
+with a lie upon my lips. Never have I been so
+terrified,' Astrid continued, 'as when I understood
+that thou wast a Saint. When I saw thee
+burn the chips in thine hand, when I saw sickness
+flee at thy bidding, and the sword fall out of
+thine enemy's hand when he met thee, I was
+terrified unto death when I saw that thou wast a
+Saint, and I resolved to die before thou knewest
+that I had deceived thee.'</p>
+
+<p>King Olaf did not answer. Astrid looked up
+at him; she saw that his eyes were turned
+towards heaven. She did not know if he had
+heard her.</p>
+
+<p>'Ah,' she said, 'this moment have I feared
+every day and every hour since I came hither.
+I would have died rather than live through it.'</p>
+
+<p>Olaf Haraldsson was still silent.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf,' she said, 'I would gladly give my
+life for thee; I would gladly throw myself into
+the gray river so that thou shouldst not live with
+a lying woman at thy side. The more I saw of
+thy holiness the better I understood that I must
+go from thee. A Saint of God cannot have a
+lying bondwoman at his side.'</p>
+
+<p>The King was still silent, but now Astrid raised
+her eyes to his face; then she cried out, terror-stricken:</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf, thy face shines.'</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Astrid spoke, God had shown King
+Olaf a vision. He saw all the stars of heaven
+leave their appointed places, and fly like swarm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>ing
+bees about the universe. But suddenly they
+all gathered above his head and formed a radiant
+crown.</p>
+
+<p>'Astrid,' said he, with trembling voice, 'God
+hath spoken to me. It is true what thou sayest.
+I shall become a Saint of God.'</p>
+
+<p>His voice trembled from emotion, and his face
+shone in the night. But when Astrid saw the
+light that surrounded his head, she arose. For
+her the last hope had faded.</p>
+
+<p>'Now I will go,' she said. 'Now thou knowest
+whom thou art. Thou canst never more bear
+me at thy side. But think gently of me. Without
+joy or happiness have I lived all my life. In
+rags have I gone; blows have I endured. Forgive
+me when I am gone. My love has done thee
+no harm.'</p>
+
+<p>When Astrid in silent despair crossed over the
+bridge, Olaf Haraldsson awoke from his ecstasy.
+He hastened after her.</p>
+
+<p>'Why wilt thou go?' he said. 'Why wilt
+thou go?'</p>
+
+<p>'<em>Must</em> I not go from thee when thou art a
+Saint?' she whispered scarcely audibly.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou shalt not go. Now thou canst remain,'
+said King Olaf. 'Before, I was a lowly man and
+must fear all sin; a poor earthly King was I,
+too poor to bestow on thee my grace; but now
+all the glory of Heaven has been given to me. Art
+thou weak? I am the Lord's knight. Dost thou
+fall? I can lift thee up. God hath chosen me,
+Astrid. Thou canst not harm me, but I can help
+thee. Ah! what am I saying? In this hour God
+hath so wholly and fully shed the riches of His<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+love in my heart that I cannot even see thou hast
+done wrong.'</p>
+
+<p>Gently and tenderly he lifted up the trembling
+form, and whilst lovingly supporting her, who
+was still sobbing and who could hardly stand
+upright, he and Astrid went back to the King's
+Castle.</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p>
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Old Agnete">III. <a name="Old_Agnete" id="Old_Agnete"><span class="dec_italic">Old</span> <span class="smcap">Agnete</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">III</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">Old</span> <span class="smcap">Agnete</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">Old</span> <span class="smcap">Agnete</span></p>
+
+<p>An old woman went up the mountain-path
+with short, tripping steps. She was little
+and thin. Her face was pale and wizened,
+but neither hard nor furrowed. She wore a long
+cloak and a quilled cap. She had a Prayer-Book
+in her hand and a sprig of lavender in her handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>She lived in a hut far up the high mountain
+where no trees could grow. It was lying quite
+close to the edge of a broad glacier, which sent
+its river of ice from the snow-clad mountain peak
+into the depths of the valley. There she lived
+quite alone. All those who had belonged to her
+were dead.</p>
+
+<p>It was Sunday, and she had been to church.
+But whatever might be the cause, her going there
+had not made her happy, but sorrowful. The
+clergyman had spoken about death and the
+doomed, and that had affected her. She had suddenly
+begun to think of how she had heard in
+her childhood that many of the doomed were
+tormented in the region of eternal cold on the
+mountain right above her dwelling. She could
+remember many tales about these wanderers of
+the glaciers&mdash;these indefatigable shadows which
+were hunted from place to place by the icy
+mountain winds.</p>
+
+<p>All at once she felt a great terror of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+mountain, and thought that her hut was dreadfully
+high up. Supposing those who moved
+about invisibly there wandered down the glaciers!
+And she who was quite alone! The word
+'alone' gave to her thoughts a still sadder turn.
+She again felt the full burden of that sorrow
+which never left her. She thought how hard it
+was to be so far away from human beings.</p>
+
+<p>'Old Agnete,' she said aloud to herself, as she
+had got into the habit of doing in the lonely
+waste, 'you sit in your hut and spin, and spin.
+You work and toil all the hours of the day so
+as not to perish from hunger. But is there anyone
+to whom you give any pleasure by being
+alive? Is there anyone, old Agnete? If any of
+your own were living&mdash;&mdash;Yes, then, perhaps,
+if you lived nearer the village, you might be of
+some use to somebody. Poor as you are, you
+could neither take dog nor cat home to you,
+but you could probably now and then give a
+beggar shelter. You ought not to live so far
+away from the highroad, old Agnete. If you
+could only once in a while give a thirsty wayfarer
+a drink, then you would know that it was of
+some use your being alive.'</p>
+
+<p>She sighed, and said to herself that not even
+the peasant women who gave her flax to spin
+would mourn her death. She had certainly
+striven to do her work honestly and well, but no
+doubt there were many who could have done it
+better. She began to cry bitterly, when the
+thought struck her that his reverence, who had
+seen her sitting in the same place in church for so
+many, many years, would perhaps think it a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+matter of perfect indifference whether she was
+dead or not.</p>
+
+<p>'It is as if I were dead,' she said. 'No one
+asks after me. I would just as well lie down
+and die. I am already frozen to death from cold
+and loneliness. I am frozen to the core of the
+heart, I am indeed. Ah me! ah me!' she said,
+now she had been set a-thinking; 'if there were
+only someone who really needed me, there might
+still be a little warmth left in old Agnete. But
+I cannot knit stockings for the mountain goats,
+or make the beds for the marmots, can I? I
+tell Thee,' she said, stretching our her hands
+towards heaven, 'something Thou must give me
+to do, or I shall lay me down and die.'</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment a tall, stern monk came
+towards her. He walked by her side because he
+saw that she was sorrowful, and she told him
+about her troubles. She said that her heart was
+nearly frozen to death, and that she would become
+like one of the wanderers on the glacier
+if God did not give her something to live for.</p>
+
+<p>'God will assuredly do that,' said the monk.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you not see that God is powerless here?'
+old Agnete said. 'Here there is nothing but
+an empty, barren waste.'</p>
+
+<p>They went higher and higher towards the snow
+mountains. The moss spread itself softly over
+the stones; the Alpine herbs, with their velvety
+leaves, grew along the pathway; the mountain,
+with its rifts and precipices, its glaciers and snow-drifts,
+towered above them, weighing them down.
+Then the monk discovered old Agnete's hut,
+right below the glacier.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Oh,' he said, 'is it there you live? Then you
+are not alone there; you have company enough.
+Only look!'</p>
+
+<p>The monk put his thumb and first finger together,
+held them before old Agnete's left eye,
+and bade her look through them towards the
+mountain. But old Agnete shuddered and closed
+her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'If there is anything to see up there, then I
+will not look on any account,' she said. 'The
+Lord preserve us! it is bad enough without that.'</p>
+
+<p>'Good-bye, then,' said the monk; 'it is not
+certain that you will be permitted to see such a
+thing a second time.'</p>
+
+<p>Old Agnete grew curious; she opened her
+eyes and looked towards the glacier. At first
+she saw nothing remarkable, but soon she began
+to discern things moving about. What she had
+taken to be mist and vapour, or bluish-white
+shadows on the ice, were multitudes of doomed
+souls, tormented in the eternal cold.</p>
+
+<p>Poor old Agnete trembled like an aspen leaf.
+Everything was just as she had heard it described
+in days gone by. The dead wandered about there
+in endless anguish and pain. Most of them were
+shrouded in something long and white, but all
+had their faces and their hands bared.</p>
+
+<p>They could not be counted, there was such a
+multitude. The longer she looked, the more
+there appeared. Some walked proud and erect,
+others seemed to dance over the glacier; but she
+saw that they all cut their feet on the sharp and
+jagged edges of the ice.</p>
+
+<p>It was just as she had been told. She saw how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+they constantly huddled close together, as if to
+warm themselves, but immediately drew back
+again, terrified by the deathly cold which emanated
+from their bodies.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if the cold of the mountain came
+from them, as if it were they who prevented the
+snow from melting and made the mist so piercingly
+cold.</p>
+
+<p>They were not all moving; some stood in icy
+stoniness, and it looked as if they had been standing
+thus for years, for ice and snow had gathered
+around them so that only the upper portion of
+their bodies could be seen.</p>
+
+<p>The longer the little old woman gazed the
+quieter she grew. Fear left her, and she was only
+filled with sorrow for all these tormented beings.
+There was no abatement in their pain, no rest for
+their torn feet, hurrying over ice sharp as edged
+steel. And how cold they were! how they shivered!
+how their teeth chattered from cold!
+Those who were petrified and those who could
+move, all suffered alike from the snarling, biting,
+unbearable cold.</p>
+
+<p>There were many young men and women; but
+there was no youth in their faces, blue with cold.
+It looked as if they were playing, but all joy was
+dead. They shivered, and were huddled up like
+old people.</p>
+
+<p>But those who made the deepest impression on
+her were those frozen fast in the hard glacier,
+and those who were hanging from the mountain-side
+like great icicles.</p>
+
+<p>Then the monk removed his hand, and old
+Agnete saw only the barren, empty glaciers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+Here and there were ice-mounds, but they did
+not surround any petrified ghosts. The blue
+light on the glacier did not proceed from frozen
+bodies; the wind chased the snowflakes before
+it, but not any ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Still old Agnete was certain that she had really
+seen all this, and she asked the monk:</p>
+
+<p>'Is it permitted to do anything for these poor
+doomed ones?'</p>
+
+<p>He answered:</p>
+
+<p>'When has God forbidden Love to do good
+or Mercy to solace?'</p>
+
+<p>Then the monk went his way, and old Agnete
+went to her hut and thought it all over. The
+whole evening she pondered how she could help
+the doomed who were wandering on the glaciers.
+For the first time in many years she had been
+too busy to think of her loneliness.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning she again went down to the
+village. She smiled, and was well content. Old
+age was no longer so heavy a burden. 'The
+dead,' she said to herself, 'do not care so much
+about red cheeks and light steps. They only
+want one to think of them with a little warmth.
+But young people do not trouble to do that. Oh
+no, oh no. How should the dead protect themselves
+from the terrible coldness of death did not
+old people open their hearts to them?</p>
+
+<p>When she came to the village shop she bought
+a large package of candles, and from a peasant
+she ordered a great load of firewood; but in
+order to pay for it she had to take in twice as
+much spinning as usual.</p>
+
+<p>Towards evening, when she got home again,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+she said many prayers, and tried to keep up her
+courage by singing hymns. But her courage
+sank more and more. All the same, she did what
+she had made up her mind to do.</p>
+
+<p>She moved her bed into the inner room of her
+hut. In the front room she made a big fire and
+lighted it. In the window she placed two candles,
+and left the outer door wide open. Then
+she went to bed.</p>
+
+<p>She lay in the darkness and listened.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, there certainly was a step. It was as if
+someone had come gliding down the glacier. It
+came heavily, moaning. It crept round the hut
+as if it dared not come in. Close to the wall it
+stood and shivered.</p>
+
+<p>Old Agnete could not bear it any longer. She
+sprang out of bed, went into the outer room and
+closed the door. It was too much; flesh and
+blood could not stand it.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the hut she heard deep sighs and dragging
+steps, as of sore, wounded feet. They
+dragged themselves away further and further up
+the icy glacier. Now and again she also heard
+sobs; but soon everything was quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Then old Agnete was beside herself with anxiety.
+'You are a coward, you silly old thing,'
+she said. 'Both the fire and the lights, which
+cost so much, are burning out. Shall it all have
+been done in vain because you are such a miserable
+coward?' And when she had said this
+she got out of bed again, crying from fear, with
+chattering teeth, and shivering all over; but into
+the other room she went, and the door she
+opened.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Again she lay and waited. Now she was no
+longer frightened that they should come. She
+was only afraid lest she had scared them away,
+and that they dared not come back.</p>
+
+<p>And as she lay there in the darkness she began
+to call just as she used to do in her young days
+when she was tending the sheep.</p>
+
+<p>'My little white lambs, my lambs in the
+mountains, come, come! Come down from rift
+and precipice, my little white lambs!'</p>
+
+<p>Then it seemed as if a cold wind from the
+mountain came rushing into the room. She
+heard neither step nor sob, only gusts of wind
+that came rushing along the walls of the hut into
+the room. And it sounded as if someone were
+continually saying:</p>
+
+<p>'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't
+frighten her! don't frighten her!'</p>
+
+<p>She had a feeling as if the outside room was
+so overcrowded that they were being crushed
+against the walls, and that the walls were giving
+way. Sometimes it seemed as if they would lift
+the roof in order to gain more room. But the
+whole time there were whispers:</p>
+
+<p>'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't
+frighten her!'</p>
+
+<p>Then old Agnete felt happy and peaceful. She
+folded her hands and fell asleep. In the morning
+it seemed as if the whole had been a dream.
+Everything looked as usual in the outer room;
+the fire had burnt out, and so had the candles.
+There was not a vestige of tallow left in the
+candlesticks.</p>
+
+<p>As long as old Agnete lived she continued to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+do this. She spun and worked so that she could
+keep her fire burning every night. And she was
+happy because someone needed her.</p>
+
+<p>Then one Sunday she was not in her usual seat
+in the church. Two peasants went up to her hut
+to see if there was anything the matter. She was
+already dead, and they carried her body down
+to the village to bury it.</p>
+
+<p>When, the following Sunday, her funeral took
+place, just before Mass, there were but few who
+followed, neither did one see grief on any face.
+But suddenly, just as the coffin was being lowered
+into the grave, a tall, stern monk came into
+the churchyard, and he stood still and pointed
+to the snow-clad mountains. Then they saw the
+whole mountain-ridge shining in a red light as
+if lighted with joy, and round it wound a procession
+of small yellow flames, looking like
+burning candles. And these flames numbered
+as many as the candles which old Agnete had
+burned for the doomed. Then people said:
+'Praise the Lord! She whom no one mourns
+here below has all the same found friends in the
+solitude <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Punctuation added">above.</span>'</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="The Fisherman's Ring">IV. <a name="The_Fishermans_Ring" id="The_Fishermans_Ring"><span class="dec_italic">The Fisherman's</span> <span class="smcap">Ring</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">IV</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The Fisherman's</span> <span class="smcap">Ring</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The Fisherman's</span> <span class="smcap">Ring</span></p>
+
+<p>During the reign of the Doge Gradenigos
+there lived in Venice an old fisherman,
+Cecco by name. He had been an
+unusually strong man, and was still very strong
+for his age, but lately he had given up work and
+left it to his two sons to provide for him. He was
+very proud of his sons, and he loved them&mdash;ah,
+signor, how he loved them!</p>
+
+<p>Fate had so ordered it that their bringing up
+had been almost entirely left to him. Their
+mother had died early, and so Cecco had to take
+care of them. He had looked after their clothes
+and cooked their food; he had sat in the boat
+with needle and cotton and mended and darned.
+He had not cared in the least that people had
+laughed at him on that account. He had also,
+quite alone, taught them all it was necessary for
+them to know. He had made a couple of able
+fishermen of them, and taught them to honour
+God and San Marco.</p>
+
+<p>'Always remember,' he said to them, 'that
+Venice will never be able to stand in her own
+strength. Look at her! Has she not been built
+on the waves? Look at the low islands close to
+land, where the sea plays amongst the seaweed.
+You would not venture to tread upon them, and
+yet it is upon such foundation that the whole
+city rests. And do you not know that the north
+wind has strength enough to throw both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+churches and palaces into the sea? Do you not
+know that we have such powerful enemies, that
+all the princes in Christendom cannot vanquish
+them? Therefore you must always pray to San
+Marco, for in his strong hands rests the chains
+which hold Venice suspended over the depths of
+the sea.'</p>
+
+<p>And in the evening, when the moon shed its
+light over Venice, greenish-blue from the sea-mist;
+when they quietly glided up the Canale
+Grande and the gondolas they met were full of
+singers; when the palaces shone in their white
+splendour, and thousands of lights mirrored
+themselves in the dark waters&mdash;then he always
+reminded them that they must thank San Marco
+for life and happiness.</p>
+
+<p>But oh, signor! he did not forget him in the
+daytime either. When they returned from fishing
+and glided over the water of the lagoons,
+light-blue and golden; when the city lay before
+them, swimming on the waves; when the great
+ships passed in and out of the harbour, and the
+palace of the Doges shone like a huge jewel-casket,
+holding all the world's treasure&mdash;then he
+never forgot to tell them that all these things
+were the gift of San Marco, and that they would
+all vanish if a single Venetian were ungrateful
+enough to give up believing in and adoring him.</p>
+
+<p>Then, one day, the sons went out fishing on
+the open sea, outside Lido. They were in company
+with several others, had a splendid vessel,
+and intended being away several days. The
+weather was fine, and they hoped for a goodly
+haul.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They left the Rialto, the large island where the
+city proper lies, one early morning, and as they
+passed through the lagoons they saw all the
+islands which, like fortifications, protect Venice
+against the sea, appear through the mist of the
+morning. There were La Gindecca and San
+Giorgio on the right, and San Michele, Muracco
+and San Lazzaro on the left. Then island followed
+upon island in a large circle, right on to
+the long Lido lying straight before them, and
+forming, as it were, the clasp of this string of
+pearls. And beyond Lido was the wide, infinite
+sea.</p>
+
+<p>When they were well at sea, some of them got
+into a small boat and rowed out to set their nets.
+It was still fine weather, although the waves were
+higher here than inside the islands. None of
+them, however, dreamt of any danger. They had
+a good boat and were experienced men. But
+soon those left on the vessel saw that the sea and
+the sky suddenly grew darker in the north. They
+understood that a storm was coming on, and they
+at once shouted to their comrades, but they were
+already too far away to hear them.</p>
+
+<p>The wind first reached the small boat. When
+the fishermen suddenly saw the waves rise around
+them, as herds of cattle on a large plain arise
+in the morning, one of the men in the boat stood
+up and beckoned to his comrades, but the same
+moment he fell backwards into the sea. Immediately
+afterwards a wave came which raised the
+boat on her bows, and one could see how the
+men, as it were, were shaken from off their seats
+and flung into the sea. It only lasted a moment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+and everything had disappeared. Then the boat
+again appeared, keel upwards. The men in the
+vessel tried to reach the spot, but could not tack
+against the wind.</p>
+
+<p>It was a terrific storm which came rushing
+over the sea, and soon the fishermen in the vessel
+had their work set to save themselves. They succeeded
+in getting home safely, however, and
+brought with them the news of the disaster. It
+was Cecco's two sons and three others who had
+perished.</p>
+
+<p>Ah me! how strangely things come about!
+The same morning Cecco had gone down to
+the Rialto to the fish-market. He went about
+amongst the stands and strutted about like a fine
+gentleman because he had no need to work.
+He even invited a couple of old Lido fishermen
+to an asteri and stood them a beaker of wine.
+He grew very important as he sat there and
+bragged and boasted about his sons. His spirits
+rose high, and he took out the zecchine&mdash;the
+one the Doge had given him when he had saved a
+child from drowning in Canale Grande. He was
+very proud of this large gold coin, carried it always
+about him, and showed it to people whenever
+there was an opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a man entered the asteri and began
+to tell about the disaster, without noticing that
+Cecco was sitting there. But he had not been
+speaking long before Cecco threw himself over
+him and seized him by the throat.</p>
+
+<p>'You do not dare to tell me that they are
+dead!' he shrieked&mdash;'not my sons!'</p>
+
+<p>The man succeeded in getting away from him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+but Cecco for a long time went on as if he were
+out of his mind. People heard him shout and
+groan; they crowded into the asteri&mdash;as many
+as it could hold&mdash;and stood round him in a circle
+as if he were a juggler.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco sat on the floor and moaned. He hit
+the hard stone floor with his fist, and said over
+and over again:</p>
+
+<p>'It is San Marco, San Marco, San Marco!'</p>
+
+<p>'Cecco, you have taken leave of your senses
+from grief,' they said to him.</p>
+
+<p>'I knew it would happen on the open sea,'
+Cecco said; 'outside Lido and Malamocco,
+there, I knew it would happen. There San
+Marco would take them. He bore them a
+grudge. I have feared it, boy. Yes,' he said,
+without hearing what they said to quiet him,
+'they once laughed at him, once when we were
+lying outside Lido. He has not forgotten it; he
+will not stand being laughed at.'</p>
+
+<p>He looked with confused glances at the bystanders,
+as if to seek help.</p>
+
+<p>'Look here, Beppo from Malamocca,' he said,
+stretching out his hand towards a big fisherman,
+'don't you believe it was San Marco?'</p>
+
+<p>'Don't imagine any such thing, Cecco.'</p>
+
+<p>'Now you shall hear, Beppo, how it happened.
+You see, we were lying out at sea, and to while
+away the time I told them how San Marco had
+come to Venice. The evangelist San Marco
+was first buried in a beautiful cathedral at Alexandria
+in Egypt. But the town got into the
+possession of unbelievers, and one day the
+Khalifa ordered that they should build him a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+magnificent palace at Alexandria, and take some
+columns from the Christian churches for its
+decoration. But just at that time there were
+two Venetian merchants at Alexandria who had
+ten heavily-laden vessels lying in the harbour.
+When these men entered the church where San
+Marco was buried and heard the command of the
+Khalifa, they said to the sorrowful priests:
+"The precious body which you have in your
+church may be desecrated by the Saracens. Give
+it to us; we will honour it, for San Marco was
+the first to preach on the Lagoon, and the Doge
+will reward you." And the priests gave their
+consent, and in order that the Christians of Alexandria
+should not object, the body of another
+holy man was placed in the Evangelist's coffin.
+But to prevent the Saracens from getting any
+news of the removal of the body, it was placed
+at the bottom of a large chest, and above it were
+packed hams and smoked bacon, which the
+Saracens could not endure. So when the Custom-house
+officers opened the lid of the chest,
+they at once hurried away. The two merchants,
+however, brought San Marco safely to Venice;
+you know, Beppo, that this is what they say.'</p>
+
+<p>'I do, Cecco.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes; but just listen now,' and Cecco half
+arose, and in his fear spoke in a low voice.
+'Something terrible now happened. When I told
+the boys that the holy man had been hidden
+underneath the bacon, they burst out laughing.
+I tried to hush them, but they only laughed the
+louder. Giacomo was lying on his stomach in
+the bows, and Pietro sat with his legs dangling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+outside the boat, and they both laughed so that
+it could be heard far out over the sea.'</p>
+
+<p>'But, Cecco, surely two children may be allowed
+to laugh.'</p>
+
+<p>'But don't you understand that is where they
+have perished to-day&mdash;on the very spot? Or can
+you understand why they should have lost their
+lives on that spot?'</p>
+
+<p>Now they all began to talk to him and comfort
+him. It was his grief which made him lose
+his senses. This was not like San Marco. He
+would not revenge himself upon two children.
+Was it not natural that when a boat was caught
+in a storm this would happen on the open sea
+and not in the harbour?</p>
+
+<p>Surely his sons had not lived in enmity with
+San Marco. They had heard them shout, '<em><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Eviva
+San Marco!</span></em>' as eagerly as all the others, and had
+he not protected them to this very day. He had
+never, during the years that had passed, shown
+any sign of being angry with them.</p>
+
+<p>'But, Cecco,' they said, 'you will bring misfortune
+upon us with your talk about San Marco.
+You, who are an old man and a wise man, should
+know better than to raise his anger against the
+Venetians. What are we without him?'</p>
+
+<p>Cecco sat and looked at them bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>'Then you don't believe it?'</p>
+
+<p>'No one in his senses would believe such a
+thing.'</p>
+
+<p>It looked as if they had succeeded in quieting
+him.</p>
+
+<p>'I will also try not to believe it,' he said. He
+rose and walked towards the door. 'It would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+too cruel, would it not?' he said. 'They were
+too handsome and too brave for anyone to hate
+them; I will not believe it.'</p>
+
+<p>He went home, and in the narrow street outside
+his door he met an old woman, one of his
+neighbours.</p>
+
+<p>'They are reading a Mass in the cathedral for
+the souls of the dead,' she said to Cecco, and
+hurried away. She was afraid of him; he looked
+so strange.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco took his boat and made his way through
+the small canals down to Riva degli Schiavoni.
+There was a wide view from there; he looked
+towards Lido and the sea. Yes, it was a hard
+wind, but not a storm by any means; there
+were hardly any waves. And his sons had perished
+in weather like this! It was inconceivable.</p>
+
+<p>He fastened his boat, and went across the
+Piazetta and the Market Place into San Marco.
+There were many people in the church, and they
+were all kneeling and praying in great fear; for
+it is much more terrible for the Venetians, you
+know, than any other people when there is a
+disaster at sea. They do not get their living
+from vineyards or fields, but they are all, everyone
+of them, dependent on the sea. Whenever
+the sea rose against any one of them they were
+all afraid, and hurried to San Marco to pray to
+him for protection.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Cecco entered the cathedral he
+stopped. He thought of how he had brought
+his little sons there, and taught them to pray to
+San Marco. 'It is he who carries us over the
+sea, who opens the gates of Byzance for us and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+gives us the supremacy over the islands of the
+East,' he said to them. Out of gratitude for all
+this the Venetians had built San Marco the most
+beautiful temple in the world, and no vessel ever
+returned from a foreign port without bringing a
+gift for San Marco.</p>
+
+<p>Then they had admired the red marble walls
+of the cathedral and the golden mosaic ceiling.
+It was as if no misfortune could befall a city that
+had such a sanctuary for her patron Saint.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco quickly knelt down and began to pray,
+the one <em>Paternoster</em> after the other. It came
+back, he felt. He would send it away by prayers.
+He would not believe anything bad about
+San Marco.</p>
+
+<p>But it had been no storm at all. And so much
+was certain, that even if the Saint had not sent
+the storm, he had, in any case, not done anything
+to help Cecco's sons, but had allowed them
+to perish as if by accident. When this thought
+came upon him he began to pray; but the
+thought would not leave him.</p>
+
+<p>And to think that San Marco had a treasury
+in this cathedral full of all the glories of fairyland!
+To think that he had himself prayed to him all
+his life, and had never rowed past the Piazetta
+without going into the cathedral to invoke him!</p>
+
+<p>Surely it was not by a mere accident that his
+sons had to-day perished on the sea! Oh, it
+was miserable for the Venetians to have no one
+better to depend upon! Just fancy a Saint who
+revenged himself upon two children&mdash;a patron
+Saint who could not protect against a gust of
+wind!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He stood up, and he shrugged his shoulders,
+and disparagingly waved his hand when he
+looked towards the tomb of the Saint in the
+chancel.</p>
+
+<p>A verger was going about with a large chased
+silver-gilt dish, collecting gifts for San Marco.
+He went from the one person to the other, and
+also came to Cecco.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco drew back as if it were the Evil One himself
+who handed him the plate. Did San Marco
+ask for gifts from him? Did he think he deserved
+gifts from him?</p>
+
+<p>All at once he seized the large golden zecchine
+he had in his belt, and flung it into the plate with
+such violence that the ring of it could be heard
+all over the church. It disturbed those who were
+praying, and made them turn round. And all
+who saw Cecco's face were terrified; he looked as
+if he were possessed of evil spirits.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco immediately left the church, and at first
+felt it as a great relief that he had been revenged
+upon the Saint. He had treated him as one treats
+a usurer who demands more than he is entitled to.
+'Take this too,' one says, and throws his last gold
+piece in the fellow's face so that the blood runs
+down over his eyes. But the usurer does not
+strike again&mdash;simply stoops and picks up the zecchine.
+So, too, had San Marco done. He had accepted
+Cecco's zecchine, having first robbed him
+of his sons. Cecco had made him accept a gift
+which had been tendered with such bitter hatred.
+Would an honourable man have put up with such
+treatment? But San Marco was a coward&mdash;both
+cowardly and revengeful. But he was not likely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+to revenge himself upon Cecco. He was, no
+doubt, pleased and thankful he had got the
+zecchine. He simply accepted it and pretended
+that it had been given as piously as could be.</p>
+
+<p>When Cecco stood at the entrance, two vergers
+quickly passed him.</p>
+
+<p>'It rises&mdash;it rises terribly!' the one said.</p>
+
+<p>'What rises?' asked Cecco.</p>
+
+<p>'The water in the crypt. It has risen a foot in
+the last two or three minutes.'</p>
+
+<p>When Cecco went down the steps, he saw a
+small pool of water on the Market Place close to
+the bottom step. It was sea-water, which had
+splashed up from the Piazetta. He was surprised
+that the sea had risen so high, and he hurried
+down to the Riva, where his boat lay. Everything
+was as he had left it, only the water had
+risen considerably. It came rolling in broad
+waves through the five sea-gates; but the wind
+was not very strong. At the Riva there were already
+pools of sea-water, and the canals rose so
+that the doors in the houses facing the water had
+to be closed. The sky was all gray like the sea.</p>
+
+<p>It never struck Cecco that it might grow into
+a serious storm. He would not believe any such
+thing. San Marco had allowed his sons to perish
+without cause. He felt sure this was no real
+storm. He would just like to see if it would be a
+storm, and he sat down beside his boat and
+waited.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly rifts appeared in the dull-gray
+clouds which covered the sky. The clouds were
+torn asunder and flung aside, and large storm-clouds
+came rushing, black like warships, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+from them scourging rain and hail fell upon the
+city. And something like quite a new sea came
+surging in from Lido. Ah, signor! they were
+not the swan-necked waves you have seen out
+there, the waves that bend their transparent necks
+and hasten towards the shore, and which, when
+they are pitilessly repulsed, float away again with
+their white foam-hair dispersed over the surface
+of the sea. These were dark waves, chasing each
+other in furious rage, and over their tops the bitter
+froth of the sea was whipped into mist.</p>
+
+<p>The wind was now so strong that the seagulls
+could no longer continue their quiet flight, but,
+shrieking, were thrust from their course. Cecco
+soon saw them with much trouble making their
+way towards the sea, so as not to be caught by
+the storm and flung against the walls. Hundreds
+of pigeons on San Marco's square flew up, beating
+their wings, so that it sounded like a new
+storm, and hid themselves away in all the nooks
+and corners of the church roof.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not the birds alone that were frightened
+by the storm. A couple of gondolas had already
+got loose, and were thrown against the
+shore, and were nearly shattered. And now all
+the gondoliers came rushing to pull their boats
+into the boathouses, or place them in shelter in
+the small canals.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors on the ships lying in the harbour
+worked with the anchor-chains to make the vessels
+fast, in order to prevent them drifting on to
+the shore. They took down the clothes hanging
+up to dry, pulled their long caps well over
+their foreheads, and began to collect all the loose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+articles lying about in order to bring them below
+deck. Outside Canale Grande a whole fishing-fleet
+came hurrying home. All the people from
+Lido and Malamocco who had sold their goods
+at the Rialto were rushing homewards, before the
+storm grew too violent.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco laughed when he saw the fishermen
+bending over their oars and straining themselves
+as if they were fleeing from death itself. Could
+they not see that it was only a gust of wind?
+They could very well have remained and given
+the Venetian women time to buy all their cattle,
+fish, and crabs.</p>
+
+<p>He was certainly not going to pull his boat into
+shelter, although the storm was now violent
+enough for any ordinary man to have taken notice
+of it. The floating bridges were lifted up high
+and cast on to the shore, whilst the washerwomen
+hurried home shrieking. The broad-brimmed
+hats of the signors were blown off into the canals,
+from whence the street-boys fished them out with
+great glee. Sails were torn from the masts, and
+fluttered in the air with a cracking sound; children
+were knocked down by the strong wind; and
+the clothes hanging on the lines in the narrow
+streets were torn to rags and carried far away.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco laughed at the storm&mdash;a storm which
+drove the birds away, and played all sorts of
+pranks in the street, like a boy. But, all the same,
+he pulled his boat under one of the arches of the
+bridge. One could really not allow what that
+wind might take it into its head to do.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening Cecco thought that it would
+have been fun to have been out at sea. It would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+have been splendid sailing with such a fresh
+wind. But on shore it was unpleasant. Chimneys
+were blown down; the roofs of the boathouses
+were lifted right off; it rained tiles from the
+houses into the canals; the wind shook the doors
+and the window-shutters, rushed in under the
+open loggias of the palaces and tore off the decorations.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco held out bravely, but he did not go home
+to bed. He could not take the boat home with
+him, so it was better to remain and look after it.
+But when anyone went by and said that it was
+terrible weather he would not admit it. He had
+experienced very different weather in his young
+days.</p>
+
+<p>'Storm!' he said to himself&mdash;'call this a
+storm? And they think, perhaps, that it began
+the same moment I threw the zecchine to San
+Marco. As if he can command a real storm!'</p>
+
+<p>When night came the wind and the sea grew
+still more violent, so that Venice trembled in her
+foundations. Doge Gradenigo and the Gentlemen
+of the High Council went in the darkness of
+the night to San Marco to pray for the city.
+Torch-bearers went before them, and the flames
+were spread out by the wind, so that they lay flat,
+like pennants. The wind tore the Doge's heavy
+brocade gown, so that two men were obliged to
+hold it.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco thought this was the most remarkable
+thing he had ever seen&mdash;Doge Gradenigo going
+himself to the cathedral on account of this bit of
+a wind! What would those people have done if
+there had been a real storm?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The waves beat incessantly against the bulwarks.
+In the darkness of the night it was as if
+white-headed wresters sprang up from the deep,
+and with teeth and claws clung fast to the piles to
+tear them loose from the shore. Cecco fancied
+he could hear their angry snorts when they were
+hurled back again. But he shuddered when he
+heard them come again and again, and tear in the
+bulwarks.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to him that the storm was far more
+terrible in the night. He heard shouts in the air,
+and that was not the wind. Sometimes black
+clouds came drifting like a whole row of heavy
+galleys, and it seemed as if they advanced to make
+an assault on the city. Then he heard distinctly
+someone speaking in one of the riven clouds over
+his head.</p>
+
+<p>'Things look bad for Venice now,' it said from
+the one cloud. 'Soon our brothers the evil spirits
+will come and overthrow the city.'</p>
+
+<p>'I am afraid San Marco will not allow it to
+happen,' came as a response from the other cloud.</p>
+
+<p>'San Marco has been knocked down by a
+Venetian, so he lies powerless, and cannot help
+anyone,' said the first.</p>
+
+<p>The storm carried the words down to old Cecco,
+and from that moment he was on his knees, praying
+San Marco for grace and forgiveness. For
+the evil spirits had spoken the truth. It did indeed
+look bad for Venice. The fair Queen of the
+Isles was near destruction. A Venetian had
+mocked San Marco, and therefore Venice was in
+danger of being carried away by the sea. There
+would be no more moonlight sails or her sea and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+in her canals, and no more barcaroles would be
+heard from her black gondolas. The sea would
+wash over the golden-haired signoras, over the
+proud palaces, over San Marco, resplendent with
+gold.</p>
+
+<p>If there was no one to protect these islands,
+they were doomed to destruction. Before San
+Marco came to Venice it had often happened that
+large portions of them had been washed away by
+the waves.</p>
+
+<p>At early dawn San Marco's Church bells began
+to ring. People crept to the church, their clothes
+being nearly torn off them.</p>
+
+<p>The storm went on increasing. The priests had
+resolved to go out and adjure the storm and the
+sea. The main doors of the cathedral were
+opened, and the long procession streamed out of
+the church. Foremost the cross was carried, then
+came the choir-boys with wax candles, and last in
+the procession were carried the banner of San
+Marco and the Sacred Host.</p>
+
+<p>But the storm did not allow itself to be cowed;
+on the contrary, it was as if it wished for nothing
+better to play with. It upset the choir-boys, blew
+out the wax candles, and flung the baldachin,
+which was carried over the Host, on to the top of
+the Doge's palace. It was with the utmost trouble
+that they saved San Marco's banner, with the
+winged lion, from being carried away.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco saw all this, and stole down to his boat
+moaning loudly. The whole day he lay near the
+shore, often wet by the waves and in danger of
+being washed into the sea. The whole day he
+was praying incessantly to God and San Marco.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+He felt that the fate of the whole city depended
+upon his prayers.</p>
+
+<p>There were not many people about that day,
+but some few went moaning along the Riva. All
+spoke about the immeasurable damage the storm
+had wrought. One could see the houses tumbling
+down on the Murano. It was as if the whole
+island were under water. And also on the Rialto
+one or two houses had fallen.</p>
+
+<p>The storm continued the whole day with unabated
+violence. In the evening a large multitude
+of people assembled at the Market Place and
+the Piazetta, although these were nearly covered
+with water. People dared not remain in their
+houses, which shook in their very foundations.
+And the cries of those who feared disaster mingled
+with the lamentations of those whom it had
+already overtaken. Whole dwellings were under
+water; children were drowned in their cradles.
+The old and the sick had been swept with the
+overturned houses into the waves.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco was still lying and praying to San Marco.
+Oh, how could the crime of a poor fisherman be
+taken in such earnest? Surely it was not his fault
+that the saint was so powerless! He would let
+the demons take him and his boat; he deserved
+no better fate. But not the whole city!&mdash;oh,
+God in heaven, not the whole city!</p>
+
+<p>'My sons!' Cecco said to San Marco. 'What
+do I care about my sons when Venice is at stake!
+I would willingly give a son for each tile in danger
+of being blown into the canal if I could keep them
+in their place at that price. Oh, San Marco, each
+little stone of Venice is worth as much as a
+promising son.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At times he saw terrible things. There was a
+large galley which had torn itself from its moorings
+and now came drifting towards the shore.
+It went straight against the bulwark, and struck
+it with the ram's head in her bows, just as if it had
+been an enemy's ship. It gave blow after blow,
+and the attack was so violent that the vessel immediately
+sprang a leak. The water rushed in,
+the leak grew larger, and the proud ship went to
+pieces. But the whole time one could see the
+captain and two or three of the crew, who would
+not leave the vessel, cling to the deck and meet
+death without attempting to escape it.</p>
+
+<p>The second night came, and Cecco's prayers
+continued to knock at the gate of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>'Let me alone suffer!' he cried. 'San Marco, it
+is more than a man can bear, thus to drag others
+with him to destruction. Only send thy lion and
+kill me; I shall not attempt to escape. Everything
+that thou wilt have me give up for the city,
+that will I willingly sacrifice.'</p>
+
+<p>Just as he had uttered these words he looked
+towards the Piazetta, and he thought he could
+no longer see San Marco's lion on the granite
+pillar. Had San Marco permitted his lion to be
+overthrown? old Cecco cried. He was nearly
+giving up Venice.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst he was lying there he saw visions and
+heard voices all the time. The demons talked and
+moved to and fro. He heard them wheeze like
+wild beasts every time they made their assaults on
+the bulwarks. He did not mind them much; it
+was worse about Venice.</p>
+
+<p>Then he heard in the air above him the beating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+of strong wings; this was surely San Marco's
+lion flying overhead. It moved backwards and
+forwards in the air; he saw and yet he did not
+see it. Then it seemed to him as if it descended
+on Riva degli Schiavoni, where he was lying, and
+prowled about there. He was on the point of
+jumping into the sea from fear, but he remained
+sitting where he was. It was no doubt he whom
+the lion sought. If that could only save Venice,
+then he was quite willing to let San Marco avenge
+himself upon him.</p>
+
+<p>Then the lion came crawling along the ground
+like a cat. He saw it making ready to spring. He
+noticed that it beat its wings and screwed its large
+carbuncle eyes together till they were only small
+fiery slits.</p>
+
+<p>Then old Cecco certainly did think of creeping
+down to his boat and hiding himself under the
+arch of the bridge, but he pulled himself together
+and remained where he was. The same moment
+a tall, imposing figure stood by his side.</p>
+
+<p>'Good-evening, Cecco,' said the man; 'take
+your boat and row me across to San Giorgio Maggiore.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, signor,' immediately replied the old fisherman.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if he had awakened from a dream.
+The lion had disappeared, and the man must be
+somebody who knew him, although Cecco could
+not quite remember where he had seen him
+before. He was glad to have company. The
+terrible heaviness and anguish that had been over
+him since he had revolted against the Saint suddenly
+vanished. As to rowing across to San<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+Giorgio, he did not for a moment think that it
+could be done.</p>
+
+<p>'I don't believe we can even get the boat out,'
+he said to himself.</p>
+
+<p>But there was something about the man at his
+side that made him feel he must do all he possibly
+could to serve him; and he did succeed in getting
+out the boat. He helped the stranger into the
+boat and took the oars.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco could not help laughing to himself.</p>
+
+<p>'What are you thinking about? Don't go out
+further in any case,' he said. 'Have you ever seen
+the like of these waves? Do tell him that it is
+not within the power of man.'</p>
+
+<p>But he felt as if he could not tell the stranger
+that it was impossible. He was sitting there as
+quietly as if he were sailing to the Lido on a
+summer's eve. And Cecco began to row to San
+Giorgio Maggiore.</p>
+
+<p>It was a terrible row. Time after time the
+waves washed over them.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, stop him!' Cecco said under his breath;
+'do stop the man who goes to sea in such
+weather! Otherwise he is a sensible old fisherman.
+Do stop him!'</p>
+
+<p>Now the boat was up a steep mountain, and
+then it went down into a valley. The foam
+splashed down on Cecco from the waves that
+rushed past him like runaway horses, but in spite
+of everything he approached San Giorgio.</p>
+
+<p>'For whom are you doing all this, risking boat
+and life?' he said. 'You don't even know
+whether he can pay you. He does not look like
+a fine gentleman. He is no better dressed than
+you are.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But he only said this to keep up his courage,
+and not to be ashamed of his tractability. He
+was simply compelled to do everything the man
+in the boat wanted.</p>
+
+<p>'But in any case not right to San Giorgio, you
+foolhardy old man,' he said. 'The wind is even
+worse there than at the Rialto.'</p>
+
+<p>But he went there, nevertheless, and made the
+boat fast whilst the stranger went on shore. He
+thought the wisest thing he could do would be
+to slip away and leave his boat, but he did not
+do it. He would rather die than deceive the
+stranger. He saw the latter go into the Church
+of San Giorgio. Soon afterwards he returned,
+accompanied by a knight in full armour.</p>
+
+<p>'Row us now to San Nicolo in Lido,' said the
+stranger.</p>
+
+<p>'Ay, ay,' Cecco thought; 'why not to Lido?'
+They had already, in constant anguish and
+death, rowed to San Giorgio; why should they
+not set out for Lido?</p>
+
+<p>And Cecco was shocked at himself that he
+obeyed the stranger even unto death, for he now
+actually steered for the Lido.</p>
+
+<p>Being now three in the boat, it was still
+heavier work. He had no idea how he should
+be able to do it. 'You might have lived many
+years yet,' he said sorrowfully to himself. But
+the strange thing was that he was not sorrowful,
+all the same. He was so glad that he could have
+laughed aloud. And then he was proud that he
+could make headway. 'He knows how to use
+his oars, does old Cecco,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>They laid-to at Lido, and the two strangers
+went on shore. They walked towards San Nicolo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+in Lido, and soon returned accompanied by an
+old Bishop, with robe and stole, crosier in hand,
+and mitre on head.</p>
+
+<p>'Now row out to the open sea,' said the first
+stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cecco shuddered. Should he row out to
+the sea, where his sons perished? Now he had
+not a single cheerful word to say to himself. He
+did not think so much of the storm, but of the
+terror it was to have to go out to the graves
+of his sons. If he rowed out there, he felt that he
+gave the stranger more than his life.</p>
+
+<p>The three men sat silently in the boat as if
+they were on watch. Cecco saw them bend forward
+and gaze into the night. They had reached
+the gate of the sea at Lido, and the great storm-ridden
+sea lay before them.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco sobbed within himself. He thought of
+two dead bodies rolling about in these waves.
+He gazed into the water for two familiar faces.
+But onward the boat went. Cecco did not
+give in.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly the three men rose up in the
+boat; and Cecco fell upon his knees, although
+he still went on holding the oars. A big ship
+steered straight against them.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco could not quite tell whether it was a
+ship or only drifting mist. The sails were large,
+spread out, as it were, towards the four corners
+of heaven; and the hull was gigantic, but it
+looked as if it were built of the lightest sea-mist.
+He thought he saw men on board and heard
+shouting; but the crew were like deep darkness,
+and the shouting was like the roar of the storm.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>However it was, it was far too terrible to see
+the ship steer straight upon them, and Cecco
+closed his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But the three men in the boat must have
+averted the collision, for the boat was not upset.
+When Cecco looked up the ship had fled out
+to sea, and loud wailings pierced the night.</p>
+
+<p>He rose, trembling to row further. He felt so
+tired that he could hardly hold the oars. But
+now there was no longer any danger. The storm
+had gone down, and the waves speedily laid themselves
+to rest.</p>
+
+<p>'Now row us back to Venice,' said the stranger
+to the fisherman.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco rowed the boat to Lido, where the
+Bishop went on shore, and to San Giorgio, where
+the knight left them. The first powerful stranger
+went with him all the way to the Rialto.</p>
+
+<p>When they had landed at Riva degli Schiavoni
+he said to the fisherman:</p>
+
+<p>'When it is daylight thou shalt go to the Doge
+and tell him what thou hast seen this night. Tell
+him that San Marco and San Giorgio and San
+Nicolo have to-night fought the evil spirits that
+would destroy Venice, and have put them to
+flight.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, signor,' the fisherman answered, 'I will
+tell everything. But how shall I speak so that
+the Doge will believe me?'</p>
+
+<p>Then San Marco handed him a ring with a
+precious stone possessed of a wonderful lustre.</p>
+
+<p>'Show this to the Doge,' he said, 'then he will
+understand that it brings a message from me.
+He knows my ring, which is kept in San Marco's
+treasury in the cathedral.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The fisherman took the ring, and kissed it
+reverently.</p>
+
+<p>'Further, thou shalt tell the Doge,' said the
+holy man, 'that this is a sign that I shall never
+forsake Venice. Even when the last Doge has
+left Palazzo Ducali I will live and preserve Venice.
+Even if Venice lose her islands in the East
+and the supremacy of the sea, and no Doge ever
+again sets out on the Bucintoro, even then I will
+preserve the city beautiful and resplendent. It
+shall always be rich and beloved, always be
+lauded and its praises sung, always a place of joy
+for men to live in. Say this, Cecco, and the Doge
+will not forsake thee in thine old age.'</p>
+
+<p>Then he disappeared; and soon the sun rose
+above the gate of the sea at Torcello. With its
+first beautiful rays it shed a rosy light over the
+white city and over the sea that shone in many
+colours. A red glow lay over San Giorgio and
+San Marco, and over the whole shore, studded
+with palaces. And in the lovely morning radiant
+Venetian ladies came out on to the loggias and
+greeted with smiles the rising day.</p>
+
+<p>Venice was once again the beautiful goddess,
+rising from the sea in her shell of rose-coloured
+pearl. Beautiful as never before, she combed her
+golden hair, and threw the purple robe around
+her, to begin one of her happiest days. For a
+transport of bliss filled her when the old fisherman
+brought San Marco's ring to the Doge, and she
+heard how the Saint, now, and until the end of
+time, would hold his protecting hand over her.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Santa Caterina of Siena">V. <a name="Santa_Caterina_of_Siena" id="Santa_Caterina_of_Siena"><em><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span></em> <span class="smcap">Caterina</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">Siena</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">V</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic" lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span> <span class="smcap">Caterina</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">Siena</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic" lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span> <span class="smcap">Caterina</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">Siena</span></p>
+
+<p>At <span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span> Caterina's house in Siena, on a
+day towards the end of April, in the week
+when her f&ecirc;te is being celebrated, people
+come to the old house in the Street of the Dyers,
+to the house with the pretty loggia and with the
+many small chambers, which have now been converted
+into chapels and sanctuaries, bringing
+bouquets of white lilies; and the rooms are fragrant
+with incense and violets.</p>
+
+<p>Walking through these rooms, one cannot
+help thinking that it is just as if she were dead
+yesterday, as if all those who go in and out of
+her home to-day had seen and known her.</p>
+
+<p>But, on the other hand, no one could really
+think that she had died recently, for then there
+would be more grief and tears, and not only a
+quiet sense of loss. It is more as if a beloved
+daughter had been recently married, and had
+left the parental home.</p>
+
+<p>Look only at the nearest houses. The old
+walls are still decorated as if for a f&ecirc;te. And in
+her own home garlands of flowers are still hanging
+beneath the portico and loggia, green leaves
+are strewn on the staircase and the doorstep, and
+large bouquets of flowers fill the rooms with their
+scent.</p>
+
+<p>She cannot possibly have been dead five hundred
+years. It looks much more as if she had
+celebrated her marriage, and had gone away to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+a country from which she would not return for
+many years, perhaps never. Are not the houses
+decorated with nothing but red table-cloths, red
+trappings, and red silken banners, and are there
+not stuck red-paper roses in the dark garlands
+of oak-leaves? and the hangings over the doors
+and the windows, are they not red with golden
+fringes? Can one imagine anything more
+cheerful?</p>
+
+<p>And notice how the old women go about in
+the house and examine her small belongings. It
+is as if they had seen her wear that very veil and
+that very shirt of hair. They inspect the room in
+which she lived, and point to the bedstead and
+the packets of letters, and they tell how at first
+she could not at all learn to write, but that it
+came to her all at once without her having learnt
+it. And only look at her writing&mdash;how good and
+distinct! And then they point to the little bottle
+she used to carry at her belt, so as always to have
+a little medicine at hand in case she met a sick
+person, and they utter a blessing over the old
+lantern she held in her hand when she went and
+visited the sick in the long weary nights. It is
+just as if they would say: 'Dear me&mdash;dear me!
+that our little Caterina Benincasa should be
+gone, that she will never come any more and look
+after us old people!' And they kiss her picture,
+and take a flower from the bouquets to keep as
+a remembrance.</p>
+
+<p>It looks as if those who were left in the home
+had long ago prepared themselves for the separation,
+and tried to do everything possible to keep
+alive the memory of the one who had gone away.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+See, there they have painted her on the wall;
+there is the whole of her little history represented
+in every detail. There she is when she cut off her
+beautiful long hair so that no man could ever fall
+in love with her, for she would never marry. Oh
+dear&mdash;oh dear! how much ridicule and scoffing
+she had suffered on that account! It is dreadful
+to think how her mother tormented her and
+treated her like a servant, and made her sleep on
+the stone floor in the hall, and would not give
+her any food, all because of her being so obstinate
+about that hair. But what was she to do when
+they continually tried to get her married&mdash;she
+who would have no other bridegroom than
+Christ? And there she is when she was kneeling
+in prayer, and her father coming into the room
+without her knowing it saw a beautiful white
+dove hovering over her head whilst she was praying.
+And there she is on that Christmas Eve
+when she had gone secretly to the Madonna's
+altar in order the more fully to rejoice over the
+birth of the Son of God, and the beautiful Madonna
+leaned out of her picture and handed the
+Child to her that she might be allowed to hold
+it for a moment in her arms. Oh, what a joy it
+had been for her!</p>
+
+<p>Oh dear, no; it is not at all necessary to say that
+our little Caterina Benincasa is dead. One need
+only say that she has gone away with the Bridegroom.</p>
+
+<p>In her home one will never forget her pious
+ways and doings. All the poor of Siena come and
+knock at her door because they know that it is the
+marriage-day of the little virgin, and large piles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+of bread lie in readiness for them as if she were
+still there. They have their pockets and baskets
+filled; had she herself been there, she could not
+have sent them away more heavily laden. She
+who had gone away had left so great a want that
+one almost wonders the Bridegroom had the
+heart to take her away with him.</p>
+
+<p>In the small chapels which have been arranged
+in every corner of the house they read Mass the
+whole day, and they invoke the bride and sing
+hymns in her praise.</p>
+
+<p>'Holy Caterina,' they say, 'on this the day of
+thy death, which is thine heavenly wedding-day,
+pray for us!'</p>
+
+<p>'Holy Caterina, thou who hadst no other love
+but Christ, thou who in life wert His affianced
+bride, and who in death wast received by Him in
+Paradise, pray for us!'</p>
+
+<p>'Holy Caterina, thou radiant heavenly bride,
+thou most blessed of virgins, thou whom the
+mother of God exalted to her Son's side, thou
+who on this day wast carried by angels to the
+kingdom of glory, pray for us!'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It is strange how one comes to love her, how
+the home and the pictures and the love of the old
+and the poor seem to make her living, and one
+begins to wonder how she really was, whether she
+was only a saint, only a heavenly bride, and if it
+is true that she was unable to love any other than
+Christ. And then comes to one's mind an old
+story which warmed one's heart long ago, at first
+quite vague and without shape, but whilst one is
+sitting there under the loggia in the festively deco<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>rated
+home and watching the poor wander away
+with their full baskets, and hearing the subdued
+murmur from the chapels, the story becomes
+more and more distinct, and suddenly it is vivid
+and clear.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Nicola Tungo was a young nobleman of Perugia,
+who often came to Siena on account of the
+races. He soon found out how badly Siena was
+governed, and often said, both at the festive gatherings
+of the great and when he sat drinking in
+the inns, that Siena ought to rise against the Signoria
+and procure other rulers.</p>
+
+<p>The Signoria had not been in power for more
+than half a year; they did not feel particularly
+firm in their office, and did not like the Perugian
+stirring up the people. In order promptly to put
+a stop to it, they had him imprisoned, and after a
+short trial he was sentenced to death. He was
+placed in a cell in the Palazzo Publico whilst
+preparations were being made for his execution,
+which was to take place the next morning in the
+Market Place.</p>
+
+<p>At first he was strangely affected. To-morrow
+he would no more wear his green velvet doublet
+and his beautiful sword; he would no more walk
+down the street in his cap with the ostrich-feather
+and attract the glances of the young maidens, and
+he had a feeling of painful disappointment that he
+would never ride the new horse which he bought
+yesterday, and which he had only tried once.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he called the gaoler, and asked him
+to go to the gentlemen of the Signoria and tell
+them that he could not possibly allow himself to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+be killed; he had no time. He had far too much
+to do. Life could not do without him. His father
+was old, and he was the only son; it was through
+his descendants that the family should be continued.
+It was he who should give away his sisters
+in marriage, he who should build the new
+palace, he who should plant the new vineyard.</p>
+
+<p>He was a strong young man; he did not know
+what sickness was, had nothing but life in his
+veins. His hair was dark and his cheeks red. He
+could not realize that he should die.</p>
+
+<p>When he thought of their wanting to take him
+away from pleasure and dancing, and the carnival,
+and from the races next Sunday, and from the
+serenade he was going to sing to the beautiful
+<span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has Guilietta">Giulietta</span> Lombardi, he became furiously angry,
+and his wrath was roused against the councillors
+as though they were thieves and robbers. The
+scoundrels&mdash;the scoundrels that would take his
+life from him!</p>
+
+<p>But as time went on his longings grew deeper;
+he longed for air and water and heaven and earth.
+He felt he would not mind being a beggar by the
+wayside; he would gladly suffer sickness and
+hunger and cold if only he were allowed to live.</p>
+
+<p>He wished that everything might die with him,
+that nothing would be left when he was gone;
+that would have been a great consolation.</p>
+
+<p>But that people should go to the Market Place
+and buy and sell, and that the women would fetch
+water from the well, and that the children would
+run in the streets the next day and all days, and
+that he would not be there to see, that he could
+not bear. He envied not only those who could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+live in luxury and pleasure, and were happy; he
+envied quite as much the most miserable cripple.
+What he wanted was life, solely life.</p>
+
+<p>Then the priests and the monks came to see
+him. It made him almost happy, for now he had
+someone upon whom he could wreak his anger.
+He first allowed them to talk a little. It amused
+him to hear what they had to say to a man so
+deeply wronged as he was, but when they said
+that he ought to rejoice that he was permitted to
+leave this life and gain the bliss of heaven in
+the fulness of his youth, then he started up and
+poured forth his wrath upon them. He scoffed
+at God and the joys of heaven&mdash;he did not want
+them. He would have life, and the world, and
+its pomps and vanities. He regretted every day
+in which he had not revelled in earthly enjoyment;
+he regretted every temptation he had resisted.
+God need not trouble Himself in the least
+about him; he felt no longing for His heaven.</p>
+
+<p>The priests continued to speak; he seized one
+of them by the throat, and would have killed him
+had not the gaoler thrown himself between them.
+They now bound and gagged him, and then
+preached to him; but as soon as he was allowed
+to speak he raged as before. They talked to him
+for many hours, but they saw that it was of no
+avail.</p>
+
+<p>When they could think of nothing else to do,
+one of them suggested they should send for the
+young Caterina Benincasa, who had shown great
+power in subduing defiant spirits. When the
+Perugian heard the name he suddenly ceased his
+abuse. In truth, it pleased him. It was some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>thing
+quite different, having to do with a young,
+beautiful maiden.</p>
+
+<p>'By all means send for the maiden,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>He knew that she was the young daughter of a
+dyer, and that she went about alone and preached
+in the lanes and streets of the town. Some
+thought she was mad, others said that she had
+visions. For him she might, anyhow, be better
+company than these dirty monks, who made him
+completely beside himself.</p>
+
+<p>The monks then went their way, and he was
+alone. Shortly afterwards the door was again
+opened, but if she for whom they had sent had
+really entered the cell, she must have walked with
+very light footsteps, for he heard nothing. He
+lay on the floor just as he had thrown himself
+down in his great anger; now he was too tired to
+raise himself, or make a movement, or even to
+look up. His arms were tied together with ropes,
+which cut deep into his flesh.</p>
+
+<p>He now felt that someone began to loosen his
+bands; a warm hand touched his arm, and he
+looked up. Beside him lay a little figure in the
+white dress of the Dominicans, with head and
+neck so shrouded in a white veil that there was
+not more of her face to be seen than of that of a
+knight in helmet and closed visor.</p>
+
+<p>She did not look so meek by any means; she
+was evidently a little annoyed. He heard her
+murmur something about the gaolers who had
+tightened the bands. It did not appear as if she
+had come for any other purpose than these knots.
+She was only taken up with loosening them so
+that they did not hurt. At last she had to bite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+in them, and then she succeeded. She untied the
+cord with a light hand, and then took the little
+bottle which was suspended from her belt and
+poured a few drops upon the chafed skin.</p>
+
+<p>He lay the whole time and looked at her, but
+she did not meet his glance; it appeared as if she
+could think of nothing else but what she had between
+her hands. It was as if nothing were further
+from her thoughts than that she was there
+to prepare him for death. He felt so exhausted
+after his passion, and at the same time so quieted
+by her presence, that he only said:</p>
+
+<p>'I think I will sleep.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is a great shame that they have not given
+you any straw,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment she looked about undecided.
+Then she sat down upon the floor, and placed his
+head in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>'Are you better now?' she said.</p>
+
+<p>Never in his whole life had he felt such a rest.
+Yet sleep he could not, but he lay and looked up
+in her face, which was like wax, and transparent.
+Such eyes he had never seen before. They were
+always looking far, far away, gazing into another
+world, whilst she sat quite motionless, so as not
+to disturb his sleep.</p>
+
+<p>'You are not sleeping, Nicola Tungo,' she said,
+and looked uneasy.</p>
+
+<p>'I cannot sleep,' he replied, 'because I am wondering
+who you can be.'</p>
+
+<p>'I am a daughter of Luca Benincasa the dyer,
+and his wife Lapa,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>'I know that,' he said, 'and I also know that
+you go about and preach in the streets. And I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+know that you have attired yourself in the dress
+of a nun, and have taken the vows of chastity.
+But yet I don't know who you are.'</p>
+
+<p>She turned her head away a little. Then she
+said, whispering like one who confesses her first
+love:</p>
+
+<p>'I am the Bride of Christ.'</p>
+
+<p>He did not laugh. On the contrary, he felt
+quite a pang in his heart, as from jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, Christ!' he said, as if she had thrown herself
+away.</p>
+
+<p>She heard that his tone was contemptuous, but
+she thought he meant that she had spoken too
+presumptuously.</p>
+
+<p>'I do not understand it myself,' she said, 'but
+so it is.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it an imagination or a dream?' he said.</p>
+
+<p>She turned her face towards him. The blood
+rose red behind the transparent skin. He saw
+suddenly that she was fair as a flower, and she became
+dear to him. He moved his lips as if to
+speak, but at first no sound came.</p>
+
+<p>'How can you expect me to believe that?' he
+said defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it not enough for you that I am here in the
+prison with you?' she asked, raising her voice.
+'Is it any pleasure for a young girl like me to go
+to you and other evil-doers in their gloomy dungeons?
+Is it usual for a woman to stand and
+preach at the street corners as I do, and to be held
+in derision? Do I not require sleep as other people?
+And yet I must rise every night and go to
+the sick in the hospitals. Am I not timid as other
+women? And yet I must go to the high-born<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+gentlemen at their castles and reason with them,
+I must go to the plague-smitten, I must see all
+vice and sin. When have you seen another
+maiden do all this? But I am obliged to do it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Poor thing!' he said, and stroked her hand
+gently&mdash;'poor thing!'</p>
+
+<p>'For I am not braver, or wiser, or stronger
+than others,' she said. 'It is just as hard for me
+as for other maidens. You can see that. I have
+come here to speak with you about your soul, but
+I do not at all know what I shall say to you.'</p>
+
+<p>It was strange how reluctantly he would allow
+himself to be convinced.</p>
+
+<p>'You may be mistaken all the same,' he said.
+'How do you know that you can call yourself the
+Bride of Christ?'</p>
+
+<p>Her voice trembled, and it was as if she should
+tear out her heart when she replied:</p>
+
+<p>'It began when I was quite young; I was not
+more than six years old. It was one evening
+when I was walking with my brother in the
+meadow below the church of the Dominicans, and
+just as I looked up at the church I saw Christ sitting
+on a throne, surrounded by all His power and
+glory. He was attired in shining white garments
+like the Holy Father in Rome. His head was
+surrounded by all the splendour of Paradise, and
+around Him stood Pietro Paolo and the Evangelist
+Giovanni. And whilst I gazed upon Him my
+heart was filled with such a love and holy joy that
+I could hardly bear it. He lifted His hand and
+blessed me, and I sank down on the meadow, and
+was so overcome with bliss, that my brother had
+to take me in his arms and shake me. And ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+since that time, Nicola Tungo, I have loved Jesus
+as a bridegroom.'</p>
+
+<p>He again objected.</p>
+
+<p>'You were a child then. You had fallen asleep
+in the meadow and were dreaming.'</p>
+
+<p>'Dreaming?' she repeated. 'Have I been
+dreaming all the time I have seen Him? Was it
+a dream when He came to me in the church in the
+likeness of a beggar and asked for alms? Then I
+was wide awake, at any rate. And do you think
+that for the sake of a dream only I could have
+borne all the worries I have had to bear as a
+young girl because I would not marry?'</p>
+
+<p>Nicola went on contradicting her because he
+could not bear the thought that her heart was
+filled with love to another.</p>
+
+<p>'But even if you do love Christ, maiden, how
+do you know that He loves you?'</p>
+
+<p>She smiled her very happiest smile and clapped
+her hands like a child.</p>
+
+<p>'Now you shall hear,' she said. 'Now I will
+tell you the most important of all. It was the last
+night before Lent. It was after my parents and
+I had been reconciled, and I had obtained their
+permission to take the vow of chastity and wear
+the dress of a nun, although I continued to live in
+their house; and it was night, as I told you, the
+last night of the carnival, when everybody turns
+night into day. There were f&ecirc;tes in every street.
+On the walls of the big palaces hung balconies
+like cages, completely covered with silken hangings
+and banners, and filled with noble ladies. I
+saw all their beauty by the light of the red torches
+in their bronze-holders, the one row over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+other quite up to the roof; and in the gaily decorated
+streets there was a train of carriages, with
+golden towers, and all the gods and goddesses,
+and all the virtues and beauties went by in a long
+procession. And everywhere there was such a
+play of masks and so much merriment that I am
+sure that you, sir, have never taken part in anything
+more gay. And I took refuge in my chamber,
+but still I heard laughter from the street, and
+never before have I heard people laugh like that;
+it was so clear and bell-like that everyone was
+obliged to join in it. And they sang songs
+which, I suppose, were wicked, but they sounded
+so innocent, and caused such pleasure, that one's
+heart trembled. Then, in the middle of my prayers,
+I suddenly began to wonder why I was not
+out amongst them, and the thought fascinated
+and tempted me, as if I were dragged along by a
+runaway horse; but never before have I prayed
+so intensely to Christ to show me what was His
+will with me. Suddenly all the noise ceased, a
+great and wonderful silence surrounded me, and
+I saw a great meadow, where the Mother of God
+sat amongst the flowers, and on her lap lay the
+Child Jesus, playing with lilies. But I hurried
+thither in great joy, and knelt before the Child,
+and was at the same moment filled with peace and
+quietness, and then the Holy Child placed a ring
+on my finger, and said to me, "Know, Caterina,
+that to-day I celebrate My betrothal with thee,
+and bind thee to Me by the strongest faith."'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, Caterina!'</p>
+
+<p>The young Perugian had turned himself on the
+floor, so that he could bury his face in her lap. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+was as if he could not bear to see how radiant she
+was whilst she was speaking, and now her eyes
+became bright as stars. A shadow of pain passed
+over him. For whilst she spoke a great sorrow
+had sprung up in his heart. This little maiden,
+this little white maiden, he could never win. Her
+love belonged to another; it could never be his.
+It was of no use even to tell her that he loved her;
+but he suffered; his whole being groaned in
+love's agony. How could he bear to live without
+her? It almost became a consolation to remember
+that he was sentenced to death. It was not
+necessary for him to live and do without her.</p>
+
+<p>Then the little woman beside him sighed
+deeply, and came back from the joys of heaven in
+order to think of poor human beings.</p>
+
+<p>'I forgot to speak to you about your soul,' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Then, he thought: 'This burden, at any rate,
+I can lighten for her.'</p>
+
+<p>'Sister Caterina,' he said, 'I do not know how
+it is, but heavenly consolation has come to me.
+In God's name I will prepare for death. Now
+you may send for the priests and monks; now I
+will confess to them. But one thing you must
+promise me before you go: you must come to
+me to-morrow, when I shall die, and hold my
+head between your hands as you are doing now.'</p>
+
+<p>When he said this she burst into tears, from a
+great feeling of relief, and an unspeakable joy
+filled her.</p>
+
+<p>'How happy you must be, Nicola Tungo!' she
+said. 'You will be in Paradise before I am;' and
+she stroked his face gently.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He said again:</p>
+
+<p>'You will come to me to-morrow in the Market
+Place? Perhaps I shall otherwise be afraid; perhaps
+I cannot otherwise die with steadfastness.
+But when you are there I shall feel nothing but
+joy, and all fear will leave me.'</p>
+
+<p>'You do not seem to me any more as a poor
+mortal,' she said, 'but as a dweller of Paradise.
+You appear to me radiant with life, surrounded
+by incense. Bliss comes to me from you, who
+shall so soon meet my beloved Bridegroom. Be
+assured I shall come.'</p>
+
+<p>She then led him to confession and the Communion.
+He felt the whole time as if he were
+asleep. All the fear of death and the longing for
+life had passed away from him. He longed for
+the morning, when he should see her again; he
+thought only of her, and of the love with which
+she had inspired him. Death seemed to him now
+but a slight thing compared with the pain of the
+thought that she would never love him.</p>
+
+<p>The young maiden did not sleep much during
+the night, and early in the morning she went to
+the place of execution, to be there when he came.
+She invoked Jesu, Mother, Marie, and the Holy
+Caterina of Egypt, virgin and martyr, incessantly
+with prayers to save his soul. Incessantly she repeated:
+'I will that he shall be saved&mdash;I will, I
+will.' But she was afraid that her prayers were
+unavailing, for she did not feel any longer that
+ecstasy which had filled her the evening before;
+she only felt an infinite pity for him who should
+die. She was quite overcome with grief and sorrow.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Little by little the Market Place filled with
+people. The soldiers marched up, the executioner
+arrived, and much noise and talking went
+on around her; but she saw and heard nothing.
+She felt as if she were quite alone.</p>
+
+<p>When Nicola Tungo arrived, it was just the
+same with him. He had no thought for all the
+others, but saw only her. When he saw at the
+first glance that she was entirely overcome with
+sorrow, his face beamed, and he felt almost
+happy. He called loudly to her:</p>
+
+<p>'You have not slept much this night, maiden?'</p>
+
+<p>'No,' she said; 'I have watched in prayer for
+you; but now I am in despair, for my prayers
+have no power.'</p>
+
+<p>He knelt down before the block, and she knelt
+so that she could hold his head in her hands.</p>
+
+<p>'Now I am going to your Bridegroom,
+Caterina.'</p>
+
+<p>She sobbed more and more.</p>
+
+<p>'I can comfort you so badly,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her with a strange smile.</p>
+
+<p>'Your tears are my best comfort.'</p>
+
+<p>The executioner stood with his sword drawn,
+but she bade him with a movement stand on one
+side, for she would speak a few words with the
+doomed man.</p>
+
+<p>'Before you came,' she said, 'I laid my head
+down on the block to try if I could bear it; and
+then I felt that I was still afraid of death, that I do
+not love Jesus enough to be willing to die in this
+hour; and I do not wish you to die either, and my
+prayers have no power.'</p>
+
+<p>When he heard this he thought: 'Had I lived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+I should have won her'; and he was glad he
+should die before he had succeeded in drawing the
+radiant heavenly bride down to earth. But when
+he had laid his head in her hands, a great consolation
+came to them both.</p>
+
+<p>'Nicola Tungo,' she said, 'I see heaven open.
+The angels descend to receive your soul.'</p>
+
+<p>A wondering smile passed over his face. Could
+what he had done for her sake make him worthy
+of heaven? He lifted his eyes to see what she
+saw; the same moment the sword fell.</p>
+
+<p>But Caterina saw the angels descend lower and
+lower, saw them lift his soul, saw them carry it to
+heaven.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>All at once it seemed so natural that Caterina
+Benincasa has lived all these five hundred years.
+How could one forget that gentle little maiden,
+that great loving heart? Again and again they
+must sing in her praise, as they are now singing
+in the small chapels:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Pia Mater et humilis,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Natur&aelig; memor fragilis,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">In hujus vit&aelig; fluctibus</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nos rege tuis precibus.</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Quem vidi, quem amavi,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">In quem credidi, quem dilexi,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i4"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ora pro nobis.</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ut digni efficiamur promessionibus Christi!</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Santa Caterina, ora pro nobis!</span>'<a name="FNanchor_B" id="FNanchor_B"></a><a href="#Footnote_B" class="fnanchor">[B]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_B" id="Footnote_B"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> Pious and gentle Mother, thou who knowest our weak
+nature, guide us by thy prayers through this life's vicissitudes.
+Thou, whom I saw and loved, in whom I believed and whom
+I adored, pray for us, that we may be worthy of Christ's
+promises. Holy Caterina, pray for us!</p></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p>
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="The Empress's Money-Chest">VI. <a name="Money-Chest" id="Money-Chest"><span class="dec_italic">The Empress's</span> <span class="smcap">Money-Chest</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">VI</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The Empress's</span> <span class="smcap">Money-Chest</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The Empress's</span> <span class="smcap">Money-Chest</span></p>
+
+<p>The Bishop had summoned Father Verneau
+to appear before him. It was on
+account of a somewhat unpleasant matter.
+Father Verneau had been sent to preach in the
+manufacturing districts around Charleroi, but he
+had arrived there in the midst of a strike, when
+the workmen were rather excited and unmanageable.
+He informed the Bishop that he had
+immediately on his arrival in the Black Country
+received a letter from one of the leaders of the
+men to the effect that they were quite willing to
+hear him preach, but if he ventured to mention
+the name of God either directly or indirectly,
+there would be a disturbance in the church.</p>
+
+<p>'And when I went up into the pulpit and saw
+the congregation to whom I should preach,' said
+the Father, 'I felt no doubt but that the threat
+would be carried out.'</p>
+
+<p>Father Verneau was a little dried-up monk.
+The Bishop looked down upon him as being of
+a lower order. Such an unshaven, not too clean
+monk, with the most insignificant face, was, of
+course, a coward. He was, probably, also afraid
+of the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>'I have been informed,' said the Bishop, 'that
+you carried out the workmen's wishes. But I
+need not point out&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'Monseigneur,' interrupted Father Verneau in
+all humility, 'I thought the Church, if possible,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+would avoid everything that might lead to a disturbance.'</p>
+
+<p>'But a Church that dare not mention the name
+of God&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'Has Monseigneur heard my sermon?'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop walked up and down the floor to
+calm himself.</p>
+
+<p>'You know it by heart, of course?' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'Of course, Monseigneur.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let me hear it, then, as it was delivered,
+Father Verneau, word for word, exactly as you
+preached it.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop sat down in his arm-chair. Father
+Verneau remained standing.</p>
+
+<p>'"Citizens and citizenesses," he began in the
+tone of a lecturer.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop started.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, that is how they will be addressed, Monseigneur.'</p>
+
+<p>'Never mind, Father Verneau, only proceed.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop shuddered slightly; these two
+words had suddenly shown him the whole situation.
+He saw before him this gathering of the
+children of the Black Country, to whom Father
+Verneau had preached. He saw many wild faces,
+many rags, much coarse merriment. He saw
+these people for whom nothing had been done.</p>
+
+<p>'"Citizens and citizenesses," began Father Verneau
+afresh, "there is in this country an Empress
+called Maria Theresa. She is an excellent ruler,
+the best and wisest Belgium has ever had. Other
+rulers, my fellow-citizens, other rulers have successors
+when they die, and lose all power over
+their people. Not so the great Empress Maria<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+Theresa. She may have lost the throne of Austria
+and Hungary; Brabant and Limburg may
+now be under other rulers, but not her good province
+of West Flanders. In West Flanders, where
+I have lived the last few years, no other ruler is
+known to this very day than Maria Theresa. We
+know King Leopold lives in Brussels, but that
+has nothing to do with us. It is Maria Theresa
+who still reigns here by the sea, more especially
+in the fishing villages. The nearer one gets to
+the sea, the mightier becomes her power. Neither
+the great Revolution, nor the Empire, nor the
+Dutch have had the power to overthrow her.
+How could they? They have done nothing for
+the children of the sea that can compare with
+what she has done. But what has she not done
+for the people on the dunes! What an invaluable
+treasure, my fellow-citizens, has she not bestowed
+upon them!</p>
+
+<p>'"About one hundred and fifty years ago, in
+the early part of her reign, she made a journey
+through Belgium. She visited Brussels and
+Bruges, she went to Liege and Louvain, and
+when she had at last seen enough of large cities
+and profusely ornamented town-halls, she went
+to the coast to see the sea and the dunes.</p>
+
+<p>'"It was not a very cheering sight for her. She
+saw the ocean, so vast and mighty that no man
+can fight against it. She saw the coast, helpless
+and unprotected. There lay the dunes, but the
+sea had washed over them before, and might do
+so again. There were also dams, but they had
+fallen down and were neglected.</p>
+
+<p>'"She saw harbours filled with sand; she saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+marshes overgrown with rushes and weeds; she
+saw, below the dunes, fishing-huts ravaged by the
+wind&mdash;huts looking as if they had been thrown
+there, a prey for the sea; she saw poor old
+churches that had been moved away from the
+sea, lying between quicksands and lyme-grass, in
+desolate wastes.</p>
+
+<p>'"The great Empress sat a whole day by the
+sea. She was told all about the floods and the
+towns that had been washed away; she was shown
+the spot where a whole district had sunk under
+the sea; she was rowed out to the place where
+an old church stood at the bottom of the sea; and
+she was told about all the people who had been
+drowned, and of all the cattle that had been lost,
+the last time the sea had overflowed the dunes.</p>
+
+<p>'"The whole day through the Empress sat
+thinking: 'How shall I help these poor people
+on the dunes? I cannot forbid the sea to rise and
+fall; I cannot forbid it to undermine the shore;
+nor can I stay the storm, or prevent it from upsetting
+the fishermen's boats; and still less can I
+lead the fish into their nets, or transform the lyme-grass
+into nutritious wheat. There is no monarch
+in the world so mighty that he can help these
+poor people in their need.'</p>
+
+<p>'"The next day it was Sunday, and the Empress
+heard Mass at Blankenberghe. All the people
+from Dunkirk to Sluis had come to see her.
+But before Mass the Empress went about and
+spoke with the people.</p>
+
+<p>'"The first person she addressed was the harbour-master
+from Nieuport. 'What news is there
+from your town?' asked the Empress. 'Noth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>ing
+new,' answered the harbour-master, 'except
+that Cornelis Aertsen's boat was upset in the
+storm yesterday; and we found him this morning
+riding on the keel.' 'It was a good thing his
+life was saved,' said the Empress. 'Well, I don't
+know,' said the harbour-master, 'for he was out
+of his mind when he came on shore.' 'Was it
+from fear?' asked the Empress. 'Yes,' said the
+harbour-master; 'it is because we in Nieuport
+have nothing to depend upon in the hour of need.
+Cornelis knew that his wife and his small children
+would starve to death if he perished; and
+it was this thought, I suppose, that drove him out
+of his mind.' 'Then that is what you need here
+on the dunes&mdash;something to depend upon?'
+'Yes, that is it,' said the harbour-master. 'The
+sea is uncertain, the harvest is uncertain, the fishing
+and the earnings are uncertain. Something
+to depend upon, that is what we need.'</p>
+
+<p>'"The Empress then went on, and the next
+she spoke to was the priest from Heyst. 'What
+news from Heyst?' said she to him. 'Nothing
+new,' he answered, 'except that Jacob van Ravesteyn
+has given up making ditches in the marshes,
+and dredging the harbour, and attending to the
+lighthouses, and all other useful work he had to
+do.' 'How is that?' said the Empress. 'He has
+inherited a sum of money,' said the priest; 'but
+it was less than he had expected.' 'But now he
+has something certain,' said the Empress. 'Yes,'
+said the priest; 'but now he has got the money
+he dare not venture to do anything great for fear
+it will not be sufficient.' 'It is something infinitely
+great, then, that is needed to help you at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+Heyst?' said the Empress. 'It is,' said the priest;
+'there is infinitely much to do. And nothing can
+be done until we know that we have something
+infinitely great to fall back upon.'</p>
+
+<p>'"The Empress then went on until she came
+to the master-pilot from Middelkerke, whom she
+began to question about the news from his town.
+'I do not know of anything new,' said the master-pilot,
+'but that Ian van der Meer has quarrelled
+with Luca Neerwinden.' 'Indeed!' said the Empress.
+'Yes, they have found the cod-bank they
+have both been looking for all their lives. They
+had heard about it from old people, and they had
+hunted for it all over the sea, and they have been
+the best of friends the whole time, but now they
+have found it they have fallen out.' 'Then it
+would have been better if they had never found
+it?' said the Empress. 'Yes,' answered the master-pilot,
+'it would indeed have been better.'
+'So, then, that which is to help you in Middelkerke,'
+said the Empress, 'must be hidden so well
+that no one can find it?' 'Just so,' said the
+master-pilot; 'well hidden it must be, for if anyone
+should find it, there would be nothing but
+quarrelling and strife over it, or else it would be
+all spent, and then it would be of no further use.'</p>
+
+<p>'"The Empress sighed, and felt she could do
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>'"She then went to Mass, and the whole time
+she knelt and prayed that power might be given
+her to help the people. And&mdash;you must excuse
+me, citizens&mdash;when the Mass was finished, it had
+become clear to her that it was better to do a little
+than to do nothing. When all the people had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+come out of the church, she stood on the steps in
+order to address them.</p>
+
+<p>'"No man or woman of West Flanders will
+ever forget how she looked. She was beautiful,
+like an Empress, and she was attired like an Empress.
+She wore her crown and her ermine mantle,
+and held the sceptre in her hand. Her hair
+was dressed high and powdered, and a string of
+large pearls was entwined amongst the curls. She
+wore a robe of red silk, which was entirely covered
+with Flemish lace, and red, high-heeled
+shoes, with large diamond buckles. That is how
+she appears, she who to this day still reigns over
+our West Flanders.</p>
+
+<p>'"She spoke to the people of the coast, and
+told them her will. She told them of how she
+had thought of every way in which to help them.
+She said that they knew she could not compel
+the sea to quietness or chain the storm, that she
+could not lead the fish-shoals to the coast, or
+transform the lyme-grass into wheat; but what
+a poor mortal could do for them, that should be
+done.</p>
+
+<p>'"They all knelt before her whilst she spoke.
+Never before had they felt such a gentle and
+motherly heart beat for them. The Empress
+spoke to them in such a manner about their hard
+and toilsome life that tears came into their eyes
+over her pity.</p>
+
+<p>'"But now the Empress said she had decided
+to leave with them her Imperial money-chest,
+with all the treasures which it contained. That
+should be her gift to all those who lived on the
+dunes. That was the only assistance she could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+render them, and she asked them to forgive her
+that it was so poor; and the Empress herself
+had tears in her eyes when she said this.</p>
+
+<p>'"She now asked them if they would promise
+and swear not to use any of the treasure until
+the need amongst them was so great that it could
+not become any greater. Next, if they would
+swear to leave it as an inheritance for their descendants,
+if they did not require it themselves.
+And, lastly, she asked every man singly to swear
+that he would not try to take possession of the
+treasure for his own use without having first
+asked the consent of all his fellow-fishermen.</p>
+
+<p>'"If they were willing to swear? That they all
+were. And they blessed the Empress and cried
+from gratitude. And she cried and told them that
+she knew that what they needed was a support
+that would never fail them, a treasure that could
+never be exhausted, and a happiness that was unattainable,
+but that she could not give them. She
+had never been so powerless as here on the dunes.</p>
+
+<p>'"My fellow-citizens, without her knowing it,
+solely by force of the royal wisdom with which
+this great Queen was endowed, the power was
+given her to attain far more than she had intended,
+and it is therefore one can say that to this
+day she reigns over West Flanders.</p>
+
+<p>'"What a happiness, is it not, to hear of all
+the blessings which have been spread over West
+Flanders by the Empress's gift! The people
+there have now something to depend upon which
+they needed so badly, and which we all need.
+However bad things may be, there is never any
+despair.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'"They have told me at the dunes what the
+Empress's money-chest is like. They say it is
+like the holy shrine of Saint Ursula at Bruges,
+only more beautiful. It is a copy of the cathedral
+at Vienna, and it is of pure gold; but on the sides
+the whole history of the Empress is depicted in
+the whitest alabaster. On the small side-towers
+are the four diamonds which the Empress took
+from the crown of the Sultan of Turkey, and in
+the gable are her initials inlaid with rubies. But
+when I ask them whether they have seen the
+money-chest, they reply that shipwrecked sailors
+when in peril always see it swimming before them
+on the waves as a sign that they shall not be in
+despair for their wives and children, should they
+be compelled to leave them. But they are the
+only ones who have seen the treasure, otherwise
+no one has been near enough to count it. And
+you know, citizens, that the Empress never told
+anyone how great it was. But if any of you doubt
+how much use it has been and is, then I will ask
+you to go to the dunes and see for yourself.
+There has been digging and building ever since
+that time, and the sea now lies cowed by bulwarks
+and dams, and no longer does harm. And there
+are green meadows inside the dunes, and there
+are flourishing towns and watering-places near
+the shore. But for every lighthouse that has been
+built, for every harbour that has been deepened,
+for every ship of which the keel has been laid, for
+every dam that has been raised, they have always
+thought: 'If our own money should not be sufficient,
+we shall receive help from our Gracious
+Empress Maria Theresa.' But this has been but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+a spur to them: their own money has always sufficed.</p>
+
+<p>'"You know, also, that the Empress did not
+say where the treasure was. Was not this well
+considered, citizens? There is one who has it in
+his keeping, but only, when all are agreed upon
+dividing it, will he who keeps the treasure come
+forward and reveal where it is. Therefore one
+is certain that neither now nor in the future will
+it be unfairly divided. It is the same for all.
+Everyone knows that the Empress thinks as much
+of him as of his neighbour. There can be no strife
+or envy amongst the people of the dunes as there
+is amongst other men, for they all share alike in
+the treasure."'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop interrupted Father Verneau.</p>
+
+<p>'That is enough,' he said. 'How did you continue?'</p>
+
+<p>'I said,' continued the monk, 'that it was very
+bad the good Empress had not also come to
+Charleroi. I pitied them because they did not own
+her money-chest. Considering the great things
+they had to accomplish, considering the sea which
+they had to tame, the quicksands which they had
+to bind, considering all this, I said to them surely
+there was nothing they needed so much.'</p>
+
+<p>'And then?' asked the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>'One or two cabbages, your Eminence, a little
+hissing; but then I was already out of the pulpit.
+That was all.'</p>
+
+<p>'They had understood that you had spoken to
+them about the providence of God?'</p>
+
+<p>The monk bowed.</p>
+
+<p>'They had understood that you would show<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+them that the power which they deride because
+they do not see it must be kept hidden? that it will
+be abused immediately it assumes a visible form?
+I congratulate you, Father Verneau.'</p>
+
+<p>The monk retired towards the door, bowing.
+The Bishop followed him, beaming benevolently.</p>
+
+<p>'But the money-chest&mdash;do they still believe in
+it at the dunes?'</p>
+
+<p>'As much as ever, Monseigneur.'</p>
+
+<p>'And the treasure&mdash;has there ever been a treasure?'</p>
+
+<p>'Monseigneur, I have sworn.'</p>
+
+<p>'But for me,' said the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>'It is the priest at Blankenberghe, who has it in
+his keeping. He allowed me to see it. It is an
+old wooden chest with iron mountings.'</p>
+
+<p>'And?'</p>
+
+<p>'And at the bottom lie twenty bright Maria
+Theresa gold pieces.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop smiled, but became grave at once.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it right to compare such a wooden chest
+with God's providence?'</p>
+
+<p>'All comparisons are incomplete, Monseigneur;
+all human thoughts are vain.'</p>
+
+<p>Father Verneau bowed once again, and quietly
+withdrew from the audience-room.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Peace of God">VII <a name="Peace" id="Peace"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Peace</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">God</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">VII</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Peace</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">God</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Peace</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">God</span></p>
+
+<p>Once upon a time there was an old farmhouse.
+It was Christmas-eve, the sky was
+heavy with snow, and the north wind was
+biting. It was just that time in the afternoon
+when everybody was busy finishing their work
+before they went to the bath-house to have their
+Christmas bath. There they had made such a
+fire that the flames went right up the chimney, and
+sparks and soot were whirled about by the wind,
+and fell down on the snow-decked roofs of the
+outhouses. And as the flames appeared above
+the chimney of the bath-house, and rose like a
+fiery pillar above the farm, everyone suddenly felt
+that Christmas was at hand. The girl that was
+scrubbing the entrance floor began to hum, although
+the water was freezing in the bucket
+beside her. The men in the wood-shed who were
+cutting Christmas logs began to cut two at a time,
+and swung their axes as merrily as if log-cutting
+were a mere pastime.</p>
+
+<p>An old woman came out of the pantry with a
+large pile of cakes in her arms. She went slowly
+across the yard into the large red-painted dwelling-house,
+and carried them carefully into the
+best room, and put them down on the long seat.
+Then she spread the tablecloth on the table, and
+arranged the cakes in heaps, a large and a small
+cake in each heap. She was a singularly ugly old
+woman, with reddish hair, heavy drooping eye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>lids,
+and with a peculiar strained look about the
+mouth and chin, as if the muscles were too short.
+But being Christmas-eve, there was such a joy
+and peace over her that one did not notice how
+ugly she was.</p>
+
+<p>But there was one person on the farm who was
+not happy, and that was the girl who was tying up
+the whisks made of birch twigs that were to be
+used for the baths. She sat near the fireplace, and
+had a whole armful of fine birch twigs lying beside
+her on the floor, but the withes with which she
+was to bind the twigs would not keep knotted.
+The best room had a narrow, low window, with
+small panes, and through them the light from the
+bath-house shone into the room, playing on the
+floor and gilding the birch twigs. But the higher
+the fire burned the more unhappy was the girl.
+She knew that the whisks would fall to pieces as
+soon as one touched them, and that she would
+never hear the last of it until the next Christmas
+fire was lighted.</p>
+
+<p>Just as she sat there bemoaning herself, the person
+of whom she was most afraid came into the
+room. It was her master, Ingmar Ingmarson.
+He was sure to have been to the bath-house to see
+if the stove was hot enough, and now he wanted
+to see how the whisks were getting on. He was
+old, was Ingmar Ingmarson, and he was fond of
+everything old, and just because people were beginning
+to leave off bathing in the bath-houses
+and being whipped with birch twigs, he made a
+great point of having it done on his farm, and
+having it done properly.</p>
+
+<p>Ingmar Ingmarson wore an old coat of sheep's-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>skin,
+skin trousers, and shoes smeared over with
+pitch. He was dirty and unshaven, slow in all his
+movements, and came in so softly that one might
+very well have mistaken him for a beggar. His
+features resembled his wife's features and his ugliness
+resembled his wife's ugliness, for they were
+relations, and from the time the girl first began to
+notice anything she had learned to feel a wholesome
+reverence for anybody who looked like that;
+for it was a great thing to belong to the old family
+of the Ingmars, which had always been the first
+in the village. But the highest to which a man
+could attain was to be Ingmar Ingmarson himself,
+and be the richest, the wisest, and the mightiest in
+the whole parish.</p>
+
+<p>Ingmar Ingmarson went up to the girl, took
+one of the whisks, and swung it in the air. It immediately
+fell to pieces; one of the twigs landed
+on the Christmas table, another on the big four-poster.</p>
+
+<p>'I say, my girl,' said old Ingmar, laughing, 'do
+you think one uses that kind of whisk when one
+takes a bath at the Ingmar's, or are you very
+tender, my girl?'</p>
+
+<p>When the girl saw that her master did not take
+it more seriously than that, she took heart, and
+answered that she could certainly make whisks
+that would not go to pieces if she could get proper
+withes to bind them with.</p>
+
+<p>'Then I suppose I must try to get some for
+you, my girl,' said old Ingmar, for he was in a real
+Christmas humour.</p>
+
+<p>He went out of the room, stepped over the girl
+who was scouring the floor, and remained stand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>ing
+on the doorstep, to see if there were anyone
+about whom he could send to the birch-wood for
+some withes. The farm hands were still busy cutting
+Yule logs; his son came out of the barn with
+the Christmas sheaf; his two sons-in-law were
+putting the carts into the shed so that the yard
+could be tidy for the Christmas festival. None of
+them had time to leave their work.</p>
+
+<p>The old man then quietly made up his mind to
+go himself. He went across the yard as if he were
+going into the cowshed, looked cautiously round
+to make sure no one noticed him, and stole along
+outside the barn where there was a fairly good
+road to the wood. The old man thought it was
+better not to let anyone know where he was going,
+for either his son or his sons-in-law might
+then have begged him to remain at home, and
+old people like to have their own way.</p>
+
+<p>He went down the road, across the fields,
+through the small pine-forest into the birch-wood.
+Here he left the road, and waded in the snow to
+find some young birches.</p>
+
+<p>About the same time the wind at last accomplished
+what it had been busy with the whole day:
+it tore the snow from the clouds, and now came
+rushing through the wood with a long train of
+snow after it.</p>
+
+<p>Ingmar Ingmarson had just stooped down and
+cut off a birch twig, when the wind came tearing
+along laden with snow. Just as the old man was
+getting up the wind blew a whole heap of snow in
+his face. His eyes were full of snow, and the wind
+whirled so violently around him that he was
+obliged to turn round once or twice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The whole misfortune, no doubt, arose from
+Ingmar Ingmarson being so old. In his young
+days a snowstorm would certainly not have made
+him dizzy. But now everything danced round
+him as if he had joined in a Christmas polka, and
+when he wanted to go home he went in the wrong
+direction. He went straight into the large pine-forest
+behind the birch-wood instead of going
+towards the fields.</p>
+
+<p>It soon grew dark, and the storm continued to
+howl and whirl around him amongst the young
+trees on the outskirts of the forest. The old man
+saw quite well that he was walking amongst fir-trees,
+but he did not understand that this was
+wrong, for there were also fir-trees on the other
+side of the birch-wood nearest the farm. But by-and-by
+he got so far into the forest that everything
+was quiet and still&mdash;one could not feel the
+storm, and the trees were high with thick stems&mdash;then
+he found out that he had mistaken the road,
+and would turn back.</p>
+
+<p>He became excited and upset at the thought
+that he <em>could</em> lose his way, and as he stood there in
+the midst of the pathless wood he was not sufficiently
+clear-headed to know in which direction to
+turn. He first went to the one side and then to the
+other. At last it occurred to him to retrace his
+way in his own footprints, but darkness came on,
+and he could no longer follow them. The trees
+around him grew higher and higher. Whichever
+way he went, it was evident to him that he got
+further and further into the forest.</p>
+
+<p>It was like witchcraft and sorcery, he thought,
+that he should be running about the woods like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+this all the evening and be too late for the bathing.
+He turned his cap and rebound his garter, but his
+head was no clearer. It had become quite dark,
+and he began to think that he would have to remain
+the whole night in the woods.</p>
+
+<p>He leant against a tree, stood still for a little,
+and tried to collect his thoughts. He knew this
+forest so well, and had walked in it so much, that
+he ought to know every single tree. As a boy he
+had gone there and tended sheep. He had gone
+there and laid snares for the birds. In his young
+days he had helped to fell trees there. He had
+seen old trees cut down and new ones grow up.
+At last he thought he had an idea where he was,
+and fancied if he went that and that way he must
+come upon the right road; but all the same, he
+only went deeper and deeper into the forest.</p>
+
+<p>Once he felt smooth, firm ground under his
+feet, and knew from that, that he had at last come
+to some road. He tried now to follow this, for a
+road, he thought, was bound to lead to some place
+or other; but then the road ended at an open
+space in the forest, and there the snowstorm had
+it all its own way; there was neither road nor
+path, only drifts and loose snow. Then the old
+man's courage failed him; he felt like some poor
+creature destined to die a lonely death in the
+wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>He began to grow tired of dragging himself
+through the snow, and time after time he sat down
+on a stone to rest; but as soon as he sat down
+he felt he was on the point of falling asleep, and
+he knew he would be frozen to death if he did fall
+asleep, therefore he tried to walk and walk; that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+was the only thing that could save him. But all
+at once he could not resist the inclination to sit
+down. He thought if he could only rest, it did
+not matter if it did cost him his life.</p>
+
+<p>It was so delightful to sit down that the thought
+of death did not in the least frighten him. He felt
+a kind of happiness at the thought that when he
+was dead the account of his whole life would be
+read aloud in the church. He thought of how
+beautifully the old Dean had spoken about his
+father, and how something equally beautiful
+would be sure to be said about him. The Dean
+would say that he had owned the oldest farm in
+the district, and he would speak about the honour
+it was to belong to such a distinguished family,
+and then something would be said about responsibility.
+Of course there was responsibility in the
+matter; that he had always known. One must
+endure to the very last when one was an Ingmar.</p>
+
+<p>The thought rushed through him that it was
+not befitting for him to be found frozen to death
+in the wild forest. He would not have that handed
+down to posterity; and he stood up again and
+began to walk. He had been sitting so long that
+masses of snow fell from his fur coat when he
+moved. But soon he sat down again and began
+to dream.</p>
+
+<p>The thought of death now came quite gently to
+him. He thought about the whole of the funeral
+and all the honour they would show his dead
+body. He could see the table laid for the great
+funeral feast in the large room on the first floor,
+the Dean and his wife in the seats of honour, the
+Justice of the Peace, with the white frill spread<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+over his narrow chest; the Major's wife in full
+dress, with a low silk bodice, and her neck covered
+with pearls and gold; he saw all the best
+rooms draped in white&mdash;white sheets before the
+windows, white over the furniture; branches of
+fir strewn the whole way from the entrance-hall to
+the church; house-cleaning and butchering,
+brewing and baking for a fortnight before the
+funeral; the corpse on a bier in the inmost room;
+smoke from the newly-lighted fires in the rooms;
+the whole house crowded with guests; singing
+over the body whilst the lid of the coffin was being
+screwed on; silver plates on the coffin; twenty
+loads of wood burned in a fortnight; the whole
+village busy cooking food to take to the funeral;
+all the tall hats newly ironed; all the corn-brandy
+from the autumn drunk up during the funeral
+feast; all the roads crowded with people as at fair-time.</p>
+
+<p>Again the old man started up. He had heard
+them sitting and talking about him during the
+feast.</p>
+
+<p>'But how did he manage to go and get frozen
+to death?' asked the Justice of the Peace. 'What
+could he have been doing in the large forest?'</p>
+
+<p>And the Captain would say that it was probably
+from Christmas ale and corn-brandy. And that
+roused him again. The Ingmars had never been
+drunkards. It should never be said of him that
+he was muddled in his last moments. And he began
+again to walk and walk; but he was so tired
+that he could scarcely stand on his legs. It was
+quite clear to him now that he had got far into
+the forest, for there were no paths anywhere, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+many large rocks, of which he knew there were
+none lower down. His foot caught between two
+stones, so that he had difficulty in getting it out,
+and he stood and moaned. He was quite done
+for.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he fell over a heap of fagots. He fell
+softly on to the snow and branches, so he was not
+hurt, but he did not take the trouble to get up
+again. He had no other desire in the world than
+to sleep. He pushed the fagots to one side and
+crept under them as if they were a rug; but when
+he pushed himself under the branches he felt that
+underneath there was something warm and soft.
+This must be a bear, he thought.</p>
+
+<p>He felt the animal move, and heard it sniff; but
+he lay still. The bear might eat him if it liked, he
+thought. He had not strength enough to move a
+single step to get out of its way.</p>
+
+<p>But it seemed as if the bear did not want to
+harm anyone who sought its protection on such a
+night as this. It moved a little further into its lair,
+as if to make room for its visitor, and directly
+afterwards it slept again with even, snorting
+breath.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the meantime there was but scanty Christmas
+joy in the old farm of the Ingmars. The
+whole of Christmas-eve they were looking for
+Ingmar Ingmarson. First they went all over the
+dwelling-house and all the outhouses. They
+searched high and low, from loft to cellar. Then
+they went to the neighbouring farms and inquired
+for Ingmar Ingmarson.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As they did not find him, his sons and his sons-in-law
+went into the fields and roads. They used
+the torches which should have lighted the way for
+people going to early service on Christmas morning
+in the search for him. The terrible snowstorm
+had hidden all traces, and the howling of the wind
+drowned the sound of their voices when they
+called and shouted. They were out and about
+until long after midnight, but then they saw that
+it was useless to continue the search, and that they
+must wait until daylight to find the old man.</p>
+
+<p>At the first pale streak of dawn everybody was
+up at Ingmar's farm, and the men stood about the
+yard ready to set out for the wood. But before
+they started the old housewife came and called
+them into the best room. She told them to sit
+down on the long benches; she herself sat down
+by the Christmas table with the Bible in front of
+her and began to read. She tried her best to find
+something suitable for the occasion, and chose
+the story of the man who was travelling from
+Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves.</p>
+
+<p>She read slowly and monotonously about the
+unfortunate man who was succoured by the good
+Samaritan. Her sons and sons-in-law, her
+daughters and daughters-in-law, sat around her
+on the benches. They all resembled her and each
+other, big and clumsy, with plain, old-fashioned
+faces, for they all belonged to the old race of the
+Ingmars. They had all reddish hair, freckled
+skin, and light-blue eyes with white eyelashes.
+They might be different enough from each other
+in some ways, but they had all a stern look about
+the mouth, dull eyes, and heavy movements, as if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+everything were a trouble to them. But one could
+see that they all, every one of them, belonged to
+the first people in the neighbourhood, and that
+they knew themselves to be better than other
+people.</p>
+
+<p>All the sons and daughters of the house of Ingmar
+sighed deeply during the reading of the Bible.
+They wondered if some good Samaritan had
+found the master of the house and taken care of
+him, for all the Ingmars felt as if they had lost part
+of their own soul when a misfortune happened to
+anyone belonging to the family.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman read and read, and came to the
+question: 'Who was neighbour unto him that fell
+amongst thieves?' But before she had read the
+answer the door opened and old Ingmar came
+into the room.</p>
+
+<p>'Mother, here is father,' said one of the daughters;
+and the answer, that the man's neighbour
+was he who had shown mercy unto him, was
+never read.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Later in the day the housewife sat again in the
+same place, and read her Bible. She was alone;
+the women had gone to church, and the men were
+bear-hunting in the forest. As soon as Ingmar
+Ingmarson had eaten and drunk, he took his sons
+with him and went out to the forest; for it is every
+man's duty to kill a bear wherever and whenever
+he comes across one. It does not do to spare a
+bear, for sooner or later it will get a taste for flesh,
+and then it will spare neither man nor beast.</p>
+
+<p>But after they were gone a great feeling of fear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+came over the old housewife, and she began to
+read her Bible. She read the lesson for the day,
+which was also the text for the Pastor's sermon;
+but she did not get further than this: 'Peace on
+earth, goodwill towards men.' She remained sitting
+and staring at these words with her dull eyes,
+now and again sighing deeply. She did not read
+any further, but she repeated time after time in
+her slow, drawling voice, 'Peace on earth, goodwill
+towards men.'</p>
+
+<p>The eldest son came into the room just as she
+was going to repeat the words afresh.</p>
+
+<p>'Mother!' he said softly.</p>
+
+<p>She heard him, but did not take her eyes from
+the book whilst she asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Are you not with the others in the forest?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' said he, still more softly, 'I have been
+there.'</p>
+
+<p>'Come to the table,' she said, 'so that I can see
+you.'</p>
+
+<p>He came nearer, but when she looked at him
+she saw that he was trembling. He had to press
+his hands hard against the edge of the table in
+order to keep them still.</p>
+
+<p>'Have you got the bear?' she asked again.</p>
+
+<p>He could not answer; he only shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman got up and did what she had
+not done since her son was a child. She went up
+to him, laid her hand on his arm, and drew him
+to the bench. She sat down beside him and took
+his hand in hers.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me now what has happened, my boy.'</p>
+
+<p>The young man recognised the caress which
+had comforted him in bygone days when he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+been in trouble and unhappy, and he was so overcome
+that he began to weep.</p>
+
+<p>'I suppose it is something about father?' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>'It is worse than that,' the son sobbed.
+'Worse than that?'</p>
+
+<p>The young man cried more and more violently;
+he did not know how to control his voice. At last
+he lifted his rough hand, with the broad fingers,
+and pointed to what she had just read: 'Peace
+on earth.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it anything about that?' she asked.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' he answered.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it anything about the peace of Christmas?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>'You wished to do an evil deed this morning?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>'And God has punished us?'</p>
+
+<p>'God has punished us.'</p>
+
+<p>So at last she was told how it had happened.
+They had with some trouble found the lair of the
+bear, and when they had got near enough to see
+the heap of fagots, they stopped in order to load
+their guns. But before they were ready the bear
+rushed out of its lair straight against them. It
+went neither to the right nor to the left, but
+straight for old Ingmar Ingmarson, and struck
+him a blow on the top of the head that felled him
+to the ground as if he had been struck by lightning.
+It did not attack any of the others, but
+rushed past them into the forest.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the afternoon Ingmar Ingmarson's wife and
+son drove to the Dean's house to announce his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
+death. The son was spokesman, and the old
+housewife sat and listened with a face as immovable
+as a stone figure.</p>
+
+<p>The Dean sat in his easy-chair near his writing-table.
+He had entered the death in the register.
+He had done it rather slowly; he wanted time to
+consider what he should say to the widow and the
+son, for this was, indeed, an unusual case. The
+son had frankly told him how it had all happened,
+but the Dean was anxious to know how they
+themselves looked at it. They were peculiar people,
+the Ingmars.</p>
+
+<p>When the Dean had closed the book, the son
+said:</p>
+
+<p>'We wanted to tell you, sir, that we do not wish
+any account of father's life to be read in church.'</p>
+
+<p>The Dean pushed his spectacles over his forehead
+and looked searchingly at the old woman.
+She sat just as immovable as before. She only
+crumpled the handkerchief a little which she
+held in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>'We wish to have him buried on a week day,'
+continued the son.</p>
+
+<p>'Indeed!' said the Dean.</p>
+
+<p>He could hardly believe his own ears. Old
+Ingmar Ingmarson to be buried without anyone
+taking any notice of it! The congregation not to
+stand on railings and mounds in order to see the
+display when he was being carried to the grave!</p>
+
+<p>'There will not be any funeral feast. We have
+let the neighbours know that they need not think
+of preparing anything for the funeral.'</p>
+
+<p>'Indeed, indeed!' said the Dean again.</p>
+
+<p>He could think of nothing else to say. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+knew quite well what it meant for such people to
+forego the funeral feast. He had seen both widows
+and fatherless comforted by giving a splendid
+funeral feast.</p>
+
+<p>'There will be no funeral procession, only I and
+my brothers.'</p>
+
+<p>The Dean looked almost appealingly at the old
+woman. Could she really be a party to all this?
+He asked himself if it could be her wishes to which
+the son had given expression. She was sitting
+there and allowing herself to be robbed of what
+must be dearer to her than gold and silver.</p>
+
+<p>'We will not have the bells rung, or any silver
+plates on the coffin. Mother and I wish it to be
+done in this way, but we tell you all this, sir, in
+order to hear, sir, if you think we are wronging
+father.'</p>
+
+<p>Now the old woman spoke:</p>
+
+<p>'We should like to hear if your Reverence
+thinks we are doing father a wrong.'</p>
+
+<p>The Dean remained silent, and the old woman
+continued, more eagerly:</p>
+
+<p>'I must tell your Reverence that if my husband
+had sinned against the King or the authorities, or
+if I had been obliged to cut him down from the
+gallows, he should all the same have had an honourable
+funeral, as his father before him, for the
+Ingmars are not afraid of anyone, and they need
+not go out of their way for anybody. But at
+Christmas God has made peace between man and
+beast, and the poor beast kept God's commandment,
+whilst we broke it, and therefore we now
+suffer God's punishment; and it is not becoming
+for us to show any ostentatious display.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Dean rose and went up to the old woman.</p>
+
+<p>'What you say is right,' he said, 'and you shall
+follow the dictates of your own conscience.' And
+involuntarily he added, perhaps most to himself:
+'The Ingmars are a grand family.'</p>
+
+<p>The old woman straightened herself a little at
+these words. At that moment the Dean saw in
+her the symbol of her whole race. He understood
+what it was that had made these heavy, silent people,
+century after century, the leaders of the whole
+parish.</p>
+
+<p>'It behooves the Ingmars to set the people a
+good example,' she said. 'It behooves us to show
+that we humble ourselves before God.'</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Story from Halstan&auml;s">VIII <a name="Story" id="Story"><span class="dec_italic">A</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">from</span> <span class="smcap">Halstan&auml;s</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">VIII</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">A</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">from</span> <span class="smcap">Halstan&auml;s</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">A</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">from</span> <span class="smcap">Halstan&auml;s</span></p>
+
+<p>In olden times there stood by the roadside an
+old country-house called Halstan&auml;s. It comprised
+a long row of red-painted houses,
+which were of low structure, and right behind
+them lay the forest. Close to the dwelling-house
+was a large wild cherry-tree, which showered its
+black fruit over the red-tiled roof. A bell under a
+small belfry hung over the gable of the stables.</p>
+
+<p>Just outside the kitchen-door was a dovecote,
+with a neat little trelliswork outside the holes.
+From the attic a cage for squirrels was hanging;
+it consisted of two small green houses and a
+large wheel, and in front of a big hedge of lilacs
+stood a long row of beehives covered with bark.</p>
+
+<p>There was a pond belonging to the farm, full of
+fat carp and slim water-snakes; there was also a
+kennel at the entrance; there were white gates at
+the end of the avenue, and at the garden walks,
+and in every place where they could possibly have
+a gate. There were big lofts with dark lumber-rooms,
+where old-fashioned uniforms and ladies'
+head-gear a hundred years old were stored away;
+there were large chests full of silk gowns and
+bridal finery; there were old pianos and violins,
+guitars and bassoons. In bureaus and cabinets
+were manuscript songs and old yellow letters; on
+the walls of the entrance-hall hung guns, pistols
+and hunting-bags; on the floor were rugs, in
+which patches of old silken gowns were woven<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+together with pieces of threadbare cotton curtains.
+There was a large porch, where the deadly nightshade
+summer after summer grew up a thin
+trelliswork; there were large, yellow front-doors,
+which were fastened with bolts and catches; the
+hall was strewn with sprigs of juniper, and the
+windows had small panes and heavy wooden
+shutters.</p>
+
+<p>One summer old Colonel Beerencreutz came on
+a visit to this house. It is supposed to have been
+the very year after he left Ekeby. At that time he
+had taken rooms at a farm at Svartsj&ouml;, and it was
+only on rare occasions that he went visiting. He
+still had his horse and gig, but he scarcely ever
+used them. He said that he had grown old in
+earnest now, and that home was the best place for
+old people.</p>
+
+<p>Beerencreutz was also loath to leave the work
+he had in hand. He was weaving rugs for his two
+rooms&mdash;large, many-coloured rugs in a rich and
+strangely-thought-out pattern. It took him an
+endless time, because he had his own way of weaving,
+for he used no loom, but stretched his wool
+from the one wall to the other right across the one
+room. He did this in order to see the whole rug
+at one time; but to cross the woof and afterwards
+bring the threads together to a firm web was no
+easy matter. And then there was the pattern,
+which he himself thought out, and the colours
+which should match. This took the Colonel more
+time than anyone would have imagined; for whilst
+Beerencreutz was busy getting the pattern right,
+and whilst he was working with warp and woof, he
+often sat and thought of God. Our Lord, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+thought, was likewise sitting at a loom, still
+larger, and with an even more peculiar pattern to
+weave. And he knew that there must be both
+light and dark shades in that weaving. But Beerencreutz
+would at times sit and think so long
+about this, until he fancied he saw before him his
+own life and the life of the people whom he had
+known, and with whom he had lived, forming a
+small portion of God's great weaving; and he
+seemed to see that piece so distinctly that he could
+discern both outlines and colouring. And if one
+asked Beerencreutz what the pattern in his work
+really meant, he would be obliged to confess that
+it was the life of himself and his friends which he
+wove into the rug as a faint imitation of what he
+thought he had seen represented on God's loom.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel, however, was accustomed to pay
+a little visit to some old friends every year just
+after midsummer. He had always liked best to
+travel through the country when the fields were
+still scented with clover, and blue and yellow flowers
+grew along the roadside in two long straight
+rows.</p>
+
+<p>This year the Colonel had hardly got to the
+great highroad before he met his old friend Ensign
+von &Ouml;rneclou. And the Ensign, who was
+travelling about all the year round, and who knew
+all the country houses in V&auml;rmland, gave him
+some good advice.</p>
+
+<p>'Go to Halstan&auml;s and call upon Ensign Vestblad,'
+he said to the Colonel. 'I can only tell you,
+old man, I don't know a house in the whole country
+where one fares better.'</p>
+
+<p>'What Vestblad are you speaking about?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+asked the Colonel. 'I suppose you don't mean
+the old Ensign whom the Major's wife showed
+the door?'</p>
+
+<p>'The very man,' said the Ensign. 'But Vestblad
+is not the same man he was. He has married
+a fine lady&mdash;a real stunning woman, Colonel&mdash;who
+has made a man of him. It was a wonderful
+piece of good luck for Vestblad that such a splendid
+girl should take a fancy to him. She was not
+exactly young any longer; but no more was he.
+You should go to Halstan&auml;s, Colonel, and see
+what wonders love can work.'</p>
+
+<p>And the Colonel went to Halstan&auml;s to see if
+&Ouml;rneclou spoke the truth. He had, as a matter
+of fact, now and then wondered what had become
+of Vestblad; in his young days he had kicked so
+recklessly over the traces that even the Major's
+wife at Ekeby could not put up with him. She
+had not been able to keep him at Ekeby more than
+a couple of years before she was obliged to turn
+him out. Vestblad had become such a heavy
+drinker that a Cavalier could hardly associate with
+him. And now &Ouml;rneclou declared that he owned
+a country house, and had made an excellent
+match.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel consequently went to Halstan&auml;s,
+and saw at the first glance that it was a real old
+country-seat. He had only to look at the avenue
+of birches with all the names cut on the fine old
+trees. Such birches he had only seen at good old
+country-houses. The Colonel drove slowly up to
+the house, and every moment his pleasure increased.
+He saw lime hedges of the proper kind,
+so close that one could walk on the top of them,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+and there were a couple of terraces with stone
+steps so old that they were half buried in the
+ground. When the Colonel drove past the pond,
+he saw indistinctly the dark carp in the yellowish
+water. The pigeons flew up from the road flapping
+their wings; the squirrel stopped its wheel;
+the watch-dog lay with its head on its paws, wagging
+its tail, and at the same time faintly growling.
+Close to the porch the Colonel saw an ant-hill,
+where the ants, unmolested, went to and fro&mdash;to
+and fro. He looked at the flower-beds inside
+the grass border. There they grew, all the old
+flowers: narcissus and pyrola, sempervivum and
+marigold; and on the bank grew small white
+daisies, which had been there so long that they
+now sowed themselves like weeds. Beerencreutz
+again said to himself that this was indeed a real
+old country-house, where both plants and animals
+and human beings throve as well as could be.</p>
+
+<p>When at last he drove up to the front-door he
+had as good a reception as he could wish for, and
+as soon as he had brushed the dust off him he was
+taken to the dining-room, and he was offered
+plenty of good old-fashioned food&mdash;the same old
+cakes for dessert that his mother used to give him
+when he came home from school; and any so
+good he had never tasted elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Beerencreutz looked with surprise at Ensign
+Vestblad. He went about quiet and content, with
+a long pipe in his mouth and a skull-cap on his
+head. He wore an old morning-coat, which he
+had difficulty in getting out of when it was time
+to dress for dinner. That was the only sign of the
+Bohemian left, as far as Beerencreutz could see.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+He went about and looked after his men, calculated
+their wages, saw how things were getting on
+in the fields and meadows, gathered a rose for his
+wife when he went through the garden, and he indulged
+no longer in either swearing or spitting.
+But what astonished the Colonel most of all was
+the discovery that old Ensign Vestblad kept his
+books. He took the Colonel into his office and
+showed him large books with red backs. And
+those he kept himself. He had lined them with
+red ink and black ink, written the headings with
+large letters, and put down everything, even to a
+stamp.</p>
+
+<p>But Ensign Vestblad's wife, who was a born
+lady, called Beerencreutz cousin, and they soon
+found out the relationship between them; and
+they talked all their relatives over. At last Beerencreutz
+became so intimate with Mrs. Vestblad
+that he consulted her about the rug he was weaving.</p>
+
+<p>It was a matter of course that the Colonel
+should stay the night. He was taken to the best
+spare room to the right of the hall and close to his
+host's bedroom, and his bed was a large four-poster,
+with heaps of eiderdowns.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel fell asleep as soon as he got into
+bed, but awoke later on in the night. He immediately
+got out of bed and went and opened the
+window-shutters. He had a view over the garden,
+and in the light summer night he could see all the
+gnarled old apple-trees, with their worm-eaten
+leaves, and with numerous props under the decayed
+branches. He saw the large wild apple-tree,
+which in the autumn would give barrels of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
+uneatable fruit; he saw the strawberries, which
+had just begun to ripen under their profusion of
+green leaves.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel stood and looked at it as if he
+could not afford to waste his time in sleeping.
+Outside his window at the peasant farm where he
+lived all he could see was a stony hill and a couple
+of juniper-bushes; and it was natural that a man
+like Beerencreutz should feel more at home
+amongst well-trimmed hedges and roses in
+bloom.</p>
+
+<p>When in the quiet stillness of the night one
+looks out upon a garden, one often has a feeling
+that it is not real and natural. It can be so still
+that one can almost fancy one's self in the theatre;
+one imagines that the trees are painted and the
+roses made of paper. And it was something like
+this the Colonel felt as he stood there. 'It cannot
+be possible,' he thought, 'that all this is real.
+It can only be a dream.' But then a few rose-leaves
+fell softly to the ground from the big rose-tree
+just outside his window, and then he realized
+that everything was genuine. Everything was
+real and genuine; both day and night the same
+peace and contentment everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>When he went and laid down again he left the
+window-shutters open. He lay in the high bed
+and looked time after time at the rose-tree; it is
+impossible to describe his pleasure in looking at
+it. He thought what a strange thing it was that
+such a man as Vestblad should have this flower of
+Paradise outside his window.</p>
+
+<p>The more the Colonel thought of Vestblad the
+more surprised he became that such a foal should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+end his days in such a stable. He was not good
+for much at the time he was turned away from
+Ekeby. Who would have thought he would have
+become a staid and well-to-do man?</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel lay and laughed to himself, and
+wondered whether Vestblad still remembered
+how he used to amuse himself in the olden days
+when he was living at Ekeby. On dark and
+stormy nights he used to rub himself over with
+phosphorus, mount a black horse, and ride over
+the hills to the ironworks, where the smiths and
+the workmen lived; and if anyone happened to
+look out of his window and saw a horseman shining
+with a bluish-white light tearing past, he
+hastened to bar and bolt everywhere, saying it
+was best to say one's prayers twice that night,
+for the devil was abroad.</p>
+
+<p>Oh yes, to frighten simple folks by such tricks
+was a favourite amusement in olden days; but
+Vestblad had carried his jokes further than anyone
+else the Colonel knew of.</p>
+
+<p>An old woman on the parish had died at Viksta,
+which belonged to Ekeby. Vestblad happened to
+hear about this. He also heard that the corpse
+had been taken from the house and placed in a
+barn. At night Vestblad put on his fiery array,
+mounted his black horse, and rode to the farmstead;
+and people there who were about had seen
+a fiery horseman ride up to the barn, where the
+corpse lay, ride three times round it and disappear
+through the door. They had also seen the horseman
+come out again, ride three times round the
+house and then disappear. But in the morning,
+when they went into the barn to see the corpse, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+was gone, and they thought the devil had been
+there and carried her off. This supposition had
+been enough for them. But a couple of weeks
+later they found the body, which had been thrown
+on to a hay-loft in the barn, and then there was a
+great outcry. They found out who the fiery
+horseman was, and the peasants were on the
+watch to give Vestblad a good hiding. But the
+Major's wife would not have him at her table or
+in her house any longer; she packed his knapsack
+and asked him to betake himself elsewhere. And
+Vestblad went out into the world and made his
+fortune.</p>
+
+<p>A strange feeling of uneasiness came over the
+Colonel as he lay in bed. He felt as if something
+were going to happen. He had hardly realized
+before what an ugly story it was. He had no
+doubt even laughed at it at the time. They had
+not been in the habit of taking much notice of
+what happened to a poor old pauper in those
+days; but, great God! how furious one would
+have been if anybody had done that to one's own
+mother!</p>
+
+<p>A suffocating feeling came over the Colonel;
+he breathed heavily. The thought of what Vestblad
+had done appeared so vile and hateful to him,
+it weighed him down like a nightmare. He was
+half afraid of seeing the dead woman, of seeing
+her appear from behind the bed. He felt as if she
+must be quite near. And from the four corners of
+the room the Colonel heard terrible words: 'God
+will not forgive it! God has never forgotten it!'</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel closed his eyes, but then he suddenly
+saw before him God's great loom, where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+the web was woven with the fates of men; and he
+thought he saw Ensign Vestblad's square, and it
+was dark on three sides; and he, who understood
+something about weaving and patterns, knew that
+the fourth side would also have to be covered with
+the dark shade. It could not be done in any other
+way, otherwise there would be a mistake in the
+weaving.</p>
+
+<p>A cold sweat broke out on his forehead; it
+seemed to him that he looked upon what was the
+hardest and the most immovable in all the world.
+He saw how the fate which a man has worked out
+in his past life will pursue him to the end. And to
+think there were actually people who thought they
+could escape it!</p>
+
+<p>Escape it! escape! All was noted and written
+down; the one colour and the one figure necessitated
+the other, and everything came about as it
+was bound to come about.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Colonel Beerencreutz sat up in bed;
+he would look at the flowers and the roses, and
+think that perhaps our Lord could forget after
+all. But at the moment Beerencreutz sat up in
+bed the bedroom door opened, and one of the
+farm-labourers&mdash;a stranger to him&mdash;put his head
+in and nodded to the Colonel.</p>
+
+<p>It was now so light that the Colonel saw the
+man quite distinctly. It was the most hideous
+face he had ever seen. He had small gray eyes
+like a pig, a flat nose, and a thin, bristly beard.
+One could not say that the man looked like an
+animal, for animals have nearly always good
+faces, but still, he had something of the animal
+about him. His lower jaw projected, his neck was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+thick, and his forehead was quite hidden by his
+rough, unkempt hair.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded three times to the Colonel, and
+every time his mouth opened with a broad grin;
+and he put out his hand, red with blood, and
+showed it triumphantly. Up to this moment the
+Colonel had sat up in bed as if paralyzed, but now
+he jumped up and was at the door in two steps.
+But when he reached the door, the fellow was
+gone and the door closed.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel was just on the point of raising the
+alarm, when it struck him that the door must be
+fastened on the inside, on his side, as he had himself
+locked it the night before; and on examining
+it, he found that it had not been unlocked.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel felt almost ashamed to think that
+in his old age he had begun to see ghosts. He
+went straight back to bed again.</p>
+
+<p>When the morning came, and he had breakfasted,
+the Colonel felt still more ashamed. He
+had excited himself to such an extent that he had
+trembled all over and perspired from fear. He
+said not a word about it. But later on in the
+day he and Vestblad went over the estate. As
+they passed a labourer who was cutting sods on a
+bank Beerencreutz recognised him again. It was
+the man he had seen in the night. He recognised
+feature for feature.</p>
+
+<p>'I would not keep that man a day longer in my
+service, my friend,' said Beerencreutz, when they
+had walked a short distance. And he told Vestblad
+what he had seen in the night. 'I tell you
+this simply to warn you, in order that you may
+dismiss the man.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Vestblad would not; he was just the man
+he would not dismiss. And when Beerencreutz
+pressed him more and more, he at last confessed
+that he would not do anything to the man, because
+he was the son of an old pauper woman who had
+died at Viksta close to Ekeby.</p>
+
+<p>'You no doubt remember the story?' he added.</p>
+
+<p>'If that's the case, I would rather go to the end
+of the world than live another day with that man
+about the place,' said Beerencreutz. An hour
+after he left, and was almost angry that his warning
+was not heeded. 'Some misfortune will happen
+before I come here again,' said the Colonel to
+Vestblad, as he took leave.</p>
+
+<p>Next year, at the same time, the Colonel was
+preparing for another visit to Halstan&auml;s. But before
+he got so far, he heard some sad news about
+his friends. As the clock struck one, a year after
+the very night he had slept there, Ensign Vestblad
+and his wife had been murdered in their bedroom
+by one of their labourers&mdash;a man with a neck like
+a bull, a flat nose, and eyes like a pig.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Inscription on the Grave">IX. <a name="Inscription" id="Inscription"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Inscription</span> <span class="dec_italic">on the</span> <span class="smcap">Grave</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">IX</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Inscription</span> <span class="dec_italic">on the</span> <span class="smcap">Grave</span></p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Inscription</span> <span class="dec_italic">on the</span> <span class="smcap">Grave</span></p>
+
+<p>Nowadays no one ever takes any notice
+of the little cross standing in the corner
+of Svartsj&ouml; Churchyard. People on their
+way to and from church go past it without giving
+it a glance. This is not so very wonderful, because
+it is so low and small that clover and
+bluebells grow right up to the arms of the cross,
+and timothy-grass to the very top of it. Neither
+does anyone think of reading the inscription
+which stands on the cross. The white letters are
+almost entirely washed out by the rain, and it
+never occurs to anyone to try and decipher what
+is still left, and try to make it out. But so it has
+not always been. The little cross in its time has
+been the cause of much surprise and curiosity.
+There was a time when not a person put his foot
+inside Svartsj&ouml; Churchyard without going up to
+look at it. And when one of the old people from
+those days now happens to see it, a whole story
+comes back to him of people and events that have
+been long forgotten. He sees before him the
+whole of Svartsj&ouml; parish in the lethargic sleep of
+winter, covered by even white snow, quite a yard
+deep, so that it is impossible to discern road or
+pathway, or to know where one is going. It is
+almost as necessary to have a compass here as
+at sea. There is no difference between sea and
+shore. The roughest ground is as even as the
+field which in the autumn yielded such a harvest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+of oats. The charcoal-burner living near the
+great bogs might imagine himself possessed of as
+much cultivated land as the richest peasant.</p>
+
+<p>The roads have left their secure course between
+the gray fences, and are running at random
+across the meadows and along the river. Even
+on one's own farm one may lose one's way, and
+suddenly discover that on one's way to the well
+one has walked over the spirea-hedge and round
+the little rose-bed.</p>
+
+<p>But nowhere is it so impossible to find one's
+way as in the churchyard. In the first place, the
+stone wall which separates it from the pastor's
+field is entirely buried under the snow, so with
+that it is all one; and secondly, the churchyard
+itself is only a simple large, white plain, where
+not even the smallest unevenness in the snow-cover
+betrays the many small mounds and tufts
+of the garden of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>On most of the graves are iron crosses, from
+which hang small, thin hearts of tin, which the
+summer wind sets in motion. These little hearts
+are now all hidden under the snow, and cannot
+tinkle their sad songs of sorrow and longing.</p>
+
+<p>People who work in the towns have brought
+back with them to their dead wreaths with flowers
+of beads and leaves of painted tin; and these
+wreaths are so highly treasured that they are kept
+in small glass cases on the graves. But now all
+this is hidden and buried under the snow, and the
+grave that possesses such an ornament is in no
+way more remarkable than any of the other
+graves.</p>
+
+<p>One or two lilac bushes raise their heads above<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+the snow-cover, but their little stiff branches look
+so alike, that it is impossible to tell one from the
+other, and they are of no use whatever to anyone
+trying to find his way in the churchyard. Old
+women who are in the habit of going on Sundays
+to visit their graves can only get a little way down
+the main walk on account of the snow. There
+they stand, trying to make out where their own
+grave lies&mdash;is it near that bush, or that?&mdash;and
+they begin to long for the snow to melt. It is
+as if the one for whom they are sorrowing has
+gone so far away from them, now that they cannot
+see the spot where he lies.</p>
+
+<p>There are also a few large gravestones and
+crosses that are higher than the snow, but they
+are not many; and as these are also covered with
+snow, they cannot be distinguished either.</p>
+
+<p>There is only one pathway kept clear in the
+churchyard. It is the one leading from the entrance
+to the small mortuary. When anyone is
+to be buried the coffin is carried into the mortuary,
+and there the pastor reads the service and
+casts the earth upon the coffin. It is impossible
+to place the coffin in the ground as long as such
+a winter lasts. It must remain standing in the
+mortuary until God sees fit to thaw the earth,
+and the ground can be digged and made ready.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Just when the winter was at its hardest, and the
+churchyard quite inaccessible, a child died at
+Sander's, the ironmaster at Lerum ironworks.</p>
+
+<p>The ironworks at Lerum were large, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+Sander, the ironmaster, was a great man in that
+part of the country. He had recently had a family
+grave made in the churchyard&mdash;a splendid grave,
+the position of which one could not easily forget,
+although the snow had laid its <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has thinck">thick</span> carpet over
+it. It was surrounded by heavy, hewn stones,
+with a massive chain between them, and in the
+middle of the grave stood a huge granite block,
+with their name inscribed upon it. There was
+only the one word 'Sander,' engraved in large
+letters, but it could be seen over the whole churchyard.
+But now that the child was dead, and was
+to be buried, the ironmaster said to his wife:</p>
+
+<p>'I will not allow this child to lie in my grave.'</p>
+
+<p>One can picture them both at that moment. It
+was in their dining-room at Lerum. The ironmaster
+was sitting at the breakfast-table alone,
+as was his wont. His wife, Ebba Sander, was sitting
+in a rocking-chair at the window, from where
+she had a wide view of the lake, with its small
+islands covered with birches.</p>
+
+<p>She had been weeping, but when her husband
+said this, her eyes became immediately dry. Her
+little figure seemed to shrink from fear, and she
+began to tremble.</p>
+
+<p>'What do you say? What are you saying?'
+she asked, and her voice sounded as if she were
+shivering from cold.</p>
+
+<p>'I object to it,' he said. 'My father and my
+mother lie there, and the name "Sander" stands
+on the stone. I will not allow that child to lie
+there.'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh,' she said, still trembling, 'is that what
+you have been thinking about? I always did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+think that some day you would have your revenge.'</p>
+
+<p>He threw down his serviette, rose from the
+table, and stood before her, broad and big. It
+was not his intention to assert his will with many
+words, but she could see, as he stood there, that
+nothing could make him change his mind. Stern,
+immovable, obstinate he was from top to toe.</p>
+
+<p>'I will not revenge myself,' he said, 'only I
+will not have it.'</p>
+
+<p>'You speak as if it were only a question of
+removing him from one bed to the other,' she
+said. 'He is dead. It does not matter to him
+where he lies, I suppose; but for me it is ruin,
+you know.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have also thought of that,' he said, 'but I
+cannot.'</p>
+
+<p>When two people have been married, and have
+lived together for some years, they do not require
+many words to understand one another. She
+knew it would be quite useless to try and move
+him.</p>
+
+<p>'Why did you forgive me, then?' she said,
+wringing her hands. 'Why did you let me stay
+with you as your wife and promise to forgive
+me?'</p>
+
+<p>He knew that he would not do her any harm.
+It was not his fault that he had now reached the
+limit of his forbearance.</p>
+
+<p>'Say to people what you like,' he said; 'I
+shall not say anything. You can say, if you like,
+that there is water in the vault, or that there is
+only room for father and mother and you and
+me.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'And you imagine that they will believe that!'</p>
+
+<p>'Well, you must manage that as best you can.'</p>
+
+<p>He was not angry; she knew that he was not.
+It was only as he said: on that point he could not
+give way.</p>
+
+<p>She went further into the room, put her hands
+at the back of her head, and sat gazing out of the
+window without saying anything. The terrible
+thing is that so much happens to one in life over
+which one has no control, and, above all, that
+something may spring up within one's self over
+which one is entirely powerless. Some years ago,
+when she was already a staid married woman,
+love came to her; and what a love&mdash;so violent that
+it was quite impossible for her to resist.</p>
+
+<p>Was not the feeling which now mastered her
+husband&mdash;was not that, after all, a desire to be
+revenged?</p>
+
+<p>He had never been angry with her. He forgave
+her at once when she came and confessed
+her sin.</p>
+
+<p>'You have been out of your senses,' he said,
+and allowed her to remain with him at Lerum as
+if nothing had happened.</p>
+
+<p>But although it is easy enough to say one forgives,
+it may be hard to do so, especially for one
+whose mind is slow and heavy, who ponders over
+but never forgets or gives vent to his feelings.
+Whatever he may say, and however much he may
+have made up his mind, something is always left
+within his heart which gnaws and longs to be satisfied
+with someone else's suffering. She had
+always had a strange feeling that it would have
+been better for her if he had been so enraged that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+he had struck her. Then, perhaps, things could
+have come right between them. All these years
+he had been morose and irritable, and she had become
+frightened. She was like a horse between
+the traces. She knew that behind her was one
+who held a whip over her, even if he did not use
+it; and now he had used it. He had not been
+able to refrain any longer. And now it was all
+over with her.</p>
+
+<p>Those who were about her said they had never
+seen such sorrow as hers. She seemed to be petrified.
+The whole time before the funeral it was
+as if there were no real life in her. One could not
+tell if she heard what was said to her, if she had
+any idea who was speaking to her. She did not
+eat; it was as if she felt no hunger. She went
+out in the bitterest cold; she did not feel it. But
+it was not grief that petrified her&mdash;it was fear.</p>
+
+<p>It never struck her for a moment to stay at
+home on the day of the funeral. She must go to
+the churchyard, she must walk in the funeral procession&mdash;must
+go there, feeling that all who were
+present expected that the body would be laid in
+the family vault of the Sanders. She thought
+she would sink into the ground at all the surprise
+and scorn which would rise up against her when
+the grave-digger, who headed the procession, led
+the way to an out-of-the-way grave. An outburst
+of astonishment would be heard from everybody,
+although it was a funeral procession:
+'Why is the child not going to be buried in the
+Sanders' family vault?' Thoughts would go back
+to the vague rumours which were once circulated
+about her. 'There must have been something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+in them, after all,' people will whisper to each
+other. And before the mourners left the churchyard
+she would be condemned and lost. The only
+thing for her to do was to be present herself. She
+would go there with a quiet face, as if everything
+was as it ought to be. Then, perhaps, they might
+believe what she said to explain the matter.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>Her husband went with her to the church; he
+had looked after everything, invited people, ordered
+the coffin, and arranged who should be the
+bearers. He was kind and good now that he had
+got his own way.</p>
+
+<p>It was on a Sunday. The service was over, and
+the mourners had assembled outside the porch,
+where the coffin was standing. The bearers had
+placed the white bands over their shoulders; all
+people of any position had joined in the procession,
+as did also many of the congregation. She
+had a feeling as if they had all gathered together
+in order to accompany a criminal to the scaffold.</p>
+
+<p>How they would all look at her when they came
+back from the funeral! She was there to prepare
+them for what was to happen, but she had not
+been able to utter a single word. She felt quite
+unable to speak quietly and sensibly. There was
+only one thing she wanted: to scream and moan
+so violently and loudly that it could be heard all
+over the churchyard; and she had to bite her lips
+so as not to cry out.</p>
+
+<p>The bells commenced to ring in the tower, and
+the procession began to move. Now all these
+people would find it out without the slightest
+preparation. Oh, why had she not spoken in
+time? She had to restrain herself to the utmost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+from shouting out and telling them that they must
+not go to the grave with the dead child. Those
+who are dead are dead and gone. Why should
+her whole life be spoiled for the sake of this dead
+child? They could put him in the earth, where
+they liked, only not in the churchyard. She had
+a confused idea that she would frighten them
+away from the churchyard; it was risky to go
+there; it was plague-smitten; there were marks
+of a wolf in the snow; she would frighten them
+as one frightens children.</p>
+
+<p>She did not know where they had digged the
+child's grave. She would know soon enough, she
+thought; and when the procession entered the
+churchyard, she glanced around the snow-covered
+ground to see where there was a new
+grave; but she saw neither path nor grave&mdash;nothing
+but the white snow. And the procession
+advanced towards the small mortuary. As many
+as possibly could pressed into the building and
+saw the earth cast on to the coffin. There was no
+question whatever about this or that grave. No
+one found out that the little one which was now
+laid to rest was never to be taken to the family
+vault.</p>
+
+<p>Had she but thought of that, had she not forgotten
+everything else in her fear and terror, then
+she need not have been afraid, not for a single
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>'In the spring,' she thought, 'when the coffin
+has to be placed in the ground, there will probably
+be no one there except the grave-digger; everybody
+will think that the child is lying in the
+Sanders' vault.' And she felt that she was saved.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She sank down sobbing violently. People
+looked at her with sympathy. 'How terribly she
+felt it!' they said. But she herself knew that she
+cried like one who has escaped from a mortal
+danger.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two after the funeral she was sitting
+in the twilight in her accustomed place in the
+dining-room, and as it grew darker she caught
+herself waiting and longing. She sat and listened
+for the child; that was the time when he always
+used to come in and play with her. Why did
+he not come that day? Then she started. 'Oh,
+he is dead, he is dead!'</p>
+
+<p>The next day she sat again in the twilight, and
+longed for him, and day by day this longing grew.
+It grew as the light does in the springtime, until
+at last it filled all the hours both of day and night.</p>
+
+<p>It almost goes without saying that a child like
+hers was more loved after death than whilst it
+was living. While it was living its mother had
+thought of nothing but regaining the trust and
+the love of her husband. And for him the child
+could never be a source of happiness. It was necessary
+to keep it away from him as much as
+possible; and the child had often felt he was in
+the way.</p>
+
+<p>She, who had failed in and neglected her duty,
+would show her husband that she was worth
+something after all. She was always about in the
+kitchen and in the weaving-room. Where could
+there be any room, then, for the little boy?</p>
+
+<p>But now, afterwards, she remembered how his
+eyes could beg and beseech. In the evening he
+liked so much to have her sitting at his bedside<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>.
+He said he was afraid to lie in the dark; but now
+it struck her that that had probably only been
+an excuse to get her to stay with him. She remembered
+how he lay and tried not to fall asleep.
+Now she knew that he kept himself awake in
+order that he might lie a little longer and feel his
+hand in hers. He had been a shrewd little fellow,
+young as he was. He had exerted all his little
+brain to find out how he could get a little share
+of her love. It is incomprehensible that children
+can love so deeply. She never understood it
+whilst he was alive.</p>
+
+<p>It was really first now that she had begun to
+love the child. It was first now that she was
+really impressed by his beauty. She would sit
+and dream of his big, strange eyes. He had never
+been robust and ruddy like most children, but
+delicate and slender. But how sweet he had been!
+He seemed to her now as something wonderfully
+beautiful&mdash;more and more beautiful for every day
+that went. Children were indeed the best of all
+in this world. To think that there were little
+beings stretching out their hands to everybody,
+and thinking good of all; that never ask if a face
+be plain or pretty, but are equally willing to kiss
+either, loving equally old and young, rich and
+poor. And yet they were real little people.</p>
+
+<p>For every day that went she was drawn nearer
+and nearer to the child. She wished that the
+child had been still alive; but, on the other hand,
+she was not sure that in that case she would have
+been drawn so near to it. At times she was quite
+in despair at the thought that she had not done
+more for the child whilst he was alive. That was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+probably why he had been taken from her, she
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not often that she sorrowed like this.
+Earlier in life she had always been afraid lest some
+great sorrow should overtake her, but now it
+seemed to her that sorrow was not what she had
+then thought it to be. Sorrow was only to live
+over and over again through something which
+was no more. Sorrow in her case was to become
+familiar with her child's whole being, and to seek
+to understand him. And that sorrow had made
+her life so rich.</p>
+
+<p>What she was most afraid of now was that time
+would take him from her and wipe out the memory
+of him. She had no picture of him; perhaps
+his features little by little would fade for her. She
+sat every day and tried to think how he looked.
+'Do I see him exactly as he was?' she said.</p>
+
+<p>Week by week, as the winter wore away, she
+began to long for the time when he would be
+taken from the mortuary and buried in the
+ground, so that she could go to his grave and
+speak with him. He should lie towards the west,
+that was the most beautiful, and she would deck
+the grave with roses. There should also be a
+hedge round the grave, and a seat where she could
+sit often and often. People would perhaps wonder
+at it; but they were not to know that her
+child did not lie in the family grave; and they
+were sure to think it strange that she placed flowers
+on an unknown grave and sat there for hours.
+What could she say to explain it?</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes she thought that she could, perhaps,
+do it in this way: First she would go to the big<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+grave and place a large bouquet of flowers on
+it, and remain sitting there for some time, and
+afterwards she would steal away to the little
+grave; and he would be sure to be content with
+the little flower she would secretly give him. But
+even if he were satisfied with the one little flower,
+could she be? Could she really come quite near
+to him in this way? Would he not notice that
+she was ashamed of him? Would he not understand
+what a disgrace his birth had been to her?
+No, she would have to protect him from that. He
+must only think that the joy of having possessed
+him weighed against all the rest.</p>
+
+<p>At last the winter was giving way. One could
+see the spring was coming. The snow-cover began
+to melt, and the earth to peep out. It would
+still be a week or two before the ground was
+thawed, but it would not be long now before the
+dead could be taken away from the mortuary.
+And she longed&mdash;she longed so exceedingly
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>Could she still picture to herself how he
+looked? She tried every day; but it was easier
+when it was winter. Now, when the spring was
+coming, it seemed as if he faded away from her.
+She was filled with despair. If she were only soon
+able to sit by his grave and be near to him
+again, then she would be able to see him again,
+to love him. Would he never be laid in his little
+grave? She must be able to see him again, see
+him through her whole life; she had no one else
+to love.</p>
+
+<p>At last all her fears and scruples vanished before
+this great longing. She loved, she loved;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+she could not live without the dead! She knew
+now that she could not consider anybody or anything
+but him&mdash;him alone. And when the spring
+came in earnest, when mounds and graves once
+again appeared all over the churchyard, when the
+little hearts of the iron crosses again began to
+tinkle in the wind, and the beaded wreaths to
+sparkle in their glass cases, and when the earth
+at last was ready to receive the little coffin, she
+had ready a black cross to place on his grave.
+On the cross from arm to arm was written in plain
+white letters,</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+'HERE RESTS MY CHILD,'<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>and underneath, on the stem of the cross, stood
+her name.</p>
+
+<p>She did not mind that the whole world would
+know how she had sinned. Other things were
+of no consequence to her; all she thought about
+was that she would now be able to pray at the
+grave of her child.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="The Brothers">X. <a name="Brothers" id="Brothers"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Brothers</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">X</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Brothers</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Brothers</span></p>
+
+<p>It is very possible that I am mistaken, but it
+seems to me that an astonishing number of
+people die this year. I have a feeling that
+I cannot go down the street without meeting a
+hearse. One cannot help thinking about all those
+who are carried to the churchyard. I always feel
+as if it were so sad for the dead who have to be
+buried in towns. I can hear how they moan in
+their coffins. Some complain that they have not
+had plumes on the hearse; some count up the
+wreaths, and are not satisfied; and then there are
+some who have only been followed by two or
+three carriages, and who are hurt by it.</p>
+
+<p>The dead ought never to know and experience
+such things; but people in towns do not at all
+understand how they ought to honour those who
+have entered into eternal rest.</p>
+
+<p>When I really think over it I do not know any
+place where they understand it better than at
+home in Svartsj&ouml;. If you die in the parish of
+Svartsj&ouml; you know you will have a coffin like that
+of everyone else&mdash;an honest black coffin which is
+like the coffins in which the country judge and
+the local magistrate were buried a year or two
+ago. For the same joiner makes all the coffins,
+and he has only one pattern; the one is made
+neither better nor worse than the other. And you
+know also, for you have seen it so many times,
+that you will be carried to the church on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+waggon which has been painted black for the
+occasion. You need not trouble yourself at all
+about any plumes. And you know that the whole
+village will follow you to the church, and that
+they will drive as slowly and as solemnly for you
+as for a landed proprietor.</p>
+
+<p>But you will have no occasion to feel annoyed
+because you have not enough wreaths, for they
+do not place a single flower on the coffin; it shall
+stand out black and shining, and nothing must
+cover it; and it is not necessary for you to think
+whether you will have a sufficiently large number
+of people to follow you, for those who live in your
+town will be sure to follow you, every one. Nor
+will you be obliged to lie and listen if there is
+lamenting and weeping around your coffin. They
+never weep over the dead when they stand on the
+church hill outside Svartsj&ouml; Church. No, they
+weep as little over a strong young fellow who falls
+a prey to death just as he is beginning to provide
+for his old people as they will for you. You will
+be placed on a couple of black trestles outside the
+door of the parish room, and a whole crowd of
+people will gradually gather round you, and all
+the women will have handkerchiefs in their hands.
+But no one will cry; all the handkerchiefs will
+be kept tightly rolled up; not one will be applied
+to the eyes. You need not speculate as to whether
+people will shed as many tears over you as they
+would over others. They would cry if it were the
+proper thing, but it is not the proper thing.</p>
+
+<p>You can understand that if there were much
+sorrowing over one grave, it would not look well
+for those over whom no one sorrowed. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
+know what they were about at Svartsj&ouml;. They do
+as it has been the custom to do there for many
+hundred years. But whilst you stand there, on
+the church hill, you are a great and important
+personage, although you receive neither flowers
+nor tears. No one comes to church without asking
+who you are, and then they go quietly up to
+you and stand and gaze at you; and it never
+occurs to anyone to wound the dead by pitying
+him. No one says anything but that it is well for
+him that it is all over.</p>
+
+<p>It is not at all as it is in a town, where you can
+be buried any day. At Svartsj&ouml; you must be
+buried on a Sunday, so that you can have the
+whole parish around you. There you will have
+standing near your coffin both the girl with whom
+you danced at the last midsummer night's festival
+and the man with whom you exchanged horses
+at the last fair. You will have the schoolmaster
+who took so much trouble with you when you
+were a little lad, and who had forgotten you,
+although you remembered him so well; and you
+will have the old Member of Parliament who
+never before thought it worth his while to bow
+to you. This is not as in a town, where people
+hardly turn round when you are carried past.
+When they bring the long bands and place them
+under the coffin, there is not one who does not
+watch the proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>You cannot imagine what a churchwarden we
+have at Svartsj&ouml;. He is an old soldier, and he
+looks like a Field-Marshal. He has short white
+hair and twisted moustaches, and a pointed imperial;
+he is slim and tall and straight, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+light and firm step. On Sundays he wears a well-brushed
+frock-coat of fine cloth. He really looks
+a very fine old gentleman, and it is he who walks
+at the head of the procession. Then comes the
+verger. Not that the verger is to be compared
+with the churchwarden. It is more than probable
+that his Sunday hat is too large and old-fashioned;
+as likely as not he is awkward&mdash;but
+when is a verger not awkward?</p>
+
+<p>Then you come next in your coffin, with the
+six bearers, and then follow the clergyman and
+the clerk and the Town Council and the whole
+parish. All the congregation will follow you to
+the churchyard, you may be sure of that. But
+I will tell you something: All those who follow
+you look so small and poor. They are not fine
+town's-people, you know&mdash;only plain, simple
+Svartsj&ouml; folk. There is only one who is great
+and important, and that is you in your coffin&mdash;you
+who are dead.</p>
+
+<p>The others the next day will have to resume
+their heavy and toilsome work. They will have
+to live in poor old cottages and wear old, patched
+clothes; the others will always be plagued and
+worried, and dragged down and humbled by
+poverty.</p>
+
+<p>Those who follow you to your grave become
+far more sad by looking at the living than by
+thinking of you who are dead. You need not
+look any more at the velvet collar of your coat
+to see if it is not getting worn at the edges; you
+need not make a special fold of your silk handkerchief
+to hide that it is beginning to fray; you
+will never more be compelled to ask the village<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>
+shopkeeper to let you have goods on credit; you
+will not find out that your strength is failing; you
+will not have to wait for the day when you must
+go on the parish.</p>
+
+<p>While they are following you to the grave
+everyone will be thinking that it is best to be
+dead&mdash;better to soar heavenwards, carried on the
+white clouds of the morning&mdash;than to be always
+experiencing life's manifold troubles. When they
+come to the wall of the churchyard, where the
+grave has been made, the bands are exchanged
+for strong ropes, and people get on to the loose
+earth and lower you down. And when this has
+been done the clerk advances to the grave and
+begins to sing: 'I walk towards death.'</p>
+
+<p>He sings the hymn quite alone; neither the
+clergyman nor any of the congregation help him.
+But the clerk must sing; however keen the north
+wind and however glaring the sun which shines
+straight in his face, sing he does.</p>
+
+<p>The clerk, however, is getting old now, and
+he has not much voice left; he is quite aware that
+it does not sound as well now as formerly when
+he sang people into their graves; but he does it
+all the same&mdash;it is part of his duty. For the day,
+you understand, when his voice quite fails him, so
+that he cannot sing any more, he must resign
+his office, and this means downright poverty for
+him. Therefore the whole gathering stands in
+apprehension while the old clerk sings, wondering
+whether his voice will last through the whole
+verse. But no one joins him, not a single person,
+for that would not do; it is not the custom. People
+never sing at a grave at Svartsj&ouml;. People do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+not sing in the church either, except the first
+hymn on Christmas Day morning.</p>
+
+<p>Still, if one listened very attentively, one could
+hear that the clerk does not sing alone. There
+really is another voice, but it sounds so exactly
+the same that the two voices blend as if they were
+only one. The other who sings is a little old man
+in a long, coarse gray coat. He is still older than
+the clerk, but he gives out all the voice he has to
+help him. And the voice, as I have told you, is
+exactly the same kind as the clerk's; they are so
+alike one cannot help wondering at it.</p>
+
+<p>But when one looks closer, the little gray old
+man is also exactly like the clerk; he has the same
+nose and chin and mouth, only somewhat older,
+and, as it were, more hardly dealt with in life.
+And then one understands that the little gray man
+is the clerk's brother; and then one knows why
+he helps him. For, you see, things have never
+gone well with him in this world, and he has
+always had bad luck; and once he was made a
+bankrupt, and brought the clerk into his misfortunes.
+He knows that it is his fault that his
+brother has always had to struggle. And the
+clerk, you know, has tried to help him on to his
+legs again, but with no avail, for he has not been
+one of those one can help. He has always been
+unfortunate; and then, he has had no strength
+of purpose.</p>
+
+<p>But the clerk has been the shining light in the
+family; and for the other it has been a case of
+receiving and receiving, and he has never been
+able to make any return at all. Great God! even
+to talk of making any return&mdash;he who is so poor!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
+You should only see the little hut in the forest
+where he lives. He knows that he has always
+been dull and sad, only a burden&mdash;only a burden
+for his brother and for others. But now of late
+he has become a great man; now he is able to
+give some return. And that he does. Now he
+helps his brother, the clerk, who has been the sunshine
+and life and joy for him all his days. Now
+he helps him to sing, so that he may keep his
+office.</p>
+
+<p>He does not go to church, for he thinks that
+everyone looks at him because he has no black
+Sunday clothes; but every Sunday he goes up
+to the church to see whether there is a coffin on
+the black trestles outside the parish room; and
+if there is one he goes to the grave, in spite of his
+old gray coat, and helps his brother with his pitiful
+old voice.</p>
+
+<p>The little old man knows very well how badly
+he sings; he places himself behind the others,
+and does not push forward to the grave. But
+sing he does; it would not matter so much if the
+clerk's voice should fail on one or other note, his
+brother is there and helps him.</p>
+
+<p>At the churchyard no one laughs at the singing;
+but when people go home and have thrown
+off their devoutness, then they speak about the
+service, and then they laugh at the clerk's singing&mdash;laugh
+both at his and his brother's. The clerk
+does not mind it, it is the same to him; but his
+brother thinks about it and suffers from it; he
+dreads the Sunday the whole week, but still he
+comes punctually to the churchyard and does his
+duty. But you in your coffin, you do not think so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span>
+badly of the singing. You think that it is good
+music. Is it not true that one would like to be
+buried in Svartsj&ouml;, if only for the sake of that
+singing?</p>
+
+<p>It says in the hymn that life is but a walk
+towards death, and when the two old men sing
+this&mdash;the two who have suffered for each other
+during their whole life&mdash;then one understands
+better than ever before how wearisome it is to
+live, and one is so entirely satisfied with being
+dead.</p>
+
+<p>And then the singing stops, and the clergyman
+throws earth on the coffin and says a prayer over
+you. Then the two old voices sing: 'I walk
+towards heaven.' And they do not sing this verse
+any better than the former; their voices grow
+more feeble and querulous the longer they sing.
+But for you a great and wide expanse opens, and
+you soar upwards with tremulous joy, and everything
+earthly fades and disappears.</p>
+
+<p>But still the last which you hear of things
+earthly tells of faithfulness and love. And in the
+midst of your trembling flight the poor song will
+awake memories of all the faithfulness and love
+you have met with here below, and this will bear
+you upwards. This will fill you with radiance and
+make you beautiful as an angel.</p>
+
+<p class="center">THE END.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <img src="images/logo.jpg" alt="Printer&apos;s logo" title="Printer&apos;s logo" width="97" height="93" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS<br />
+GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<div class="transnote">
+<h2>Transcriber's Note:</h2>
+
+<p>Hyphenation is inconsistent, for example sheepskin, sheep-skin and
+sheep's-skin all occur. These have been left as printed.</p>
+
+<p>On <a href="#Page_184" title="">page 184</a> "... and the nip reddened on the naked branch of the
+hawthorn" has been left as printed, however the original Swedish talks
+of <span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">nyponet</span> and <span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">t&ouml;rnbuskens</span> (rosehip and thornbush), rather than nip and
+hawthorn.</p>
+
+<p>Changes that have been made are:</p>
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#Page_4" title="">Page 4</a>: from "then I feel that I must speak" to "then I feel that I must speak.".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_55" title="">Page 55</a>: from "the newly-buried birl" to "the newly-buried girl".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_94" title="">Page 94</a>: from "the everlasting unrest that tormened him" to "the everlasting unrest that tormented him".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_124" title="">Page 124</a>: from "why had be been unhappy?" to "why had he been unhappy?".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_229" title="">Page 229</a>: from "found friends in the solitude above" to "found friends in the solitude above.".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_264" title="">Page 264</a>: from "Guilietta Lombardi" to "Giulietta Lombardi".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_328" title="">Page 328</a>: from "the snow had laid its thinck carpet" to "the snow had laid its thick carpet".</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44630 ***</div>
+</body>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #44630 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/44630)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerlöf
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: From a Swedish Homestead
+
+Author: Selma Lagerlöf
+
+Translator: Jessie Brochner
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2014 [EBook #44630]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FROM A SWEDISH HOMESTEAD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Fay Dunn, sp1nd and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
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+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+
+
+
+ _From a SWEDISH_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ _By_
+
+ SELMA LAGERLÖF
+
+ _Translated by_
+
+ JESSIE BROCHNER
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ 1916
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1901, by_
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+_A_ LIST _of the_ STORIES
+
+
+ _Page_
+
+ _The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE 1
+
+ _Queens at_ KUNGAHÄLLA 135
+
+ _On the_ SITE _of the Great_ KUNGAHÄLLA 135
+
+ _The Forest_ QUEEN 141
+
+ SIGRID STORRÄDE 157
+
+ ASTRID 172
+
+ _Old_ AGNETE 219
+
+ _The Fisherman's_ RING 231
+
+ _Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA 257
+
+ _The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST 277
+
+ _The_ PEACE _of_ GOD 291
+
+ _A_ STORY _from_ HALSTANÄS 309
+
+ _The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE 323
+
+ _The_ BROTHERS 339
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ I
+
+ _The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+_The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE
+
+
+I
+
+It was a beautiful autumn day towards the end of the thirties. There was
+in Upsala at that time a high, yellow, two-storied house, which stood
+quite alone in a little meadow on the outskirts of the town. It was a
+rather desolate and dismal-looking house, but was rendered less so by
+the Virginia-creepers which grew there in profusion, and which had crept
+so high up the yellow wall on the sunny side of the house that they
+completely surrounded the three windows on the upper story.
+
+At one of these windows a student was sitting, drinking his morning
+coffee. He was a tall, handsome fellow, of distinguished appearance. His
+hair was brushed back from his forehead; it curled prettily, and a lock
+was continually falling into his eyes. He wore a loose, comfortable
+suit, but looked rather smart all the same.
+
+His room was well furnished. There was a good sofa and comfortable
+chairs, a large writing-table, a capital bookcase, but hardly any books.
+
+Before he had finished his coffee another student entered the room. The
+new-comer was a totally different-looking man. He was a short,
+broad-shouldered fellow, squarely built and strong, ugly, with a large
+head, thin hair, and coarse complexion.
+
+'Hede,' he said, 'I have come to have a serious talk with you.'
+
+'Has anything unpleasant happened to you?'
+
+'Oh no, not to me,' the other answered; 'it is really you it concerns.'
+He sat silent for a while, and looked down. 'It is so awfully unpleasant
+having to tell you.'
+
+'Leave it alone, then,' suggested Hede.
+
+He felt inclined to laugh at his friend's solemnity.
+
+'I can't leave it alone any longer,' said his visitor. 'I ought to have
+spoken to you long ago, but it is hardly my place. You understand? I
+can't help thinking you will say to yourself: "There's Gustaf Alin, son
+of one of our cottagers, thinks himself such a great man now that he can
+order me about."'
+
+'My dear fellow,' Hede said, 'don't imagine I think anything of the
+kind. My father's father was a peasant's son.'
+
+'Yes, but no one thinks of that now,' Alin answered. He sat there,
+looking awkward and stupid, resuming every moment more and more of his
+peasant manners, as if that could help him out of his difficulty. 'When
+I think of the difference there is between your family and mine, I feel
+as if I ought to keep quiet; but when I remember that it was your father
+who, by his help in days gone by, enabled me to study, then I feel that
+I must speak.'
+
+Hede looked at him with a pleasant smile.
+
+'You had better speak out and have done with it,' he said.
+
+'The thing is,' Alin said, 'I have heard people say that you don't do
+any work. They say you have hardly opened a book during the four terms
+you have been at the University. They say you don't do anything but play
+on the violin the whole day; and that I can quite believe, for you never
+wanted to do anything else when you were at school in Falu, although
+there you were obliged to work.'
+
+Hede straightened himself a little in his chair. Alin grew more and more
+uncomfortable, but he continued with stubborn resolution:
+
+'I suppose you think that anyone owning an estate like Munkhyttan ought
+to be able to do as he likes--work if he likes, or leave it alone. If he
+takes his exam., good; if he does not take his exam., what does it
+matter? for in any case you will never be anything but a landed
+proprietor and iron-master. You will live at Munkhyttan all your life. I
+understand quite well that is what you must think.'
+
+Hede was silent, and Alin seemed to see him surrounded by the same wall
+of distinction which in Alin's eyes had always surrounded his father,
+the Squire, and his mother.
+
+'But, you see, Munkhyttan is no longer what it used to be when there was
+iron in the mine,' he continued cautiously. 'The Squire knew that very
+well, and that was why it was arranged before his death that you should
+study. Your poor mother knows it, too, and the whole parish knows it.
+The only one who does not know anything is you, Hede.'
+
+'Don't you think I know,' Hede said a little irritably, 'that the
+iron-mine cannot be worked any longer?'
+
+'Oh yes,' Alin said, 'I dare say you know that much, but you don't know
+that it is all up with the property. Think the matter over, and you will
+understand that one cannot live from farming alone at Vesterdalarne. I
+cannot understand why your mother has kept it a secret from you. But, of
+course, she has the sole control of the estate, so she need not ask your
+advice about anything. Everybody at home knows that she is hard up. They
+say she drives about borrowing money. I suppose she did not want to
+disturb you with her troubles, but thought that she could keep matters
+going until you had taken your degree. She will not sell the estate
+before you have finished, and made yourself a new home.'
+
+Hede rose, and walked once or twice up and down the floor. Then he
+stopped opposite Alin.
+
+'But what on earth are you driving at, Alin? Do you want to make me
+believe that we are not rich?'
+
+'I know quite well that, until lately, you have been considered rich
+people at home,' Alin said. 'But you can understand that things must
+come to an end when it is a case of always spending and never earning
+anything. It was a different thing when you had the mine.'
+
+Hede sat down again.
+
+'My mother would surely have told me if there were anything the matter,'
+he said. 'I am grateful to you, Alin; but you have allowed yourself to
+be frightened by some silly stories.'
+
+'I thought that you did not know anything,' Alin continued obstinately.
+'At Munkhyttan your mother saves and works in order to get the money to
+keep you at Upsala, and to make it cheerful and pleasant for you when
+you are at home in the vacations. And in the meantime you are here doing
+nothing, because you don't know there is trouble coming. I could not
+stand any longer seeing you deceiving each other. Her ladyship thought
+you were studying, and you thought she was rich. I could not let you
+destroy your prospects without saying anything.'
+
+Hede sat quietly for a moment, and meditated. Then he rose and gave Alin
+his hand with rather a sad smile.
+
+'You understand that I feel you are speaking the truth, even if I _will_
+not believe you? Thanks.'
+
+Alin joyfully shook his hand.
+
+'You must know, Hede, that if you will only work no harm is done. With
+your brains, you can take your degree in three or four years.'
+
+Hede straightened himself.
+
+'Do not be uneasy, Alin,' he said; 'I am going to work hard now.'
+
+Alin rose and went towards the door, but hesitated. Before he reached it
+he turned round.
+
+'There was something else I wanted,' he said. He again became
+embarrassed. 'I want you to lend me your violin until you have commenced
+reading in earnest.'
+
+'Lend you my violin?'
+
+'Yes; pack it up in a silk handkerchief, and put it in the case, and let
+me take it with me, or otherwise you will read to no purpose. You will
+begin to play as soon as I am out of the room. You are so accustomed to
+it now you cannot resist if you have it here. One cannot get over that
+kind of thing unless someone helps one; it gets the mastery over one.'
+
+Hede appeared unwilling.
+
+'This is madness, you know,' he said.
+
+'No, Hede, it is not. You know you have inherited it from the Squire. It
+runs in your blood. Ever since you have been your own master here in
+Upsala you have done nothing else but play. You live here in the
+outskirts of the town simply not to disturb anyone by your playing. You
+cannot help yourself in this matter. Let me have the violin.'
+
+'Well,' said Hede, 'before I could not help playing, but now Munkhyttan
+is at stake; I am more fond of my home than of my violin.'
+
+But Alin was determined, and continued to ask for the violin.
+
+'What is the good of it?' Hede said. 'If I want to play, I need not go
+many steps to borrow another violin.'
+
+'I know that,' Alin replied, 'but I don't think it would be so bad with
+another violin. It is your old Italian violin which is the greatest
+danger for you. And besides, I would suggest your locking yourself in
+for the first few days--only until you have got fairly started.'
+
+He begged and begged, but Hede resisted; he would not stand anything so
+unreasonable as being a prisoner in his own room.
+
+Alin grew crimson.
+
+'I must have the violin with me,' he said, 'or it is no use at all.' He
+spoke eagerly and excitedly. 'I had not intended to say anything about
+it, but I know that it concerns more than Munkhyttan. I saw a young girl
+at the Promotion Ball in the spring who, people said, was engaged to
+you. I don't dance, you know, but I liked to watch her when she was
+dancing, looking radiant like one of the lilies of the field. And when I
+heard that she was engaged to you, I felt sorry for her.'
+
+'Why?'
+
+'Because I knew that you would never succeed if you continued as you had
+begun. And then I swore that she should not have to spend her whole life
+waiting for one who never came. She should not sit and wither whilst
+waiting for you. I did not want to meet her in a few years with
+sharpened features and deep wrinkles round her mouth----'
+
+He stopped suddenly; Hede's glance had rested so searchingly upon him.
+
+But Gunnar Hede had already understood that Alin was in love with his
+_fiancée_. It moved him deeply that Alin under these circumstances tried
+to save him, and, influenced by this feeling, he yielded and gave him
+the violin.
+
+When Alin had gone, Hede read desperately for a whole hour, but then he
+threw away his book.
+
+It was not of much good his reading. It would be three or four years
+before he could be finished, and who could guarantee that the estate
+would not be sold in the meantime?
+
+He felt almost with terror how deeply he loved the old home. It was like
+witchery. Every room, every tree, stood clearly before him. He felt he
+could not part with any of it if he were to be happy. And he was to sit
+quietly with his books whilst all this was about to pass away from him.
+
+He became more and more restless; he felt the blood beating in his
+temples as if in a fever. And then he grew quite beside himself because
+he could not take his violin and play himself calm again.
+
+'My God!' he said, 'Alin will drive me mad. First to tell me all this,
+and then to take away my violin! A man like I must feel the bow between
+his fingers in sorrow and in joy. I must do something; I must get money,
+but I have not an idea in my head. I cannot think without my violin.'
+
+He could not endure the feeling of being locked in. He was so angry with
+Alin, who had thought of this absurd plan, that he was afraid he might
+strike him the next time he came.
+
+Of course he would have played, if he had had the violin, for that was
+just what he needed. His blood rushed so wildly, that he was nearly
+going out of his mind.
+
+Just as Hede was longing most for his violin a wandering musician began
+to play outside. It was an old blind man. He played out of tune and
+without expression, but Hede was so overcome by hearing a violin just at
+this moment that he listened with tears in his eyes and with his hands
+folded.
+
+The next moment he flung open the window and climbed to the ground by
+the help of the creepers. He had no compunction at leaving his work. He
+thought the violin had simply come to comfort him in his misfortune.
+
+Hede had probably never before begged so humbly for anything as he did
+now, when he asked the old blind man to lend him his violin. He stood
+the whole time with his cap in his hand, although the old man was blind.
+
+The musician did not seem to understand what he wanted. He turned to the
+young girl who was leading him. Hede bowed to the poor girl and repeated
+his request. She looked at him, as if she must have eyes for them both.
+The glance from her big eyes was so steady that Hede thought he could
+feel where it struck him. It began with his collar, and it noticed that
+the frills of his shirt were well starched, then it saw that his coat
+was brushed, next that his boots were polished.
+
+Hede had never before been subjected to such close scrutiny. He saw
+clearly that he would not pass muster before those eyes.
+
+But it was not so, all the same. The young girl had a strange way of
+smiling. Her face was so serious, that one had the impression when she
+smiled that it was the first and only time she had ever looked happy;
+and now one of these rare smiles passed over her lips. She took the
+violin from the old man and handed it to Hede.
+
+'Play the waltz from "Freischütz," then,' she said.
+
+Hede thought it was strange that he should have to play a waltz just at
+that moment, but, as a matter of fact, it was all the same to him what
+he played, if he could only have a bow in his hand. That was all he
+wanted. The violin at once began to comfort him; it spoke to him in
+faint, cracked tones.
+
+'I am only a poor man's violin,' it said; 'but such as I am, I am a
+comfort and help to a poor blind man. I am the light and the colour and
+the brightness in his life. It is I who must comfort him in his poverty
+and old age and blindness.'
+
+Hede felt that the terrible depression that had cowed his hopes began to
+give way.
+
+'You are young and strong,' the violin said to him. 'You can fight and
+strive; you can hold fast that which tries to escape you. Why are you
+downcast and without courage?'
+
+Hede had played with lowered eyes; now he threw back his head and looked
+at those who stood around him. There was quite a crowd of children and
+people from the street, who had come into the yard to listen to the
+music. It appeared, however, that they had not come solely for the sake
+of the music. The blind man and his companion were not the only ones in
+the troupe.
+
+Opposite Hede stood a figure in tights and spangles, and with bare arms
+crossed over his chest. He looked old and worn, but Hede could not help
+thinking that he looked a devil of a fellow with his high chest and long
+moustaches. And beside him stood his wife, little and fat, and not so
+very young either, but beaming with joy over her spangles and flowing
+gauze skirts.
+
+During the first bars of the music they stood still and counted, then a
+gracious smile passed over their faces, and they took each other's hands
+and began to dance on a small carpet. And Hede saw that during all the
+equilibristic tricks they now performed the woman stood almost still,
+whilst her husband did all the work. He sprang over her, and twirled
+round her, and vaulted over her. The woman scarcely did anything else
+but kiss her hand to the spectators.
+
+But Hede did not really take much notice of them. His bow began to fly
+over the strings. It told him that there was happiness in fighting and
+overcoming. It almost deemed him happy because everything was at stake
+for him. Hede stood there, playing courage and hope into himself, and
+did not think of the old tight-rope dancers.
+
+But suddenly he saw that they grew restless. They no longer smiled; they
+left off kissing their hands to the spectators; the acrobat made
+mistakes, and his wife began to sway to and fro in waltz time.
+
+Hede played more and more eagerly. He left off 'Freischütz' and rushed
+into an old 'Nixie Polka,' one which generally sent all the people mad
+when played at the peasant festivals.
+
+The old tight-rope dancers quite lost their heads. They stood in
+breathless astonishment, and at last they could resist no longer. They
+sprang into each other's arms, and then they began to dance a waltz in
+the middle of the carpet.
+
+How they danced! dear me, how they danced! They took small, tripping
+steps, and whirled round in a small circle; they hardly went outside the
+carpet, and their faces beamed with joy and delight. There was the
+happiness of youth and the rapture of love over these two old people.
+
+The whole crowd was jubilant at seeing them dance. The serious little
+companion of the blind man smiled all over her face, and Hede grew much
+excited.
+
+Just fancy what an effect his violin could have! It made people quite
+forget themselves. It was a great power to have at his disposal. Any
+moment he liked he could take possession of his kingdom. Only a couple
+of years' study abroad with a great master, and he could go all over the
+world, and by his playing earn riches and honour and fame.
+
+It seemed to Hede that these acrobats must have come to tell him this.
+That was the road he should follow; it lay before him clear and smooth.
+He said to himself: 'I will--I _will_ become a musician! I _must_ be
+one! This is better than studying. I can charm my fellow-men with my
+violin; I can become rich.'
+
+Hede stopped playing. The acrobats at once came up and complimented him.
+The man said his name was Blomgren. That was his real name; he had other
+names when he performed. He and his wife were old circus people. Mrs.
+Blomgren in former days had been called Miss Viola, and had performed on
+horseback; and although they had now left the circus, they were still
+true artists--artists body and soul. That he had probably already
+noticed; that was why they could not resist his violin.
+
+Hede walked about with the acrobats for a couple of hours. He could not
+part with the violin, and the old artists' enthusiasm for their
+profession appealed to him. He was simply testing himself. 'I want to
+find out whether there is the proper stuff for an artist in me. I want
+to see if I can call forth enthusiasm. I want to see whether I can make
+children and idlers follow me from house to house.'
+
+On their way from house to house Mr. Blomgren threw an old threadbare
+mantle around him, and Mrs. Blomgren enveloped herself in a brown cloak.
+Thus arrayed, they walked at Hede's side and talked.
+
+Mr. Blomgren would not speak of all the honour he and Mrs. Blomgren had
+received during the time they had performed in a real circus; but the
+_directeur_ had given Mrs. Blomgren her dismissal under the pretence
+that she was getting too stout. Mr. Blomgren had not been dismissed: he
+had himself resigned his position. Surely no one could think that Mr.
+Blomgren would remain with a _directeur_ who had dismissed his wife!
+
+Mrs. Blomgren loved her art, and for her sake Mr. Blomgren had made up
+his mind to live as a free artist, so that she could still continue to
+perform. During the winter, when it was too cold to give performances in
+the street, they performed in a tent. They had a very comprehensive
+repertoire. They gave pantomimes, and were jugglers and conjurers.
+
+The circus had cast them off, but Art had not, said Mr. Blomgren. They
+served Art always. It was well worth being faithful to Art, even unto
+death. Always artists--always. That was Mr. Blomgren's opinion, and it
+was also Mrs. Blomgren's.
+
+Hede walked quietly and listened. His thoughts flew restlessly from plan
+to plan. Sometimes events happen which become like symbols, like signs,
+which one must obey. There must be some meaning in what had now happened
+to him. If he could only understand it rightly, it might help him
+towards arriving at a wise resolution.
+
+Mr. Blomgren asked the student to notice the young girl who was leading
+the blind man. Had he ever before seen such eyes? Did he not think that
+such eyes must mean something? Could one have those eyes without being
+intended for something great?
+
+Hede turned round and looked at the little pale girl. Yes, she had eyes
+like stars, set in a sad and rather thin face.
+
+'Our Lord knows always what He is about,' said Mrs. Blomgren; 'and I
+also believe that He has some reason for letting such an artist as Mr.
+Blomgren perform in the street. But what was He thinking about when He
+gave that girl those eyes and that smile?'
+
+'I will tell you something,' said Mr. Blomgren; 'she has not the
+slightest talent for Art. And with those eyes!'
+
+Hede had a suspicion that they were not talking to him, but simply for
+the benefit of the young girl. She was walking just behind them, and
+could hear every word.
+
+'She is not more than thirteen years old, and not by any means too old
+to learn something; but, impossible--impossible, without the slightest
+talent! If one does not want to waste one's time, sir, teach her to sew,
+but not to stand on her head. Her smile makes people quite mad about
+her,' Mr. Blomgren continued. 'Simply on account of her smile she has
+had many offers from families wishful to adopt her. She could grow up in
+a well-to-do home if she would only leave her grandfather. But what does
+she want with a smile that makes people mad about her, when she will
+never appear either on horseback or on a trapeze?'
+
+'We know other artists,' said Mrs. Blomgren, 'who pick up children in
+the street and train them for the profession when they cannot perform
+any longer themselves. There is more than one who has been lucky enough
+to create a star and obtain immense salaries for her. But Mr. Blomgren
+and I have never thought of the money; we have only thought of some day
+seeing Ingrid flying through a hoop whilst the whole circus resounded
+with applause. For us it would have been as if we were beginning life
+over again.'
+
+'Why do we keep her grandfather?' said Mr. Blomgren. 'Is he an artist
+fit for us? We could, no doubt, have got a previous member of a
+Hofkapell if we had wished. But we love that child; we cannot do without
+her; we keep the old man for her sake.'
+
+'Is it not naughty of her that she will not allow us to make an artist
+of her?' they said.
+
+Hede turned round. The little girl's face wore an expression of
+suffering and patience. He could see that she knew that anyone who could
+not dance on the tight-rope was a stupid and contemptible person.
+
+At the same moment they came to another house, but before they began
+their performance Hede sat down on an overturned wheelbarrow and began
+to preach. He defended the poor little girl. He reproached Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren for wishing to hand her over to the great, cruel public, who
+would love and applaud her for a time, but when she grew old and worn
+out, they would let her trudge along the streets in rain and cold. No;
+he or she was artist enough, who made a fellow-being happy. Ingrid
+should only have eyes and smiles for one, should keep them for one only;
+and this one should never leave her, but give her a safe home as long as
+he lived.
+
+Tears came into Hede's eyes whilst he spoke. He spoke more to himself
+than to the others. He felt it suddenly as something terrible to be
+thrust out into the world, to be severed from the quiet home-life. He
+saw that the great, star-like eyes of the girl began to sparkle. It
+seemed as if she had understood every single word. It seemed as if she
+again felt the right to live.
+
+But Mr. Blomgren and his wife had become very serious. They pressed
+Hede's hand and promised him that they would never again try and
+persuade the little girl to become an artist. She should be allowed to
+lead the life she wished. He had touched them. They were
+artists--artists body and soul; they understood what he meant when he
+spoke of love and faithfulness.
+
+Then Hede parted from them and went home. He no longer tried to find any
+secret meaning in his adventure. After all, it had meant nothing more
+than that he should save this poor sorrowful child from always grieving
+over her incapacity.
+
+
+II
+
+Munkhyttan, the home of Gunnar Hede, was situated in a poor parish in
+the forests of Vesterdalarne. It was a large, thinly-populated parish,
+with which Nature had dealt very stingily. There were stony,
+forest-covered hills, and many small lakes. The people could not
+possibly have earned a livelihood there had they not had the right to
+travel about the country as pedlars. But to make up for it, the whole of
+this poor district was full of old tales of how poor peasant lads and
+lassies had gone into the world with a pack of goods on their backs, to
+return in gilded coaches, with the boxes under the seats filled with
+money.
+
+One of the very best stories was about Hede's grandfather. He was the
+son of a poor musician, and had grown up with his violin in his hand,
+and when he was seventeen years old he had gone out into the world with
+his pack on his back. But wherever he went his violin had helped him in
+his business. He had by turns gathered people together by his music and
+sold them silk handkerchiefs, combs, and pins. All his trading had been
+brought about with music and merriment, and things had gone so well with
+him that he had at last been able to buy Munkhyttan, with its mine and
+ironworks, from the poverty-stricken Baron who then owned the property.
+Then he became the Squire, and the pretty daughter of the Baron became
+his wife.
+
+From that time the old family, as they were always called, had thought
+of nothing else but beautifying the place. They removed the main
+building on to the beautiful island which lay on the edge of a small
+lake, round which lay their fields and their mines. The upper story had
+been added in their time, for they wanted to have plenty of room for
+their numerous guests; and they had also added the two large flights of
+steps outside. They had planted ornamental trees all over the
+fir-covered island. They had made small winding pathways in the stony
+soil, and on the most beautiful spots they had built small pavilions,
+hanging like large birds'-nests over the lake. The beautiful French
+roses that grew on the terrace, the Dutch furniture, the Italian violin,
+had all been brought to the house by them. And it was they who had built
+the wall protecting the orchard from the north wind, and the
+conservatory.
+
+The old family were merry, kind-hearted, old-fashioned people. The
+Squire's wife certainly liked to be a little aristocratic; but that was
+not at all in the old Squire's line. In the midst of all the luxury
+which surrounded him he never forgot what he had been, and in the room
+where he transacted his business, and where people came and went, the
+pack and the red-painted, home-made violin were hung right above the old
+man's desk.
+
+Even after his death the pack and the violin remained in the same place.
+And every time the old man's son and grandson saw them their hearts
+swelled with gratitude. It was these two poor implements that had
+created Munkhyttan, and Munkhyttan was the best thing in the world.
+
+Whatever the reason might be--and it was probably because it seemed
+natural to the place that one lived a good, genial life there, free from
+trouble--Hede's family clung to the place with greater love than was
+good for it. And more especially Gunnar Hede was so strongly attached to
+it that people said that it was incorrect to say of him that he owned an
+estate. On the contrary, it was an old estate in Vesterdalarne that
+owned Gunnar Hede.
+
+If he had not made himself a slave of an old rambling manor-house and
+some acres of land and forest, and some stunted apple-trees, he would
+probably have continued his studies, or, better still, gone abroad to
+study music, which, after all, was no doubt his proper vocation in this
+world. But when he returned from Upsala, and it became clear to him that
+they really would have to sell the estate if he could not soon earn a
+lot of money, he decided upon giving up all his other plans, and made up
+his mind to go out into the world as a pedlar, as his grandfather before
+him had done.
+
+His mother and his _fiancée_ besought him rather to sell the place than
+to sacrifice himself for it in this manner, but he was not to be moved.
+He put on peasant's attire, bought goods, and began to travel about the
+country as a pedlar. He thought that if he only traded a couple of years
+he could earn enough to pay the debt and save the estate.
+
+And as far as the latter was concerned he was successful enough. But he
+brought upon himself a terrible misfortune.
+
+When he had walked about with his pack for a year or so he thought that
+he would try and earn a large sum of money at one stroke. He went far
+north and bought a large flock of goats, about a couple of hundred. And
+he and a comrade intended to drive them down to a large fair in
+Vermland, where goats cost twice as much as in the north. If he
+succeeded in selling all his goats, he would do a very good business.
+
+It was in the beginning of November, and there had not yet been any
+snow, when Hede and his comrade set out with their goats. The first day
+everything went well with them, but the second day, when they came to
+the great Fifty-Mile Forest, it began to snow. Much snow fell, and it
+stormed and blew severely. It was not long before it became difficult
+for the animals to make their way through the snow. Goats are certainly
+both plucky and hardy animals, and the herd struggled on for a
+considerable time; but the snow-storm lasted two days and two nights,
+and it was terribly cold.
+
+Hede did all he could to save the animals, but after the snow began to
+fall he could get them neither food nor water. And when they had worked
+their way through deep snow for a whole day they became very footsore.
+Their feet hurt them, and they would not go any longer. The first goat
+that threw itself down by the roadside and would not get up again and
+follow the herd Hede lifted on to his shoulder so as not to leave it
+behind. But when another and again another lay down he could not carry
+them. There was nothing to do but to look the other way and go on.
+
+Do you know what the Fifty-Mile Forest is like? Not a farmhouse, not a
+cottage, mile after mile, only forest; tall-stemmed fir-trees, with bark
+as hard as wood, and high branches; no young trees with soft bark and
+soft twigs that the animals could eat. If there had been no snow, they
+could have got through the forest in a couple of days; now they could
+not get through it at all. All the goats were left there, and the men
+too nearly perished. They did not meet a single human being the whole
+time. No one helped them.
+
+Hede tried to throw the snow to one side so that the goats could eat the
+moss; but the snow fell so thickly, and the moss was frozen fast to the
+ground. And how could he get food for two hundred animals in this way?
+
+He bore it bravely until the goats began to moan. The first day they
+were a lively, rather noisy herd. He had had hard work to make them all
+keep together, and prevent them from butting each other to death. But
+when they seemed to understand that they could not be saved their
+nature changed, and they completely lost their courage. They all began
+to bleat and moan, not faintly and peevishly, as goats usually do, but
+loudly, louder and louder as the danger increased. And when Hede heard
+their cries he felt quite desperate.
+
+They were in the midst of the wild, desolate forest; there was no help
+whatever obtainable. Goat after goat dropped down by the roadside. The
+snow gathered round them and covered them. When Hede looked back at this
+row of drifts by the wayside, each hiding the body of an animal, of
+which one could still see the projecting horns and the hoofs, then his
+brain began to give way.
+
+He rushed at the animals, which allowed themselves to be covered by the
+snow, swung his whip over them, and hit them. It was the only way to
+save them, but they did not stir. He took them by the horns and dragged
+them along. They allowed themselves to be dragged, but they did not move
+a foot themselves. When he let go his hold of their horns, they licked
+his hands, as if beseeching him to help them. As soon as he went up to
+them they licked his hands.
+
+All this had such a strong effect upon Hede that he felt he was on the
+point of going out of his mind.
+
+It is not certain, however, that things would have gone so badly with
+him had he not, after it was all over in the forest, gone to see one
+whom he loved dearly. It was not his mother, but his sweetheart. He
+thought himself that he had gone there because he ought to tell her at
+once that he had lost so much money that he would not be able to marry
+for many years. But no doubt he went to see her solely to hear her say
+that she loved him quite as much in spite of his misfortunes. He thought
+that she could drive away the memory of the Fifty-Mile Forest.
+
+She could, perhaps, have done this, but she would not. She was already
+displeased because Hede went about with a pack and looked like a
+peasant; she thought that for that reason alone it was difficult to love
+him as much as before. Now, when he told her that he must still go on
+doing this for many years, she said that she could no longer wait for
+him. This last blow was too much for Hede; his mind gave way.
+
+He did not grow quite mad, however; he retained so much of his senses
+that he could attend to his business. He even did better than others,
+for it amused people to make fun of him; he was always welcome at the
+peasants' houses. People plagued and teased him, but that was in a way
+good for him, as he was so anxious to become rich. And in the course of
+a few years he had earned enough to pay all his debts, and he could have
+lived free from worry on his estate. But this he did not understand; he
+went about half-witted and silly from farm to farm, and he had no longer
+any idea to what class of people he really belonged.
+
+
+III
+
+Raglanda was the name of a parish in the north of East Vermland, near
+the borders of Dalarne, where the Dean had a large house, but the pastor
+only a small and poor one. But poor as they were at the small parsonage,
+they had been charitable enough to adopt a poor girl. She was a little
+girl, Ingrid by name, and she had come to the parsonage when she was
+thirteen years old.
+
+The pastor had accidentally seen her at a fair, where she sat crying
+outside the tent of some acrobats. He had stopped and asked her why she
+was crying, and she had told him that her blind grandfather was dead,
+and that she had no relatives left. She now travelled with a couple of
+acrobats, and they were good to her, but she cried because she was so
+stupid that she could never learn to dance on the tight-rope and help to
+earn any money.
+
+There was a sorrowful grace over the child which touched the pastor's
+heart. He said at once to himself that he could not allow such a little
+creature to go to the bad amongst these wandering tramps. He went into
+the tent, where he saw Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren, and offered to take the
+child home with him. The old acrobats began to weep, and said that
+although the girl was entirely unfitted for the profession, they would
+so very much like to keep her; but at the same time they thought she
+would be happier in a real home with people who lived in the same place
+all the year round, and therefore they were willing to give her up to
+the pastor if he would only promise them that she should be like one of
+his own children.
+
+This he had promised, and from that time the young girl had lived at the
+parsonage. She was a quiet, gentle child, full of love and tender care
+for those around her. At first her adopted parents loved her very
+dearly, but as she grew older she developed a strong inclination to lose
+herself in dreams and fancies. She lived in a world of visions, and in
+the middle of the day she could let her work fall and be lost in dreams.
+But the pastor's wife, who was a clever and hard-working woman, did not
+approve of this. She found fault with the young girl for being lazy and
+slow, and tormented her by her severity so that she became timid and
+unhappy.
+
+When she had completed her nineteenth year, she fell dangerously ill.
+They did not quite know what was the matter with her, for this happened
+long ago, when there was no doctor at Raglanda, but the girl was very
+ill. They soon saw she was so ill that she could not live.
+
+She herself did nothing but pray to God that He would take her away from
+this world. She would so like to die, she said.
+
+Then it seemed as if our Lord would try whether she was in earnest. One
+night she felt that she grew stiff and cold all over her body, and a
+heavy lethargy fell upon her. 'I think this must be death,' she said to
+herself.
+
+But the strange thing was that she did not quite lose consciousness. She
+knew that she lay as if she were dead, knew that they wrapped her in
+her shroud and laid her in her coffin, but she felt no fear of being
+buried, although she was still alive. She had but the one thought that
+she was happy because she was about to die and leave this troublesome
+life.
+
+The only thing she was uneasy about was lest they should discover that
+she was not really dead and would not bury her. Life must have been very
+bitter to her, inasmuch as she felt no fear of death whatever.
+
+But no one discovered that she was living. She was conveyed to the
+church, carried to the churchyard, and lowered into the grave.
+
+The grave, however, was not filled in; she had been buried before the
+service on Sunday morning, as was the custom at Raglanda. The mourners
+had gone into church after the funeral, and the coffin was left in the
+open grave; but as soon as the service was over they would come back,
+and help the grave-digger to fill in the grave.
+
+The young girl knew everything that happened, but felt no fear. She had
+not been able to make the slightest movement to show that she was alive,
+even if she had wanted to; but even if she had been able to move, she
+would not have done so; the whole time she was happy because she was as
+good as dead.
+
+But, on the other hand, one could hardly say that she was alive. She had
+neither the use of her mind nor of her senses. It was only that part of
+the soul which dreams dreams during the night that was still living
+within her.
+
+She could not even think enough to realize how terrible it would be for
+her to awake when the grave was filled in. She had no more power over
+her mind than has one who dreams.
+
+'I should like to know,' she thought, 'if there is anything in the whole
+wide world that could make me wish to live.'
+
+As soon as that thought rushed through her it seemed to her as if the
+lid of the coffin, and the handkerchief which had been placed over her
+face, became transparent, and she saw before her riches and beautiful
+raiment, and lovely gardens with delicious fruits.
+
+'No, I do not care for any of these things,' she said, and she closed
+her eyes for their glories.
+
+When she again looked up they had disappeared, but instead she saw quite
+distinctly a little angel of God sitting on the edge of the grave.
+
+'Good-morning, thou little angel of God,' she said to him.
+
+'Good-morning, Ingrid,' the angel said. 'Whilst thou art lying here
+doing nothing, I would like to speak a little with thee about days gone
+by.'
+
+Ingrid heard distinctly every word the angel said; but his voice was not
+like anything she had ever heard before. It was more like a stringed
+instrument; it was not like singing, but like the tones of a violin or
+the clang of a harp.
+
+'Ingrid,' the angel said, 'dost thou remember, whilst thy grandfather
+was still living, that thou once met a young student, who went with
+thee from house to house playing the whole day on thy grandfather's
+violin?'
+
+The girl's face was lighted by a smile.
+
+'Dost thou think I have forgotten this?' she said. 'Ever since that time
+no day has passed when I have not thought of him.'
+
+'And no night when thou hast not dreamt of him?'
+
+'No, not a night when I have not dreamt of him.'
+
+'And thou wilt die, although thou rememberest him so well,' said the
+angel. 'Then thou wilt never be able to see him again.'
+
+When he said this it was as if the dead girl felt all the happiness of
+love, but even that could not tempt her.
+
+'No, no,' she said; 'I am afraid to live; I would rather die.'
+
+Then the angel waved his hand, and Ingrid saw before her a wide waste of
+desert. There were no trees, and the desert was barren and dry and hot,
+and extended in all directions without any limits. In the sand there
+lay, here and there, objects which at the first glance looked like
+pieces of rock, but when she examined them more closely, she saw they
+were the immense living animals of fairy tales, with huge claws and
+great jaws, with sharp teeth; they lay in the sand, watching for prey.
+And between these terrible animals the student came walking along. He
+went quite fearlessly, without suspecting that the figures around him
+were living.
+
+'But warn him! do warn him!' Ingrid said to the angel in unspeakable
+fear. 'Tell him that they are living, and that he must take care.'
+
+'I am not allowed to speak to him,' said the angel with his clear voice;
+'thou must thyself warn him.'
+
+The apparently dead girl felt with horror that she lay powerless, and
+could not rush to save the student. She made one futile effort after the
+other to raise herself, but the impotence of death bound her. But then
+at last, at last, she felt her heart begin to beat, the blood rushed
+through her veins, the stiffness of death was loosened in her body. She
+arose and hastened towards him.
+
+
+IV
+
+It is quite certain the sun loves the open places outside the small
+village churches. Has no one ever noticed that one never sees so much
+sunshine as during the morning service outside a small, whitewashed
+church? Nowhere else does one see such radiant streams of light, nowhere
+else is the air so devoutly quiet. The sun simply keeps watch that no
+one remains on the church hill gossiping. It wants them all to sit
+quietly in church and listen to the sermon--that is why it sends such a
+wealth of sunny rays on to the ground outside the church wall.
+
+Perhaps one must not take it for granted that the sun keeps watch
+outside the small churches every Sunday; but so much is certain, that
+the morning Ingrid had been placed in the grave in the churchyard at
+Raglanda, it spread a burning heat over the open space outside the
+church. Even the flint stones looked as if they might take fire as they
+lay and sparkled in the wheel-ruts. The short, down-trodden grass
+curled, so that it looked like dry moss, whilst the yellow dandelions
+which grew amongst the grass spread themselves out on their long stems,
+so that they became as large as asters.
+
+A man from Dalarne came wandering along the road--one of those men who
+go about selling knives and scissors. He was clad in a long, white
+sheep-skin coat, and on his back he had a large black leather pack. He
+had been walking with this burden for several hours without finding it
+too hot, but when he had left the highroad, and came to the open place
+outside the church, he stopped and took off his hat in order to dry the
+perspiration from his forehead.
+
+As the man stood there bare-headed, he looked both handsome and clever.
+His forehead was high and white, with a deep wrinkle between the
+eyebrows; the mouth was well formed, with thin lips. His hair was parted
+in the middle; it was cut short at the back, but hung over his ears, and
+was inclined to curl. He was tall, and strongly, but not coarsely,
+built; in every respect well proportioned. But what was wrong about him
+was his glance, which was unsteady, and the pupils of his eyes rolled
+restlessly, and were drawn far into the sockets, as if to hide
+themselves. There was something drawn about the mouth, something dull
+and heavy, which did not seem to belong to the face.
+
+He could not be quite right, either, or he would not have dragged that
+heavy pack about on a Sunday. If he had been quite in his senses, he
+would have known that it was of no use, as he could not sell anything in
+any case. None of the other men from Dalarne who walked about from
+village to village bent their backs under this burden on a Sunday, but
+they went to the house of God free and erect as other men.
+
+But this poor fellow probably did not know it was a holy day until he
+stood in the sunshine outside the church and heard the singing. He was
+sensible enough at once to understand that he could not do any business,
+and then his brain began to work as to how he should spend the day.
+
+He stood for a long time and stared in front of him. When everything
+went its usual course, he had no difficulty in managing. He was not so
+bad but that he could go from farm to farm all through the week and
+attend to his business, but he never could get accustomed to the
+Sunday--that always came upon him as a great, unexpected trouble.
+
+His eyes became quite fixed, and the muscles of his forehead swelled.
+
+The first thought that took shape in his brain was that he should go
+into the church and listen to the singing, but he would not accept this
+suggestion. He was very fond of singing, but he dared not go into the
+church. He was not afraid of human beings, but in some churches there
+were such quaint, uncanny pictures, which represented creatures of which
+he would rather not think.
+
+At last his brain worked round to the thought that, as this was a
+church, there would probably also be a churchyard, and when he could
+take refuge in a churchyard all was well. One could not offer him
+anything better. If on his wanderings he saw a churchyard, he always
+went in and sat there awhile, even if it were in the middle of a
+workaday week.
+
+Now that he wanted to go to the churchyard a new difficulty suddenly
+arose. The burial-place at Raglanda does not lie quite near the church,
+which is built on a hill, but on the other side of the road; and he
+could not get to the entrance of the churchyard without passing along
+the road where the horses of the church-goers were standing tied up.
+
+All the horses stood with their heads deep in bundles of hay and
+nosebags, chewing. There was no question of their being able to do the
+man any harm, but he had his own ideas as to the danger of going past
+such a long row of animals.
+
+Two or three times he made an attempt, but his courage failed him, so
+that he was obliged to turn back. He was not afraid that the horses
+would bite or kick. It was quite enough for him that they were so near
+that they could see him. It was quite enough that they could shake their
+bridles and scrape the earth with their hoofs.
+
+At last a moment came when all the horses were looking down, and seemed
+to be eating for a wager. Then he began to make his way between them. He
+held his sheepskin cloak tightly around him so that it should not flap
+and betray him, and he went on tiptoe as lightly as he could. When a
+horse raised its eyelid and looked at him, he at once stopped and
+curtsied. He wanted to be polite in this great danger, but surely
+animals were amenable to reason, and could understand that he could not
+bow when he had a pack full of hardware upon his back; he could only
+curtsy.
+
+He sighed deeply, for in this world it was a sad and troublesome thing
+to be so afraid of all four-footed animals as he was. He was really not
+afraid of any other animals than goats, and he would not have been at
+all afraid of horses and dogs and cats had he only been quite sure that
+they were not a kind of transformed goats. But he never was quite sure
+of that, so as a matter of fact it was just as bad for him as if he had
+been afraid of all kinds of four-footed animals.
+
+It was no use his thinking of how strong he was, and that these small
+peasant horses never did any harm to anyone: he who has become possessed
+of such fears cannot reason with himself. Fear is a heavy burden, and it
+is hard for him who must always carry it.
+
+It was strange that he managed to get past all the horses. The last few
+steps he took in two long jumps, and when he got into the churchyard he
+closed the gate after him, and began to threaten the horses with his
+clenched fist.
+
+'You wretched, miserable, accursed goats!'
+
+He did that to all animals. He could not help calling them goats, and
+that was very stupid of him, for it had procured him a name which he did
+not like. Everyone who met him called him the 'Goat.' But he would not
+own to this name. He wanted to be called by his proper name, but
+apparently no one knew his real name in that district.
+
+He stood a little while at the gate, rejoicing at having escaped from
+the horses, but he soon went further into the churchyard. At every cross
+and every stone he stopped and curtsied, but this was not from fear:
+this was simply from joy at seeing these dear old friends. All at once
+he began to look quite gentle and mild. They were exactly the same
+crosses and stones he had so often seen before. They looked just as
+usual. How well he knew them again! He must say 'Good-morning' to them.
+
+How nice it was in the churchyard! There were no animals about there,
+and there were no people to make fun of him. It was best there, when it
+was quite quiet as now; but even if there were people, they did not
+disturb him. He certainly knew many pretty meadows and woods which he
+liked still better, but there he was never left in peace. They could not
+by any means compare with the churchyard. And the churchyard was better
+than the forest, for in the forest the loneliness was so great that he
+was frightened by it. Here it was quiet, as in the depths of the
+forest; but he was not without company. Here people were sleeping under
+every stone and every mound; just the company he wanted in order not to
+feel lonely and strange.
+
+He went straight to the open grave. He went there partly because there
+were some shady trees, and partly because he wanted company. He thought,
+perhaps, that the dead who had so recently been laid in the grave might
+be a better protection against his loneliness than those who had passed
+away long ago.
+
+He bent his knees, with his back to the great mound of earth at the edge
+of the grave, and succeeded in pushing the pack upwards, so that it
+stood firmly on the mound, and he then loosened the heavy straps that
+fastened it. It was a great day--a holiday. He also took off his coat.
+He sat down on the grass with a feeling of great pleasure, so close to
+the grave that his long legs, with the stockings tied under the knee,
+and the heavy laced shoes dangled over the edge of the grave.
+
+For a while he sat still, with his eyes steadily fixed upon the coffin.
+When one was possessed by such fear as he was, one could not be too
+careful. But the coffin did not move in the least; it was impossible to
+suspect it of containing any snare.
+
+He was no sooner certain of this than he put his hand into a side-pocket
+of the pack and took out a violin and bow, and at the same time he
+nodded to the dead in the grave. As he was so quiet he should hear
+something pretty.
+
+This was something very unusual for him. There were not many who were
+allowed to hear him play. No one was ever allowed to hear him play at
+the farms, where they set the dogs at him and called him the 'Goat'; but
+sometimes he would play in a house where they spoke softly, and went
+about quietly, and did not ask him if he wanted to buy any goat-skins.
+At such places he took out his violin and treated them to some music;
+and this was a great favour--the greatest he could bestow upon anybody.
+
+As he sat there and played at the edge of the grave it did not sound
+amiss; he did not play a wrong note, and he played so softly and gently
+that it could hardly be heard at the next grave. The strange thing about
+it was that it was not the man who could play, but it was his violin
+that could remember some small melodies. They came forth from the violin
+as soon as he let the bow glide over it. It might not, perhaps, have
+meant so much to others, but for him, who could not remember a single
+tune, it was the most precious gift of all to possess such a violin that
+could play by itself.
+
+Whilst he played he sat with a beaming smile on his face. It was the
+violin that spoke and spoke; he only listened. Was it not strange that
+one heard all these beautiful things as soon as one let the bow glide
+over the strings? The violin did that. It knew how it ought to be, and
+the Dalar man only sat and listened. Melodies grew out of that violin as
+grass grows out of the earth. No one could understand how it happened.
+Our Lord had ordered it so.
+
+The Dalar man intended to remain sitting there the whole day, and let
+the dear tunes grow out of the violin like small white and many-coloured
+flowers. He would play a whole meadowful of flowers, play a whole long
+valleyful, a whole wide plain.
+
+But she who lay in the coffin distinctly heard the violin, and upon her
+it had a strange effect. The tones had made her dream, and what she had
+seen in her dreams caused her such emotion that her heart began to beat,
+her blood to flow, and she awoke.
+
+But all she had lived through while she lay there, apparently dead, the
+thoughts she had had, and also her last dream--everything vanished in
+the same moment she awoke to consciousness. She did not even know that
+she was lying in her coffin, but thought she was still lying ill at home
+in her bed. She only thought it strange that she was still alive. A
+little while ago, before she fell asleep, she had been in the pangs of
+death. Surely, all must have been over with her long ago. She had taken
+leave of her adopted parents, and of her brothers and sisters, and of
+the servants. The Dean had been there himself to administer the last
+Communion, for her adopted father did not think he could bear to give it
+to her himself. For several days she had put away all earthly thoughts
+from her mind. It was incomprehensible that she was not dead.
+
+She wondered why it was so dark in the room where she lay. There had
+been a light all the other nights during her illness. And then they had
+let the blankets fall off the bed. She was lying there getting as cold
+as ice. She raised herself a little to pull the blankets over her. In
+doing so she knocked her head against the lid of the coffin, and fell
+back with a little scream of pain. She had knocked herself rather
+severely, and immediately became unconscious again. She lay as
+motionless as before, and it seemed as if life had again left her.
+
+The Dalar man, who had heard both the knock and the cry, immediately
+laid down his violin and sat listening; but there was nothing more to be
+heard--nothing whatever. He began again to look at the coffin as
+attentively as before. He sat nodding his head, as if he would say 'Yes'
+to what he was himself thinking about, namely, that nothing in this
+world was to be depended upon. Here he had had the best and most silent
+of comrades, but had he not also been disappointed in him?
+
+He sat and looked at the coffin, as if trying to see right through it.
+At last, when it continued quite still, he took his violin again and
+began to play. But the violin would not play any longer. However gently
+and tenderly he drew his bow, there came forth no melody. This was so
+sad that he was nearly crying. He had intended to sit still and listen
+to his violin the whole day, and now it would not play any more.
+
+He could quite understand the reason. The violin was uneasy and afraid
+of what had moved in the coffin. It had forgotten all its melodies, and
+thought only of what it could be that had knocked at the coffin-lid.
+That is how it is one forgets everything when one is afraid. He saw
+that he would have to quiet the violin if he wanted to hear more.
+
+He had felt so happy, more so than for many years. If there was really
+anything bad in the coffin, would it not be better to let it out? Then
+the violin would be glad, and beautiful flowers would again grow out of
+it.
+
+He quickly opened his big pack, and began to rummage amongst his knives
+and saws and hammers until he found a screw-driver. In another moment he
+was down in the grave on his knees and unscrewing the coffin-lid. He
+took out one screw after the other, until at last he could raise the lid
+against the side of the grave; at the same moment the handkerchief fell
+from off the face of the apparently dead girl. As soon as the fresh air
+reached Ingrid, she opened her eyes. Now she saw that it was light. They
+must have removed her. Now she was lying in a yellow chamber with a
+green ceiling, and a large chandelier was hanging from the ceiling. The
+chamber was small, but the bed was still smaller. Why had she the
+sensation of her arms and legs being tied? Was it because she should lie
+still in the little narrow bed? It was strange that they had placed a
+hymn-book under her chin; they only did that with corpses. Between her
+fingers she had a little bouquet. Her adopted mother had cut a few
+sprigs from her flowering myrtle, and laid them in her hands. Ingrid was
+very much surprised. What had come to her adopted mother? She saw that
+they had given her a pillow with broad lace, and a fine hem-stitched
+sheet. She was very glad of that; she liked to have things nice. Still,
+she would rather have had a warm blanket over her. It could surely not
+be good for a sick person to lie without a blanket. Ingrid was nearly
+putting her hands to her eyes and beginning to cry, she was so bitterly
+cold. At the same moment she felt something hard and cold against her
+cheek. She could not help smiling. It was the old, red wooden horse, the
+old three-legged Camilla, that lay beside her on the pillow. Her little
+brother, who could never sleep at night without having it with him in
+his bed, had put it in her bed. It was very sweet of her little brother.
+Ingrid felt still more inclined to cry when she understood that her
+little brother had wanted to comfort her with his wooden horse.
+
+But she did not get so far as crying. The truth all at once flashed upon
+her. Her little brother had given her the wooden horse, and her mother
+had given her her white myrtle flowers, and the hymn-book had been
+placed under her chin, because they had thought she was dead.
+
+Ingrid took hold of the sides of the coffin with both hands and raised
+herself. The little narrow bed was a coffin, and the little narrow
+chamber was a grave. It was all very difficult to understand. She could
+not understand that this concerned her, that it was she who had been
+swathed like a corpse and placed in the grave. She must be lying all the
+same in her bed, and be seeing or dreaming all this. She would soon find
+out that this was no reality, but that everything was as usual.
+
+All at once she found the explanation of the whole thing--'I often have
+such strange dreams. This is only a vision'--and she sighed, relieved
+and happy. She laid herself down in her coffin again; she was so sure
+that it was her own bed, for that was not very wide either.
+
+All this time the Dalar man stood in the grave, quite close to the foot
+of the coffin. He only stood a few feet from her, but she had not seen
+him; that was probably because he had tried to hide himself in the
+corner of the grave as soon as the dead in the coffin had opened her
+eyes and begun to move. She could, perhaps, have seen him, although he
+held the coffin-lid before him as a screen, had there not been something
+like a white mist before her eyes so that she could only see things
+quite near her distinctly. Ingrid could not even see that there were
+earthen walls around her. She had taken the sun to be a large
+chandelier, and the shady lime-trees for a roof. The poor Dalar man
+stood and waited for the thing that moved in the coffin to go away. It
+did not strike him that it would not go unrequested. Had it not knocked
+because it wanted to get out? He stood for a long time with his head
+behind the coffin-lid and waited, that it should go. He peeped over the
+lid when he thought that now it must have gone. But it had not moved; it
+remained lying on its bed of shavings.
+
+He could not put up with it any longer; he must really make an end of
+it. It was a long time since his violin had spoken so prettily as
+to-day, he longed to sit again quietly with it. Ingrid, who had nearly
+fallen asleep again, suddenly heard herself addressed in the sing-song
+Dalar dialect:
+
+'Now, I think it is time you got up.'
+
+As soon as he had said this he hid his head. He shook so much over his
+boldness that he nearly let the lid fall.
+
+But the white mist which had been before Ingrid's eyes disappeared
+completely when she heard a human being speaking. She saw a man standing
+in the corner, at the foot of the coffin, holding a coffin-lid before
+him. She saw at once that she could not lie down again and think it was
+a vision. Surely he was a reality, which she must try and make out. It
+certainly looked as if the coffin were a coffin, and the grave a grave,
+and that she herself a few minutes ago was nothing but a swathed and
+buried corpse. For the first time she was terror-stricken at what had
+happened to her. To think that she could really have been dead that
+moment! She could have been a hideous corpse, food for worms. She had
+been placed in the coffin for them to throw earth upon her; she was
+worth no more than a piece of turf; she had been thrown aside
+altogether. The worms were welcome to eat her; no one would mind about
+that.
+
+Ingrid needed so badly to have a fellow-creature near her in her great
+terror. She had recognized the Goat directly he put up his head. He was
+an old acquaintance from the parsonage; she was not in the least afraid
+of him. She wanted him to come close to her. She did not mind in the
+least that he was an idiot. He was, at any rate, a living being. She
+wanted him to come so near to her that she could feel she belonged to
+the living and not to the dead.
+
+'Oh, for God's sake, come close to me!' she said, with tears in her
+voice.
+
+She raised herself in the coffin and stretched out her arms to him.
+
+But the Dalar man only thought of himself. If she were so anxious to
+have him near her, he resolved to make his own terms.
+
+'Yes,' he said, 'if you will go away.'
+
+Ingrid at once tried to comply with his request, but she was so tightly
+swathed in the sheet that she found it difficult to get up.
+
+'You must come and help me,' she said.
+
+She said this, partly because she was obliged to do it, and partly
+because she was afraid that she had not quite escaped death. She must be
+near someone living.
+
+He actually went near her, squeezing himself between the coffin and the
+side of the grave. He bent over her, lifted her out of the coffin, and
+put her down on the grass at the side of the open grave.
+
+Ingrid could not help it. She threw her arms round his neck, laid her
+head on his shoulder and sobbed. Afterwards she could not understand how
+she had been able to do this, and that she was not afraid of him. It was
+partly from joy that he was a human being--a living human being--and
+partly from gratitude, because he had saved her.
+
+What would have become of her if it had not been for him? It was he who
+had raised the coffin-lid, who had brought her back to life. She
+certainly did not know how it had all happened, but it was surely he who
+had opened the coffin. What would have happened to her if he had not
+done this? She would have awakened to find herself imprisoned in the
+black coffin. She would have knocked and shouted; but who would have
+heard her six feet below the ground? Ingrid dared not think of it; she
+was entirely absorbed with gratitude because she had been saved. She
+must have someone she could thank. She must lay her head on someone's
+breast and cry from gratitude.
+
+The most extraordinary thing, almost, that happened that day was, that
+the Dalar man did not repulse her. But it was not quite clear to him
+that she was alive. He thought she was dead, and he knew it was not
+advisable to offend anyone dead. But as soon as he could manage, he
+freed himself from her and went down into the grave again. He placed the
+lid carefully on the coffin, put in the screws and fastened it as
+before. Then he thought the coffin would be quite still, and the violin
+would regain its peace and its melodies.
+
+In the meantime Ingrid sat on the grass and tried to collect her
+thoughts. She looked towards the church and discovered the horses and
+the carriages on the hillside. Then she began to realize everything. It
+was Sunday; they had placed her in the grave in the morning, and now
+they were in church.
+
+A great fear now seized Ingrid. The service would, perhaps, soon be
+over, and then all the people would come out and see her. And she had
+nothing on but a sheet! She was almost naked. Fancy, if all these people
+came and saw her in this state! They would never forget the sight. And
+she would be ashamed of it all her life.
+
+Where should she get some clothes? For a moment she thought of throwing
+the Dalar man's fur coat round her, but she did not think that that
+would make her any more like other people.
+
+She turned quickly to the crazy man, who was still working at the
+coffin-lid.
+
+'Oh,' she said, 'will you let me creep into your pack?'
+
+In a moment she stood by the great leather pack, which contained goods
+enough to fill a whole market-stall, and began to open it.
+
+'You must come and help me.'
+
+She did not ask in vain. When the Dalar man saw her touching his wares
+he came up at once.
+
+'Are you touching my pack?' he asked threateningly.
+
+Ingrid did not notice that he spoke angrily; she considered him to be
+her best friend all the time.
+
+'Oh, dear good man,' she said, 'help me to hide, so that people will not
+see me. Put your wares somewhere or other, and let me creep into the
+pack, and carry me home. Oh, do do it! I live at the Parsonage, and it
+is only a little way from here. You know where it is.'
+
+The man stood and looked at her with stupid eyes. She did not know
+whether he had understood a word of what she said. She repeated it, but
+he made no sign of obeying her. She began again to take the things out
+of the pack. Then he stamped on the ground and tore the pack from her.
+
+However should Ingrid be able to make him do what she wanted?
+
+On the grass beside her lay a violin and a bow. She took them up
+mechanically--she did not know herself why. She had probably been so
+much in the company of people playing the violin that she could not bear
+to see an instrument lying on the ground.
+
+As soon as she touched the violin he let go the pack, and tore the
+violin from her. He was evidently quite beside himself when anyone
+touched his violin. He looked quite malicious.
+
+What in the world could she do to get away before people came out of
+church?
+
+She began to promise him all sorts of things, just as one promises
+children when one wants them to be good.
+
+'I will ask father to buy a whole dozen of scythes from you. I will lock
+up all the dogs when you come to the Parsonage. I will ask mother to
+give you a good meal.'
+
+But there was no sign of his giving way. She bethought herself of the
+violin, and said in her despair:
+
+'If you will carry me to the Parsonage, I will play for you.'
+
+At last a smile flashed across his face. That was evidently what he
+wanted.
+
+'I will play for you the whole afternoon; I will play for you as long as
+you like.'
+
+'Will you teach the violin new melodies?' he asked.
+
+'Of course I will.'
+
+But Ingrid now became both surprised and unhappy, for he took hold of
+the pack and pulled it towards him. He dragged it over the graves, and
+the sweet-williams and southernwood that grew on them were crushed under
+it as if it were a roller. He dragged it to a heap of branches and
+wizened leaves and old wreaths lying near the wall round the churchyard.
+There he took all the things out of the pack, and hid them well under
+the heap. When it was empty he returned to Ingrid.
+
+'Now you can get in,' he said.
+
+Ingrid stepped into the pack, and crouched down on the wooden bottom.
+The man fastened all the straps as carefully as when he went about with
+his usual wares, bent down so that he nearly went on his knees, put his
+arms through the braces, buckled a couple of straps across his chest,
+and stood up. When he had gone a few steps he began to laugh. His pack
+was so light that he could have danced with it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was only about a mile from the church to the Parsonage. The Dalar man
+could walk it in twenty minutes. Ingrid's only wish was that he would
+walk so quickly that she could get home before the people came back from
+church. She could not bear the idea of so many people seeing her. She
+would like to get home when only her mother and the maid-servants were
+there.
+
+Ingrid had taken with her the little bouquet of flowers from her adopted
+mother's myrtle. She was so pleased with it that she kissed it over and
+over again. It made her think more kindly of her adopted mother than she
+had ever done before. But in any case she would, of course, think kindly
+of her now. One who has come straight from the grave must think kindly
+and gently of everything living and moving on the face of the earth.
+
+She could now understand so well that the Pastor's wife was bound to
+love her own children more than her adopted daughter. And when they were
+so poor at the Parsonage that they could not afford to keep a nursemaid,
+she could see now that it was quite natural that she should look after
+her little brothers and sisters. And when her brothers and sisters were
+not good to her, it was because they had become accustomed to think of
+her as their nurse. It was not so easy for them to remember that she had
+come to the Parsonage to be their sister.
+
+And, after all, it all came from their being poor. When father some day
+got another living, and became Dean, or even Rector, everything would
+surely come right. Then they would love her again, as they did when she
+first came to them. The good old times would be sure to come back again.
+Ingrid kissed her flowers. It had not been mother's intention, perhaps,
+to be hard; it was only worry that had made her so strange and unkind.
+
+But now it would not matter how unkind they were to her. In the future
+nothing could hurt her, for now she would always be glad, simply because
+she was alive. And if things should ever be really bad again, she would
+only think of mother's myrtle and her little brother's horse.
+
+It was happiness enough to know that she was being carried along the
+road alive. This morning no one had thought that she would ever again go
+over these roads and hills. And the fragrant clover and the little birds
+singing and the beautiful shady trees, which had all been a source of
+joy for the living, had not even existed for her. But she had not much
+time for reflection, for in twenty minutes the Dalar man had reached the
+Parsonage.
+
+No one was at home but the Pastor's wife and the maid-servants, just as
+Ingrid had wished. The Pastor's wife had been busy the whole morning
+cooking for the funeral feast. She soon expected the guests, and
+everything was nearly ready. She had just been into the bedroom to put
+on her black dress. She glanced down the road to the church, but there
+were still no carriages to be seen. So she went once again into the
+kitchen to taste the food.
+
+She was quite satisfied, for everything was as it ought to be, and one
+cannot help being glad for that, even if one is in mourning. There was
+only one maid in the kitchen, and that was the one the Pastor's wife had
+brought with her from her old home, so she felt she could speak to her
+in confidence.
+
+'I must confess, Lisa,' she said, 'I think anyone would be pleased with
+having such a funeral.'
+
+'If she could only look down and see all the fuss you make of her,' Lisa
+said, 'she would be pleased.'
+
+'Ah!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I don't think she would ever be pleased
+with me.'
+
+'She is dead now,' said the girl, 'and I am not the one to say anything
+against one who is hardly yet under the ground.'
+
+'I have had to bear many a hard word from my husband for her sake,' said
+the mistress.
+
+The Pastor's wife felt she wanted to speak with someone about the dead
+girl. Her conscience had pricked her a little on her account, and this
+was why she had arranged such a grand funeral feast. She thought her
+conscience might leave her alone now she had had so much trouble over
+the funeral, but it did not do so by any means. Her husband also
+reproached himself, and said that the young girl had not been treated
+like one of their own children, and that they had promised she should be
+when they adopted her; and he said it would have been better if they had
+never taken her, when they could not help letting her see that they
+loved their own children more. And now the Pastor's wife felt she must
+talk to someone about the young girl, to hear whether people thought she
+had treated her badly.
+
+She saw that Lisa began to stir the pan violently, as if she had
+difficulty in controlling her anger. She was a clever girl, who
+thoroughly understood how to get into her mistress's good books.
+
+'I must say,' Lisa began, 'that when one has a mother who always looks
+after one, and takes care that one is neat and clean, one might at
+least try to obey and please her. And when one is allowed to live in a
+good Parsonage, and to be educated respectably, one ought at least to
+give some return for it, and not always go idling about and dreaming. I
+should like to know what would have happened if you had not taken the
+poor thing in. I suppose she would have been running about with those
+acrobats, and have died in the streets, like any other poor wretch.'
+
+A man from Dalarne came across the yard; he had his pack on his back,
+although it was Sunday. He came very quietly through the open
+kitchen-door, and curtsied when he entered, but no one took any notice
+of him. Both the mistress and the maid saw him, but as they knew him,
+they did not think it necessary to interrupt their conversation.
+
+The Pastor's wife was anxious to continue it; she felt she was about to
+hear what she needed to ease her conscience.
+
+'It is perhaps as well she is gone,' she said.
+
+'Yes, ma'am,' the servant said eagerly; 'and I am sure the Pastor thinks
+just the same. In any case he soon will. And the mistress will see that
+now there will be more peace in the house, and I am sure the master
+needs it.'
+
+'Oh!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I was obliged to be careful. There were
+always so many clothes to be got for her, that it was quite dreadful. He
+was so afraid that she should not get as much as the others that she
+sometimes even had more. And it cost so much, now that she was grown
+up.'
+
+'I suppose, ma'am, Greta will get her muslin dress?'
+
+'Yes; either Greta will have it, or I shall use it myself.'
+
+'She does not leave much behind her, poor thing!'
+
+'No one expects her to leave anything,' said her adopted mother. 'I
+should be quite content if I could remember ever having had a kind word
+from her.'
+
+This is only the kind of thing one says when one has a bad conscience,
+and wants to excuse one's self. Her adopted mother did not really mean
+what she said.
+
+The Dalar man behaved exactly as he always did when he came to sell his
+wares. He stood for a little while looking round the kitchen; then he
+slowly pushed the pack on to a table, and unfastened the braces and the
+straps; then he looked round to see if there were any cats or dogs
+about. He then straightened his back, and began to unfasten the two
+leather flaps, which were fastened with numerous buckles and knots.
+
+'He need not trouble about opening his pack to-day,' Lisa said; 'it is
+Sunday, and he knows quite well we don't buy anything on Sundays.'
+
+She, however, took no notice of the crazy fellow, who continued to
+unfasten his straps. She turned round to her mistress. This was a good
+opportunity for insinuating herself.
+
+'I don't even know whether she was good to the children. I have often
+heard them cry in the nursery.'
+
+'I suppose it was the same with them as it was with their mother,' said
+the Pastor's wife; 'but now, of course, they cry because she is dead.'
+
+'They don't understand what is best for them,' said the servant; 'but
+the mistress can be certain that before a month is gone there will be no
+one to cry over her.'
+
+At the same moment they both turned round from the kitchen range, and
+looked towards the table, where the Dalar man stood opening his big
+pack. They had heard a strange noise, something like a sigh or a sob.
+The man was just opening the inside lid, and out of the pack rose the
+newly-buried girl, exactly the same as when they laid her in the coffin.
+
+And yet she did not look quite the same. She looked almost more dead now
+than when she was laid in her coffin. Then she had nearly the same
+colour as when she was alive; now her face was ashy-gray, there was a
+bluish-black shadow round her mouth, and her eyes lay deep in her head.
+She said nothing, but her face expressed the greatest despair, and she
+held out beseechingly, and as if to avert their anger, the bouquet of
+myrtle which she had received from her adopted mother.
+
+This sight was more than flesh and blood could stand. Her mother fell
+fainting to the ground; the maid stood still for a moment, gazing at the
+mother and daughter, covered her eyes with her hands, and rushed into
+her own room and locked the door.
+
+'It is not me she has come for; this does not concern me.'
+
+But Ingrid turned round to the Dalar man.
+
+'Put me in your pack again, and take me away. Do you hear? Take me away.
+Take me back to where you found me.'
+
+The Dalar man happened to look through the window. A long row of carts
+and carriages was coming up the avenue and into the yard. Ah, indeed!
+then he was not going to stay. He did not like that at all.
+
+Ingrid crouched down at the bottom of the pack. She said not another
+word, but only sobbed. The flaps and the lids were fastened, and she was
+again lifted on to his back and carried away. Those who were coming to
+the funeral feast laughed at the Goat, who hastened away, curtsying and
+curtsying to every horse he met.
+
+
+V
+
+Anna Stina was an old woman who lived in the depths of the forest. She
+gave a helping hand at the Parsonage now and then, and always managed
+opportunely to come down the hillside when they were baking or washing.
+She was a nice, clever old woman, and she and Ingrid were good friends.
+As soon as the young girl was able to collect her thoughts, she made up
+her mind to take refuge with her.
+
+'Listen,' she said to the Dalar man. 'When you get onto the highroad,
+turn into the forest; then go straight on until you come to a gate;
+there you must turn to the left; then you must go straight on until you
+come to the large gravel-pit. From there you can see a house: take me
+there, and I will play to you.'
+
+The short and harsh manner in which she gave her orders jarred upon her
+ears, but she was obliged to speak in this way in order to be obeyed; it
+was the only chance she had. What right had she to order another person
+about--she who had not even the right to be alive?
+
+After all this she would never again be able to feel as if she had any
+right to live. This was the most dreadful part of all that had happened
+to her: that she could have lived in the Parsonage for six years, and
+not even been able to make herself so much loved that they wished to
+keep her alive. And those whom no one loves have no right to live. She
+could not exactly say how she knew it was so, but it was as clear as
+daylight. She knew it from the feeling that the same moment she heard
+that they did not care about her an iron hand seemed to have crushed her
+heart as if to make it stop. Yes, it was life itself that had been
+closed for her. And the same moment she had come back from death, and
+felt the delight of being alive burn brightly and strongly within her,
+just at that moment the one thing that gave her the right of existing
+had been torn from her.
+
+This was worse than sentence of death. It was much more cruel than an
+ordinary sentence of death. She knew what it was like. It was like
+felling a tree--not in the usual manner, when the trunk is cut through,
+but by cutting its roots and leaving it standing in the ground to die by
+itself. There the tree stands, and cannot understand why it no longer
+gets nourishment and support. It struggles and strives to live, but the
+leaves get smaller and smaller, it sends forth no fresh shoots, the bark
+falls off, and it must die, because it is severed from the spring of
+life. Thus it is it must die.
+
+At last the Dalar man put down his pack on the stone step outside a
+little house in the midst of the wild forest. The door was locked, but
+as soon as Ingrid had got out of the pack she took the key from under
+the doorstep, opened the door, and walked in.
+
+Ingrid knew the house thoroughly and all it contained. It was not the
+first time she had come there for comfort; it was not the first time she
+had come and told old Anna Stina that she could not bear living at home
+any longer--that her adopted mother was so hard to her that she would
+not go back to the Parsonage. But every time she came the old woman had
+talked her over and quieted her. She had made her some terrible coffee
+from roasted peas and chicory, without a single coffee-bean in it, but
+which had all the same given her new courage, and in the end she had
+made her laugh at everything, and encouraged her so much, that she had
+simply danced down the hillside on her way home.
+
+Even if Anna Stina had been at home, and had made some of her terrible
+coffee, it would probably not have helped Ingrid this time. But the old
+woman was down at the Parsonage to the funeral feast, for the Pastor's
+wife had not forgotten to invite any of those of whom Ingrid had been
+fond. That, too, was probably the result of an uneasy conscience.
+
+But in Anna's room everything was as usual. And when Ingrid saw the
+sofa with the wooden seat, and the clean, scoured table, and the cat,
+and the coffee-kettle, although she did not feel comforted or cheered,
+she felt that here was a place where she could give vent to her sorrow.
+It was a relief that here she need not think of anything but crying and
+moaning.
+
+She went straight to the settle, threw herself on the wooden seat, and
+lay there crying, she did not know for how long.
+
+The Dalar man sat outside on the stone step; he did not want to go into
+the house on account of the cat. He expected that Ingrid would come out
+and play to him. He had taken the violin out long ago. As it was such a
+long time before she came, he began to play himself. He played softly
+and gently, as was his wont. It was barely possible for the young girl
+to hear him playing.
+
+Ingrid had one fit of shivering after the other. This was how she had
+been before she fell ill. She would no doubt be ill again. It was also
+best that the fever should come and put an end to her in earnest.
+
+When she heard the violin, she rose and looked round with bewildered
+glance. Who was that playing? Was that her student? Had he come at last?
+It soon struck her, however, that it was the Dalar man, and she lay down
+again with a sigh. She could not follow what he was playing. But as soon
+as she closed her eyes the violin assumed the student's voice. She also
+heard what he said; he spoke with her adopted mother and defended her.
+He spoke just as nicely as he had done to Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren. Ingrid
+needed love so much, he said. That was what she had missed. That was
+why she had not always attended to her work, but allowed dreams to fill
+her mind. But no one knew how she could work and slave for those who
+loved her. For their sake she could bear sorrow and sickness, and
+contempt and poverty; for them she would be as strong as a giant, and as
+patient as a slave.
+
+Ingrid heard him distinctly and she became quiet. Yes, it was true. If
+only her adopted mother had loved her, she would have seen what Ingrid
+was worth. But as she did not love her, Ingrid was paralyzed in her
+efforts. Yes, so it had been.
+
+Now the fever had left her, she only lay and listened to what the
+student said. She slept a little now and then; time after time she
+thought she was lying in her grave, and then it was always the student
+who came and took her out of the coffin. She lay and disputed with him.
+
+'When I am dreaming it is you who come,' she said.
+
+'It is always I who come to you, Ingrid,' he said. 'I thought you knew
+that. I take you out of the grave; I carry you on my shoulders; I play
+you to sleep. It is always I.'
+
+What disturbed and awoke her was the thought that she had to get up and
+play for the Dalar man. Several times she rose up to do it, but could
+not. As soon as she fell back upon the settle she began to dream. She
+sat crouching in the pack and the student carried her through the
+forest. It was always he.
+
+'But it was not you,' she said to him.
+
+'Of course it was I,' he said, smiling at her contradicting him. 'You
+have been thinking about me every day for all these years; so you can
+understand I could not help saving you when you were in such great
+danger.'
+
+Of course she saw the force of his argument; and then she began to
+realize that he was right, and that it was he. But this was such
+infinite bliss that she again awoke. Love seemed to fill her whole
+being. It could not have been more real had she seen and spoken with her
+beloved.
+
+'Why does he never come in real life?' she said, half aloud. 'Why does
+he only come in my dreams?'
+
+She did not dare to move, for then love would fly away. It was as if a
+timid bird had settled on her shoulder, and she was afraid of
+frightening it away. If she moved, the bird would fly away, and sorrow
+would overcome her.
+
+When at last she really awoke, it was twilight. She must have slept the
+whole afternoon and evening. At that time of the year it was not dark
+until after ten o'clock. The violin had ceased playing, and the Dalar
+man had probably gone away.
+
+Anna Stina had not yet come back. She would probably be away the whole
+night. It did not matter to Ingrid; all she wanted was to lie down again
+and sleep. She was afraid of all the sorrow and despair that would
+overwhelm her as soon as she awoke. But then she got something new to
+think about. Who could have closed the door? who had spread Anna Stina's
+great shawl over her? and who had placed a piece of dry bread beside her
+on the seat? Had he, the Goat, done all this for her? For a moment she
+thought she saw dream and reality standing side by side, trying which
+could best console her. And the dream stood joyous and smiling,
+showering over her all the bliss of love to comfort her. But life, poor,
+hard, and bitter though it was, also brought its kindly little mite to
+show that it did not mean to be so hard upon her as perhaps she thought.
+
+
+VI
+
+Ingrid and Anna Stina were walking through the dark forest. They had
+been walking for four days, and had slept three nights in the Säter
+huts. Ingrid was weak and weary; her face was transparently pale; her
+eyes were sunken, and shone feverishly. Old Anna Stina now and then
+secretly cast an anxious look at her, and prayed to God that He would
+sustain her so that she might not die by the wayside. Now and then the
+old woman could not help looking behind her with uneasiness. She had an
+uncomfortable feeling that the old man with his scythe came stealthily
+after them through the forest to reclaim the young girl who, both by the
+word of God and the casting of earth upon her, had been consecrated to
+him.
+
+Old Anna Stina was little and broad, with a large, square face, which
+was so intelligent that it was almost good-looking. She was not
+superstitious--she lived quite alone in the midst of the forest without
+being afraid either of witches or evil spirits--but as she walked there
+by the side of Ingrid she felt as distinctly as if someone had told her
+that she was walking beside a being who did not belong to this world.
+She had had that sensation ever since she had found Ingrid lying in her
+house that Monday morning.
+
+Anna Stina had not returned home on the Sunday evening, for down at the
+Parsonage the Pastor's wife had been taken very ill, and Anna Stina, who
+was accustomed to nurse sick people, had stayed to sit up with her. The
+whole night she had heard the Pastor's wife raving about Ingrid's having
+appeared to her; but that the old woman had not believed. And when she
+returned home the next day and found Ingrid, the old woman would at once
+have gone down to the Parsonage again to tell them that it was not a
+ghost they had seen; but when she had suggested this to Ingrid, it had
+affected her so much that she dared not do it. It was as if the little
+life which burnt in her would be extinguished, just as the flame of a
+candle is put out by too strong a draught. She could have died as easily
+as a little bird in its cage. Death was prowling around her. There was
+nothing to be done but to nurse her very tenderly and deal very gently
+with her if her life was to be preserved.
+
+The old woman hardly knew what to think of Ingrid. Perhaps she was a
+ghost; there seemed to be so little life in her. She quite gave up
+trying to talk her to reason. There was nothing else for it but giving
+in to her wishes that no one should hear anything about her being alive.
+And then the old woman tried to arrange everything as wisely as
+possible. She had a sister who was housekeeper on a large estate in
+Dalarne, and she made up her mind to take Ingrid to her, and persuade
+her sister, Stafva, to give the girl a situation at the Manor House.
+Ingrid would have to be content with being simply a servant. There was
+nothing else for it.
+
+They were now on their way to the Manor House. Anna Stina knew the
+country so well that they were not obliged to go by the highroad, but
+could follow the lonely forest paths. But they had also undergone much
+hardship. Their shoes were worn and in pieces, their skirts soiled and
+frayed at the bottom, and a branch had torn a long rent in Ingrid's
+sleeve.
+
+On the evening of the fourth day they came to a hill from which they
+could look down into a deep valley. In the valley was a lake, and near
+the edge of the lake was a high, rocky island, upon which stood a large
+white building. When Anna Stina saw the house, she said it was called
+Munkhyttan, and that it was there her sister lived.
+
+They made themselves as tidy as they could on the hillside. They
+arranged the handkerchiefs which they wore on their heads, dried their
+shoes with moss, and washed themselves in a forest stream, and Anna
+Stina tried to make a fold in Ingrid's sleeve so that the rent could not
+be seen.
+
+The old woman sighed when she looked at Ingrid, and quite lost courage.
+It was not only that she looked so strange in the clothes she had
+borrowed from Anna Stina, and which did not at all fit her, but her
+sister Stafva would never take her into her service, she looked so
+wretched and pitiful. It was like engaging a breath of wind. The girl
+could be of no more use than a sick butterfly.
+
+As soon as they were ready, they went down the hill to the lake. It was
+only a short distance. Then they came to the land belonging to the Manor
+House.
+
+Was that a country house?
+
+There were large neglected fields, upon which the forest encroached more
+and more. There was a bridge leading on to the island, so shaky that
+they hardly thought it would keep together until they were safely over.
+There was an avenue leading from the bridge to the main building,
+covered with grass, like a meadow, and a tree which had been blown down
+had been left lying across the road.
+
+The island was pretty enough, so pretty that a castle might very well
+have been built there. But nothing but weeds grew in the garden, and in
+the large park the trees were choking each other, and black snakes
+glided over the green, wet walks.
+
+Anna Stina felt uneasy when she saw how neglected everything was, and
+went along mumbling to herself: 'What does all this mean? Is Stafva
+dead? How can she stand everything looking like this? Things were very
+different thirty years ago, when I was last here. What in the world can
+be the matter with Stafva?' She could not imagine that there could be
+such neglect in any place where Stafva lived.
+
+Ingrid walked behind her, slowly and reluctantly. The moment she put her
+foot on the bridge she felt that there were not two walking there, but
+three. Someone had come to meet her there, and had turned back to
+accompany her. Ingrid heard no footsteps, but he who accompanied them
+appeared indistinctly by her side. She could see there was someone.
+
+She became terribly afraid. She was just going to beg Anna Stina to turn
+back and tell her that everything seemed so strange here that she dare
+not go any further. But before she had time to say anything, the
+stranger came quite close to her, and she recognised him. Before, she
+only saw him indistinctly; now she saw him so clearly that she could see
+it was the student.
+
+It no longer seemed weird and ghost-like that he walked there. It was
+only strangely delightful that he came to receive her. It was as if it
+were he who had brought her there, and would, by coming to welcome her,
+show that it was.
+
+He walked with her over the bridge, through the avenue, quite up to the
+main building.
+
+She could not help turning her head every moment to the left. It was
+there she saw his face, quite close to her cheek. It was really not a
+face that she saw, only an unspeakably beautiful smile that drew
+tenderly near her. But if she turned her head quite round to see it
+properly, it was no longer there. No, there was nothing one could see
+distinctly. But as soon as she looked straight before her, it was there
+again, quite close to her.
+
+Her invisible companion did not speak to her, he only smiled. But that
+was enough for her. It was more than enough to show her that there was
+one in the world who kept near her with tender love.
+
+She felt his presence as something so real, that she firmly believed he
+protected her and watched over her. And before this happy consciousness
+vanished all the despair which her adopted mother's hard words had
+called forth.
+
+Ingrid felt herself again given back to life. She had the right to live,
+as there was one who loved her.
+
+And this was why she entered the kitchen at Munkhyttan with a faint
+blush on her cheeks, and with radiant eyes, fragile, weak, and
+transparent, but sweet as a newly-opened rose.
+
+She still went about as if in a dream, and did not know much about where
+she was; but what surprised her so much that it nearly awakened her was
+to see a new Anna Stina standing by the fireplace. She stood there,
+little and broad, with a large, square face, exactly like the other. But
+why was she so fine, with a white cap with strings tied in a large bow
+under her chin, and with a black bombazine dress? Ingrid's head was so
+confused, that it was some time before it occurred to her that this must
+be Miss Stafva.
+
+She felt that Anna Stina looked uneasily at her, and she tried to pull
+herself together and say 'Good-day.' But the only thing her mind could
+grasp was the thought that he had come to her.
+
+Inside the kitchen there was a small room, with blue-checked covering on
+the furniture. They were taken into that room, and Miss Stafva gave them
+coffee and something to eat.
+
+Anna Stina at once began to talk about their errand. She spoke for a
+long time; said that she knew her sister stood so high in her
+ladyship's favour that she left it to her to engage the servants. Miss
+Stafva said nothing, but she gave a look at Ingrid as much as to say
+that it would hardly have been left with her if she had chosen servants
+like her.
+
+Anna Stina praised Ingrid, and said she was a good girl. She had
+hitherto served in a parsonage, but now that she was grown up she wanted
+really to learn something, and that was why Anna Stina had brought her
+to one who could teach her more than any other person she knew.
+
+Miss Stafva did not reply to this remark either. But her glance plainly
+showed that she was surprised that anyone who had had a situation in a
+parsonage had no clothes of her own, but was obliged to borrow old Anna
+Stina's.
+
+Then old Anna Stina began to tell how she lived quite alone in the
+forest, deserted by all her relatives. And this young girl had come
+running up the hill many an evening and many an early morning to see
+her. She had therefore thought and hoped that she could now help her to
+get a good situation.
+
+Miss Stafva said it was a pity that they had gone such a long way to
+find a place. If she were a clever girl, she could surely get a
+situation in some good family in their own neighbourhood.
+
+Anna Stina could now clearly see that Ingrid's prospects were not good,
+and therefore she began in a more solemn vein:
+
+'Here you have lived, Stafva, and had a good, comfortable home all your
+life, and I have had to fight my way in great poverty. But I have never
+asked you for anything before to-day. And now you will send me away
+like a beggar, to whom one gives a meal and nothing more.'
+
+Miss Stafva smiled a little; then she said:
+
+'Sister Anna Stina, you are not telling me the truth. I, too, come from
+Raglanda, and I should like to know at what peasant's house in that
+parish grow such eyes and such a face.'
+
+And she pointed at Ingrid, and continued:
+
+'I can quite understand, Anna Stina, that you would like to help one who
+looks like that. But I do not understand how you can think that your
+sister Stafva has not more sense than to believe the stories you choose
+to tell her.'
+
+Anna Stina was so frightened that she could not say a word, but Ingrid
+made up her mind to confide in Miss Stafva, and began at once to tell
+her whole story in her soft, beautiful voice.
+
+And Ingrid had hardly told of how she had been lying in the grave, and
+that a Dalar man had come and saved her, before old Miss Stafva grew red
+and quickly bent down to hide it. It was only a second, but there must
+have been some cause for it, for from that moment she looked so kind.
+
+She soon began to ask full particulars about it; more especially she
+wanted to know about the crazy man, whether Ingrid had not been afraid
+of him. Oh no, he did no harm. He was not mad, Ingrid said; he could
+both buy and sell. He was only frightened of some things.
+
+Ingrid thought the hardest of all was to tell what she had heard her
+adopted mother say. But she told everything, although there were tears
+in her voice.
+
+Then Miss Stafva went up to her, drew back the handkerchief from her
+head, and looked into her eyes. Then she patted her lightly on the
+cheek.
+
+'Never mind that, little miss,' she said. 'There is no need for me to
+know about that. Now sister and Miss Ingrid must excuse me,' she said
+soon after, 'but I must take up her ladyship's coffee. I shall soon be
+down again, and you can tell me more.'
+
+When she returned, she said she had told her ladyship about the young
+girl who had lain in the grave, and now her mistress wanted to see her.
+
+They were taken upstairs, and shown into her ladyship's boudoir.
+
+Anna Stina remained standing at the door of the fine room. But Ingrid
+was not shy; she went straight up to the old lady and put out her hand.
+She had often been shy with others who looked much less aristocratic;
+but here, in this house, she did not feel embarrassed. She only felt so
+wonderfully happy that she had come there.
+
+'So it is you, my child, who have been buried,' said her ladyship,
+nodding friendlily to her. 'Do you mind telling me your story, my child?
+I sit here quite alone, and never hear anything, you know.'
+
+Then Ingrid began again to tell her story. But she had not got very far
+before she was interrupted. Her ladyship did exactly the same as Miss
+Stafva had done. She rose, pushed the handkerchief back from Ingrid's
+forehead and looked into her eyes.
+
+'Yes,' her ladyship said to herself, 'that I can understand. I can
+understand that he must obey those eyes.'
+
+For the first time in her life Ingrid was praised for her courage. Her
+ladyship thought she had been very brave to place herself in the hands
+of a crazy fellow.
+
+She _was_ afraid, she said, but she was still more afraid of people
+seeing her in that state. And he did no harm; he was almost quite right,
+and then he was so good.
+
+Her ladyship wanted to know his name, but Ingrid did not know it. She
+had never heard of any other name but the Goat. Her ladyship asked
+several times how he managed when he came to do business. Had she not
+laughed at him, and did she not think that he looked terrible--the Goat?
+It sounded so strange when her ladyship said 'the Goat.' There was so
+much bitterness in her voice when she said it, and yet she said it over
+and over again.
+
+No; Ingrid did not think so, and she never laughed at unfortunate
+people. The old lady looked more gentle than her words sounded.
+
+'It appears you know how to manage mad people, my child,' she said.
+'That is a great gift. Most people are afraid of such poor creatures.'
+She listened to all Ingrid had to say, and sat meditating. 'As you have
+not any home, my child,' she said, 'will you not stay here with me? You
+see, I am an old woman living here by myself, and you can keep me
+company, and I shall take care that you have everything you want. What
+do you say to it, my child? There will come a time, I suppose,'
+continued her ladyship, 'when we shall have to inform your parents that
+you are still living; but for the present everything shall remain as it
+is, so that you can have time to rest both body and mind. And you shall
+call me "Aunt"; but what shall I call you?'
+
+'Ingrid--Ingrid Berg.'
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship thoughtfully. 'I would rather have called
+you something else. As soon as you entered the room with those star-like
+eyes, I thought you ought to be called Mignon.'
+
+When it dawned upon the young girl that here she would really find a
+home, she felt more sure than ever that she had been brought here in
+some supernatural manner, and she whispered her thanks to her invisible
+protector before she thanked her ladyship, Miss Stafva, and Anna Stina.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ingrid slept in a four-poster, on luxurious featherbeds three feet high,
+and had hem-stitched sheets, and silken quilts embroidered with Swedish
+crowns and French lilies. The bed was so broad that she could lie as she
+liked either way, and so high that she must mount two steps to get into
+it. At the top sat a Cupid holding the brightly-coloured hangings, and
+on the posts sat other Cupids, which held them up in festoons.
+
+In the same room where the bed stood was an old curved chest of drawers
+inlaid with olive-wood, and from it Ingrid might take as much
+sweetly-scented linen as she liked. There was also a wardrobe containing
+many gay and pretty silk and muslin gowns that only hung there and
+waited until it pleased her to put them on.
+
+When she awoke in the morning there stood by her bedside a tray with a
+silver coffee-set and old Indian china. And every morning she set her
+small white teeth in fine white bread and delicious almond-cakes; every
+day she was dressed in a fine muslin gown with a lace fichu. Her hair
+was dressed high at the back, but round her forehead there was a row of
+little light curls.
+
+On the wall between the windows hung a mirror, with a narrow glass in a
+broad frame, where she could see herself, and nod to her picture, and
+ask:
+
+'Is it you? Is it really you? How have you come here?'
+
+In the daytime, when Ingrid had left the chamber with the four-poster,
+she sat in the drawing-room and embroidered or painted on silk, and when
+she was tired of that, she played a little on the guitar and sang, or
+talked with the old lady, who taught her French, and amused herself by
+training her to be a fine lady.
+
+But she had come to an enchanted castle--she could not get away from
+that idea. She had had that feeling the first moment, and it was always
+coming back again. No one arrived at the house, no one left it. In this
+big house only two or three rooms were kept in order; in the others no
+one ever went. No one walked in the garden, no one looked after it.
+There was only one man-servant, and an old man who cut the firewood. And
+Miss Stafva had only two servants, who helped her in the kitchen and in
+the dairy.
+
+But there was always dainty food on the table, and her ladyship and
+Ingrid were always waited upon and dressed like fine ladies of rank.
+
+If nothing thrived on the old estate, there was, at any rate, fertile
+soil for dreams, and even if they did not nurse and cultivate flowers
+there, Ingrid was not the one to neglect her dream-roses. They grew up
+around her whenever she was alone. It seemed to her then as if red
+dream-roses formed a canopy over her.
+
+Round the island where the trees bent low over the water, and sent long
+branches in between the reeds, and where shrubs and lofty trees grew
+luxuriantly, was a pathway where Ingrid often walked. It looked so
+strange to see so many letters carved on the trees, to see the old seats
+and summer-houses; to see the old tumble-down pavilions, which were so
+worm-eaten that she dared not go into them; to think that real people
+had walked here, that here they had lived, and longed, and loved, and
+that this had not always been an enchanted castle.
+
+Down here she felt even more the witchery of the place. Here the face
+with the smile came to her. Here she could thank him, the student,
+because he had brought her to a home where she was so happy, where they
+loved her, and made her forget how hardly others had treated her. If it
+had not been he who had arranged all this for her, she could not
+possibly have been allowed to remain here; it was quite impossible.
+
+She knew that it must be he. She had never before had such wild fancies.
+She had always been thinking of him, but she had never felt that he was
+so near her that he took care of her. The only thing she longed for was
+that he himself should come, for of course he would come some day. It
+was impossible that he should not come. In these avenues he had left
+behind part of his soul.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Summer went, and autumn; Christmas was drawing near.
+
+'Miss Ingrid,' said the old housekeeper one day, in a rather mysterious
+manner, 'I think I ought to tell you that the young master who owns
+Munkhyttan is coming home for Christmas. In any case, he generally
+comes,' she added, with a sigh.
+
+'And her ladyship, who has never even mentioned that she has a son,'
+said Ingrid.
+
+But she was not really surprised. She might just as well have answered
+that she had known it all along.
+
+'No one has spoken to you about him, Miss Ingrid,' said the housekeeper,
+'for her ladyship has forbidden us to speak about him.'
+
+And then Miss Stafva would not say any more.
+
+Neither did Ingrid want to ask any more. Now she was afraid of hearing
+something definite. She had raised her expectations so high that she was
+herself afraid they would fail. The truth might be well worth hearing,
+but it might also be bitter, and destroy all her beautiful dreams. But
+from that day he was with her night and day. She had hardly time to
+speak to others. She must always be with him.
+
+One day she saw that they had cleared the snow away from the avenue. She
+grew almost frightened. Was he coming now?
+
+The next day her ladyship sat from early morning in the window looking
+down the avenue. Ingrid had gone further into the room. She was so
+restless that she could not remain at the window.
+
+'Do you know whom I am expecting to-day, Ingrid?'
+
+The young girl nodded; she dared not depend upon her voice to answer.
+
+'Has Miss Stafva told you that my son is peculiar?'
+
+Ingrid shook her head.
+
+'He is very peculiar--he--I cannot speak about it. I cannot--you must
+see for yourself.'
+
+It sounded heartrending. Ingrid grew very uneasy. What was there with
+this house that made everything so strange? Was it something terrible
+that she did not know about? Was her ladyship not on good terms with her
+son? What was it, what was it?
+
+The one moment in an ecstasy of joy, the next in a fever of uncertainty,
+she was obliged to call forth the long row of visions in order again to
+feel that it must be he who came. She could not at all say why she so
+firmly believed that he must be the son just of this house. He might,
+for the matter of that, be quite another person. Oh, how hard it was
+that she had never heard his name!
+
+It was a long day. They sat waiting in silence until evening came.
+
+The man came driving a cartload of Christmas logs, and the horse
+remained in the yard whilst the wood was unloaded.
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship in a commanding and hasty tone, 'run down
+to Anders and tell him that he must be quick and get the horse into the
+stable. Quick--quick!'
+
+Ingrid ran down the stairs and on to the veranda; but when she came out
+she forgot to call to the man. Just behind the cart she saw a tall man
+in a sheepskin coat, and with a large pack on his back. It was not
+necessary for her to see him standing curtsying and curtsying to
+recognise him. But, but----She put her hand to her head and drew a deep
+breath. How would all these things ever become clear to her? Was it for
+that fellow's sake her ladyship had sent her down? And the man, why did
+he pull the horse away in such great haste? And why did he take off his
+cap and salute? What had that crazy man to do with the people of this
+house?
+
+All at once the truth flashed upon Ingrid so crushingly and
+overwhelmingly that she could have screamed. It was not her beloved who
+had watched over her; it was this crazy man. She had been allowed to
+remain here because she had spoken kindly of him, because his mother
+wanted to carry on the good work which he had commenced.
+
+The Goat--that was the young master.
+
+But to her no one came. No one had brought her here; no one had expected
+her. It was all dreams, fancies, illusions! Oh, how hard it was! If she
+had only never expected him!
+
+But at night, when Ingrid lay in the big bed with the brightly-coloured
+hangings, she dreamt over and over again that she saw the student come
+home. 'It was not you who came,' she said. 'Yes, of course it was I,'
+he replied. And in her dreams she believed him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One day, the week after Christmas, Ingrid sat at the window in the
+boudoir embroidering. Her ladyship sat on the sofa knitting, as she
+always did now. There was silence in the room.
+
+Young Hede had been at home for a week. During all that time Ingrid had
+never seen him. In his home, too, he lived like a peasant, slept in the
+men-servants' quarters, and had his meals in the kitchen. He never went
+to see his mother.
+
+Ingrid knew that both her ladyship and Miss Stafva expected that she
+should do something for Hede, that at the least she would try and
+persuade him to remain at home. And it grieved her that it was
+impossible for her to do what they wished. She was in despair about
+herself and about the utter weakness that had come over her since her
+expectations had been so shattered.
+
+To-day Miss Stafva had just come in to say that Hede was getting his
+pack ready to start. He was not even staying as long as he generally did
+at Christmas, she said with a reproachful look at Ingrid.
+
+Ingrid understood all they had expected from her, but she could do
+nothing. She sewed and sewed without saying anything.
+
+Miss Stafva went away, and there was again silence in the room. Ingrid
+quite forgot that she was not alone; a feeling of drowsiness suddenly
+came over her, whilst all her sad thoughts wove themselves into a
+strange fancy.
+
+She thought she was walking up and down the whole of the large house.
+She went through a number of rooms and salons; she saw them before her
+with gray covers over the furniture. The paintings and the chandeliers
+were covered with gauze, and on the floors was a layer of thick dust,
+which whirled about when she went through the rooms. But at last she
+came to a room where she had never been before; it was quite a small
+chamber, where both walls and ceiling were black. But when she came to
+look more closely at them, she saw that the chamber was neither painted
+black, nor covered with black material, but it was so dark on account of
+the walls and the ceiling being completely covered with bats. The whole
+room was nothing but a huge nest for bats. In one of the windows a pane
+was broken, so one could understand how the bats had got in in such
+incredible numbers that they covered the whole room. They hung there in
+their undisturbed winter sleep; not one moved when she entered. But she
+was seized by such terror at this sight that she began to shiver and
+shake all over. It was dreadful to see the quantity of bats she so
+distinctly saw hanging there. They all had black wings wrapped around
+them like cloaks; they all hung from the walls by a single long claw in
+undisturbable sleep. She saw it all so distinctly that she wondered if
+Miss Stafva knew that the bats had taken possession of a whole room. In
+her thoughts she then went to Miss Stafva and asked her whether she had
+been into that room and seen all the bats.
+
+'Of course I have seen them,' said Miss Stafva. 'It is their own room. I
+suppose you know, Miss Ingrid, that there is not a single old country
+house in all Sweden where they have not to give up a room to the bats?'
+
+'I have never heard that before,' Ingrid said.
+
+'When you have lived as long in the world as I have, Miss Ingrid, you
+will find out that I am speaking the truth,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+'I cannot understand that people will put up with such a thing,' Ingrid
+said.
+
+'We are obliged to,' said Miss Stafva. 'Those bats are Mistress Sorrow's
+birds, and she has commanded us to receive them.'
+
+Ingrid saw that Miss Stafva did not wish to say anything more about that
+matter, and she began to sew again; but she could not help speculating
+over who that Mistress Sorrow could be who had so much power here that
+she could compel Miss Stafva to give up a whole room to the bats.
+
+Just as she was thinking about all this, she saw a black sledge, drawn
+by black horses, pull up outside the veranda. She saw Miss Stafva come
+out and make a low curtsy. An old lady in a long black velvet cloak,
+with many small capes on the shoulders, alighted from the sledge. She
+was bent, and had difficulty in walking. She could hardly lift her feet
+sufficiently to walk up the steps.
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship, looking up from her knitting, 'I think I
+heard Mistress Sorrow arrive. It must have been her jingle I heard. Have
+you noticed that she never has sledge-bells on her horses, but only
+quite a small jingle? But one can hear it--one can hear it! Go down
+into the hall, Ingrid, and bid Mistress Sorrow welcome.'
+
+When Ingrid came down into the front hall, Mistress Sorrow stood talking
+with Miss Stafva on the veranda. They did not notice her.
+
+Ingrid saw with surprise that the round-backed old lady had something
+hidden under all her capes which looked like crape; it was put well up
+and carefully hidden. Ingrid had to look very closely before she
+discovered that they were two large bat's wings which she tried to hide.
+The young girl grew still more curious and tried to see her face, but
+she stood and looked into the yard, so it was impossible. So much,
+however, Ingrid did see when she put out her hand to the
+housekeeper--that one of her fingers was much longer than the others,
+and at the end of it was a large, crooked claw.
+
+'I suppose everything is as usual here?' she said.
+
+'Yes, honoured Mistress Sorrow,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+'You have not planted any flowers, nor pruned any trees? You have not
+mended the bridge, nor weeded the avenue?'
+
+'No, honoured mistress.'
+
+'This is quite as it should be,' said the honoured mistress. 'I suppose
+you have not had the audacity to search for the vein of ore, or to cut
+down the forest which is encroaching on the fields?'
+
+'No, honoured mistress.'
+
+'Or to clean the wells?'
+
+'No, nor to clean the wells.'
+
+'This is a nice place,' said Mistress Sorrow; 'I always like being here.
+In a few years things will be in such a state that my birds can live all
+over the house. You are really very good to my birds, Miss Stafva.'
+
+At this praise the housekeeper made a deep curtsy.
+
+'How are things otherwise at the house?' said Mistress Sorrow. 'What
+sort of a Christmas have you had?'
+
+'We have kept Christmas as we always do,' said Miss Stafva. 'Her
+ladyship sits knitting in her room day after day, thinks of nothing but
+her son, and does not even know that it is a festival. Christmas Eve we
+allowed to pass like any other day--no presents and no candles.'
+
+'No Christmas tree, no Christmas fare?'
+
+'Nor any going to church; not so much as a candle in the windows on
+Christmas morning.'
+
+'Why should her ladyship honour God's Son when God will not heal her
+son?' said Mistress Sorrow.
+
+'No, why should she?'
+
+'He is at home at present, I suppose? Perhaps he is better now?'
+
+'No, he is no better. He is as much afraid of things as ever.'
+
+'Does he still behave like a peasant? Does he never go into the rooms?'
+
+'We cannot get him to go into the rooms; he is afraid of her ladyship,
+as the honoured mistress knows.'
+
+'He has his meals in the kitchen, and sleeps in the men-servants'
+room?'
+
+'Yes, he does.'
+
+'And you have no idea how to cure him?'
+
+'We know nothing, we understand nothing.'
+
+Mistress Sorrow was silent for a moment; when she spoke again there was
+a hard, sharp ring in her voice:
+
+'This is all right as far as it goes, Miss Stafva; but I am not quite
+satisfied with you, all the same.'
+
+The same moment she turned round and looked sharply at Ingrid.
+
+Ingrid shuddered. Mistress Sorrow had a little, wrinkled face, the under
+part of which was so doubled up that one could hardly see the lower jaw.
+She had teeth like a saw, and thick hair on the upper lip. Her eyebrows
+were one single tuft of hair, and her skin was quite brown.
+
+Ingrid thought Miss Stafva could not see what she saw: Mistress Sorrow
+was not a human being; she was only an animal.
+
+Mistress Sorrow opened her mouth and showed her glittering teeth when
+she looked at Ingrid.
+
+'When this girl came here,' she said to Miss Stafva, 'you thought she
+had been sent by God. You thought you could see from her eyes that she
+had been sent by Our Lord to save him. She knew how to manage mad
+people. Well, how has it worked?'
+
+'It has not worked at all. She has not done anything.'
+
+'No, I have seen to that,' said Mistress Sorrow. 'It was my doing that
+you did not tell her why she was allowed to stay here. Had she known
+that, she would not have indulged in such rosy dreams about seeing her
+beloved. If she had not had such expectations, she would not have had
+such a bitter disappointment. Had disappointment not paralyzed her, she
+could perhaps have done something for this mad fellow. But now she has
+not even been to see him. She hates him because he is not the one she
+expected him to be. That is my doing, Miss Stafva, my doing.'
+
+'Yes; the honoured mistress knows her business,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+Mistress Sorrow took her lace handkerchief and dried her red-rimmed
+eyes. It looked as if it were meant for an expression of joy.
+
+'You need not make yourself out to be any better than you are, Miss
+Stafva,' she said. 'I know you do not like my having taken that room for
+my birds. You do not like the thought of my having the whole house soon.
+I know that. You and your mistress had intended to cheat me. But it is
+all over now.'
+
+'Yes,' said Miss Stafva, 'the honoured mistress can be quite easy. It is
+all over. The young master is leaving to-day. He has packed up his pack,
+and then we always know he is about to leave. Everything her ladyship
+and I have been dreaming about the whole autumn is over. Nothing has
+been done. We thought she might at least have persuaded him to remain at
+home, but in spite of all we have done for her, she has not done
+anything for us.'
+
+'No, she has only been a poor help, I know that,' said Mistress Sorrow.
+'But, all the same, she must be sent away now. That was really what I
+wanted to see her ladyship about.'
+
+Mistress Sorrow began to drag herself up the steps on her tottering
+legs. At every step she raised her wings a little, as if they should
+help her. She would, no doubt, much rather have flown.
+
+Ingrid went behind her. She felt strangely attracted and fascinated. If
+Mistress Sorrow had been the most beautiful woman in the world, she
+could not have felt a greater inclination to follow her.
+
+When she went into the boudoir she saw Mistress Sorrow sitting on the
+sofa by the side of her ladyship, whispering confidentially with her, as
+if they were old friends.
+
+'You must be able to see that you cannot keep her with you,' said
+Mistress Sorrow impressively. 'You, who cannot bear to see a flower
+growing in your garden, can surely not stand having a young girl about
+in the house. It always brings a certain amount of brightness and life,
+and that would not suit you.'
+
+'No; that is just what I have been sitting and thinking about.'
+
+'Get her a situation as lady's companion somewhere or other, but don't
+keep her here.'
+
+She rose to say good-bye.
+
+'That was all I wanted to see you about,' she said. 'But how are you
+yourself?'
+
+'Knives and scissors cut my heart all day long,' said her ladyship. 'I
+only live in him as long as he is at home. It is worse than usual, much
+worse this time. I cannot bear it much longer.' . . .
+
+Ingrid started; it was her ladyship's bell that rang. She had been
+dreaming so vividly that she was quite surprised to see that her
+ladyship was alone, and that the black sledge was not waiting before the
+door.
+
+Her ladyship had rung for Miss Stafva, but she did not come. She asked
+Ingrid to go down to her room and call her.
+
+Ingrid went, but the little blue-checked room was empty. The young girl
+was going into the kitchen to ask for the housekeeper, but before she
+had time to open the door she heard Hede talking. She stopped outside;
+she could not persuade herself to go in and see him.
+
+She tried, however, to argue with herself. It was not his fault that he
+was not the one she had been expecting. She must try to do something for
+him; she must persuade him to remain at home. Before, she had not had
+such a feeling against him. He was not so very bad.
+
+She bent down and peeped through the keyhole. It was the same here as at
+other places. The servants tried to lead him on in order to amuse
+themselves by his strange talk. They asked him whom he was going to
+marry. Hede smiled; he liked to be asked about that kind of thing.
+
+'She is called Grave-Lily--don't you know that?' he said.
+
+The servant said she did not know that she had such a fine name.
+
+'But where does she live?'
+
+'Neither has she home nor has she farm,' Hede said. 'She lives in my
+pack.'
+
+The servant said that was a queer home, and asked about her parents.
+
+'Neither has she father nor has she mother,' Hede said. 'She is as fine
+as a flower; she has grown up in a garden.'
+
+He said all this with a certain amount of clearness, but when he wanted
+to describe how beautiful his sweetheart was he could not get on at all.
+He said a number of words, but they were strangely mixed together. One
+could not follow his thoughts, but evidently he himself derived much
+pleasure from what he said. He sat smiling and happy.
+
+Ingrid hurried away. She could not bear it any longer. She could not do
+anything for him. She was afraid of him. She disliked him. But she had
+not got further than the stairs before her conscience pricked her. Here
+she had received so much kindness, and she would not make any return.
+
+In order to master her dislike she tried in her own mind to think of
+Hede as a gentleman. She wondered how he had looked when he wore good
+clothes, and had his hair brushed back. She closed her eyes for a moment
+and thought. No, it was impossible, she could not imagine him as being
+any different from what he was. The same moment she saw the outlines of
+a beloved face by her side. It appeared at her left side wonderfully
+distinct. This time the face did not smile. The lips trembled as if in
+pain, and unspeakable suffering was written in sharp lines round the
+mouth.
+
+Ingrid stopped half-way up the stairs and looked at it. There it was,
+light and fleeting, as impossible to grasp and hold fast as a sun-spot
+reflected by the prism of a chandelier, but just as visible, just as
+real. She thought of her recent dream, but this was different--this was
+reality.
+
+When she had looked a little at the face, the lips began to move; they
+spoke, but she could not hear a sound. Then she tried to see what they
+said, tried to read the words from the lips, as deaf people do, and she
+succeeded.
+
+'Do not let me go,' the lips said; 'do not let me go.'
+
+And the anguish with which it was said! If a fellow-creature had been
+lying at her feet begging for life, it could not have affected her more.
+She was so overcome that she shook. It was more heart-rending than
+anything she had ever heard in her whole life. Never had she thought
+that anyone could beg in such fearful anguish. Again and again the lips
+begged, 'Do not let me go!' And for every time the anguish was greater.
+
+Ingrid did not understand it, but remained standing, filled with
+unspeakable pity. It seemed to her that more than life itself must be at
+stake for one who begged like this, that his very soul must be at stake.
+
+The lips did not move any more; they stood half open in dull despair.
+When they assumed this expression she uttered a cry and stumbled. She
+recognised the face of the crazy fellow as she had just seen it.
+
+'No, no, no!' she said. 'It cannot be so! It must not! it cannot! It is
+not possible that it is he!'
+
+The same moment the face vanished. She must have sat for a whole hour on
+the cold staircase, crying in helpless despair. But at last hope sprang
+up in her, strong and fair. She again took courage to raise her head.
+All that had happened seemed to show that she should save him. It was
+for that she had come here. She should have the great, great happiness
+of saving him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the little boudoir her ladyship was talking to Miss Stafva. It
+sounded so pitiful to hear her asking the housekeeper to persuade her
+son to remain a few days longer. Miss Stafva tried to appear hard and
+severe.
+
+'Of course, I can ask him,' she said; 'but your ladyship knows that no
+one can make him stay longer than he wants.'
+
+'We have money enough, you know. There is not the slightest necessity
+for him to go. Can you not tell him that?' said her ladyship.
+
+At the same moment Ingrid came in. The door opened noiselessly. She
+glided through the room with light, airy steps; her eyes were radiant,
+as if she beheld something beautiful afar off.
+
+When her ladyship saw her she frowned a little. She also felt an
+inclination to be cruel, to give pain.
+
+'Ingrid,' she said, 'come here; I must speak with you about your
+future.'
+
+The young girl had fetched her guitar and was about to leave the room.
+She turned round to her ladyship.
+
+'My future?' she said, putting her hand to her forehead. 'My future is
+already decided, you know,' she continued, with the smile of a martyr;
+and without saying any more she left the room.
+
+Her ladyship and Stafva looked in surprise at each other. They began to
+discuss where they should send the young girl. But when Miss Stafva came
+down to her room she found Ingrid sitting there, singing some little
+songs and playing on the guitar, and Hede sat opposite her, listening,
+his face all sunshine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ever since Ingrid had recognised the student in the poor crazy fellow,
+she had no other thought but that of trying to cure him; but this was a
+difficult task, and she had no idea whatever as to how she should set
+about it. To begin with, she only thought of how she could persuade him
+to remain at Munkhyttan; and this was easy enough. Only for the sake of
+hearing her play the violin or the guitar a little every day he would
+now sit patiently from morning till evening in Miss Stafva's room
+waiting for her.
+
+She thought it would be a great thing if she could get him to go into
+the other rooms, but that she could not. She tried keeping in her room,
+and said she would not play any more for him if he did not come to her.
+But after she had remained there two days, he began to pack up his pack
+to go away, and then she was obliged to give in.
+
+He showed great preference for her, and distinctly showed that he liked
+her better than others; but she did not make him less frightened. She
+begged him to leave off his sheepskin coat, and wear an ordinary coat.
+He consented at once, but the next day he had it on again. Then she hid
+it from him; but he then appeared in the man-servant's skin coat. So
+then they would rather let him keep his own. He was still as frightened
+as ever, and took great care no one came too near him. Even Ingrid was
+not allowed to sit quite close to him.
+
+One day she said to him that now he must promise her something: he must
+give over curtsying to the cat. She would not ask him to do anything so
+difficult as give up curtsying to horses and dogs, but surely he could
+not be afraid of a little cat.
+
+Yes, he said; the cat was a goat.
+
+'It can't be a goat,' she said; 'it has no horns, you know.'
+
+He was pleased to hear that. It seemed as if at last he had found
+something by which he could distinguish a goat from other animals.
+
+The next day he met Miss Stafva's cat.
+
+'That goat has no horns,' he said; and laughed quite proudly.
+
+He went past it, and sat down on the sofa to listen to Ingrid playing.
+But after he had sat a little while he grew restless, and he rose, went
+up to the cat, and curtsied.
+
+Ingrid was in despair. She took him by his arm and shook him. He ran
+straight out of the room, and did not appear until the next day.
+
+'Child, child,' said her ladyship, 'you do exactly as I did; you try the
+same as I did. It will end by your frightening him so that he dare not
+see you any more. It is better to leave him in peace. We are satisfied
+with things as they are if he will only remain at home.'
+
+There was nothing else for Ingrid to do but wring her hands in sorrow
+that such a fine, lovable fellow should be concealed in this crazy man.
+
+Ingrid thought again and again, had she really only come here to play
+her grandfather's tunes to him? Should they go on like that all through
+life? Would it never be otherwise?
+
+She also told him many stories, and in the midst of a story his face
+would lighten up, and he would say something wonderfully subtle and
+beautiful. A sane person would never have thought of anything like it.
+And no more was needed to make her courage rise, and then she began
+again with these endless experiments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was late one afternoon, and the moon was just about to rise. White
+snow lay on the ground, and bright gray ice covered the lake. The trees
+were blackish-brown, and the sky was a flaming red after the sunset.
+
+Ingrid was on her way to the lake to skate. She went along a narrow path
+where the snow was quite trodden down. Gunnar Hede went behind her.
+There was something cowed in his bearing that made one think of a dog
+following its master.
+
+Ingrid looked tired; there was no brightness in her eyes, and her
+complexion was gray.
+
+As she walked along she wondered whether the day, which was now so
+nearly over, was content with itself--if it were from joy it had
+lighted the great flaming red sunset far away in the west.
+
+She knew she could light no bonfire over this day, nor over any other
+day. In the whole month that had passed since she recognised Gunnar Hede
+she had gained nothing.
+
+And to-day a great fear had come upon her. It seemed to her as if she
+might perhaps lose her love over all this. She was nearly forgetting the
+student, only for thinking of the poor fellow. All that was bright and
+beautiful and youthful vanished from her love. Nothing was left but
+dull, heavy earnest.
+
+She was quite in despair as she walked towards the lake. She felt she
+did not know what ought to be done--felt that she must give it all up.
+Oh, God, to have him walking behind her apparently strong and hale, and
+yet so helplessly, incurably sick!
+
+They had reached the lake, and she was putting on her skates. She also
+wanted him to skate, and helped him to put on his skates; but he fell as
+soon as he got on to the ice. He scrambled to the bank and sat down on a
+stone, and she skated away from him.
+
+Just opposite the stone upon which Gunnar Hede was sitting was an islet
+overgrown with birches and poplars, and behind it the radiant evening
+sky, which was still flaming red. And the fine, light, leafless tops of
+the trees stood against the glorious sky with such beauty that it was
+impossible not to notice it.
+
+Is it not a fact that one always recognises a place by a single feature?
+One does not exactly know how even the most familiar spot looks from
+all sides. And Munkhyttan one always knew by the little islet. If one
+had not seen the place for many years, one would know it again by this
+islet, where the dark tree-tops were lifted towards the sunset.
+
+Hede sat quite still, and looked at the islet and at the branches of the
+trees and at the gray ice which surrounded it.
+
+This was the view he knew best of all; there was nothing on the whole
+estate he knew so well, for it was always this islet that attracted the
+eye. And soon he was sitting looking at the islet without thinking about
+it, just as one does with things one knows so well. He sat for a long
+time gazing. Nothing disturbed him, not a human being, not a gust of
+wind, no strange object. He could not see Ingrid; she had skated far
+away on the ice.
+
+A rest and peace fell upon Gunnar Hede such as one only feels in home
+surroundings. Security and peace came to him from the little islet; it
+quieted the everlasting unrest that tormented him.
+
+Hede always imagined he was amongst enemies, and always thought of
+defending himself. For many years he had not felt that peace which made
+it possible for him to forget himself. But now it came upon him.
+
+Whilst Gunnar Hede was sitting thus and not thinking of anything, he
+happened mechanically to make a movement as one may do when one finds
+one's self in accustomed circumstances. As he sat there with the shining
+ice before him and with skates on his feet, he got up and skated on to
+the lake, and he thought as little of what he was doing as one thinks of
+how one is holding fork or spoon when eating.
+
+He glided over the ice; it was glorious skating. He was a long way off
+the shore before he realized what he was doing.
+
+'Splendid ice!' he thought. 'I wonder why I did not come down earlier in
+the day. It is a good thing I was more here yesterday,' he said. 'I will
+really not waste a single day during the rest of my vacation.'
+
+No doubt it was because Gunnar Hede happened to do something he was in
+the habit of doing before he was ill that his old self awakened within
+him.
+
+Thoughts and associations connected with his former life began to force
+themselves upon his consciousness, and at the same time all the thoughts
+connected with his illness sank into oblivion.
+
+It had been his habit when skating to take a wide turn on the lake in
+order to see beyond a certain point. He did so now without thinking, but
+when he had turned the point he knew he had skated there to see if there
+was a light in his mother's window.
+
+'She thinks it is time I was coming home, but she must wait a little;
+the ice is too good.'
+
+But it was mostly vague sensations of pleasure over the exercise and the
+beautiful evening that were awakened within him. A moonlight evening
+like this was just the time for skating; he was so fond of this peaceful
+transition from day to night. It was still light, but the stillness of
+night was already there, the best both of day and of night.
+
+There was another skater on the ice; it was a young girl. He was not
+sure if he knew her, but he skated towards her to find out. No; it was
+no one he knew, but he could not help making a remark when he passed her
+about the splendid ice.
+
+The stranger was probably a young girl from the town. She was evidently
+not accustomed to be addressed in this unceremonious manner; she looked
+quite frightened when he spoke to her. He certainly was queerly dressed;
+he was dressed quite like a peasant.
+
+Well, he did not want to frighten her away. He turned off and skated
+further up the lake; the ice was big enough for them both.
+
+But Ingrid had nearly screamed with astonishment. He had come towards
+her skating elegantly, with his arms crossed, the brim of his hat turned
+up, and his hair thrown back, so that it did not fall over his ears.
+
+He had spoken with the voice of a gentleman, almost without the
+slightest Dalar accent. She did not stop to think about it. She skated
+quickly towards the shore. She came breathless into the kitchen. She did
+not know how to say it shortly and quickly enough.
+
+'Miss Stafva, the young master has come home!'
+
+The kitchen was empty; neither the housekeeper nor the servants were
+there. Nor was there anybody in the housekeeper's room. Ingrid rushed
+through the whole house, went into rooms where no one ever went. The
+whole time she cried out, 'Miss Stafva, Miss Stafva! the young master
+has come home!'
+
+She was quite beside herself, and went on calling out, even when she
+stood on the landing upstairs, surrounded by the servants, Miss Stafva,
+and her ladyship herself. She said it over and over again. She was too
+much excited to stop. They all understood what she meant. They stood
+there quite as much overcome as she was.
+
+Ingrid turned restlessly from the one to the other. She ought to give
+explanations and orders, but about what? That she could so lose her
+presence of mind! She looked wildly questioning at her ladyship.
+
+'What was it I wanted?'
+
+The old lady gave some orders in a low, trembling voice. She almost
+whispered.
+
+'Light the candles and make a fire in the young master's room. Lay out
+the young master's clothes.'
+
+It was neither the place nor the time for Miss Stafva to be important.
+But there was all the same a certain superior ring in her voice as she
+answered:
+
+'There is always a fire in the young master's room. The young master's
+clothes are always in readiness for him.'
+
+'Ingrid had better go up to her room,' said her ladyship.
+
+The young girl did just the opposite. She went into the drawing-room,
+placed herself at the window, sobbed and shook, but did not herself
+know that she was not still. She impatiently dried the tears from her
+eyes, so that she could see over the snowfield in front of the house. If
+only she did not cry, there was nothing she could miss seeing in the
+clear moonlight. At last he came.
+
+'There he is! there he is!' she cried to her ladyship. 'He walks
+quickly! he runs! Do come and see!'
+
+Her ladyship sat quite still before the fire. She did not move. She
+strained her ears to hear, just as much as the other strained her eyes
+to see. She asked Ingrid to be quiet, so that she could hear how he
+walked. Ah, yes, she would be quiet. Her ladyship should hear how he
+walked. She grasped the window-sill, as if that could help her.
+
+'You _shall_ be quiet,' she whispered, 'so that her ladyship can hear
+how he walks.'
+
+Her ladyship sat bending forward, listening with all her soul. Did she
+already hear his steps in the court-yard? She probably thought he would
+go towards the kitchen. Did she hear that it was the front steps that
+creaked? Did she hear that it was the door to the front hall that
+opened? Did she hear how quickly he came up the stairs, two or three
+steps at a time? Had his mother heard that? It was not the dragging step
+of a peasant, as it had been when he left the house.
+
+It was almost more than they could bear, to hear him coming towards the
+door of the drawing-room. Had he come in then, they would no doubt both
+have screamed. But he turned down the corridor to his own rooms.
+
+Her ladyship fell back in her chair, and her eyes closed. Ingrid thought
+her ladyship would have liked to die at that moment. Without opening her
+eyes, she put out her hand. Ingrid went softly up and took it; the old
+lady drew her towards her.
+
+'Mignon, Mignon,' she said; 'that was the right name after all. But,'
+she continued, 'we must not cry. We must not speak about it. Take a
+stool and come and sit down by the fire. We must be calm, my little
+friend. Let us speak about something else. We must be perfectly calm
+when he comes in.'
+
+Half an hour afterwards Hede came in; the tea was on the table, and the
+chandelier was lighted. He had dressed; every trace of the peasant had
+disappeared. Ingrid and her ladyship pressed each other's hands.
+
+They had been sitting trying to imagine how he would look when he came
+in. It was impossible to say what he might say or do, said her ladyship.
+One never had known what he might do. But in any case they would both be
+quite calm. A feeling of great happiness had come over her, and that had
+quieted her. She was resting, free from all sorrow, in the arms of
+angels carrying her upwards, upwards.
+
+But when Hede came in, there was no sign of confusion about him.
+
+'I have only come to tell you,' he said, 'that I have got such a
+headache, that I shall have to go to bed at once. I felt it already when
+I was on the ice.'
+
+Her ladyship made no reply. Everything was so simple; she had never
+thought it would be like that. It took her a few moments to realize that
+he did not know anything about his illness, that he was living somewhere
+in the past.
+
+'But perhaps I can first drink a cup of tea,' he said, looking a little
+surprised at their silence.
+
+Her ladyship went to the tea-tray. He looked at her.
+
+'Have you been crying, mother? You are so quiet.'
+
+'We have been sitting talking about a sad story, I and my young friend
+here,' said her ladyship, pointing to Ingrid.
+
+'I beg your pardon,' he said. 'I did not see you had visitors.'
+
+The young girl came forward towards the light, beautiful as one would be
+who knew that the gates of heaven the next moment would open before her.
+
+He bowed a little stiffly. He evidently did not know who she was. Her
+ladyship introduced them to each other. He looked curiously at Ingrid.
+
+'I think I saw Miss Berg on the ice,' he said.
+
+He knew nothing about her--had never spoken to her before.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A short, happy time followed. Gunnar Hede was certainly not quite
+himself; but those around him were happy in the belief that he soon
+would be. His memory was partly gone. He knew nothing about certain
+periods of his life; he could not play the violin; he had almost
+forgotten all he knew; and his power of thinking was weak; and he
+preferred neither to read nor to write. But still he was very much
+better. He was not frightened; he was fond of his mother; he had again
+assumed the manners and habits of a gentleman. One can easily understand
+that her ladyship and all her household were delighted.
+
+Hede was in the best of spirits--bright and joyous all day long. He
+never speculated over anything, put to one side everything he could not
+understand, never spoke about anything that necessitated mental
+exertion, but talked merrily and cheerfully. He was most happy when he
+was engaged in bodily exercise. He took Ingrid out with him sledging and
+skating. He did not talk much to her, but she was happy to be with him.
+He was kind to Ingrid, as he was to everyone else, but not in the least
+in love with her. He often wondered about his _fiancée_--wondered why
+she never wrote. But after a short time that trouble, too, left him. He
+always put away from him anything that worried him.
+
+Ingrid thought that he would never get really well by doing like this.
+He must some time be made to think--to face his own thoughts, which he
+was afraid of doing now. But she dared not compel him to do this, and
+there was no one else who dared. If he began to care for her a little,
+perhaps she might dare. She thought all they now wanted, every one of
+them, was a little happiness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was just at that time that a little child died at the Parsonage at
+Raglanda where Ingrid had been brought up; and the grave-digger was
+about to dig the grave.
+
+The man dug the grave quite close to the spot where the previous summer
+he had dug the grave for Ingrid. And when he had got a few feet into the
+ground he happened to lay bare a corner of her coffin. The grave-digger
+could not help smiling a little to himself. Of course he had heard that
+the dead girl lying in this coffin had appeared. She was supposed to
+have unscrewed her coffin-lid on the very day of her funeral, risen from
+the grave, and appeared at the Parsonage. The Pastor's wife was not so
+much liked but that people in the parish rather enjoyed telling this
+story about her. The grave-digger thought that people should only know
+how securely the dead were lying in the ground, and how fast the
+coffin-lids. . . .
+
+He interrupted himself in the midst of this thought. On the corner of
+the coffin which was exposed the lid was not quite straight, and one of
+the screws was not quite fast. He did not say anything, he did not think
+anything, but stopped digging and whistled the whole reveille of the
+Vermland Regiment--for he was an old soldier. Then he thought he had
+better examine the thing properly. It would never do for a grave-digger
+to have thoughts about the dead which might come and trouble him during
+the dark autumn nights. He hastily removed some more earth. Then he
+began to hammer on the coffin with his shovel. The coffin answered quite
+distinctly that it was empty--empty.
+
+Half an hour after the grave-digger was at the Parsonage. There was no
+end to the questionings and surmises. So much they were all agreed
+upon--that the young girl had been in the Dalar man's pack. But what had
+become of her afterwards?
+
+Anna Stina stood at the oven in the Parsonage and looked after the
+baking, for of course there was baking to be done for the new funeral.
+She stood for a long time listening to all this talk without saying a
+word. All she took care of was that the cakes were not burnt. She put
+sheet-tins in and took sheet-tins out, and it was dangerous to approach
+her as she stood there with the long baker's shovel. But suddenly she
+took off her kitchen-apron, wiped the worst of the sweat and the soot
+from her face, and was talking with the Pastor in his study almost
+before she knew how it had come about.
+
+After this it was not so very wonderful that one day in March the
+Pastor's little red-painted sledge, ornamented with green tulips, and
+drawn by the Pastor's little red horse, pulled up at Munkhyttan. Ingrid
+was of course obliged to go back with the Pastor home to her mother. The
+Pastor had come to fetch her. He did not say much about their being glad
+that she was alive, but one could see how happy he was. He had never
+been able to forgive himself that they had not been more kind to their
+adopted daughter. And now he was radiant at the thought that he was
+allowed to make a new beginning and make everything good for her this
+time.
+
+They did not speak a word about the reason why she had run away. It was
+of no use bringing that up again so long after. But Ingrid understood
+that the Pastor's wife had had a hard time, and had suffered many pangs
+of conscience, and that they wanted to have her back again in order to
+be good to her. She felt that she was almost obliged to go back to the
+Parsonage to show that she had no ill-feeling against her adopted
+parents.
+
+They all thought it was the most natural thing that she should go to the
+Parsonage for a week or two. And why should she not? She could not make
+the excuse that they needed her at Munkhyttan. She could surely be away
+for some weeks without it doing Gunnar Hede any harm. She felt it was
+hard, but it was best she should go away, as they all thought it was the
+right thing.
+
+Perhaps she had hoped they would ask her not to go away. She took her
+seat in the sledge with the feeling that her ladyship or Miss Stafva
+would surely come and lift her out of it, and carry her into the house
+again. It was impossible to realize that she was actually driving down
+the avenue, that she was turning into the forest, and that Munkhyttan
+was disappearing behind her.
+
+But supposing it was from pure goodness that they let her go? They
+thought, perhaps, that youth, with its craving for pleasure, wanted to
+get away from the loneliness of Munkhyttan. They thought, perhaps, she
+was tired of being the keeper of a crazy man. She raised her hand, and
+was on the point of seizing the reins and turning the horse. Now that
+she was several miles from the house it struck her that that was why
+they had let her go. She would have liked so much to have gone back and
+asked them.
+
+In her utter loneliness she felt as if she were groping about in the
+wild forest. There was not a single human being who answered her or
+advised her. She received just as much answer from fir and pine, and
+squirrel and owl, as she did from any human being.
+
+It was really a matter of utter indifference to her how they treated her
+at the Parsonage. They were very kind to her, as far as she knew, but it
+really did not matter. If she had come to a palace full of everything
+one could most desire, that would likewise have been the same to her. No
+bed is soft enough to give rest unto one whose heart is full of longing.
+
+In the beginning she had asked them every day, as modestly as she could,
+if they would not let her go home, now that she had had the great
+happiness of seeing her mother and her brothers and sisters. But the
+roads were really too bad. She must stay with them until the frost had
+disappeared. It was not a matter of life and death, they supposed, to go
+back to that place.
+
+Ingrid could not understand why it annoyed people when she said she
+wanted to go back to Munkhyttan. But this seemed to be the case with her
+father and her mother and everybody else in the parish. One had no
+right, it appeared, to long for any other place in the world, when one
+was at Raglanda.
+
+She soon saw it was best not to speak about her going away. There were
+so many difficulties in the way whenever she spoke about it. It was not
+enough that the roads were still in the same bad condition; they
+surrounded her with walls and ramparts and moats. She would knit and
+weave, and plant out in the forcing-frames. And surely she would not go
+away until after the large birthday party at the Dean's? And she could
+not think of leaving till after Karin Landberg's wedding.
+
+There was nothing for her to do but to lift her hands in supplication to
+the spring, and beg it to make haste with its work, beg for sunshine and
+warmth, beg the gentle sun to do its very best for the great border
+forest, send small piercing rays between the fir-trees, and melt the
+snow beneath them. Dear, dear sun! It did not matter if the snow were
+not melted in the valley, if only the snow would vanish from the
+mountains, if only the forest paths became passable, if only the Säter
+girls were able to go to their huts, if only the bogs became dry, if
+only it became possible to go by the forest road, which was half the
+distance of the highroad.
+
+Ingrid knew one who would not wait for carriage, or ask for money to
+drive, if only the road through the forest became passable. She knew one
+who would leave the Parsonage some moonlight night, and who would do it
+without asking a single person's permission.
+
+She thought she had waited for the spring before. That everybody does.
+But now Ingrid knew that she had never before longed for it. Oh no, no!
+She had never before known what it was to long. Before she had waited
+for green leaves and anemones, and the song of the thrush and the
+cuckoo. But that was childishness--nothing more. They did not long for
+the spring who only thought of what was beautiful. One should take the
+first bit of earth that peeped through the snow, and kiss it. One should
+pluck the first coarse leaf of the nettle simply to burn into one that
+now the spring had come.
+
+Everybody was very good to her. But although they did not say anything,
+they seemed to think that she was always thinking of leaving them.
+
+'I can't understand why you want to go back to that place and look after
+that crazy fellow,' said Karin Landberg one day. It seemed as if she
+could read Ingrid's thoughts.
+
+'Oh, she has given up thinking of that now,' said the Pastor's wife,
+before the young girl had time to answer.
+
+When Karin was gone the Pastor's wife said:
+
+'People wonder that you want to leave us.'
+
+Ingrid was silent.
+
+'They say that when Hede began to improve perhaps you fell in love with
+him.'
+
+'Oh no! Not after he had begun to improve,' Ingrid said, feeling almost
+inclined to laugh.
+
+'In any case, he is not the sort of person one could marry,' said her
+adopted mother. 'Father and I have been speaking about it, and we think
+it is best that you should remain with us.'
+
+'It is very good of you that you want to keep me,' Ingrid said. And she
+was touched that now they wanted to be so kind to her.
+
+They did not believe her, however obedient she was. She could not
+understand what little bird it was that told them about her longing.
+Now her adopted mother had told her that she must not go back to
+Munkhyttan. But even then she could not leave the matter alone.
+
+'If they really wanted you,' she said, 'they would write for you.'
+
+Ingrid again felt inclined to laugh. That would be the strangest thing
+of all, should there be a letter from the enchanted castle. She would
+like to know if her adopted mother thought that the King of the Mountain
+wrote for the maiden who had been swallowed by the mountain to come back
+when she had gone to see her mother?
+
+But if her adopted mother had known how many messages she had received
+she would probably have been even more uneasy. There came messages to
+her in her dreams by nights, and there came messages to her in her
+visions by day. He let Ingrid know that he was in need of her. He was so
+ill--so ill!
+
+She knew that he was nearly going out of his mind again, and that she
+must go to him. If anyone had told her this, she would simply have
+answered that she knew it.
+
+The large star-like eyes looked further and further away. Those who saw
+that look would never believe that she meant to stay quietly and
+patiently at home.
+
+It is not very difficult either to see whether a person is content or
+full of longing. One only needs to see a little gleam of happiness in
+the eyes when he or she comes in from work and sits down by the fire.
+But in Ingrid's eyes there was no gleam of happiness, except when she
+saw the mountain stream come down through the forest, broad and strong.
+It was that that should prepare the way for her.
+
+It happened one day that Ingrid was sitting alone with Karin Landberg,
+and she began to tell her about her life at Munkhyttan. Karin was quite
+shocked. How could Ingrid stand such a life?
+
+Karin Landberg was to be married very soon. And she was now at that
+stage when she could speak of nothing but her lover. She knew nothing
+but what he had taught her, and she could do nothing without first
+consulting him.
+
+It occurred to her that Oluf had said something about Gunnar Hede which
+would help to frighten Ingrid if she had begun to like that crazy
+fellow. And then she began to tell her how mad he had really been. For
+Oluf had told her that when he was at the fair last autumn some
+gentlemen had said that they did not think the Goat was mad at all. He
+only pretended to be in order to attract customers. But Oluf had
+maintained that he was mad, and in order to prove it went to the market
+and bought a wretched little goat. And then it was plain enough to see
+that he was mad. Oluf had only put the goat in front of him on the
+counter where his knives and things lay, and he had run away and left
+both his pack and his wares, and they had all laughed so awfully when
+they saw how frightened he was. And it was impossible that Ingrid could
+care for anyone who had been so crazy.
+
+It was, no doubt, unwise of Karin Landberg that she did not look at
+Ingrid whilst she told this story. If she had seen how she frowned, she
+would perhaps have taken warning.
+
+'And you will marry anyone who could do such a thing!' Ingrid said. 'I
+think it would be better to marry the Goat himself.'
+
+This Ingrid said in downright earnest, and it seemed so strange to Karin
+that she, who was always so gentle, should have said anything so unkind,
+that it quite worried her. For several days she was quite unhappy,
+because she feared Oluf was not what she would like him to be. It simply
+embittered Karin's life until she made up her mind to tell Oluf
+everything; but he was so nice and good, that he quite reassured her.
+
+It is not an easy task to wait for the spring in Vermland. One can have
+sun and warmth in the evening, and the next morning find the ground
+white with snow. Gooseberry-bushes and lawns may be green, but the trees
+of the birch-forest are bare, and seem as if they will never spring out.
+
+At Whitsuntide there was spring in the air, but Ingrid's prayers had
+been of no avail. Not a single Säter girl had taken up her abode in the
+forest, not a fen was dry; it was impossible to go through the forest.
+
+On Whit-Sunday Ingrid and her adopted mother went to church. As it was
+such a great festival, they had driven to church. In olden days Ingrid
+had very much enjoyed driving up to the church in full gallop, whilst
+people along the roadside politely took off their hats, and those who
+were standing on the road rushed to the side as if they were quite
+frightened. But at the present moment she could not enjoy anything.
+'Longing takes the fragrance from the rose, and the light from the full
+moon,' says an old proverb.
+
+But Ingrid was glad for what she heard in church. It did her good to
+hear how the disciples were comforted in their longing. She was glad
+that Jesus thought of comforting those who longed so greatly for Him.
+
+Whilst Ingrid and the rest of the congregation were in church a tall
+Dalar man came walking down the road. He wore a sheepskin coat, and had
+a large pack on his back, like one who cannot tell winter from summer,
+or Sunday from any other day. He did not go into the church, but stole
+timidly past the horses that were tied to the railings, and went into
+the churchyard.
+
+He sat down on a grave and thought of all the dead who were still
+sleeping, and of one of the dead who had awakened to life again. He was
+still sitting there when the people left the church. Karin Landberg's
+Oluf was one of the first to leave the church, and when he happened to
+look across the churchyard he discovered the Dalar man. It is hard to
+say whether it was curiosity or some other motive that prompted him, but
+he went up to talk to him. He wanted to see if it were possible that he
+who was supposed to have been cured had become mad again.
+
+And it was possible. He told him at once that he sat there waiting for
+her who was called Grave-Lily. She was to come and play to him. She
+played so beautifully that the sun and the stars danced.
+
+Then Karin Landberg's Oluf told him that she for whom he was waiting was
+standing outside the church. If he stood up, he could see her. She
+would, no doubt, be glad to see him.
+
+The Pastor's wife and Ingrid were just getting into the carriage, when a
+tall Dalar man came running up to them. He came at a great pace in spite
+of all the horses he must curtsy to, and he beckoned eagerly to the
+young girl.
+
+As soon as Ingrid saw him she stood quite still. She could not have told
+whether she was most glad to see him again or most grieved that he had
+again gone out of his mind; she only forgot everything else in the
+world.
+
+Her eyes began to sparkle. In that moment she saw nothing of the poor
+wretched man. She only felt that she was once again near the beautiful
+soul of the man for whom she had longed so terribly.
+
+There were a great many people about, and they could not help looking at
+her. They could not take their eyes from her face. She did not move; she
+stood waiting for him. But those who saw how radiant she was with
+happiness must have thought that she was waiting for some great and
+noble man, instead of a poor, half-witted fellow.
+
+They said afterwards that it almost seemed as if there were some
+affinity between his soul and hers--some secret affinity which lay so
+deeply hidden beneath their consciousness that no human being could
+understand it.
+
+But when Hede was only a step or two from Ingrid her adopted mother took
+her resolutely round the waist and lifted her into the carriage. She
+would not have a scene between the two just outside the church, with so
+many people present. And as soon as they were in the carriage the man
+sent his horses off at full gallop.
+
+A wild, terrified cry was heard as they drove away. The Pastor's wife
+thanked God that she had got the young girl into the carriage.
+
+It was still early in the afternoon when a peasant came to the Parsonage
+to speak with the Pastor. He came to speak about the crazy Dalar man. He
+had now gone quite raving mad, and they had been obliged to bind him.
+What did the Pastor advise them to do? What should they do with him?
+
+The Pastor could give them no other advice but to take him home. He told
+the peasant who he was, and where he lived.
+
+Later on in the evening he told Ingrid everything. It was best to tell
+her the truth, and trust to her own common-sense.
+
+But when night came it became clear to her that she had not time to wait
+for the spring. The poor girl set out for Munkhyttan by the highroad.
+She would no doubt be able to get there by that road, although she knew
+that it was twice as long as the way through the forest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was Whit-Monday, late in the afternoon. Ingrid walked along the
+highroad. There was a wide expanse of country, with low mountains and
+small patches of birch forest between the fields. The mountain-ash and
+the bird-cherry were in bloom; the light, sticky leaves of the aspen
+were just out. The ditches were full of clear, rippling water which made
+the stones at the bottom glisten and sparkle.
+
+Ingrid walked sorrowfully along, thinking of him whose mind had again
+given way, wondering whether she could do anything for him, whether it
+was of any use that she had left her home in this manner.
+
+She was tired and hungry; her shoes had begun to go to pieces. Perhaps
+it would be better for her to turn back. She could never get to
+Munkhyttan.
+
+The further she walked, the more sorrowful she became. She could not
+help thinking that it could be of no use her coming now that he had gone
+quite out of his mind. There was no doubt it was too late now; it was
+quite hopeless to do anything for him.
+
+But as soon as she thought of turning back she saw Gunnar Hede's face
+close to her cheek, as she had so often seen it before. It gave her new
+courage; she felt as if he were calling for her. She again felt hopeful
+and confident of being able to help him.
+
+Just as Ingrid raised her head, looking a little less downcast, a queer
+little procession came towards her.
+
+There was a little horse, drawing a little cart; a fat woman sat in the
+cart, and a tall, thin man, with long, thin moustaches walked by the
+side of it.
+
+In the country, where no one understood anything about art, Mr. and
+Mrs. Blomgren always went in for looking like ordinary people. The
+little cart in which they travelled about was well covered over, and no
+one could suspect that it only contained fireworks and conjuring
+apparatus and marionettes.
+
+No one could suspect that the fat woman who sat on the top of the load,
+looking like a well-to-do shopkeeper's wife, was formerly Miss Viola,
+who once sprang through the air, or that the man who walked by her side,
+and looked like a pensioned soldier, was the same Mr. Blomgren who
+occasionally, to break the monotony of the journey, took it into his
+head to turn a somersault over the horse, and play the ventriloquist
+with thrushes and siskins that sang in the trees by the roadside, so
+that he made them quite mad.
+
+The horse was very small, and had formerly drawn a roundabout, and
+therefore it would never go unless it heard music. On that account Mrs.
+Blomgren generally sat playing the Jews'-harp, but as soon as they met
+anyone, she put it in her pocket, so that no one should discover they
+were artists, for whom country people have no respect whatever. Owing to
+this they did not travel very fast, but they were not in any hurry
+either.
+
+The blind man, who played the violin, had to walk some little distance
+behind the others in order not to betray the fact of his belonging to
+the company. The blind man was led by a little dog; he was not allowed
+to have a child to lead him, for that would always have reminded Mr.
+and Mrs. Blomgren of a little girl who was called Ingrid. That would
+have been too sad.
+
+And now they were all in the country on account of the spring. For
+however much money Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren were making in the towns, they
+felt they _must_ be in the country at that time of the year, for Mr. and
+Mrs. Blomgren were artists.
+
+They did not recognise Ingrid, and she went past them without taking any
+notice of them, for she was in a hurry; she was afraid of their
+detaining her. But directly afterwards she felt that it was heartless
+and unkind of her, and turned back.
+
+If Ingrid could have felt glad about anything, she would have been glad
+by seeing the old people's joy at meeting her. You may be sure they had
+plenty to talk about. The little horse turned its head time after time
+to see what was wrong with the roundabout.
+
+Strangely enough, it was Ingrid who talked the most. The two old people
+saw at once that she had been crying, and they were so concerned that
+she was obliged to tell them everything that had happened to her.
+
+But it was a relief to Ingrid to speak. The old people had their own way
+of taking things; they clapped their hands when she told them how she
+had got out of the grave and how she had frightened the Pastor's wife.
+They caressed her and praised her because she had run away from the
+Parsonage. For them nothing was dull or sad, but everything was bright
+and hopeful. They simply had no standard by which to measure reality,
+and therefore its hardness could not affect them. They compared
+everything they heard with the pieces from marionette theatres and
+pantomimes. Of course, one also put a little sorrow and misery into the
+pantomime, but that was only done to heighten the effect. And, of
+course, everything would end well. In the pantomimes it always ended
+well.
+
+There was something infectious in all this hopefulness. Ingrid knew they
+did not at all understand how great her trouble was, but it was cheering
+all the same to listen to them.
+
+But they were also of real help to Ingrid. They told her that they had
+had dinner a short time since at the inn at Torsäker, and just as they
+were getting up from the table some peasants came driving up with a man
+who was mad. Mrs. Blomgren could not bear to see mad people, and wanted
+to go away at once, and Mr. Blomgren had consented. But supposing it was
+Ingrid's madman! And they had hardly said the words before Ingrid said
+that it was very likely, and wanted to set off at once.
+
+Mr. Blomgren then asked his wife in his own ceremonious manner if they
+were not in the country solely on account of the spring, and if it were
+not just the same where they went. And old Mrs. Blomgren asked him
+equally ceremoniously in her turn if he thought she would leave her
+beloved Ingrid before she had reached the harbour of her happiness.
+
+Then the old roundabout horse was turned, and conversation grew more
+difficult, because they again had to play on the Jews'-harp. As soon as
+Mrs. Blomgren wished to say anything, she was obliged to hand the
+instrument to Mr. Blomgren, and when Mr. Blomgren wanted to speak, he
+gave it back again to his wife. And the little horse stood still every
+time the instrument passed from mouth to mouth.
+
+The whole time they did their best to comfort Ingrid. They related all
+the fairy tales they had seen represented at the dolls' theatre. They
+comforted her with the 'Enchanted Princess,' they comforted her with
+'Cinderella,' they comforted her with all the fairy tales under the sun.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren watched Ingrid when they saw that her eyes grew
+brighter. 'Artist's eyes,' they said, nodding contentedly to each other.
+'What did we say? Artist's eyes!'
+
+In some incomprehensible manner they had got the idea that Ingrid had
+become one of them, an artist. They thought she was playing a part in a
+drama. It was a triumph for them in their old age.
+
+On they went as fast as they could. The old couple were only afraid that
+the madman would not be at the inn any longer. But he was there, and the
+worst of it was, no one knew how to get him away.
+
+The two peasants from Raglanda who had brought him had taken him to one
+of the rooms and locked him in whilst they were waiting for fresh
+horses. When they left him his arms had been tied behind him, but he had
+somehow managed to free his hands from the cord, and when they came to
+fetch him he was free, and, beside himself with rage, had seized a
+chair, with which he threatened to strike anyone who approached him.
+They could do nothing but beat a hasty retreat and lock the door. The
+peasants now only waited for the landlord and his men to return and help
+them to bind him again.
+
+All the hope which Ingrid's old friends had reawakened within her was,
+however, not quenched. She quite saw that Gunnar Hede was worse than he
+had ever been before, but that was what she had expected. She still
+hoped. It was not their fairy tales, it was their great love that had
+given her new hope.
+
+She asked the men to let her go to the madman. She said she knew him,
+and he would not do her any harm; but the peasants said they were not
+mad. The man in the room would kill anybody who went in.
+
+Ingrid sat down to think. She thought how strange it was that she should
+meet Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren just to-day. Surely that meant something. She
+would never have met them if it had not been for some purpose. And
+Ingrid thought of how Hede had regained his senses the last time. Could
+she not again make him do something which would remind him of olden
+days, and drive away his mad thoughts? She thought and thought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren sat on a seat outside the inn, looking more
+unhappy than one would have thought was possible. They were not far from
+crying.
+
+Ingrid, their 'child,' came up to them with a smile--such a smile as
+only she could have--and stroked their old, wrinkled cheeks, and said
+it would please her so much if they would let her see a performance like
+those she used to see every day in the olden time. It would be such a
+comfort to her.
+
+At first they said no, for they were not at all in proper artist humour,
+but when she had expended a few smiles upon them they could not resist
+her. They went to their cart and unpacked their costumes.
+
+When they were ready they called for the blind man, and Ingrid selected
+the place where the performance was to be held. She would not let them
+perform in the yard, but took them into the garden belonging to the inn,
+for there was a garden belonging to this inn. It was mostly full of beds
+for vegetables which had not yet come up, but here and there was an
+apple-tree in bloom. And Ingrid said she would like them to perform
+under one of the apple-trees in bloom.
+
+Some lads and servant-girls came running when they heard the violin, so
+there was a small audience. But it was hard work for Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren to perform. Ingrid had asked too much of them; they were really
+much too sad.
+
+And it was very unfortunate that Ingrid had taken them out into the
+garden. She had evidently not remembered that the rooms in the inn faced
+this way. Mrs. Blomgren was very nearly running away when she heard a
+window in one of the rooms quickly opened. Supposing the madman had
+heard the music, and supposing he jumped out of the window and came to
+them?
+
+But Mrs. Blomgren was somewhat reassured when she saw who had opened
+the window. It was a young gentleman with a pleasant face. He was in
+shirt-sleeves, but otherwise very decently dressed. His eye was quiet,
+his lips smiled, and he stroked his hair back from his forehead with his
+hand.
+
+Mr. Blomgren was working, and was so taken up with the performance that
+he did not notice anything. Mrs. Blomgren, who had nothing else to do
+but kiss her hands in all directions, had time to observe everything.
+
+It was astonishing how radiant Ingrid suddenly looked. Her eyes shone as
+never before, and her face was so white that light seemed to come from
+it. And all this radiancy was directed towards the man in the window.
+
+He did not hesitate long. He stood up on the window-sill and jumped down
+to them, and he went up to the blind man and asked him to lend him his
+violin. Ingrid at once took the violin from the blind man and gave it to
+him.
+
+'Play the waltz from "Freischütz,"' she said.
+
+Then the man began to play, and Ingrid smiled, but she looked so
+unearthly that Mrs. Blomgren almost thought that she would dissolve into
+a sunbeam, and fly away from them. But as soon as Mrs. Blomgren heard
+the man play she knew him again.
+
+'Is that how it is?' she said to herself. 'Is it he? That was why she
+wanted to see two old people perform.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gunnar Hede, who had been walking up and down his room in such a rage
+that he felt inclined to kill someone, had suddenly heard a blind man
+playing outside his window, and that had taken him back to an incident
+in his former life.
+
+He could not at first understand where his own violin was, but then he
+remembered that Alin had taken it away with him, and now the only thing
+left for him to do was to try and borrow the blind man's violin to play
+himself quiet again; he was so excited. And as soon as he had got the
+violin in his hand he began to play. It never occurred to him that he
+could not play. He had no idea that for several years he had only been
+able to play some poor little tunes.
+
+He thought all the time he was in Upsala, outside the house with the
+Virginia-creepers, and he expected the acrobats would begin to dance as
+they had done last time. He endeavoured to play with more life to make
+them do so, but his fingers were stiff and awkward; the bow would not
+properly obey them. He exerted himself so much that the perspiration
+stood on his forehead.
+
+At last, however, he got hold of the right tune--the same they had
+danced to the last time. He played it so enticingly, so temptingly, that
+it ought to have melted their hearts. But the old acrobats did not begin
+to dance. It was a long time since they had met the student at Upsala;
+they did not remember how enthusiastic they were then. They had no idea
+what he expected them to do.
+
+Gunnar Hede looked at Ingrid for an explanation why they did not dance.
+When he looked at her there was such an unearthly radiance in her eyes
+that in his astonishment he gave up playing. He stood a moment looking
+round the small crowd. They all looked at him with such strange, uneasy
+glances. It was impossible to play with people staring at him so. He
+simply went away from them. There were some apple-pears in bloom at the
+other end of the garden, so he went there.
+
+He saw now that nothing fitted in with the ideas he had just had that
+Alin had locked him in, and that he was at Upsala. The garden was too
+large, and the house was not covered with red creepers. No, it could not
+be Upsala. But he did not mind very much where he was. It seemed to him
+as if he had not played for centuries, and now he had got hold of a
+violin. Now he would play. He placed the violin against his cheek, and
+began. But again he was stopped by the stiffness in his fingers. He
+could only play the very simplest things.
+
+'I shall have to begin at the beginning,' he said.
+
+And he smiled and played a little minuet. It was the first thing he had
+learnt. His father had played it to him, and he had afterwards played it
+from ear. He saw all at once the whole scene before him, and he heard
+the words:
+
+'The little Prince should learn to dance, but he broke his little leg.'
+
+Then he tried to play several other small dances. They were some he had
+played as a school boy. They had asked him to play at the
+dancing-lessons at the young ladies' boarding-school. He could see the
+girls dance and swing about, and could hear the dancing-mistress beat
+the time with her foot.
+
+Then he grew bolder. He played first violin in one of Mozart's
+quartettes. When he learnt that, he was in the Sixth Form at the Latin
+school at Falun. Some old gentlemen had practised this quartette for a
+concert, but the first violin had been taken ill, and he was asked to
+take his part, young as he was. He remembered how proud he had been.
+
+Gunnar Hede only thought of getting his fingers into practice when he
+played these childish exercises. But he soon noticed that something
+strange was happening to him. He had a distinct sensation that in his
+brain there was some great darkness that hid his past. As soon as he
+tried to remember anything, it was as if he were trying to find
+something in a dark room; but when he played, some of the darkness
+vanished. Without his having thought of it, the darkness had vanished so
+much that he could now remember his childhood and school life.
+
+Then he made up his mind to let himself be led by the violin; perhaps it
+could drive away all the darkness. And so it did, for every piece he
+played the darkness vanished a little. The violin led him through the
+one year after the other, awoke in him memories of studies, friends and
+pleasures. The darkness stood like a wall before him, but when he
+advanced against it, armed with the violin, it vanished step by step.
+Now and then he looked round to see whether it closed again behind him.
+But behind him was bright day.
+
+The violin came to a series of duets for piano and violin. He only
+played a bar or two of each. But a large portion of the darkness
+vanished; he remembered his _fiancée_ and his engagement. He would like
+to have dwelt a little over this, but there was still much darkness left
+to be played away. He had no time.
+
+He glided into a hymn. He had heard it once when he was unhappy. He
+remembered he was sitting in a village church when he heard it. But why
+had he been unhappy? Because he went about the country selling goods
+like a poor pedlar. It was a hard life. It was sad to think about it.
+
+The bow went over the strings like a whirlwind, and again cut through a
+large portion of the darkness. Now he saw the Fifty-Mile Forest, the
+snow-covered animals, the weird shapes, the drifts made of them. He
+remembered the journey to see his _fiancée_, remembered that she had
+broken the engagement. All this became clear to him at one time.
+
+He really felt neither sorrow nor joy over anything he remembered. The
+most important thing was that he did remember. This of itself was an
+unspeakable pleasure. But all at once the bow stopped, as if of its own
+accord. It would not lead him any further. And yet there was more--much
+more--that he must remember. The darkness still stood like a solid wall
+before him.
+
+He compelled the bow to go on. And it played two quite common tunes, the
+poorest he had ever heard. How could his bow have learned such tunes?
+The darkness did not vanish in the least for these tunes. They really
+taught him nothing; but from them came a terror which he could not
+remember having ever felt before--an inconceivable, awful fear, the mad
+terror of a doomed soul.
+
+He stopped playing; he could not bear it. What was there in these
+tunes--what was there? The darkness did not vanish for them, and the
+awful thing was, that it seemed to him that when he did not advance
+against the darkness with the violin and drive it before him, it came
+gliding towards him to overwhelm him.
+
+He had been standing playing, with his eyes half closed; now he opened
+them and looked into the world of reality. He saw Ingrid, who had been
+standing listening to him the whole time. He asked her, not expecting an
+answer, but simply to keep back the darkness for a moment:
+
+'When did I last play this tune?'
+
+But Ingrid stood trembling. She had made up her mind, whatever happened,
+now he should hear the truth. Afraid she was, but at the same time full
+of courage, and quite decided as to what she meant to do. He should not
+again escape her, not be allowed to slip away from her. But in spite of
+her courage she did not dare to tell him straight out that these were
+the tunes he had played whilst he was out of his mind; she evaded the
+question.
+
+'That was what you used to play at Munkhyttan last winter,' she said.
+
+Hede felt as if he were surrounded by nothing but mysteries. Why did
+this young girl say '_du_' to him? She was not a peasant girl.[A] Her
+hair was dressed like other young ladies', on the top of the head and
+in small curls. Her dress was home-woven, but she wore a lace collar.
+She had small hands and a refined face. This face, with the large,
+dreamy eyes, could not belong to a peasant girl. Hede's memory could not
+tell him anything about her. Why did she, then, say '_du_' to him? How
+did she know that he had played these tunes at home?
+
+ [A] The peasants in the Dalar district used formerly to address
+ everybody by the pronoun _du_ (thou), even when speaking to the King;
+ this custom is now, however, not so general.--I.B.
+
+'What is your name?' he said. 'Who are you?'
+
+'I am Ingrid, whom you saw at Upsala many years ago, and whom you
+comforted because she could not learn to dance on the tight-rope.'
+
+This went back to the time he could partly remember. Now he did remember
+her.
+
+'How tall and pretty you have grown, Ingrid!' he said. 'And how fine you
+have become! What a beautiful brooch you have!'
+
+He had been looking at her brooch for some time. He thought he knew it;
+it was like a brooch of enamel and pearls his mother used to wear. The
+young girl answered at once.
+
+'Your mother gave it to me. You must have seen it before.'
+
+Gunnar Hede put down the violin and went up to Ingrid. He asked her
+almost violently:
+
+'How is it possible--how can you wear her brooch? How is it that I don't
+know anything about your knowing my mother?'
+
+Ingrid was frightened. She grew almost gray with terror. She knew
+already what the next question would be.
+
+'I know nothing, Ingrid. I don't know why I am here. I don't know why
+you are here. Why don't I know all this?'
+
+'Oh, don't ask me!'
+
+She went back a step or two, and stretched out her hands as if to
+protect herself.
+
+'Won't you tell me?'
+
+'Don't ask! don't ask!'
+
+He seized her roughly by the wrist to compel her to tell the truth.
+
+'Tell me! I am in my full senses! Why is there so much I can't
+remember?'
+
+She saw something wild and threatening in his eyes. She knew now that
+she would be obliged to tell him. But she felt as if it were impossible
+to tell a man that he had been mad. It was much more difficult than she
+had thought. It was impossible--impossible!
+
+'Tell me!' he repeated.
+
+But she could hear from his voice that he would not hear it. He was
+almost ready to kill her if she told him. Then she summoned up all her
+love, and looked straight into Gunnar Hede's eyes, and said:
+
+'You have not been quite right.'
+
+'Not for a long time?'
+
+'I don't quite know--not for three or four years.'
+
+'Have I been out of my mind?'
+
+'No, no! You have bought and sold and gone to the fairs.'
+
+'In what way have I been mad?'
+
+'You were frightened.'
+
+'Of whom was I frightened?'
+
+'Of animals.'
+
+'Of goats, perhaps?'
+
+'Yes, mostly of goats.'
+
+He had stood clutching her by the wrist the whole time. He now flung her
+hand away from him--simply flung it. He turned away from Ingrid in a
+rage, as if she had maliciously told him an infamous lie.
+
+But this feeling gave way for something else which excited him still
+more. He saw before his eyes, as distinctly as if it had been a picture,
+a tall Dalar man, weighed down by a huge pack. He was going into a
+peasant's house, but a wretched little dog came rushing at him. He
+stopped and curtsied and curtsied, and did not dare to go in until a man
+came out of the house, laughing, and drove the dog away.
+
+When he saw this he again felt that terrible fear. In this anguish the
+vision disappeared, but then he heard voices. They shouted and shrieked
+around him. They laughed. Derision was showered upon him. Worst and
+loudest were the shrill voices of children. One word, one name came over
+and over again: it was shouted, shrieked, whispered, wheezed into his
+ear--'The Goat! the Goat!' And that all meant him, Gunnar Hede. All that
+he had lived in. He felt in full consciousness the same unspeakable fear
+he had suffered whilst out of his mind. But now it was not fear for
+anything outside himself--now he was afraid of himself.
+
+'It was I! it was I!' he said, wringing his hands. The next moment he
+was kneeling against a low seat. He laid his head down and cried, cried:
+'It was I!' He moaned and sobbed. 'It was I!' How could he have courage
+to bear this thought--a madman, scorned and laughed at by all? 'Ah! let
+me go mad again!' he said, hitting the seat with his fist. 'This is more
+than a human being can bear.'
+
+He held his breath a moment. The darkness came towards him as the
+saviour he invoked. It came gliding towards him like a mist. A smile
+passed over his lips. He could feel the muscles of his face relax, feel
+that he again had the look of a madman. But that was better. The other
+he could not bear. To be pointed at, jeered at, scorned, mad! No, it was
+better to be so again and not to know it. Why should he come back to
+life? Everyone must loathe him. The first light, fleeting clouds of the
+great darkness began to enwrap him.
+
+Ingrid stood there, seeing and hearing all his anguish, not knowing but
+that all would soon be lost again. She saw clearly that madness was
+again about to seize him. She was so frightened, so frightened, all her
+courage had gone. But before he again lost his senses, and became so
+scared that he allowed no one to come near him, she would at least take
+leave of him and of all her happiness.
+
+Gunnar Hede felt that Ingrid came and knelt down beside him, laid her
+arm round his neck, put her cheek to his, and kissed him. She did not
+think herself too good to come near him, the madman, did not think
+herself too good to kiss him.
+
+There was a faint hissing in the darkness. The mist lifted, and it was
+as if serpents had raised their heads against him, and now wheezed with
+anger that they could not reach to sting him.
+
+'Do not be so unhappy,' Ingrid said. 'Do not be so unhappy. No one
+thinks of the past, if you will only get well.'
+
+'I want to be mad again,' he said. 'I cannot bear it. I cannot bear to
+think how I have been.'
+
+'Yes, you can,' said Ingrid.
+
+'No; that no one can forget,' he moaned. 'I was so dreadful! No one can
+love me.'
+
+'I love you,' she said.
+
+He looked up doubtfully.
+
+'You kissed me in order that I should not go out of my mind again. You
+pity me.'
+
+'I will kiss you again,' she said.
+
+'You say that now because you think I am in need of hearing it.'
+
+'Are you in need of hearing that someone loves you?'
+
+'If I am--if I am? Ah, child,' he said, and tore himself away from her,
+'how can I possibly bear it, when I know that everyone who sees me
+thinks: "That fellow has been mad; he has gone about curtsying for dogs
+and cats."'
+
+Then he began again. He lay crying with his face in his hands.
+
+'It is better to go out of one's mind again. I can hear them shouting
+after me, and I see myself, and the anguish, the anguish, the
+anguish----'
+
+But then Ingrid's patience came to an end.
+
+'Yes, that is right,' she cried; 'go out of your mind again. I call that
+manly to go mad in order to escape a little anguish.'
+
+She sat biting her lips, struggling with her tears, and as she could
+not get the words out quickly enough, she seized him by the shoulder and
+shook him. She was enraged and quite beside herself with anger because
+he would again escape her, because he did not struggle and fight.
+
+'What do you care about me? What do you care about your mother? You go
+mad, and then you will have peace.' She shook him again by the arm. 'To
+be saved from anguish, you say, but you don't care about one who has
+been waiting for you all her life. If you had any thought for anyone but
+yourself, you would fight against this and get well; but you have no
+thought for others. You can come so touchingly in visions and dreams and
+beg for help, but in reality you will not have any help. You imagine
+that your sufferings are greater than anyone else's, but there are
+others who have suffered more than you.'
+
+At last Gunnar Hede raised his eyes, and looked her straight in the
+face. She was anything but beautiful at this moment. Tears were
+streaming down her cheeks, and her lips trembled, whilst she tried to
+get out the words between her sobs. But in his eyes her emotion only
+made her more beautiful. A wonderful peace came over him, and a great
+and humble thankfulness. Something great and wonderful had come to him
+in his deepest humiliation. It must be a great love--a great love.
+
+He had sat bemoaning his wretchedness, and Love came and knocked at his
+door. He would not merely be tolerated when he came back to life;
+people would not only with difficulty refrain from laughing at him.
+
+There was one who loved him and longed for him. She spoke hardly to him,
+but he heard love trembling in every single word. He felt as if she were
+offering him thrones and kingdoms. She told him that whilst he had been
+out of his mind he had saved her life. He had awakened her from the
+dead, had helped her, protected her. But this was not enough for her;
+she would possess him altogether.
+
+When she kissed him he had felt a life-giving balm enter his sick soul,
+but he had hardly dared to think that it was love that made her. But he
+could not doubt her anger and her tears. He was beloved--he, poor
+wretched creature! he who had been held in derision by everybody! and
+before the great and humble bliss which now filled Gunnar Hede vanished
+the last darkness. It was drawn aside like a heavy curtain, and he saw
+plainly before him the region of terror through which he had wandered.
+But there, too, he had met Ingrid; there he had lifted her from the
+grave; there he had played for her at the hut in the forest; there she
+had striven to heal him.
+
+But only the memory of her came back: the feelings with which she had
+formerly inspired him now awoke. Love filled his whole being; he felt
+the same burning longing that he had felt in the churchyard at Raglanda
+when she was taken from him.
+
+In that region of terror, in that great desert, there had at any rate
+grown one flower that had comforted him with fragrance and beauty, and
+now he felt that love would dwell with him forever. The wild flower of
+the desert had been transplanted into the garden of life, and had taken
+root and grown and thriven, and when he felt this he knew he was saved;
+he knew that the darkness had found its master.
+
+Ingrid was silent. She was tired, as one is tired after hard work; but
+she was also content, for she felt she had carried out her work in the
+best possible manner. She knew she had conquered.
+
+At last Gunnar Hede broke the silence.
+
+'I promise you that I will not give in,' he said.
+
+'Thank you,' Ingrid answered.
+
+Nothing more was said.
+
+Gunnar Hede thought he would never be able to tell her how much he loved
+her. It could never be told in words, only shown every day and every
+hour of his life.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ II
+
+ _Queens at_ KUNGAHÄLLA
+
+
+
+
+_Queens at_ KUNGAHÄLLA
+
+_On the_ SITE _of the Great_ KUNGAHÄLLA
+
+
+Should a stranger who had heard about the old city of Kungahälla ever
+visit the site on the northern river where it once lay, he would
+assuredly be much surprised. He would ask himself whether churches and
+fortifications could melt away like snow, or if the earth had opened and
+swallowed them up. He stands on a spot where formerly there was a mighty
+city, and he cannot find a street or a landing-stage. He sees neither
+ruins nor traces of devastating fires; he only sees a country seat,
+surrounded by green trees and red outbuildings. He sees nothing but
+broad meadows and fields, where the plough does its work year after year
+without being hindered either by brick foundations or old pavements.
+
+He would probably first of all go down to the river. He would not expect
+to see anything of the great ships that went to the Baltic ports or to
+distant Spain, but he would in all likelihood think that he might find
+traces of the old ship-yards, of the large boat-houses and
+landing-stages. He presumes that he will find some of the old kilns
+where they used to refine salt; he will see the worn-out pavement on the
+main street that led to the harbour. He will inquire about the German
+pier and the Swedish pier; he would like to see the Weeping Bridge where
+the women of Kungahälla took leave of their husbands and sons when they
+went to distant lands, but when he comes down to the river's edge he
+sees nothing but a forest of waving reeds. He sees a road full of holes
+leading down to the ferry; he sees a couple of common barges and a
+little flat-bottomed ferryboat that is taking a peasant cart over to
+Hisingen, but no big ships come gliding up the river. He does not even
+see any dark hulls lying and rotting at the bottom of the river.
+
+As he does not find anything remarkable down at the harbour, he will
+probably begin to look for the celebrated Convent Hill. He expects to
+see traces of the palisading and ramparts which in olden days surrounded
+it. He is hoping to see the ruins of the high walls and the long
+cloisters. He says to himself that anyhow there must be ruins of that
+magnificent church where the cross was kept--that miracle-working cross
+which had been brought from Jerusalem. He thinks of the number of
+monuments covering the holy hills which rise over other ancient cities,
+and his heart begins to beat with glad expectation. But when he comes to
+the old Convent Hill which rises above the fields, he finds nothing but
+clusters of murmuring trees; he finds neither walls, nor towers, nor
+gables perforated with pointed arched windows. Garden seats and benches
+he will find under the shadow of the trees, but no cloisters decorated
+with pillars, no hewn gravestones.
+
+Well, if he has not found anything here, he will in any case try to
+find the old King's Hall. He thinks about the large halls from which
+Kungahälla is supposed to have derived its name. It might be that there
+was something left of the timber--a yard thick--that formed the walls,
+or of the deep cellars under the great hall where the Norwegian kings
+celebrated their banquets. He thinks of the smooth green courtyard of
+the King's Hall, where the kings used to ride their silver-shod
+chargers, and where the queens used to milk the golden-horned cows. He
+thinks of the lofty ladies' bower; of the brewing-room, with its large
+boilers; of the huge kitchen, where half an ox at a time was placed in
+the pot, and where a whole hog was roasted on the spit. He thinks of the
+serfs' house, of the falcon's cages, of the great pantries--house by
+house all round the courtyard, moss-grown with age, decorated with
+dragons' heads. Of such a number of buildings there must be some traces
+left, he thinks.
+
+But should he then inquire for the old King's Hall, he will be taken to
+a modern country-house, with glass veranda and conservatories. The
+King's seat has vanished, and with it all the drinking-horns, inlaid
+with silver, and the shields, covered with skin. One cannot even show
+him the well-kept courtyard, with its short, close grass, and with
+narrow paths of black earth. He sees strawberry-beds and hedges of
+rose-trees; he sees happy children and young girls dancing under apple
+and pear trees. But he does not see strong men wrestling, or knights
+playing at ball.
+
+Perhaps he asks about the great oak on the Market Place, beneath which
+the Kings sat in judgment, and where the twelve stones of judgment were
+set up. Or about the long street, which was said to be seven miles long!
+Or about the rich merchants' houses, separated by dark lanes, each
+having its own landing-stage and boathouse down by the river. Or about
+the Marie Church in the Market Place, where the seamen brought their
+offerings of small, full-rigged ships, and the sorrowful, small silver
+hearts.
+
+But there is nothing left to show him of all these things. Cows and
+sheep graze where the long street used to be. Rye and barley grow on the
+Market Place, and stables and barns stand where people used to flock
+round the tempting market-stalls.
+
+How can he help feeling disappointed? Is there not a single thing to be
+found, he says, not a single relic left? And he thinks perhaps that they
+have been deceiving him. The great Kungahälla can never have stood here,
+he says. It must have stood in some other place.
+
+Then they take him down to the riverside, and show him a roughly-hewn
+stone block, and they scrape away the silver-gray lichen, so that he can
+see there are some figures hewn in the stone. He will not be able to
+understand what they represent; they will be as incomprehensible to him
+as the spots in the moon. But they will assure him that they represent a
+ship and an elk, and that they were cut in the stone in the olden days
+to commemorate the foundation of the city.
+
+And should he still not be able to understand, they will tell him what
+is the meaning of the inscription on the stone.
+
+
+
+
+_The Forest_ QUEEN
+
+
+Marcus Antonius Poppius was a Roman merchant of high standing. He traded
+with distant lands; and from the harbour at Ostia he sent well-equipped
+triremas to Spain, to Britain, and even to the north coast of Germany.
+Fortune favoured him, and he amassed immense riches, which he hoped to
+leave as an inheritance to his only son. Unfortunately, this only son
+had not inherited his father's ability. This happens, unfortunately, all
+the world over. A rich man's only son. Need one say more? It is, and
+always will be, the same story.
+
+One would almost think that the gods give rich men these incorrigible
+idlers, these dull, pale, languid fools of sons, to show man what
+unutterable folly it is to amass riches. When will the eyes of mankind
+be opened? When will men listen to the warning voice of the gods?
+
+Young Silvius Antonius Poppius, at the age of twenty, had already tried
+all the pleasures of life. He was also fond of letting people see that
+he was tired of them; but in spite of that, one did not notice any
+diminution in the eagerness with which he sought them. On the contrary,
+he was quite in despair when a singularly persistent ill-luck began to
+pursue him, and to interfere with all his pleasures. His Numidian horses
+fell lame the day before the great chariot race of the year; his
+illicit love affairs were found out; his cleverest cook died from
+malaria. This was more than enough to crush a man whose strength had not
+been hardened by exertion and toil. Young Poppius felt so unhappy that
+he made up his mind to take his own life. He seemed to think that this
+was the only way in which he could cheat the God of Misfortune who
+pursued him and made his life a burden.
+
+One can understand that an unhappy creature commits suicide in order to
+escape the persecution of man; but only a fool like Silvius Antonius
+could think of adopting such means to flee from the gods. One recalls
+involuntarily the story of the man who, to escape from the lion, sprang
+right into its open jaws.
+
+Young Silvius was much too effeminate to choose a bloody death. Neither
+had he any inclination to die from a painful poison. After careful
+consideration, he resolved to die the gentle death of the waves.
+
+But when he went down to the Tiber to drown himself he could not make up
+his mind to give his body to the dirty, sluggish water of the river. For
+a long time he stood undecided, staring into the stream. Then he was
+seized by the magic charm which lies dreamily over a river. He felt that
+great, holy longing which fills these never-resting wanderers of nature;
+he would see the sea.
+
+'I will die in the clear blue sea, through which the sun's rays
+penetrate right to the bottom,' said Silvius Antonius. 'My body shall
+rest upon a couch of pink coral. The foamy waves which I set in motion
+when I sink into the deep shall be snow-white and fresh; they shall not
+be like the sooty froth which lies quivering at the river-side.'
+
+He immediately hurried home, had his horses harnessed and drove to
+Ostia. He knew that one of his father's ships was lying in the harbour
+ready to sail. Young Poppius drove his horses at a furious pace, and he
+succeeded in getting on board just as the anchor was being weighed. Of
+course he did not think it necessary to take any baggage with him. He
+did not even trouble to ask the skipper for what place the craft was
+bound. To the sea they were going, in any case--that was enough for him.
+
+Nor was it very long before the young suicide reached the goal of his
+desire. The trirema passed the mouth of the Tiber, and the Mediterranean
+lay before Silvius Antonius, its sparkling waves bathed in sun. Its
+beauty made Silvius Antonius believe in the poet's assertion that the
+swelling ocean is but a thin veil which covers the most beautiful world.
+He felt bound to believe that he who boldly makes his way through this
+cover will immediately reach the sea-god's palace of pearls. The young
+man congratulated himself that he had chosen this manner of death. And
+one could scarcely call it that; it was impossible to believe that this
+beautiful water could kill. It was only the shortest road to a land
+where pleasure is not a delusion, leaving nothing but distaste and
+loathing. He could only with difficulty suppress his eagerness. But the
+whole deck was full of sailors. Even Silvius could understand that if he
+now sprang into the sea the consequence would simply be that one of his
+father's sailors would quickly spring overboard and fish him out.
+
+As soon as the sails were set and the oarsmen were well in swing, the
+skipper came up to him and saluted him with the greatest politeness.
+
+'You intend, then, to go with me to Germany, my Silvius?' he said. 'You
+do me great honour.'
+
+Young Poppius suddenly remembered that this man used never to return
+from a voyage without bringing him some curious thing or other from the
+barbarous countries he had visited. Sometimes it was a couple of pieces
+of wood with which the savages made fire; sometimes it was the black
+horn of an ox, which they used as a drinking-vessel; sometimes a
+necklace of bear's teeth, which had been a great chief's mark of
+distinction.
+
+The good man beamed with joy at having his master's son on board his
+ship. He saw in it a new proof of the wisdom of old Poppius, in sending
+his son to distant lands, instead of letting him waste more time amongst
+the effeminate young Roman idlers.
+
+Young Poppius did not wish to undeceive him. He was afraid that if he
+disclosed his intention the skipper would at once turn back with him.
+
+'Verily, Galenus,' he said, 'I would gladly accompany you on this
+voyage, but I fear I must ask you to put me ashore at Bajæ. I made up my
+mind too late. I have neither clothes nor money.'
+
+But Galenus assured him that that need was soon remedied. Was he not
+upon his father's well-appointed vessel? He should not want for
+anything--neither warm fur tunic when the weather was cold, or light
+Syrian clothing of the kind that seamen wear when they cruise in fair
+weather in the friendly seas between the islands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Three months after their departure from Ostia, Galenus's trirema rowed
+in amongst a cluster of rocky islands. Neither the skipper nor any of
+his crew were quite clear as to where they really were, but they were
+glad to take shelter for a time from the storms that raged on the open
+sea.
+
+One could almost think that Silvius Antonius was right in his belief
+that some deity persecuted him. No one on the ship had ever before
+experienced such a voyage. The luckless sailors said to each other that
+they had not had fair weather for two days since they left Ostia. The
+one storm had followed upon the other. They had undergone the most
+terrible sufferings. They had suffered hunger and thirst, whilst they,
+day and night, exhausted and almost fainting from want of sleep, had had
+to manage sails and oars. The fact of the seamen being unable to trade
+had added to their despondency. How could they approach the coast and
+display their wares on the shore to effect an exchange in such weather?
+On the contrary, every time they saw the coast appear through the
+obstinate heavy mist that surrounded them, they had been compelled to
+put out to sea again for fear of the foam-decked rocks. One night, when
+they struck on a rock, they had been obliged to throw the half of their
+cargo into the sea. And as for the other half, they dared not think
+about it, as they feared it was completely spoiled by the breakers
+which had rolled over the ship.
+
+Certain it was that Silvius Antonius had proved himself not to be lucky
+at sea either. Silvius Antonius was still living; he had not drowned
+himself. It is difficult to say why he prolonged an existence which
+could not be of any more pleasure to him now than when he first made up
+his mind to cut it short. Perhaps he had hoped that the sea would have
+taken possession of him without he himself doing anything to bring it
+about. Perhaps his love for the sea had passed away during its bursts of
+anger; perhaps he had resolved to die in the opal-green perfumed water
+of his bath.
+
+But had Galenus and his men known why the young man had come on board,
+they would assuredly have bitterly complained that he had not carried
+out his intention, for they were all convinced that it was his presence
+which had called forth their misfortunes. Many a dark night Galenus had
+feared that the sailors would throw him into the sea. More than one of
+them related that in the terrible stormy nights he had seen dark hands
+stretching out of the water, grasping after the ship. And they did not
+think it was necessary to cast lots to find out who it was that these
+hands wanted to draw down into the deep. Both the skipper and the crew
+did Silvius Antonius the special honour to think that it was for his
+sake these storms rent the air and scourged the sea.
+
+If Silvius during this time had behaved like a man, if he had taken his
+share of their work and anxiety, then perhaps some of his companions
+might have had pity upon him as a being who had brought upon himself the
+wrath of the gods. But the young man had not understood how to win their
+sympathy. He had only thought of seeking shelter for himself from the
+wind, and of sending them to fetch furs and rugs from the stores for his
+protection from the cold.
+
+But for the moment all complaints over his presence had ceased. As soon
+as the storm had succeeded in driving the trirema into the quiet waters
+between the islands, its rage was spent. It behaved like a sheep-dog
+that becomes silent and keeps quiet as soon as it sees the sheep on the
+right way to the fold. The heavy clouds disappeared from the sky; the
+sun shone. For the first time during the voyage the sailors felt the
+joys of summer spreading over Nature.
+
+Upon these storm-beaten men the sunshine and the warmth had almost an
+intoxicating effect. Instead of longing for rest and sleep, they became
+as merry as happy children in the morning. They expected they would find
+a large continent behind all these rocks and boulders. They hoped to
+find people, and--who could tell?--on this foreign coast, which had
+probably never before been visited by a Roman ship, their wares would no
+doubt find a ready sale. In that case they might after all do some good
+business, and bring back with them skins of bear and elk, and large
+quantities of white wax and golden amber.
+
+Whilst the trirema slowly made its way between the rocks, which grew
+higher and higher and richer with verdure and trees, the crew made haste
+to decorate it so that it could attract the attention of the
+barbarians. The ship, which, even without any decoration, was a
+beautiful specimen of human handiwork, soon rivalled in splendour the
+most gorgeous bird. Recently tossed about by storms and ravaged by
+tempests, it now bore on its topmast a golden sceptre and sails striped
+with purple. In the bows a resplendent figure of Neptune was raised, and
+in the stern a tent of many-coloured silken carpets. And do not think
+the sailors neglected to hang the sides of the ship with rugs, the
+fringes of which trailed in the water, or to wind the long oars of the
+ship with golden ribbons. Neither did the crew of the ship wear the
+clothes they had worn during the voyage, and which the sea and the storm
+had done their best to destroy. They arrayed themselves in white
+garments, wound purple scarves round their waists, and placed glittering
+bands in their hair.
+
+Even Silvius Antonius roused himself from his apathy. It was as if he
+was glad of having at last found something to do which he thoroughly
+understood. He was shaved, had his hair trimmed, and his whole person
+rubbed over with fragrant scents. Then he put on a flowing robe, hung a
+mantle over his shoulders, and chose from the large casket of jewels
+which Galenus opened for him rings and bracelets, necklaces, and a
+golden belt. When he was ready he flung aside the purple curtains of the
+silken tent, and laid himself on a couch in the opening of the tent in
+order to be seen by the people on the shore.
+
+During these preparations the sea became narrower and narrower, and the
+sailors discovered that they were entering the mouth of a river. The
+water was fresh, and there was land on both sides. The trirema glided
+slowly onwards up the sparkling river. The weather was brilliant, and
+the whole of nature was gloriously peaceful. And how the magnificent
+merchantman enlivened the great solitude!
+
+On both sides of the river primeval forests, high and thick, met their
+view. Pine-trees grew right to the water's edge. The river in its
+eternal course had washed away the earth from the roots, and the hearts
+of the seamen were moved with solemn awe at the sight, not only of these
+venerable trees, but even more by that of the naked roots, which
+resembled the mighty limbs of a giant. 'Here,' they thought, 'man will
+never succeed in planting corn; here the ground will never be cleared
+for the building of a city, or even a farmstead. For miles round the
+earth is woven through with this network of roots, hard as steel. This
+alone is sufficient to make the dominion of the forest everlasting and
+unchangeable.'
+
+Along the river the trees grew so close, and their branches were so
+entangled, that they formed firm, impenetrable walls. These walls of
+prickly firs were so strong and high that no fortified city need wish
+for stronger defences. But here and there there was, all the same, an
+opening in this wall of firs. It was the paths the wild beasts had made
+on their way to the river to drink. Through these openings the strangers
+could obtain a glimpse of the interior of the forest. They had never
+seen anything like it. In sunless twilight there grew trees with trunks
+of greater circumference than the gate-towers on the walls of Rome.
+There was a multitude of trees, fighting with each other for light and
+air. Trees strove and struggled, trees were crippled and weighed down by
+other trees. Trees took root in the branches of other trees. Trees
+strove and fought as if they had been human beings.
+
+But if man or beast moved in this world of trees they must have other
+modes of making their way than those which the Romans knew, for from the
+ground right up to the top of the forest was a network of stiff bare
+branches. From these branches fluttered long tangles of gray lichen,
+transforming the trees into weird beings with hair and beard. And
+beneath them the ground was covered with rotten and rotting trunks, and
+one's feet would have sunk into the decayed wood as into melting snow.
+
+The forest sent forth a fragrance which had a drowsy effect upon the men
+on board the ship. It was the strong odour of resin and wild honey that
+blended with the sickly smell from the decayed wood, and from
+innumerable gigantic red and yellow mushrooms.
+
+There was no doubt something awe-inspiring in all this, but it was also
+elevating to see nature in all its power before man had yet interfered
+with its dominion. It was not long before one of the sailors began to
+sing a hymn to the God of the Forest, and involuntarily the whole crew
+joined in. They had quite given up all thought of meeting human beings
+in this forest-world. Their hearts were filled with pious thoughts;
+they thought of the forest god and his nymphs. They said to themselves
+that when Pan was driven from the woods of Hellas he must have taken
+refuge here in the far north. With pious songs they entered his kingdom.
+
+Every time there was a pause in the song they heard a gentle music from
+the forest. The tops of the fir-trees, vibrating in the noonday heat,
+sang and played. The sailors often discontinued their song in order to
+listen, if Pan was not playing upon his flute.
+
+The oarsmen rowed slower and slower. The sailors gazed searchingly into
+the golden-green and black-violet water flowing under the fir-trees.
+They peered between the tall reeds which quivered and rustled in the
+wash of the ship. They were in such a state of expectation that they
+started at the sight of the white water-lilies that shone in the dark
+water between the reeds.
+
+And again they sang the song, 'Pan, thou ruler of the forest!' They had
+given up all thoughts of trading. They felt that they stood at the
+entrance to the dwelling of the gods. All earthly cares had left them.
+Then, all of a sudden, at the outlet of one of the tracks, there stood
+an elk, a royal deer with broad forehead and a forest of antlers on its
+horns.
+
+There was a breathless silence on the trirema. They stemmed the oars to
+slacken speed. Silvius Antonius arose from his purple couch.
+
+All eyes were fixed upon the elk. They thought they could discern that
+it carried something on its back, but the darkness of the forest and
+the drooping branches made it impossible to see distinctly.
+
+The huge animal stood for a long time and scented the air, with its
+muzzle turned towards the trirema. At last it seemed to understand that
+there was no danger. It made a step towards the water. Behind the broad
+horns one could now discern more distinctly something light and white.
+They wondered if the elk carried on its back a harvest of wild roses.
+
+The crew gently plied their oars. The trirema drew nearer to the animal,
+which gradually moved towards the edge of the reeds.
+
+The elk strode slowly into the water, put down its feet carefully, so as
+not to be caught by the roots at the bottom. Behind the horns one could
+now distinctly see the face of a maiden, surrounded by fair hair. The
+elk carried on its back one of those nymphs whom they had been
+expectantly awaiting, and whom they felt sure would be found in this
+primeval world.
+
+A holy enthusiasm filled the men on the trirema. One of them, who hailed
+from Sicily, remembered a song which he had heard in his youth, when he
+played on the flowery plains around Syracuse. He began to sing softly:
+
+ 'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name,
+ Thou who in sheltered wood wanders, white like the moon.'
+
+And when the weather-beaten men understood the words, they tried to
+subdue the storm-like roar in their voices in order to sing:
+
+ 'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name.'
+
+They steered the ship nearer and nearer the reeds. They did not heed
+that it had already once or twice touched the bottom.
+
+But the young forest maiden sat and played hide-and-seek between the
+horns. One moment she hid herself, the next she peeped out. She did not
+stop the elk; she drove it further into the river.
+
+When the elk had gone some little distance, she stroked it to make it
+stop. Then she bent down and gathered two or three water-lilies. The men
+on the ship looked a little foolishly at each other. The nymph had,
+then, come solely for the purpose of plucking the white water-lilies
+that rocked on the waters of the river. She had not come for the sake of
+the Roman seamen.
+
+Then Silvius Antonius drew a ring from off his finger, sent up a shout
+that made the nymph look up, and threw her the ring. She stretched out
+her hand and caught it. Her eyes sparkled. She stretched out her hands
+for more. Silvius Antonius again threw a ring.
+
+Then she flung the water-lilies back into the river and drove the elk
+further into the water. Now and again she stopped, but then a ring came
+flying from Silvius Antonius, and enticed her further.
+
+All at once she overcame her hesitation. The colour rose in her cheeks.
+She came nearer to the ship without it being necessary to tempt her. The
+water was already up to the shoulders of the elk. She came right under
+the side of the vessel.
+
+The sailors hung over the gunwales to help the beautiful nymph, should
+she wish to go on board the trirema.
+
+But she saw only Silvius Antonius, as he stood there, decked with pearls
+and rings, and fair as the sunrise. And when the young Roman saw that
+the eyes of the nymph were fastened upon him, he leant over even further
+than the others. They cried to him that he should take care, lest he
+should lose his balance and fall into the sea. But this warning came too
+late. It is not known whether the nymph, with a quick movement, drew
+Silvius Antonius to her, or how it really happened, but before anyone
+thought of grasping him, he was overboard.
+
+All the same, there was no danger of Silvius Antonius drowning. The
+nymph stretched forth her lovely arms and caught him in them. He hardly
+touched the surface of the water. At the same moment her steed turned,
+rushed through the water, and disappeared in the forest. And loudly rang
+the laugh of the wild rider as she carried off Silvius Antonius.
+
+Galenus and his men stood for a moment horror-stricken. Then some of the
+men involuntarily threw off their clothes to swim to the shore; but
+Galenus stopped them.
+
+'Without doubt this is the will of the gods,' he said. 'Now we see the
+reason why they have brought Silvius Antonius Poppius through a thousand
+storms to this unknown land. Let us be glad that we have been an
+instrument in their hands; and let us not seek to hinder their will.'
+
+The seamen obediently took their oars and rowed down the river, softly
+singing to their even stroke the song of Arethusa's flight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When one has finished this story, surely the stranger must be able to
+understand the inscription on the old stone. He must be able to see both
+the elk with its many-antlered horns, and the trirema with its long
+oars. One does not expect that he shall be able to see Silvius Antonius
+Poppius and the beautiful queen of the primeval forest, for in order to
+see them he must have the eyes of the relaters of fairy-tales of bygone
+days. He will understand that the inscription hales from the young Roman
+himself, and that this also applies to the whole of the old story.
+Silvius Antonius has handed it down to his descendants word for word. He
+knew that it would gladden their hearts to know that they sprang from
+the world-famed Romans.
+
+But the stranger, of course, need not believe that any of Pan's nymphs
+have wandered here by the river's side. He understands quite well that a
+tribe of wild men have wandered about in the primeval forest, and that
+the rider of the elk was the daughter of the King who ruled over these
+people; and that the maiden who carried off Silvius Antonius would only
+rob him of his jewels, and that she did not at all think of Silvius
+Antonius himself, scarcely knew, perhaps, that he was a human being like
+herself. And the stranger can also understand that the name of Silvius
+Antonius would have been forgotten long ago in this country had he
+remained the fool he was. He will hear how misfortune and want roused
+the young Roman, so that from being the despised slave of the wild men
+he became their King. It was he who attacked the forest with fire and
+steel. He erected the first firmly-timbered house. He built vessels and
+planted corn. He laid the foundation of the power and glory of great
+Kungahälla.
+
+And when the stranger hears this, he looks around the country with a
+more contented glance than before. For even if the site of the city has
+been turned into fields and meadows, and even if the river no longer
+boasts of busy craft, still, this is the ground that has enabled him to
+breathe the air of the land of dreams, and shown him visions of bygone
+days.
+
+
+
+
+SIGRID STORRÄDE
+
+
+Once upon a time there was an exceedingly beautiful spring. It was the
+very spring that the Swedish Queen Sigrid Storräde summoned the
+Norwegian King Olaf Trygveson to meet her at Kungahälla in order to
+settle about their marriage.
+
+It was strange that King Olaf would marry Queen Sigrid; for although she
+was fair and well-gifted, she was a wicked heathen, whilst King Olaf was
+a Christian, who thought of nothing but building churches and compelling
+the people to be baptized. But maybe the King thought that God the
+Almighty would convert her.
+
+But it was even more strange that when Storräde had announced to King
+Olaf's messenger that she would set out for Kungahälla as soon as the
+sea was no longer ice-bound, spring should come almost immediately. Cold
+and snow disappeared at the time when winter is usually at its height.
+And when Storräde made known that she would begin to equip her ships,
+the ice vanished from the fjords, the meadows became green, and although
+it was yet a long time to Lady-day, the cattle could already be put out
+to grass.
+
+When the Queen rowed between the rocks of East Gothland into the Baltic,
+she heard the cuckoo's song, although it was so early in the year that
+one could scarcely expect to hear the lark.
+
+And great joy prevailed everywhere when Storräde proceeded on her way.
+All the trolls who had been obliged to flee from Norway during King
+Olaf's reign because they could not bear the sound of the church bells
+came on the rocks when they saw Storräde sailing past. They pulled up
+young birch-trees by the roots and waved them to the Queen, and then
+they went back to their rocky dwellings, where their wives were sitting,
+full of longing and anxiety, and said:
+
+'Woman, thou shalt not be cast down any longer. Storräde is now sailing
+to King Olaf. Now we shall soon return to Norway.'
+
+When the Queen sailed past Kullen, the Kulla troll came out of his cave,
+and he made the black mountain open, so that she saw the gold and silver
+veins which twisted through it, and it made the Queen happy to see his
+riches.
+
+When Storräde went past the Holland rivers, the Nixie came down from his
+waterfall, swam right out to the mouth of the river, and played upon his
+harp, so that the ship danced upon the waves.
+
+When she sailed past the Nidinge rocks, the mermen lay there and blew
+upon their seashell horns, and made the water splash in frothy pillars.
+And when the wind was against them, the most loathsome trolls came out
+of the deep to help Storräde's ship over the waves. Some lay at the
+stern and pushed, others took ropes of seaweed in their mouth and
+harnessed themselves before the ship like horses.
+
+The wild heathen, whom King Olaf would not allow to remain in the
+country on account of their great wickedness, came rowing towards the
+Queen's ship, with sails furled, and with their pole-axes raised as if
+for attack. But when they recognised the Queen, they allowed her to pass
+unhurt, and shouted after her:
+
+'We empty a beaker to thy wedding, Storräde.'
+
+All the heathen who lived along the coast laid firewood upon their stone
+altars, and sacrificed both sheep and goats to the old gods, in order
+that they should aid Storräde in her expedition to the Norwegian King.
+
+When the Queen sailed up the northern river, a mermaid swam alongside
+the ship, stretched her white arm out of the water, and gave her a large
+clear pearl.
+
+'Wear this, Storräde,' she said; 'then King Olaf will be so bewitched by
+thy beauty that he will never be able to forget thee.'
+
+When the Queen had sailed a short distance up the river, she heard such
+a roar and such a rushing noise that she expected to find a waterfall.
+The further she proceeded, the louder grew the noise. But when she rowed
+past the Golden Isle, and passed into a broad bay, she saw at the
+riverside the great Kungahälla.
+
+The town was so large, that as far as she could see up the river there
+was house after house, all imposing and well timbered, with many
+outhouses. Narrow lanes between the gray wooden walls led down to the
+river; there were large courtyards before the dwelling-houses,
+well-laid pathways went from each house down to its boathouse and
+landing-stage.
+
+Storräde commanded her men to row quite slowly. She herself stood on the
+poop of the ship and looked towards the shore.
+
+'Never before have I seen the like of this,' she said.
+
+She now understood that the roar she had heard was nothing but the noise
+of the work which went on at Kungahälla in the spring, when the ships
+were being made ready for their long cruises. She heard the smiths
+hammering with huge sledge-hammers, the baker's shovel clattered in the
+ovens; beams were hoisted on to heavy lighters with much crashing noise;
+young men planed oars and stripped the bark from the trees which were to
+be used for masts.
+
+She saw green courtyards, where handmaidens were twining ropes for the
+seafaring men, and where old men sat mending the gray wadmal sails. She
+saw the boat-builders tarring the new boats. Enormous nails were driven
+into strong oaken planks. The hulls of the ships were hauled out of the
+boathouses to be tightened; old ships were done up with freshly-painted
+dragon-heads; goods were stowed away; people took a hurried leave of
+each other; heavily-filled ships' chests were carried on board. Ships
+that were ready to sail left the shore. Storräde saw that the vessels
+rowing up the river were heavily laden with herrings and salt, but those
+making for the open sea were laden high up the masts with costly oak
+timber, hides, and skins.
+
+When the Queen saw all this she laughed with joy. She thought that she
+would willingly marry King Olaf in order to rule over such a city.
+Storräde rowed up to the King's Landing-Stage. There King Olaf stood
+ready to receive her, and when she advanced to meet him he thought that
+she was the fairest woman he had ever seen.
+
+They then proceeded to the King's Hall, and there was great harmony and
+friendship between them. When they went to table Storräde laughed and
+talked the whole time the Bishop was saying grace, and the King laughed
+and talked also, because he saw that it pleased Storräde. When the meal
+was finished, and they all folded their hands to listen to the Bishop's
+prayer, Storräde began to tell the King about her riches. She continued
+doing this as long as the prayer lasted, and the King listened to
+Storräde, and not to the Bishop.
+
+The King placed Storräde in the seat of honour, whilst he sat at her
+feet; and Storräde told him how she had caused two minor kings to be
+burnt to death for having had the presumption to woo her. The King was
+glad at hearing this, and thought that all minor kings who had the
+audacity to woo a woman like Storräde should share the same fate.
+
+When the bells rang for Evensong, the King rose to go to the Marie
+Church to pray, as was his wont. But then Storräde called for her bard,
+and he sang the lay of Brynhild Budles-dotter, who caused Sigurd
+Fofnersbane to be slain; and King Olaf did not go to church, but instead
+sat and looked into Storräde's radiant eyes, under the thick, black,
+arched eyebrows; and he understood that Storräde was Brynhild, and that
+she would kill him if ever he forsook her. He also thought that she was
+no doubt a woman who would be willing to burn on the pile with him. And
+whilst the priests were saying Mass and praying in the Marie Church at
+Kungahälla, King Olaf sat thinking that he would ride to Valhalla with
+Sigrid Storräde before him on the horse.
+
+That night the ferryman who conveyed people over the Göta River was
+busier than he had ever been before. Time after time he was called to
+the other side, but when he crossed over there was never anybody to be
+seen. But all the same he heard steps around him, and the boat was so
+full that it was nearly sinking. He rowed the whole night backwards and
+forwards, and did not know what it could all mean. But in the morning
+the whole shore was full of small footprints, and in the footprints the
+ferryman found small withered leaves, which on closer examination proved
+to be pure gold, and he understood they were the Brownies and Dwarfs who
+had fled from Norway when it became a Christian country, and who had now
+come back again. And the giant who lived in the Fortin mountain right to
+the east of Kungahälla threw one big stone after the other at the Marie
+Church the whole night through; and had not the giant been so strong
+that all the stones went too far and fell down at Hisingen, on the other
+side of the river, a great disaster would assuredly have happened.
+
+Every morning King Olaf was in the habit of going to Mass, but the day
+Storräde was at Kungahälla he thought he had not the time. As soon as he
+arose, he at once wanted to go down to the harbour, where her ship lay,
+in order to ask her if she would drink the wedding-cup with him before
+eventide.
+
+The Bishop had caused the bells to be rung the whole morning, and when
+the King left the King's Hall, and went across the Market Place, the
+church doors were thrown open, and beautiful singing was heard from
+within. But the King went on as if he had not heard anything. The Bishop
+ordered the bells to be stopped, the singing ceased, and the candles
+were extinguished.
+
+It all happened so suddenly that the King involuntarily stopped and
+looked towards the church, and it seemed to him that the church was more
+insignificant than he had ever before thought. It was smaller than the
+houses in the town; the peat roof hung heavily over its low walls
+without windows; the door was low, with a small projecting roof covered
+with fir-bark.
+
+Whilst the King stood thinking, a slender young woman came out of the
+dark church door. She wore a red robe and a blue mantle, and she bore in
+her arms a child with fair locks. Her dress was poor, and yet it seemed
+to the King that he had never before seen a more noble-looking woman.
+She was tall, dignified, and fair of face.
+
+The King saw with emotion that the young woman pressed the child close
+to her, and carried it with such care, that one could see it was the
+most precious thing she possessed in the world.
+
+As the woman stood in the doorway she turned her gentle face round and
+looked back, looked into the poor, dark little church with great longing
+in look and mien. When she again turned round towards the Market Place
+there were tears in her eyes. But just as she was about to step over the
+threshold into the Market Place her courage failed her. She leant
+against the doorposts and looked at the child with a troubled glance, as
+if to say:
+
+'Where in all the wide world shall we find a roof over our heads?'
+
+The King stood immovable, and looked at the homeless woman. What touched
+him the most was to see the child, who lay in her arms free from sorrow,
+stretch out his hand with a flower towards her, as if to win a smile
+from her. And then he saw she tried to drive away the sorrow from her
+face and smile at her son.
+
+'Who can that woman be?' thought the King. 'It seems to me that I have
+seen her before. She is undoubtedly a high-born woman who is in
+trouble.'
+
+However great a hurry the King was in to go to Storräde, he could not
+take his eyes away from the woman. It seemed to him that he had seen
+these tender eyes and this gentle face before, but where, he could not
+call to mind. The woman still stood in the church door, as if she could
+not tear herself away. Then the King went up to her and asked:
+
+'Why art thou so sorrowful?'
+
+'I am turned out of my home,' answered the woman, pointing to the little
+dark church.
+
+The King thought she meant that she had taken refuge in the church
+because she had no other place to go to. He again asked:
+
+'Who hath turned thee out?'
+
+She looked at him with an unutterably sorrowful glance.
+
+'Dost thou not know?' she asked.
+
+But then the King turned away from her. He had no time to stand guessing
+riddles, he thought. It appeared as if the woman meant that it was he
+who had turned her out. He did not understand what she could mean.
+
+The King went on quickly. He went down to the King's Landing-Stage,
+where Storräde's ship was lying. At the harbour the Queen's servants met
+the King. Their clothes were braided with gold, and they wore silver
+helmets on their heads.
+
+Storräde stood on her ship looking towards Kungahälla, rejoicing in its
+power and wealth. She looked at the city as if she already regarded
+herself as its Queen. But when the King saw Storräde, he thought at once
+of the gentle woman who, poor and sorrowful, had been turned out of the
+church.
+
+'What is this?' he thought. 'It seems to me as if she were fairer than
+Storräde.'
+
+When Storräde greeted him with smiles, he thought of the tears that
+sparkled in the eyes of the other woman. The face of the strange woman
+was so clear to King Olaf that he could not help comparing it, feature
+for feature, with Storräde's. And when he did that all Storräde's
+beauty vanished. He saw that Storräde's eyes were cruel and her mouth
+sensual. In each of her features he saw a sin. He could still see she
+was beautiful, but he no longer took pleasure in her countenance. He
+began to loathe her as if she were a beautiful poisonous snake.
+
+When the Queen saw the King come a victorious smile passed over her
+lips.
+
+'I did not expect thee so early, King Olaf,' she said. 'I thought thou
+wast at Mass.'
+
+The King felt an irresistible inclination to contradict Storräde, and do
+everything she did not want.
+
+'Mass has not yet begun,' he said. 'I have come to ask thee to go with
+me to the house of my God.'
+
+When the King said this he saw an angry look in Storräde's eyes, but she
+continued to smile.
+
+'Rather come to me on my ship,' she said, 'and I will show thee the
+presents I have brought for thee.'
+
+She took up a sword inlaid with gold, as if to tempt him; but the King
+thought all the time that he could see the other woman at her side, and
+it appeared to him that Storräde stood amongst her treasures like a foul
+dragon.
+
+'Answer me first,' said the King, 'if thou wilt go with me to church.'
+
+'What have I to do in thy church?' she asked mockingly.
+
+Then she saw that the King's brow darkened, and she perceived that he
+was not of the same mind as the day before. She immediately changed her
+manner, and became gentle and submissive.
+
+'Go thou to church as much as thou likest, even if I do not go. There
+shall be no discord between us on that account.'
+
+The Queen came down from the ship and went up to the King. She held in
+her hand a sword and a mantle trimmed with fur which she would give him.
+But in the same moment the King happened to look towards the harbour. At
+some distance he saw the other woman; her head was bowed, and she walked
+with weary steps, but she still bore the child in her arms.
+
+'What art thou looking so eagerly after, King Olaf?' Storräde asked.
+
+Then the other woman turned round and looked at the King, and as she
+looked at him it appeared to him as if a ring of golden light surrounded
+her head and that of the child, more beautiful than the crown of any
+King or Queen. Then she immediately turned round and walked again
+towards the town, and he saw her no more.
+
+'What art thou looking so eagerly after?' again asked Storräde.
+
+But when King Olaf now turned to the Queen she appeared to him old and
+ugly, and full of the world's sin and wickedness, and he was terrified
+at the thought that he might have fallen into her snares.
+
+He had taken off his glove to give her his hand; but he now took the
+glove and threw it in her face instead.
+
+'I will not own thee, foul woman and heathen dog that thou art!' he
+said.
+
+Then Storräde drew backwards. But she soon regained the command over
+herself, and answered:
+
+'That blow may prove thy destruction, King Olaf Trygveson.'
+
+And she was white as Hél when she turned away from him and went on board
+her ship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next night King Olaf had a strange dream. What he saw in his dream was
+not the earth, but the bottom of the sea. It was a grayish-green field,
+over which there were many fathoms of water. He saw fish swimming after
+their prey; he saw ships gliding past on the surface of the water, like
+dark clouds; and he saw the disc of the sun, dull as a pale moon.
+
+Then he saw the woman he had seen at the church-door wandering along the
+bottom of the sea. She had the same stooping gait and the same worn
+garments as when he first saw her, and her face was still sorrowful. But
+as she wandered along the bottom of the sea the water divided before
+her. He saw that it rose into pillars, as if in deep reverence, forming
+itself into arches, so that she walked in the most glorious temple.
+
+Suddenly the King saw that the water which surrounded the woman began to
+change colour. The pillars and the arches first became pale pink; but
+they soon assumed a darker colour. The whole sea around was also red, as
+if it had been changed into blood.
+
+At the bottom of the sea, where the woman walked, the King saw broken
+swords and arrows, and bows and spears in pieces. At first there were
+not many, but the longer she walked in the red water the more closely
+they were heaped together.
+
+The King saw with emotion that the woman went to one side in order not
+to tread upon a dead man who lay stretched upon the bed of green
+seaweed. The man, who had a deep cut in his head, wore a coat of mail,
+and had a sword in his hand. It seemed to the King that the woman closed
+her eyes so as not to see the dead man. She moved towards a fixed goal
+without hesitation or doubt. But he who dreamt could not turn his eyes
+away.
+
+He saw the bottom of the sea covered with wreckage. He saw heavy
+anchors, thick ropes twined about like snakes, ships with their sides
+riven asunder; golden dragon-heads from the bows of ships stared at him
+with red, threatening eyes.
+
+'I should like to know who has fought a battle here and left all this as
+a prey to destruction,' thought the dreamer.
+
+Everywhere he saw dead men. They were hanging on the ships' sides, or
+had sunk into the green seaweed. But he did not give himself time to
+look at them, for his eyes were obliged to follow the woman, who
+continued to walk onwards.
+
+At last the King saw her stop at the side of a dead man. He was clothed
+in a red mantle, had a bright helmet on his head, a shield on his arm,
+and a naked sword in his hand.
+
+The woman bent over him and whispered to him, as if awaking someone
+sleeping:
+
+'King Olaf! King Olaf!'
+
+Then he who was dreaming saw that the man at the bottom of the sea was
+himself. He could distinctly see that he was the dead man.
+
+As the dead did not move, the woman knelt by his side and whispered into
+his ear:
+
+'Now Storräde hath sent her fleet against thee and avenged herself. Dost
+thou repent what thou hast done, King Olaf?'
+
+And again she asked:
+
+'Now thou sufferest the bitterness of death because thou hast chosen me
+instead of Storräde. Dost thou repent? dost thou repent?'
+
+Then at last the dead opened his eyes, and the woman helped him to rise.
+He leant upon her shoulder, and she walked slowly away with him.
+
+Again King Olaf saw her wander and wander, through night and day, over
+sea and land. At last it seemed to him that they had gone further than
+the clouds and higher than the stars. Now they entered a garden, where
+the earth shone as light and the flowers were clear as dewdrops.
+
+The King saw that when the woman entered the garden she raised her head,
+and her step grew lighter. When they had gone a little further into the
+garden her garments began to shine. He saw that they became, as of
+themselves, bordered with golden braid, and coloured with the hues of
+the rainbow. He saw also that a halo surrounded her head that cast a
+light over her countenance.
+
+But the slain man who leant upon her shoulder raised his head, and
+asked:
+
+'Who art thou?'
+
+'Dost thou not know, King Olaf?' she answered; and an infinite majesty
+and glory encompassed her.
+
+But in the dream King Olaf was filled with a great joy because he had
+chosen to serve the gentle Queen of Heaven. It was a joy so great that
+he had never before felt the like of it, and it was so strong that it
+awoke him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When King Olaf awoke his face was bathed in tears, and he lay with his
+hands folded in prayer.
+
+
+
+
+ASTRID
+
+
+I
+
+In the midst of the low buildings forming the old Castle of the Kings at
+Upsala towered the Ladies' Bower. It was built on poles, like a
+dovecote. The staircase leading up to it was as steep as a ladder, and
+one entered it by a very low door. The walls inside were covered with
+runes, signifying love and longing; the sills of the small loopholes
+were worn by the maidens leaning on their elbows and looking down into
+the courtyard.
+
+Old Hjalte, the bard, had been a guest at the King's Castle for some
+time, and he went up every day to the Ladies' Bower to see Princess
+Ingegerd, and talk with her about Olaf Haraldsson, the King of Norway,
+and every time Hjalte came Ingegerd's bondwoman Astrid sat and listened
+to his words with as much pleasure as the Princess. And whilst Hjalte
+talked, both the maidens listened so eagerly that they let their hands
+fall in their laps and their work rest.
+
+Anyone seeing them would not think much spinning or weaving could be
+done in the Ladies' Bower. No one would have thought that they gathered
+all Hjalte's words as if they were silken threads, and that each of his
+listeners made from them her own picture of King Olaf. No one could
+know that in their thoughts they wove the Bard's words each into her own
+radiant picture.
+
+But so it was. And the Princess's picture was so beautiful that every
+time she saw it before her she felt as if she must fall on her knees and
+worship it. For she saw the King sitting on his throne, crowned and
+great; she saw a red, gold-embroidered mantle hanging from his shoulders
+to his feet. She saw no sword in his hand, but holy writings; and she
+also saw that his throne was supported by a chained troll. His face
+shone for her, white like wax, surrounded by long, soft locks, and his
+eyes beamed with piety and peace. Oh, she became nearly afraid when she
+saw the almost superhuman strength that shone from that pale face. She
+understood that King Olaf was not only a King, she saw that he was a
+saint, and the equal of the angels.
+
+But quite different was the picture which Astrid had made of the King.
+The fair-haired bondwoman, who had experienced both hunger and cold and
+suffered much hardship, but who all the same was the one who filled the
+Ladies' Bower with merriment and laughter, had in her mind an entirely
+different picture of the King. She could not help that every time she
+heard him spoken about she saw before her the wood-cutter's son who at
+eventide came out of the wood with the axe over his shoulder.
+
+'I can see thee--I can see thee so well,' Astrid said to the picture, as
+if it were a living being. 'Tall thou art not, but broad of shoulders
+and light and agile, and because thou hast walked about in the dark
+forest the whole long summer day thou takest the last few steps in one
+spring, and laughest when thou reachest the road. Then thy white teeth
+shine, and thy hair flies about, and that I love to see. I can see thee;
+thou hast a fair, ruddy face and freckles on thy nose, and thou hast
+blue eyes, which become dark and stern in the deep forest; but when thou
+comest so far that thou seest the valley and thy home, they become light
+and gentle. As soon as thou seest thine own hut down in the valley, thou
+raisest thy cap for a greeting, and then I see thy forehead. Is not that
+forehead befitting a King? Should not that broad forehead be able to
+wear both crown and helmet?'
+
+But however different these two pictures were, one thing is certain:
+just as much as the Princess loved the holy picture she had conjured
+forth, so did the poor bondwoman love the bold swain whom she saw coming
+from the depths of the forest to meet her.
+
+And had Hjalte the Bard been able to see these pictures he would have
+assuredly praised them both. He would assuredly have said that they both
+were like the King. For that is King Olaf's good fortune, he would have
+been sure to say, that he is a fresh and merry swain at the same time
+that he is God's holy warrior. For old Hjalte loved King Olaf, and
+although he had wandered from court to court he had never been able to
+find his equal.
+
+'Where can I find anyone to make me forget Olaf Haraldsson?' he was
+wont to say. 'Where shall I find a greater hero?'
+
+Hjalte the Bard was a rough old man and severe of countenance. Old as he
+was, his hair was still black, he was dark of complexion, and his eyes
+were keen, and his song had always tallied with his appearance. His
+tongue never uttered other words than those of strife; he had never made
+other lays than songs of war.
+
+Old Hjalte's heart had hitherto been like the stony waste outside the
+wood-cutter's hut; it had been like a rocky plain, where only poor ferns
+and dry mugworts could grow. But now Hjalte's roving life had brought
+him to the Court at Upsala, and he had seen the Princess Ingegerd. He
+had seen that she was the noblest of all the women he had met in his
+life--in truth, the Princess was just as much fairer than all other
+women as King Olaf was greater than all other men.
+
+Then the thought suddenly arose within Hjalte that he would try to
+awaken love between the Swedish Princess and the Norwegian King. He
+asked himself why she, who was the best amongst women, should not be
+able to love King Olaf, the most glorious amongst men? And after that
+thought had taken root in Hjalte's heart he gave up making his stern
+war-songs. He gave up trying to win praise and honour from the rough
+warriors at the Court of Upsala, and sat for many hours with the women
+in the Ladies' Bower, and one would never have thought that it was
+Hjalte who spoke. One would never have believed that he possessed such
+soft and fair and gentle words which he now used in speaking about King
+Olaf.
+
+No one would have known Hjalte again; he was entirely transformed ever
+since the thought of the marriage had arisen within him. When the
+beautiful thought took root in Hjalte's soul, it was as if a blushing
+rose, with soft and fragrant petals, had sprung up in the midst of a
+wilderness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One day Hjalte sat with the Princess in the Ladies' Bower. All the
+maidens were absent except Astrid. Hjalte thought that now he had spoken
+long enough about Olaf Haraldsson. He had said all the fair words he
+could about him, but had it been of any avail? What did the Princess
+think of the King? Then he began to lay snares for the Princess to find
+out what she thought of King Olaf.
+
+'I can see from a look or a blush,' he thought.
+
+But the Princess was a high-born lady; she knew how to conceal her
+thoughts. She neither blushed nor smiled, neither did her eyes betray
+her. She would not let Hjalte divine what she thought.
+
+When the Bard looked into her noble face he was ashamed of himself.
+
+'She is too good for anyone to take her by stealth,' he said; 'one must
+meet her in open warfare.' So Hjalte said straight out: 'Daughter of a
+King, if Olaf Haraldsson asked thee in marriage of thy father, what
+wouldst thou answer?'
+
+Then the young Princess's face lit up, as does the face of a man when he
+reaches the mountain-top and discovers the ocean. Without hesitation she
+replied at once:
+
+'If he be such a King and such a Christian as thou sayest, Hjalte, then
+I consider it would be a great happiness.'
+
+But scarcely had she said this before the light faded from her eyes. It
+was as if a cloud rose between her and the beautiful far-off vision.
+
+'Oh, Hjalte,' she said, 'thou forgettest one thing. King Olaf is our
+enemy. It is war and not wooing we may expect from him.'
+
+'Do not let that trouble thee,' said Hjalte. 'If thou only wilt, all is
+well. I know King Olaf's mind in this matter.'
+
+The Bard was so glad that he laughed when he said this; but the Princess
+grew more and more sorrowful.
+
+'No,' she said, 'neither upon me nor King Olaf does it depend, but upon
+my father, Oluf Skötkonung, and you know that he hates Olaf Haraldsson,
+and cannot bear that anyone should even mention his name. Never will he
+let me leave my father's house with an enemy; never will he give his
+daughter to Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+When the Princess had said this, she laid aside all her pride and began
+to lament her fate.
+
+'Of what good is it that I have now learnt to know Olaf Haraldsson,' she
+said, 'that I dream of him every night, and long for him every day?
+Would it not have been better if thou hadst never come hither and told
+me about him?'
+
+When the Princess had spoken these words, her eyes filled with tears;
+but when Hjalte saw her tears, he lifted his hand fervent and eager.
+
+'God wills it,' he cried. 'Ye belong to one another. Strife must
+exchange its red mantle for the white robe of peace, that your happiness
+may give joy unto the earth.'
+
+When Hjalte had said this, the Princess bowed her head before God's holy
+name, and when she raised it, it was with a newly awakened hope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When old Hjalte stepped through the low door of the Ladies' Bower, and
+went down the narrow open corridor, Astrid followed him.
+
+'Hjalte,' she cried, 'why dost thou not ask me what I would answer if
+Olaf Haraldsson asked for my hand?'
+
+It was the first time Astrid had spoken to Hjalte; but Hjalte only cast
+a hurried glance at the fair bondwoman, whose golden hair curled on her
+temples and neck, who had the broadest bracelets and the heaviest
+ear-rings, whose dress was fastened with silken cords, and whose bodice
+was so embroidered with pearls that it was as stiff as armour, and went
+on without answering.
+
+'Why dost thou only ask Princess Ingegerd?' continued Astrid. 'Why dost
+thou not also ask me? Dost thou not know that I, too, am the Svea-King's
+daughter? Dost thou not know,' she continued, when Hjalte did not
+answer, 'that although my mother was a bondwoman, she was the bride of
+the King's youth? Dost thou not know that whilst she lived no one dared
+to remind her of her birth? Oh, Hjalte, dost thou not know that it was
+only after she was dead, when the King had taken to himself a Queen,
+that everyone remembered that she was a bondwoman? It was first after I
+had a stepmother that the King began to think I was not of free birth.
+But am I not a King's daughter, Hjalte, even if my father counts me for
+so little, that he has allowed me to fall into bondage? Am I not a
+King's daughter, even if my stepmother allowed me to go in rags, whilst
+my sister went in cloth of gold? Am I not a King's daughter, even if my
+stepmother has allowed me to tend the geese and taste the whip of the
+slave? And if I am a King's daughter, why dost thou not ask me whether I
+will wed Olaf Haraldsson? See, I have golden hair that shines round my
+head like the sun. See, I have sparkling eyes; I have roses in my
+cheeks. Why should not King Olaf woo me?'
+
+She followed Hjalte across the courtyard all the way to the King's Hall;
+but Hjalte took no more heed of her words than a warrior clad in armour
+heeds a boy throwing stones. He took no more notice of her words than if
+she had been a chattering magpie in the top of a tree.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No one must think that Hjalte contented himself with having won Ingegerd
+for his King. The next day the old Icelander summoned up his courage and
+spoke to Oluf Skötkonung about Olaf Haraldsson. But he hardly had time
+to say a word; the King interrupted him as soon as he mentioned the name
+of his foe. Hjalte saw that the Princess was right. He thought he had
+never before seen such bitter hatred.
+
+'But that marriage will take place all the same,' said Hjalte. 'It is
+the will of God--the will of God.'
+
+And it really seemed as if Hjalte were right. Two or three days later a
+messenger came from King Olaf of Norway to make peace with the Swedes.
+Hjalte sought the messenger, and told him that peace between the two
+countries could be most firmly established by a marriage taking place
+between Princess Ingegerd and Olaf Haraldsson.
+
+The King's messenger hardly thought that old Hjalte was the man to
+incline a young maiden's heart to a stranger; but he thought, all the
+same, that the plan was a good one; and he promised Hjalte that he would
+lay the proposal of the marriage before King Oluf Skötkonung at the
+great Winter Ting.
+
+Immediately afterwards Hjalte left Upsala. He went from farm to farm on
+the great plain; he went far into the forests; he went even to the
+borders of the sea. He never met either man or woman without speaking to
+them about Olaf Haraldsson and Princess Ingegerd. 'Hast thou ever heard
+of a greater man or of a fairer woman?' he said. 'It is assuredly the
+will of God that they shall wander through life together.'
+
+Hjalte came upon old Vikings, who wintered at the seashore, and who had
+formerly carried off women from every coast. He talked to them about the
+beautiful Princess until they sprang up and promised him, with their
+hand on the hilt of their sword, that they would do what they could to
+help her to happiness.
+
+Hjalte went to stubborn old peasants who had never listened to the
+prayers of their own daughters, but had given them in marriage as
+shrewdness, family honour, and advantage required, and he spoke to them
+so wisely about the peace between the two countries and the marriage
+that they swore they would rather deprive the King of his kingdom than
+that this marriage should not come to pass.
+
+But to the young women Hjalte spoke so many good words about Olaf
+Haraldsson that they vowed they would never look with kindly eyes at the
+swain who did not stand by the Norwegian King's messenger at the Ting
+and help to break down the King's opposition.
+
+Thus Hjalte went about talking to people until the Winter Ting should
+assemble, and all the people, along snow-covered roads, proceeded to the
+great Ting Hills at Upsala.
+
+When the Ting was opened, the eagerness of the people was so great that
+it seemed as if the stars would fall down from the sky were this
+marriage not decided upon. And although the King twice roughly said 'No'
+both to the peace and to the wooing, it was of no avail. It was of no
+avail that he would not hear the name of King Olaf mentioned. The people
+only shouted: 'We will not have war with Norway. We will that these two,
+who by all are accounted the greatest, shall wander through life
+together.'
+
+What could old Oluf Skötkonung do when the people rose against him with
+threats, strong words, and clashing of shields? What was he to do when
+he saw nothing but swords lifted and angry men before him? Was he not
+compelled to promise his daughter away if he would keep his life and his
+crown? Must he not swear to send the Princess to Kungahälla next summer
+to meet King Olaf there?
+
+In this way the whole people helped to further Ingegerd's love. But no
+one helped Astrid to the attainment of her happiness; no one asked her
+about her love. And yet it lived--it lived like the child of the poor
+fisherman's widow, in want and need; but all the same it grew, happily
+and hopefully. It grew and thrived, for in Astrid's soul there were, as
+at the sea, fresh air and light and breezy waves.
+
+
+II
+
+In the rich city of Kungahälla, far away at the border, was the old
+castle of the kings. It was surrounded by green ramparts. Huge stones
+stood as sentinels outside the gates, and in the courtyard grew an oak
+large enough to shelter under its branches all the King's henchmen.
+
+The whole space inside the ramparts was covered with long, low wooden
+houses. They were so old that grass grew on the ridges of the roofs. The
+beams in the walls were made from the thickest trees of the forest,
+silver-white with age.
+
+In the beginning of the summer Olaf Haraldsson came to Kungahälla, and
+he gathered together in the castle everything necessary for the
+celebration of his marriage. For several weeks peasants came crowding up
+the long street, bringing gifts: butter in tubs, cheese in sacks, hops
+and salt, roots and flour.
+
+After the gifts had been brought to the castle, there was a continual
+procession of wedding guests through the street. There were great men
+and women on side-saddles, with a numerous retinue of servants and
+serfs. Then came hosts of players and singers, and the reciters of the
+Sagas. Merchants came all the way from Venderland and Gardarike, to
+tempt the King with bridal gifts.
+
+When these processions for two whole weeks had filled the town with
+noise and bustle they only awaited the last procession, the bride's.
+
+But the bridal procession was long in coming. Every day they expected
+that she would come ashore at the King's Landing-Stage, and from there,
+headed by drum and fife, and followed by merry swains and serious
+priests, proceed up the street to the King's Castle. But the bride's
+procession came not.
+
+When the bride was so long in coming, everybody looked at King Olaf to
+see if he were uneasy. But the King always showed an undisturbed face.
+
+'If it be the will of God,' the King said, 'that I shall possess this
+fair woman, she will assuredly come.'
+
+And the King waited, whilst the grass fell for the scythe, and the
+cornflowers blossomed in the rye. The King still waited when the flax
+was pulled up, and the hops ripened on the poles. He was still waiting,
+when the bramble blackened on the mountain-side, and the nip reddened
+on the naked branch of the hawthorn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hjalte had spent the whole summer at Kungahälla waiting for the
+marriage. No one awaited the arrival of the Princess more eagerly than
+he did. He assuredly awaited her with greater longing and anxiety than
+even King Olaf himself.
+
+Hjalte no longer felt at his ease with the warriors in the King's Hall.
+But lower down the river there was a landing-stage where the women of
+Kungahälla were wont to assemble to see the last of their husbands and
+sons, when they sailed for distant lands. Here they were also in the
+habit of gathering during the summer, to watch for the vessels coming up
+the river, and to weep over those who had departed. To that bridge
+Hjalte wended his way every day. He liked best to be amongst those who
+longed and sorrowed.
+
+Never had any of the women who sat waiting at Weeping Bridge gazed down
+the river with more anxious look than did Hjalte the Bard. No one looked
+more eagerly at every approaching sail. Sometimes Hjalte stole away to
+the Marie Church. He never prayed for anything for himself. He only came
+to remind the Saints about this marriage, which must come to pass, which
+God Himself had willed.
+
+Most of all Hjalte liked to speak with King Olaf Haraldsson alone. It
+was his greatest happiness to sit and tell him of every word that had
+fallen from the lips of the King's daughter. He described her every
+feature.
+
+'King Olaf,' he said to him, 'pray to God that she may come to thee.
+Every day I see thee warring against ancient heathendom which hides like
+an owl in the darkness of the forest, and in the mountain-clefts. But
+the falcon, King Olaf, will never be able to overcome the owl. Only a
+dove can do that, only a dove.'
+
+The Bard asked the King whether it was not his desire to vanquish all
+his enemies. Was it not his intention to be alone master in the land?
+But in that he would never succeed. He would never succeed until he had
+won the crown which Hjalte had chosen for him, a crown so resplendent
+with brightness and glory that everyone must bow before him who owned
+it.
+
+And last of all he asked the King if he were desirous of gaining the
+mastery over himself. But he would never succeed in overcoming the
+wilfulness of his own heart if he did not win a shield which Hjalte had
+seen in the Ladies' Bower at the King's Castle at Upsala. It was a
+shield from which shone the purity of heaven. It was a shield which
+protected from all sin and the lusts of the flesh.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But harvest came and they were still waiting for the Princess. One after
+the other the great men who had come to Kungahälla for the marriage
+festivities were obliged to depart. The last to take his leave was old
+Hjalte the Bard. It was with a heavy heart he set sail, but he was
+obliged to return to his home in distant Iceland before Christmas came.
+
+Old Hjalte had not gone further than the rocky islands outside the mouth
+of the northern river before he met a galley. He immediately ordered his
+men to stop rowing. At the first glance he recognised the dragon-headed
+ship belonging to Princess Ingegerd. Without hesitation Hjalte told his
+men to row him to the galley. He gave up his place at the rudder to
+another, and placed himself with joyous face at the prow of the boat.
+
+'It will make me happy to behold the fair maiden once more,' the Bard
+said. 'It gladdens my heart that her gentle face will be the last I
+shall see before sailing for Iceland.'
+
+All the wrinkles had disappeared from Hjalte's face when he went on
+board the dragon-ship. He greeted the brave lads who plied the oars as
+friendlily as if they were his comrades, and he handed a golden ring to
+the maiden, who, with much deference, conducted him to the women's tent
+in the stern of the ship. Hjalte's hand trembled when he lifted the
+hangings that covered the entrance to the tent. He thought this was the
+most beautiful moment of his life.
+
+'Never have I fought for a greater cause,' he said. 'Never have I longed
+so eagerly for anything as this marriage.'
+
+But when Hjalte entered the tent, he drew back a step in great
+consternation. His face expressed the utmost confusion. He saw a tall,
+beautiful woman. She advanced to meet him with outstretched hand. But
+the woman was not Ingegerd.
+
+Hjalte's eyes looked searchingly round the narrow tent to find the
+Princess. He certainly saw that the woman who stood before him was a
+King's daughter. Only the daughter of a King could look at him with such
+a proud glance, and greet him with such dignity. And she wore the band
+of royalty on her forehead, and was attired like a Queen. But why was
+she not Ingegerd? Hjalte angrily asked the strange woman:
+
+'Who art thou?'
+
+'Dost thou not know me, Hjalte? I am the King's daughter, to whom thou
+hast spoken about Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+'I have spoken with a King's daughter about Olaf Haraldsson, but her
+name was Ingegerd.'
+
+'Ingegerd is also my name.'
+
+'Thy name can be what thou likest, but thou art not the Princess. What
+is the meaning of all this? Will the Svea-King deceive King Olaf?'
+
+'He will not by any means deceive him. He sends him his daughter as he
+has promised.'
+
+Hjalte was not far from drawing his sword to slay the strange woman. He
+had his hand already on the hilt, but he bethought himself it was not
+befitting a warrior to take the life of a woman. But he would not waste
+more words over this impostor. He turned round to go.
+
+The stranger with gentle voice called him back.
+
+'Where art thou going, Hjalte? Dost thou intend to go to Kungahälla to
+report this to Olaf Haraldsson?'
+
+'That is my intention,' answered Hjalte, without looking at her.
+
+'Why, then, dost thou leave me, Hjalte? Why dost thou not remain with
+me? I, too, am going to Kungahälla.'
+
+Hjalte now turned round and looked at her.
+
+'Hast thou, then, no pity for an old man?' he said. 'I tell thee that my
+whole mind is set upon this marriage. Let me hear the full measure of my
+misfortune. Is Princess Ingegerd not coming?'
+
+Then the Princess gave over fooling Hjalte.
+
+'Come into my tent and sit down,' she said, 'and I will tell thee all
+that thou wouldest know. I see it is of no use to hide the truth from
+thee.'
+
+Then she began to tell him everything:
+
+'The summer was already drawing to a close. The blackcock's lively young
+ones had already strong feathers in their cloven tails and firmness in
+their rounded wings; they had already begun to flutter about amongst the
+close branches of the pine-forest with quick, noisy strokes.
+
+'It happened one morning that the Svea-King came riding across the
+plain; he was returning from a successful chase. There hung from the
+pommel of his saddle a shining blue-black blackcock, a tough old fellow,
+with red eyebrows, as well as four of his half-grown young ones, which
+on account of their youth were still garbed in many-coloured hues. And
+the King was very proud; he thought it was not every man's luck to make
+such a bag with falcon and hawk in one morning.
+
+'But that morning Princess Ingegerd and her maidens stood at the gates
+of the castle waiting for the King. And amongst the maidens was one,
+Astrid by name; she was the daughter of the Svea-King just as much as
+Ingegerd, although her mother was not a free woman, and she was
+therefore treated as a bondmaiden. And this young maiden stood and
+showed her sister how the swallows gathered in the fields and chose the
+leaders for their long journey. She reminded her that the summer was
+soon over--the summer that should have witnessed the marriage of
+Ingegerd--and urged her to ask the King why she might not set out on her
+journey to King Olaf; for Astrid wished to accompany her sister on the
+journey. She thought that if she could but once see Olaf Haraldsson, she
+would have pleasure from it all her life.
+
+'But when the Svea-King saw the Princess, he rode up to her.
+
+'"Look, Ingegerd," he said, "here are five blackcocks hanging from my
+saddle. In one morning I have killed five blackcocks. Who dost thou
+think can boast of better luck? Have you ever heard of a King making a
+better capture?"
+
+'But then the Princess was angered that he who barred the way for her
+happiness should come so proudly and praise his own good luck. And to
+make an end of the uncertainty that had tormented her for so many weeks,
+she replied:
+
+'"Thou, father, hast with great honour killed five blackcocks, but I
+know of a King who in one morning captured five other Kings, and that
+was Olaf Haraldsson, the hero whom thou hast selected to be my husband."
+
+'Then the Svea-King sprang off his horse in great fury, and advanced
+towards the Princess with clenched hands.
+
+'"What troll hath bewitched thee?" he asked. "What herb hath poisoned
+thee? How hath thy mind been turned to this man?"
+
+'Ingegerd did not answer; she drew back, frightened. Then the King
+became quieter.
+
+'"Fair daughter," he said to her, "dost thou not know how dear thou art
+to me? How should I, then, give thee to one whom I cannot endure? I
+should like my best wishes to go with thee on thy journey. I should like
+to sit as guest in thy hall. I tell thee thou must turn thy mind to the
+Kings of other lands, for Norway's King shall never own thee."
+
+'At these words the Princess became so confused that she could find no
+other words than these with which to answer the King:
+
+'"I did not ask thee; it was the will of the people."
+
+'The King then asked her if she thought that the Svea-King was a slave,
+who could not dispose of his own offspring, or if there were a master
+over him who had the right to give away his daughters.
+
+'"Will the Svea-King be content to hear himself called a breaker of
+oaths?" asked the Princess.
+
+'Then the Svea-King laughed aloud.
+
+'"Do not let that trouble thee. No one shall call me that. Why dost thou
+question about this, thou who art a woman? There are still men in my
+Council; they will find a way out of it."
+
+'Then the King turned towards his henchmen who had been with him to the
+chase.
+
+'"My will is bound by this promise," he said to them. "How shall I be
+released from it?"
+
+'But none of the King's men answered a word; no one knew how to counsel
+him.
+
+'Then Oluf Skötkonung became very wrath; he became like a madman.
+
+'"So much for your wisdom," he shouted again and again to his men. "I
+will be free. Why do people laud your wisdom?"
+
+'Whilst the King raged and shouted, and no one knew how to answer him,
+the maiden Astrid stepped forward from amongst the other women and made
+a proposal.
+
+'Hjalte must really believe her when she told him that it was only
+because she found it so amusing that she could not help saying it, and
+not in the least because she thought it could really be done.
+
+'"Why dost thou not send me?" she had said. "I am also thy daughter. Why
+dost thou not send me to the Norwegian King?"
+
+'But when Ingegerd heard Astrid say these words, she grew pale.
+
+'"Be silent, and go thy way!" she said angrily. "Go thy way, thou
+tattler, thou deceitful, wicked thing, to propose such a shameful thing
+to my father!"
+
+'But the King would not allow Astrid to go. On the contrary! on the
+contrary! He stretched out his arms and drew her to his breast. He both
+laughed and cried, and was as wild with joy as a child.
+
+'"Oh," he shouted, "what an idea! What a heathenish trick! Let us call
+Astrid Ingegerd, and entrap the King of Norway into marrying her. And
+afterwards when the rumour gets abroad that she is born of a bondwoman,
+many will rejoice in their hearts, and Olaf Haraldsson will be held in
+scorn and derision."
+
+'But then Ingegerd went up to the King, and prayed:
+
+"Oh, father, father! do not do this thing. King Olaf is dear at heart to
+me. Surely thou wilt not grieve me by thus deceiving him."
+
+'And she added that she would patiently do the bidding of her royal
+father, and give up all thought of marriage with Olaf Haraldsson, if he
+would only promise not to do him this injury.
+
+'But the Svea-King would not listen to her prayers. He turned to Astrid
+and caressed her, just as if she were as beautiful as revenge itself.
+
+'"Thou shalt go! thou shalt go soon--to-morrow!" he said. "All thy
+dowry, thy clothes, my dear daughter, and thy retinue, can all be
+collected in great haste. The Norwegian King will not think of such
+things; he is too taken up with joy at the thought of possessing the
+high-born daughter of the Svea-King."
+
+'Then Ingegerd understood that she could hope for no mercy. And she went
+up to her sister, put her arm round her neck, and conducted her to the
+hall. Here she placed her in her own seat of honour, whilst she herself
+sat down on a low stool at her feet. And she said to Astrid that from
+henceforth she must sit there, in order to accustom herself to the place
+she should take as Queen. For Ingegerd did not wish that King Olaf
+should have any occasion to be ashamed of his Queen.
+
+'Then the Princess sent her maidens to the wardrobes and the pantries to
+fetch the dowry she had chosen for herself. And she gave everything to
+her sister, so that Astrid should not come to Norway's King as a poor
+bondwoman. She had also settled which of the serfs and maidens should
+accompany Astrid, and at last she made her a present of her own splendid
+galley.
+
+'"Thou shalt certainly have my galley," she said. "Thou knowest there
+are many good men at the oars. For it is my will that thou shalt come
+well dowered to Norway's King, so that he may feel honoured with his
+Queen."
+
+'And afterwards the Princess had sat a long time with her sister, and
+spoken with her about King Olaf. But she had spoken of him as one speaks
+of the Saints of God, and not of kings, and Astrid had not understood
+many of her words. But this much she did understand--that the King's
+daughter wished to give Astrid all the good thoughts that dwelt in her
+own heart, in order that King Olaf might not be so disappointed as her
+father wished. And then Astrid, who was not so bad as people thought
+her, forgot how often she had suffered for her sister's sake, and she
+wished that she had been able to say, "I will not go!" She had also
+spoken to her sister about this wish, and they had cried together, and
+for the first time felt like sisters.
+
+'But it was not Astrid's nature to allow herself to be weighed down by
+sorrow and scruples. By the time she was out at sea she had forgotten
+all her sorrow and fear. She travelled as a Princess, and was waited
+upon as a Princess. For the first time since her mother's death she was
+happy.'
+
+When the King's beautiful daughter had told Hjalte all this she was
+silent for a moment, and looked at him. Hjalte had sat immovable whilst
+she was speaking, but the King's daughter grew pale when she saw the
+pain his face betrayed.
+
+'Tell me what thou thinkest, Hjalte,' she exclaimed. 'Now, we are soon
+at Kungahälla. How shall I fare there? Will the King slay me? Will he
+brand me with red-hot irons, and send me back again? Tell me the truth,
+Hjalte.'
+
+But Hjalte did not answer. He sat and talked to himself without knowing
+it. Astrid heard him murmur that at Kungahälla no one knew Ingegerd, and
+that he himself had but little inclination to turn back.
+
+But now Hjalte's moody face fell upon Astrid, and he began to question
+her. She had wished, had she not, that she could have said 'No' to this
+journey. When she came to Kungahälla, the choice lay before her. What
+did she, then, mean to do! Would she tell King Olaf who she was?
+
+This question caused Astrid not a little embarrassment. She was silent
+for a long while, but then she began to beg Hjalte to go with her to
+Kungahälla and tell the King the truth. She told Hjalte that her maidens
+and the men on board her ship had been bound to silence.
+
+'And what I shall do myself I do not know,' she said. 'How can I know
+that? I have heard all thou hast told Ingegerd about Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+When Astrid said this she saw that Hjalte was again lost in thought. She
+heard him mutter to himself that he did not think she would confess how
+things were.
+
+'But I must all the same tell her what awaits her,' he said.
+
+Then Hjalte rose, and spoke to her with the utmost gravity.
+
+'Let me tell thee yet another story, Astrid, about King Olaf, which I
+have not told thee before:
+
+'It was at the time when King Olaf was a poor sea-king, when he only
+possessed a few good ships and some faithful warriors, but none of his
+forefathers' land. It was at the time when he fought with honour on
+distant seas, chastised vikings and protected merchants, and aided
+Christian princes with his sword.
+
+'The King had a dream that one night an angel of God descended to his
+ship, set all the sails, and steered for the north. And it seemed to the
+King that they had not sailed for a longer time than it takes the dawn
+to extinguish a star before they came to a steep and rocky shore, cut up
+by narrow fjords and bordered with milk-white breakers. But when they
+reached the shore the angel stretched out his hand, and spoke in his
+silvery voice. It rang through the wind, which whistled in the sails,
+and through the waves surging round the keel.
+
+'"Thou, King Olaf," were the angel's words, "shalt possess this land for
+all time."
+
+'And when the angel had said this the dream was over.'
+
+Hjalte now tried to explain to Astrid that like as the dawn tempers the
+transition from dark night to sunny day, so God had not willed that King
+Olaf should at once understand that the dream foretold him of superhuman
+honour. The King had not understood that it was the will of God that he
+from a heavenly throne should reign forever and ever over Norway's land,
+that kings should reign and kings should pass away, but holy King Olaf
+should continue to rule his kingdom for ever.
+
+The King's humility did not let him see the heavenly message in its
+fulness of light, and he understood the words of the angel thus--that he
+and his seed should forever rule over the land the angel had shown him.
+And inasmuch as he thought he recognised in this land the kingdom of his
+forefathers, he steered his course for Norway, and, fortune helping him,
+he soon became King of that land.
+
+'And thus it is still, Astrid. Although everything indicates that in
+King Olaf dwells a heavenly strength, he himself is still in doubt, and
+thinks that he is only called to be an earthly King. He does not yet
+stretch forth his hand for the crown of the saints. But now the time
+cannot be far distant when he must fully realize his mission. It cannot
+be far distant.'
+
+And old Hjalte went on speaking, whilst the light of the seer shone in
+his soul and on his brow.
+
+'Is there any other woman but Ingegerd who would not be rejected by Olaf
+Haraldsson and driven from his side when he fully understands the words
+of the angel, that he shall be Norway's King for all time? Is there
+anyone who can, then, follow him in his holy walk except Ingegerd?'
+
+And again Hjalte turned to Astrid and asked with great severity:
+
+'Answer me now and tell me whether thou wilt speak the truth to King
+Olaf?'
+
+Astrid was now sore afraid. She answered humbly:
+
+'Why wilt thou not go with me to Kungahälla? Then I shall be compelled
+to tell everything. Canst thou not see, Hjalte, that I do not know
+myself what I shall do? If it were my intention to deceive the King,
+could I not promise thee all thou wishest? All that I needed was to
+persuade thee to go on thy way. But I am weak; I only asked thee to go
+with me.'
+
+But hardly had she said this before she saw Hjalte's face glow with
+fierce wrath.
+
+'Why should I help thee to escape the fate that awaits thee?' he asked.
+
+And then he said that he did not think he had any cause to show her
+mercy. He hated her for having sinned against her sister. The man that
+she would steal, thief as she was, belonged to Ingegerd. Even a hardened
+warrior like Hjalte must groan with pain when he thought of how Ingegerd
+had suffered. But Astrid had felt nothing. In the midst of all that
+young maiden's sorrow she had come with wicked and cruel cunning, and
+had only sought her own happiness. Woe unto Astrid! woe unto her!
+
+Hjalte had lowered his voice; it became heavy and dull; it sounded to
+Astrid as if he were murmuring an incantation.
+
+'It is thou,' he said to her, 'who hast destroyed my most beautiful
+song.' For the most beautiful song Hjalte had made was the one in which
+he had joined the most pious of all women with the greatest of all men.
+'But thou hast spoiled my song,' he said, 'and made a mockery of it; and
+I will punish thee, thou child of Hél. I will punish thee; as the Lord
+punisheth the tempter who brought sin into His world, I will punish
+thee. But do not ask me,' he continued, 'to protect thee against thine
+own self. I remember the Princess, and how she must suffer through the
+trick thou playest on King Olaf. For her sake thou shalt be punished,
+just as much as for mine. I will not go with thee to betray thee. That
+is my revenge, Astrid. I will not betray thee. Go thou to Kungahälla,
+Astrid; and if thou dost not speak of thine own accord, thou wilt become
+the King's bride. But then, thou serpent, punishment shall overtake
+thee! I know King Olaf, and I know thee. Thy life shall be such a burden
+that thou wilt wish for death every day that passes.'
+
+When Hjalte had said this he turned away from her and went his way.
+
+Astrid sat a long time silent, thinking of what she had heard. But then
+a smile came over her face. He forgot, did old Hjalte, that she had
+suffered many trials, that she had learnt to laugh at pain. But
+happiness, happiness, that she had never tried.
+
+And Astrid rose and went to the opening of the tent. She saw the angry
+Bard's ship. She thought that far, far away she could see Iceland,
+shrouded in mist, welcoming her much-travelled son with cold and
+darkness.
+
+
+III
+
+A sunny day late in the harvest, not a cloud in the sky; a day when one
+thinks the fair sun will give to the earth all the light she possesses!
+The fair sun is like a mother whose son is about to set out for a
+far-off land, and who, in the hour of the leave-taking, cannot take her
+eyes from the beloved.
+
+In the long valley where Kungahälla lies there is a row of small hills
+covered with beech-wood. And now at harvest-time the trees have garbed
+themselves in such splendid raiment that one's heart is gladdened. One
+would almost think that the trees were going a-wooing. It looks as if
+they had clothed themselves in gold and scarlet to win a rich bride by
+their splendour.
+
+The large island of Hisingen, on the other side of the river, had also
+adorned itself. But Hisingen is covered with golden-white birch-trees.
+At Hisingen the trees are clad in light colours, as if they are little
+maidens in bridal attire.
+
+But up the river, which comes rushing down towards the ocean as proudly
+and wildly as if the harvest rain had filled it with frothy wine, there
+passes the one ship after the other, rowing homewards. And when the
+ships approach Kungahälla they hoist new white sails, instead of the old
+ones of gray wadmal; and one cannot help thinking of old fairy-tales of
+kings' sons who go out seeking adventures clothed in rags, but who throw
+them off when they again enter the King's lofty hall.
+
+But all the people of Kungahälla have assembled at the landing-stages.
+Old and young are busy unloading goods from the ships. They fill the
+storehouses with salt and train-oil, with costly weapons, and
+many-coloured rugs. They haul large and small vessels on to land, they
+question the returned seamen about their voyage. But suddenly all work
+ceases, and every eye is turned towards the river.
+
+Right between the big merchant vessels a large galley is making its way,
+and people ask each other in astonishment who it can be that carries
+sails striped with purple and a golden device on the prow; they wonder
+what kind of ship it can be that comes flying over the waves like a
+bird. They praise the oarsmen, who handle the oars so evenly that they
+flash along the sides of the ship like an eagle's wings.
+
+'It must be the Swedish Princess who is coming,' they say. 'It must be
+the beautiful Princess Ingegerd, for whom Olaf Haraldsson has been
+waiting the whole summer and harvest.'
+
+And the women hasten down to the riverside to see the Princess when she
+rows past them on her way to the King's Landing-Stage. Men and boys run
+to the ships, or climb the roofs of the boathouses.
+
+When the women see the Princess standing in gorgeous apparel, they begin
+to shout to her, and to greet her with words of welcome; and every man
+who sees her radiant face tears his cap from his head and swings it high
+in the air. But on the King's Landing-Stage stands King Olaf himself,
+and when he sees the Princess his face beams with gladness, and his eyes
+light up with tender love.
+
+And as it is now so late in the year that all the flowers are faded, the
+young maidens pluck the golden-red autumnal leaves from the trees and
+strew them on the bridge and in the street; and they hasten to deck
+their houses with the bright berries of the mountain-ash and the
+dark-red leaves of the poplar.
+
+The Princess, who stands high on the ship, sees the people waving and
+greeting her in welcome. She sees the golden-red leaves over which she
+shall walk, and foremost on the landing-stage she sees the King awaiting
+her with smiles. And the Princess forgets everything she would have said
+and confessed. She forgets that she is not Ingegerd, she forgets
+everything except the one thing, that she is to be the wife of Olaf
+Haraldsson.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One Sunday Olaf Haraldsson was seated at table, and his beautiful Queen
+sat by his side. He was talking eagerly with her, resting his elbow on
+the table, and turning towards her, so that he could see her face. But
+when Astrid spoke the King lowered his eyes in order not to think of
+anything but her lovely voice, and when she had been speaking for a long
+time he began to cut the table with his knife without thinking of what
+he was doing. All King Olaf's men knew that he would not have done this
+if he had remembered that it was Sunday; but they had far too great a
+respect for King Olaf to venture to remind him that he was committing a
+sin.
+
+The longer Astrid talked, the more uneasy became his henchmen. The Queen
+saw that they exchanged troubled glances with each other, but she did
+not understand what was the matter.
+
+All had finished eating, and the food had been removed, but King Olaf
+still sat and talked with Astrid and cut the top of the table. A whole
+little heap of chips lay in front of him. Then at last his friend Björn,
+the son of Ogur from Selö, spoke.
+
+'What day is it to-morrow, Eilif?' he asked, turning to one of the
+torch-bearers.
+
+'To-morrow is Monday,' answered Eilif in a loud and clear voice.
+
+Then the King lifted his head and looked up at Eilif.
+
+'Dost thou say that to-morrow is Monday?' he asked thoughtfully.
+
+Without saying another word, the King gathered up all the chips he had
+cut off the table into his hand, went to the fireplace, seized a burning
+coal, and laid it on the chips, which soon caught fire. The King stood
+quite still and let them burn to ashes in his hand. Then all the
+henchmen rejoiced, but the young Queen grew pale as death.
+
+'What sentence will he pronounce over me when he one day finds out my
+sin,' she thought, 'he who punishes himself so hardly for so slight an
+offence?'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Agge from Gardarike lay sick on board his galley in Kungahälla harbour.
+He was lying in the narrow hold awaiting death. He had been suffering
+for a long time from pains in his foot, and now there was an open sore,
+and in the course of the last few hours it had begun to turn black.
+
+'Thou needest not die, Agge,' said Lodulf from Kunghälla, who had come
+on board to see his sick friend. 'Dost thou not know that King Olaf is
+here in the town, and that God, on account of his piety and holiness,
+has given him power to heal the sick? Send a message to him and ask him
+to come and lay his hand upon thee, and thou wilt recover.'
+
+'No, I cannot ask help from him,' answered Agge. 'Olaf Haraldsson hates
+me because I have slain his foster-brother, Reor the White. If he knew
+that my ship lay in the harbour, he would send his men to kill me.'
+
+But when Lodulf had left Agge and gone into the town, he met the young
+Queen, who had been in the forest gathering nuts.
+
+'Queen,' Lodulf cried to her, 'say this to King Olaf: "Agge from
+Gardarike, who has slain thy foster-brother, lies at the point of death
+on his ship in the harbour."'
+
+The young Queen hastened home and went immediately up to King Olaf, who
+stood in the courtyard smoothing the mane of his horse.
+
+'Rejoice, King Olaf!' she said. 'Agge from Gardarike, who slew thy
+foster-brother, lies sick on his ship in the harbour and is near death.'
+
+Olaf Haraldsson at once led his horse into the stable; then he went out
+without sword or helmet. He went quickly down one of the narrow lanes
+between the houses until he reached the harbour. There he found the ship
+which belonged to Agge. The King was at the side of the sick man before
+Agge's men thought of stopping him.
+
+'Agge,' said King Olaf, 'many a time I have pursued thee on the sea, and
+thou hast always escaped me. Now thou hast been struck down with
+sickness here in my city. This is a sign to me that God hath given thy
+life into my hands.'
+
+Agge made no answer. He was utterly feeble, and death was very near.
+Olaf Haraldsson laid his hands upon his breast and prayed to God.
+
+'Give me the life of this mine enemy,' he said.
+
+But the Queen, who had seen the King hasten down to the harbour without
+helmet and sword, went into the hall, fetched his weapons and called for
+some of his men. Then she hurried after him down to the ship. But when
+she stood outside the narrow hold, she heard King Olaf praying for the
+sick man.
+
+Astrid looked in and saw the King and Agge without betraying her
+presence. She saw that whilst the King's hands rested upon the forehead
+and breast of the dying man, the deathly pallor vanished from his face;
+he began to breathe lightly and quietly; he ceased moaning, and at last
+he fell into a sound sleep.
+
+Astrid went softly back to the King's Castle. She dragged the King's
+sword after her along the road. Her face was paler than the dying man's
+had been. Her breathing was heavy, like that of a dying person.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was the morning of All Saints' Day, and King Olaf was ready to go to
+Mass. He came out of the King's Hall and went across the courtyard
+towards the gateway. Several of the King's henchmen stood in the
+courtyard to accompany him to Mass. When the King came towards them,
+they drew up in two rows, and the King passed between them.
+
+Astrid stood in the narrow corridor outside the Women's Room and looked
+down at the King. He wore a broad golden band round his head, and was
+attired in a long mantle of red velvet. He went very quietly, and there
+was a holy peace over his face. Astrid was terrified to see how much he
+resembled the Saints and Kings that were carved in wood over the altar
+in the Marie Church.
+
+At the gateway stood a man in a broad-brimmed hat, and wearing a big
+mantle. When the King approached him he threw off his mantle, lifted a
+drawn sword, which he had hidden under it, and rushed at the King. But
+when he was quite close to him, the mild and gentle glance of the King
+fell upon him, and he suddenly stopped. He let his sword fall to the
+ground, and fell on his knees.
+
+King Olaf stood still, and looked at the man with the same clear glance;
+the man tried to turn his eyes away from him, but he could not. At last
+he burst into tears and sobs.
+
+'Oh, King Olaf! King Olaf!' he moaned. 'Thine enemies sent me hither to
+slay thee; but when I saw thy saintly face my sword fell from my hand.
+Thine eyes, King Olaf, have felled me to the ground.'
+
+Astrid sank upon her knees where she stood.
+
+'Oh God, have mercy upon me, a sinner!' she said. 'Woe unto me, because
+by lying and deceit I have become the wife of this man.'
+
+
+IV
+
+On the evening of All Saints' Day the moon shone bright and clear. The
+King had gone the round of the castle, had looked into stables and barns
+to see that all was well; he had even been to the house where the serfs
+dwelt to ascertain if they were well looked after. When he went back to
+the King's Hall, he saw a woman with a black kerchief over her head
+stealing towards the gateway. He thought he knew her, and therefore
+followed her. She went out of the gateway, over the Market Place, and
+stole down the narrow lanes to the river.
+
+Olaf Haraldsson went after her as quietly as he could. He saw her go on
+to one of the landing-stages, stand still, and look down into the water.
+She stretched out her arms towards heaven, and, with a deep sigh, she
+went so near the edge that the King saw she meant to spring into the
+river.
+
+The King approached her with the noiseless steps which a life full of
+danger had taught him. Twice the woman lifted her foot to make the
+spring, but she hesitated. Before she could make a new attempt, King
+Olaf had his arm round her waist and drew her back.
+
+'Thou unhappy one!' he said. 'Thou wouldest do that which God hath
+prohibited.'
+
+When the woman heard his voice she held her hands before her face as if
+to hide it. But King Olaf knew who she was. The rustle of her dress, the
+shape of her head, the golden rings on her arms had already told him
+that it was the Queen. The first moment Astrid had struggled to free
+herself, but she soon grew quiet, and tried to make the King believe
+that she had not intended to kill herself.
+
+'King Olaf, why dost thou secretly come behind a poor woman who hath
+gone down to the river to see how she is mirrored in the water? What
+must I think of thee?'
+
+Astrid's voice sounded composed and playful. The King stood silent.
+
+'Thou hast frightened me so that I nearly fell into the river,' Astrid
+said. 'Didst thou think, perhaps, that I would drown myself?'
+
+The King answered:
+
+'I know not what to believe; God will enlighten me.'
+
+Astrid laughed and kissed him.
+
+'What woman would take her life who is as happy as I am? Doth one take
+one's life in Paradise?'
+
+'I do not understand it,' said King Olaf, in his gentle manner. 'God
+will enlighten me. He will tell me if it be through any fault of mine
+that thou wouldest commit so great a sin.'
+
+Astrid went up to him and stroked his cheek. The reverence she felt for
+King Olaf had hitherto deterred her from showing him the full tenderness
+of her love. Now she threw her arms passionately around him and kissed
+him countless times. Then she began to speak to him in gentle, bird-like
+tones.
+
+'Wouldest thou know how truly my heart clings to thee?' she said.
+
+She made the King sit down on an overturned boat. She knelt down at his
+feet.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'I will no longer be Queen. She who loves as
+greatly as I love thee cannot be a Queen. I wish thou wouldest go far
+into the forest, and let me be thy bondwoman. Then I should have leave
+to serve thee every day. Then I would prepare thy food, make thy bed,
+and watch over thy house whilst thou slept. None other should have leave
+to serve thee, except I. When thou returnest from the chase in the
+evening, I would go to meet thee, and kneel before thee on the road and
+say: "King Olaf, my life is thine." And thou wouldest laugh, and lower
+thy spear against my breast, and say: "Yes, thy life is mine. Thou hast
+neither father nor mother; thou art mine, and thy life is mine."'
+
+As Astrid said this, she drew, as if in play, King Olaf's sword out of
+its sheath. She laid the hilt in the King's hand, but the point she
+directed towards her own heart.
+
+'Say these words to me, King Olaf,' she said, 'as if we were alone in
+the forest, and I were thy bondwoman. Say: "Thy life is mine."'
+
+'Thy life is God's,' said the King.
+
+Astrid laughed lightly.
+
+'My life is thine,' she repeated, in the tenderest voice, and the same
+moment King Olaf felt that she pressed the point of the sword against
+her breast.
+
+But the King held the sword with a firm hand, even when in play. He drew
+it to him before Astrid had time to do herself any harm. And he sprang
+up. For the first time in his life he trembled from fear. The Queen
+would die at his hand, and she had not been far from attaining her wish.
+At the same moment he had an inspiration, and he understood what was the
+cause of her despair.
+
+'She has committed a sin,' he thought. 'She has a sin upon her
+conscience.'
+
+He bent down over Astrid.
+
+'Tell me in what manner thou hast sinned,' he said.
+
+Astrid had thrown herself down on the rough planks of the bridge, crying
+in utter despair.
+
+'No one free from guilt would weep like this,' thought the King. 'But
+how can the honourable daughter of the King have brought such a heavy
+burden upon her?' he asked himself. 'How can the noble Ingegerd have a
+crime upon her conscience?'
+
+'Ingegerd, tell me how thou hast sinned,' he asked again.
+
+But Astrid was sobbing so violently that she could not answer, but
+instead she drew off her golden arm and finger rings, and handed them to
+the King with averted face. The King thought how unlike this was to the
+gentle King's daughter of whom Hjalte had spoken.
+
+'Is this Hjalte's Ingegerd that lies sobbing at my feet?' he thought.
+
+He bent down and seized Astrid by the shoulder.
+
+'Who are thou? who art thou?' he said, shaking her arm. 'I see that thou
+canst not be Ingegerd. Who art thou?'
+
+Astrid was still sobbing so violently that she could not speak. But in
+order to give the King the answer he asked for, she let down her long
+hair, twisted a lock of it round her arms, and held them towards the
+King, and sat thus bowed and with drooping head. The King thought:
+
+'She wishes me to understand that she belongs to those who wear chains.
+She confesses that she is a bondwoman.'
+
+A thought again struck the King; he now understood everything.
+
+'Has not the Svea-King a daughter who is the child of a bondwoman?' he
+asked suddenly.
+
+He received no answer to this question either, but he heard Astrid
+shudder as if from cold. King Olaf asked still one more question.
+
+'Thou whom I have made my wife,' he said, 'hast thou so low a mind that
+thou wouldest allow thyself to be used as a means of spoiling a man's
+honour? Is thy mind so mean that thou rejoicest when his enemies laugh
+at his discomfiture?'
+
+Astrid could hear from the King's voice how bitterly he suffered under
+the insult that had been offered him. She forgot her own sufferings, and
+wept no more.
+
+'Take my life,' she said.
+
+A great temptation came upon King Olaf.
+
+'Slay this wicked bondwoman,' the old Adam said within him. 'Show the
+Svea-King what it costs to make a fool of the King of Norway.'
+
+At that moment Olaf Haraldsson felt no love for Astrid. He hated her for
+having been the means of his humiliation. He knew everybody would think
+it right when he returned evil for evil, and if he did not avenge this
+insult, he would be held in derision by the Bards, and his enemies would
+no longer fear him. He had but one wish: to slay Astrid, to take her
+life. His anger was so violent that it craved for blood. If a fool had
+dared to put his fool's cap upon his head, would he not have torn it
+off, torn it to pieces, thrown it on the ground, trampled upon it? If he
+now laid Astrid a bloody corpse upon her ship, and sent her back to her
+father, people would say of King Olaf that he was a worthy descendant of
+Harald Haarfager.
+
+But King Olaf still held his sword in his hand, and under his fingers he
+felt the hilt, upon which he had once had inscribed: 'Blessed are the
+peacemakers,' 'Blessed are the meek,' 'Blessed are the merciful.' And
+every time he, in this hour of anguish, grasped his sword firmly in
+order to slay Astrid, he felt these words under his hand. He thought he
+could feel every letter. He remembered the day when he had first heard
+these words.
+
+'This I will write in letters of gold on the hilt of my sword,' he had
+said, 'so that the words may burn in my hand every time I would swing my
+sword in fury, or for an unjust cause.'
+
+He felt that the hilt of the sword now burnt in his hand. King Olaf said
+aloud to himself:
+
+'Formerly thou wert the slave of many lusts; now thou hast but one
+master, and that is God.'
+
+With these words he put back the sword into its sheath, and began to
+walk to and fro on the bridge. Astrid remained lying in the same
+position. King Olaf saw that she crouched in fear of death every time he
+went past her.
+
+'I will not slay thee,' he said; but his voice sounded hard from hatred.
+
+King Olaf continued for awhile to walk backwards and forwards on the
+bridge; then he went up to Astrid, and asked her in the same hard voice
+what her real name was, and that she was able to answer him. He looked
+at this woman whom he had so highly treasured, and who now lay at his
+feet like a wounded deer--he looked down upon her as a dead man's soul
+looks with pity at the poor body which was once its dwelling.
+
+'Oh, thou my soul,' said King Olaf, 'it was there thou dwelt in love,
+and now thou art as homeless as a beggar.' He drew nearer to Astrid,
+and spoke as if she were no longer living or could hear what he said.
+'It was told me that there was a King's daughter whose heart was so pure
+and holy that she endued with peace all who came near her. They told me
+of her gentleness, that he who saw her felt as safe as a helpless child
+does with its mother, and when the beautiful woman who now lies here
+came to me, I thought that she was Ingegerd, and she became exceeding
+dear to me. She was so beautiful and glad, and she made my own heavy
+thoughts light. And did she sometimes act otherwise than I expected the
+proud Ingegerd to do, she was too dear to me to doubt her; she stole
+into my heart with her joyousness and beauty.'
+
+He was silent for a time, and thought how dear Astrid had been to him
+and how happiness had with her come to his house.
+
+'I could forgive her,' he said aloud. 'I could again make her my Queen,
+I could in love take her in my arms; but I _dare_ not, for my soul would
+still be homeless. Ah, thou fair woman,' he said, 'why dost lying dwell
+within thee? With thee there is no security, no rest.'
+
+The King went on bemoaning himself, but now Astrid stood up.
+
+'King Olaf, do not speak thus to me,' she said; 'I will rather die.
+Understand, I am in earnest.'
+
+Then she tried to say a few words to excuse herself. She told him that
+she had gone to Kungahälla not with the intention of deceiving him, but
+in order to be a Princess for a few weeks, to be waited upon like a
+Queen, to sail on the sea. But she had intended to confess who she was
+as soon as she came to Kungahälla. There she expected to find Hjalte and
+the other great men who knew Ingegerd. She had never thought of
+deceiving him when she came, but an evil spirit had sent all those away
+who knew Ingegerd, and then the temptation had come to her.
+
+'When I saw thee, King Olaf,' she said, 'I forgot everything to become
+thine, and I thought I would gladly suffer death at thine hand had I but
+for one day been thy wife.'
+
+King Olaf answered her:
+
+'I see that what was deadly earnest to me was but a pastime to thee.
+Never hast thou thought upon what it was to come and say to a man: "I am
+she whom thou most fervently desirest; I am that high-born maiden whom
+it is the greatest honour to win." And then thou art not that woman;
+thou art but a lying bondwoman.'
+
+'I have loved thee from the first moment I heard thy name,' Astrid said
+softly.
+
+The King clenched his hand in anger against her.
+
+'Know, Astrid, that I have longed for Ingegerd as no man has ever longed
+for woman. I would have clung to her as the soul of the dead clings to
+the angel bearing him upwards. I thought she was so pure that she could
+have helped me to lead a sinless life.'
+
+And he broke out into wild longings, and said that he longed for the
+power of the holy ones of God, but that he was too weak and sinful to
+attain to perfection.
+
+'But the King's daughter could have helped me,' he said; 'she the
+saintly and gentle one would have helped me. Oh, my God,' he said,
+'whichever way I turn I see sinners, wherever I go I meet those who
+would entice me to sin. Why didst Thou not send me the King's daughter,
+who had not a single evil thought in her heart? Her gentle eye would
+have found the right path for my foot. Whenever I strayed from it her
+gentle hand would have led me back.'
+
+A feeling of utter helplessness and the weariness of despair fell upon
+Olaf Haraldsson.
+
+'It was this upon which I had set my hopes,' he said--'to have a good
+woman at my side, not to wander alone amongst wickedness and sin
+forever. Now I feel that I must succumb; I am unable to fight any
+longer. Have I not asked God,' he exclaimed, 'what place I shall have
+before His face? To what hast Thou chosen me, Thou Lord of souls? Is it
+appointed unto me to become the equal of apostles and martyrs? But now,
+Astrid, I need ask no longer; God hath not been willing to give me that
+woman who should have assisted me in my wandering. Now I know that I
+shall never win the crown of the Saints.'
+
+The King was silent in inconsolable despair; then Astrid drew nearer to
+him.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'what thou now sayest both Hjalte and Ingegerd
+have told me long ago, but I would not believe that thou wert more than
+a good and brave knight and noble King. It is only now that I have
+lived under thy roof that my soul has begun to fear thee. I have felt
+that it was worse than death to appear before thee with a lie upon my
+lips. Never have I been so terrified,' Astrid continued, 'as when I
+understood that thou wast a Saint. When I saw thee burn the chips in
+thine hand, when I saw sickness flee at thy bidding, and the sword fall
+out of thine enemy's hand when he met thee, I was terrified unto death
+when I saw that thou wast a Saint, and I resolved to die before thou
+knewest that I had deceived thee.'
+
+King Olaf did not answer. Astrid looked up at him; she saw that his eyes
+were turned towards heaven. She did not know if he had heard her.
+
+'Ah,' she said, 'this moment have I feared every day and every hour
+since I came hither. I would have died rather than live through it.'
+
+Olaf Haraldsson was still silent.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'I would gladly give my life for thee; I would
+gladly throw myself into the gray river so that thou shouldst not live
+with a lying woman at thy side. The more I saw of thy holiness the
+better I understood that I must go from thee. A Saint of God cannot have
+a lying bondwoman at his side.'
+
+The King was still silent, but now Astrid raised her eyes to his face;
+then she cried out, terror-stricken:
+
+'King Olaf, thy face shines.'
+
+Whilst Astrid spoke, God had shown King Olaf a vision. He saw all the
+stars of heaven leave their appointed places, and fly like swarming
+bees about the universe. But suddenly they all gathered above his head
+and formed a radiant crown.
+
+'Astrid,' said he, with trembling voice, 'God hath spoken to me. It is
+true what thou sayest. I shall become a Saint of God.'
+
+His voice trembled from emotion, and his face shone in the night. But
+when Astrid saw the light that surrounded his head, she arose. For her
+the last hope had faded.
+
+'Now I will go,' she said. 'Now thou knowest whom thou art. Thou canst
+never more bear me at thy side. But think gently of me. Without joy or
+happiness have I lived all my life. In rags have I gone; blows have I
+endured. Forgive me when I am gone. My love has done thee no harm.'
+
+When Astrid in silent despair crossed over the bridge, Olaf Haraldsson
+awoke from his ecstasy. He hastened after her.
+
+'Why wilt thou go?' he said. 'Why wilt thou go?'
+
+'_Must_ I not go from thee when thou art a Saint?' she whispered
+scarcely audibly.
+
+'Thou shalt not go. Now thou canst remain,' said King Olaf. 'Before, I
+was a lowly man and must fear all sin; a poor earthly King was I, too
+poor to bestow on thee my grace; but now all the glory of Heaven has
+been given to me. Art thou weak? I am the Lord's knight. Dost thou fall?
+I can lift thee up. God hath chosen me, Astrid. Thou canst not harm me,
+but I can help thee. Ah! what am I saying? In this hour God hath so
+wholly and fully shed the riches of His love in my heart that I cannot
+even see thou hast done wrong.'
+
+Gently and tenderly he lifted up the trembling form, and whilst lovingly
+supporting her, who was still sobbing and who could hardly stand
+upright, he and Astrid went back to the King's Castle.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ III
+
+ _Old_ AGNETE
+
+
+
+
+_Old_ AGNETE
+
+
+An old woman went up the mountain-path with short, tripping steps. She
+was little and thin. Her face was pale and wizened, but neither hard nor
+furrowed. She wore a long cloak and a quilled cap. She had a Prayer-Book
+in her hand and a sprig of lavender in her handkerchief.
+
+She lived in a hut far up the high mountain where no trees could grow.
+It was lying quite close to the edge of a broad glacier, which sent its
+river of ice from the snow-clad mountain peak into the depths of the
+valley. There she lived quite alone. All those who had belonged to her
+were dead.
+
+It was Sunday, and she had been to church. But whatever might be the
+cause, her going there had not made her happy, but sorrowful. The
+clergyman had spoken about death and the doomed, and that had affected
+her. She had suddenly begun to think of how she had heard in her
+childhood that many of the doomed were tormented in the region of
+eternal cold on the mountain right above her dwelling. She could
+remember many tales about these wanderers of the glaciers--these
+indefatigable shadows which were hunted from place to place by the icy
+mountain winds.
+
+All at once she felt a great terror of the mountain, and thought that
+her hut was dreadfully high up. Supposing those who moved about
+invisibly there wandered down the glaciers! And she who was quite alone!
+The word 'alone' gave to her thoughts a still sadder turn. She again
+felt the full burden of that sorrow which never left her. She thought
+how hard it was to be so far away from human beings.
+
+'Old Agnete,' she said aloud to herself, as she had got into the habit
+of doing in the lonely waste, 'you sit in your hut and spin, and spin.
+You work and toil all the hours of the day so as not to perish from
+hunger. But is there anyone to whom you give any pleasure by being
+alive? Is there anyone, old Agnete? If any of your own were
+living----Yes, then, perhaps, if you lived nearer the village, you might
+be of some use to somebody. Poor as you are, you could neither take dog
+nor cat home to you, but you could probably now and then give a beggar
+shelter. You ought not to live so far away from the highroad, old
+Agnete. If you could only once in a while give a thirsty wayfarer a
+drink, then you would know that it was of some use your being alive.'
+
+She sighed, and said to herself that not even the peasant women who gave
+her flax to spin would mourn her death. She had certainly striven to do
+her work honestly and well, but no doubt there were many who could have
+done it better. She began to cry bitterly, when the thought struck her
+that his reverence, who had seen her sitting in the same place in church
+for so many, many years, would perhaps think it a matter of perfect
+indifference whether she was dead or not.
+
+'It is as if I were dead,' she said. 'No one asks after me. I would just
+as well lie down and die. I am already frozen to death from cold and
+loneliness. I am frozen to the core of the heart, I am indeed. Ah me! ah
+me!' she said, now she had been set a-thinking; 'if there were only
+someone who really needed me, there might still be a little warmth left
+in old Agnete. But I cannot knit stockings for the mountain goats, or
+make the beds for the marmots, can I? I tell Thee,' she said, stretching
+our her hands towards heaven, 'something Thou must give me to do, or I
+shall lay me down and die.'
+
+At the same moment a tall, stern monk came towards her. He walked by her
+side because he saw that she was sorrowful, and she told him about her
+troubles. She said that her heart was nearly frozen to death, and that
+she would become like one of the wanderers on the glacier if God did not
+give her something to live for.
+
+'God will assuredly do that,' said the monk.
+
+'Do you not see that God is powerless here?' old Agnete said. 'Here
+there is nothing but an empty, barren waste.'
+
+They went higher and higher towards the snow mountains. The moss spread
+itself softly over the stones; the Alpine herbs, with their velvety
+leaves, grew along the pathway; the mountain, with its rifts and
+precipices, its glaciers and snow-drifts, towered above them, weighing
+them down. Then the monk discovered old Agnete's hut, right below the
+glacier.
+
+'Oh,' he said, 'is it there you live? Then you are not alone there; you
+have company enough. Only look!'
+
+The monk put his thumb and first finger together, held them before old
+Agnete's left eye, and bade her look through them towards the mountain.
+But old Agnete shuddered and closed her eyes.
+
+'If there is anything to see up there, then I will not look on any
+account,' she said. 'The Lord preserve us! it is bad enough without
+that.'
+
+'Good-bye, then,' said the monk; 'it is not certain that you will be
+permitted to see such a thing a second time.'
+
+Old Agnete grew curious; she opened her eyes and looked towards the
+glacier. At first she saw nothing remarkable, but soon she began to
+discern things moving about. What she had taken to be mist and vapour,
+or bluish-white shadows on the ice, were multitudes of doomed souls,
+tormented in the eternal cold.
+
+Poor old Agnete trembled like an aspen leaf. Everything was just as she
+had heard it described in days gone by. The dead wandered about there in
+endless anguish and pain. Most of them were shrouded in something long
+and white, but all had their faces and their hands bared.
+
+They could not be counted, there was such a multitude. The longer she
+looked, the more there appeared. Some walked proud and erect, others
+seemed to dance over the glacier; but she saw that they all cut their
+feet on the sharp and jagged edges of the ice.
+
+It was just as she had been told. She saw how they constantly huddled
+close together, as if to warm themselves, but immediately drew back
+again, terrified by the deathly cold which emanated from their bodies.
+
+It was as if the cold of the mountain came from them, as if it were they
+who prevented the snow from melting and made the mist so piercingly
+cold.
+
+They were not all moving; some stood in icy stoniness, and it looked as
+if they had been standing thus for years, for ice and snow had gathered
+around them so that only the upper portion of their bodies could be
+seen.
+
+The longer the little old woman gazed the quieter she grew. Fear left
+her, and she was only filled with sorrow for all these tormented beings.
+There was no abatement in their pain, no rest for their torn feet,
+hurrying over ice sharp as edged steel. And how cold they were! how they
+shivered! how their teeth chattered from cold! Those who were petrified
+and those who could move, all suffered alike from the snarling, biting,
+unbearable cold.
+
+There were many young men and women; but there was no youth in their
+faces, blue with cold. It looked as if they were playing, but all joy
+was dead. They shivered, and were huddled up like old people.
+
+But those who made the deepest impression on her were those frozen fast
+in the hard glacier, and those who were hanging from the mountain-side
+like great icicles.
+
+Then the monk removed his hand, and old Agnete saw only the barren,
+empty glaciers. Here and there were ice-mounds, but they did not
+surround any petrified ghosts. The blue light on the glacier did not
+proceed from frozen bodies; the wind chased the snowflakes before it,
+but not any ghosts.
+
+Still old Agnete was certain that she had really seen all this, and she
+asked the monk:
+
+'Is it permitted to do anything for these poor doomed ones?'
+
+He answered:
+
+'When has God forbidden Love to do good or Mercy to solace?'
+
+Then the monk went his way, and old Agnete went to her hut and thought
+it all over. The whole evening she pondered how she could help the
+doomed who were wandering on the glaciers. For the first time in many
+years she had been too busy to think of her loneliness.
+
+Next morning she again went down to the village. She smiled, and was
+well content. Old age was no longer so heavy a burden. 'The dead,' she
+said to herself, 'do not care so much about red cheeks and light steps.
+They only want one to think of them with a little warmth. But young
+people do not trouble to do that. Oh no, oh no. How should the dead
+protect themselves from the terrible coldness of death did not old
+people open their hearts to them?
+
+When she came to the village shop she bought a large package of candles,
+and from a peasant she ordered a great load of firewood; but in order to
+pay for it she had to take in twice as much spinning as usual.
+
+Towards evening, when she got home again, she said many prayers, and
+tried to keep up her courage by singing hymns. But her courage sank more
+and more. All the same, she did what she had made up her mind to do.
+
+She moved her bed into the inner room of her hut. In the front room she
+made a big fire and lighted it. In the window she placed two candles,
+and left the outer door wide open. Then she went to bed.
+
+She lay in the darkness and listened.
+
+Yes, there certainly was a step. It was as if someone had come gliding
+down the glacier. It came heavily, moaning. It crept round the hut as if
+it dared not come in. Close to the wall it stood and shivered.
+
+Old Agnete could not bear it any longer. She sprang out of bed, went
+into the outer room and closed the door. It was too much; flesh and
+blood could not stand it.
+
+Outside the hut she heard deep sighs and dragging steps, as of sore,
+wounded feet. They dragged themselves away further and further up the
+icy glacier. Now and again she also heard sobs; but soon everything was
+quiet.
+
+Then old Agnete was beside herself with anxiety. 'You are a coward, you
+silly old thing,' she said. 'Both the fire and the lights, which cost so
+much, are burning out. Shall it all have been done in vain because you
+are such a miserable coward?' And when she had said this she got out of
+bed again, crying from fear, with chattering teeth, and shivering all
+over; but into the other room she went, and the door she opened.
+
+Again she lay and waited. Now she was no longer frightened that they
+should come. She was only afraid lest she had scared them away, and that
+they dared not come back.
+
+And as she lay there in the darkness she began to call just as she used
+to do in her young days when she was tending the sheep.
+
+'My little white lambs, my lambs in the mountains, come, come! Come down
+from rift and precipice, my little white lambs!'
+
+Then it seemed as if a cold wind from the mountain came rushing into the
+room. She heard neither step nor sob, only gusts of wind that came
+rushing along the walls of the hut into the room. And it sounded as if
+someone were continually saying:
+
+'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't frighten her! don't frighten
+her!'
+
+She had a feeling as if the outside room was so overcrowded that they
+were being crushed against the walls, and that the walls were giving
+way. Sometimes it seemed as if they would lift the roof in order to gain
+more room. But the whole time there were whispers:
+
+'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't frighten her!'
+
+Then old Agnete felt happy and peaceful. She folded her hands and fell
+asleep. In the morning it seemed as if the whole had been a dream.
+Everything looked as usual in the outer room; the fire had burnt out,
+and so had the candles. There was not a vestige of tallow left in the
+candlesticks.
+
+As long as old Agnete lived she continued to do this. She spun and
+worked so that she could keep her fire burning every night. And she was
+happy because someone needed her.
+
+Then one Sunday she was not in her usual seat in the church. Two
+peasants went up to her hut to see if there was anything the matter. She
+was already dead, and they carried her body down to the village to bury
+it.
+
+When, the following Sunday, her funeral took place, just before Mass,
+there were but few who followed, neither did one see grief on any face.
+But suddenly, just as the coffin was being lowered into the grave, a
+tall, stern monk came into the churchyard, and he stood still and
+pointed to the snow-clad mountains. Then they saw the whole
+mountain-ridge shining in a red light as if lighted with joy, and round
+it wound a procession of small yellow flames, looking like burning
+candles. And these flames numbered as many as the candles which old
+Agnete had burned for the doomed. Then people said: 'Praise the Lord!
+She whom no one mourns here below has all the same found friends in the
+solitude above.'
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ IV
+
+ _The Fisherman's_ RING
+
+
+
+
+_The Fisherman's_ RING
+
+
+During the reign of the Doge Gradenigos there lived in Venice an old
+fisherman, Cecco by name. He had been an unusually strong man, and was
+still very strong for his age, but lately he had given up work and left
+it to his two sons to provide for him. He was very proud of his sons,
+and he loved them--ah, signor, how he loved them!
+
+Fate had so ordered it that their bringing up had been almost entirely
+left to him. Their mother had died early, and so Cecco had to take care
+of them. He had looked after their clothes and cooked their food; he had
+sat in the boat with needle and cotton and mended and darned. He had not
+cared in the least that people had laughed at him on that account. He
+had also, quite alone, taught them all it was necessary for them to
+know. He had made a couple of able fishermen of them, and taught them to
+honour God and San Marco.
+
+'Always remember,' he said to them, 'that Venice will never be able to
+stand in her own strength. Look at her! Has she not been built on the
+waves? Look at the low islands close to land, where the sea plays
+amongst the seaweed. You would not venture to tread upon them, and yet
+it is upon such foundation that the whole city rests. And do you not
+know that the north wind has strength enough to throw both churches and
+palaces into the sea? Do you not know that we have such powerful
+enemies, that all the princes in Christendom cannot vanquish them?
+Therefore you must always pray to San Marco, for in his strong hands
+rests the chains which hold Venice suspended over the depths of the
+sea.'
+
+And in the evening, when the moon shed its light over Venice,
+greenish-blue from the sea-mist; when they quietly glided up the Canale
+Grande and the gondolas they met were full of singers; when the palaces
+shone in their white splendour, and thousands of lights mirrored
+themselves in the dark waters--then he always reminded them that they
+must thank San Marco for life and happiness.
+
+But oh, signor! he did not forget him in the daytime either. When they
+returned from fishing and glided over the water of the lagoons,
+light-blue and golden; when the city lay before them, swimming on the
+waves; when the great ships passed in and out of the harbour, and the
+palace of the Doges shone like a huge jewel-casket, holding all the
+world's treasure--then he never forgot to tell them that all these
+things were the gift of San Marco, and that they would all vanish if a
+single Venetian were ungrateful enough to give up believing in and
+adoring him.
+
+Then, one day, the sons went out fishing on the open sea, outside Lido.
+They were in company with several others, had a splendid vessel, and
+intended being away several days. The weather was fine, and they hoped
+for a goodly haul.
+
+They left the Rialto, the large island where the city proper lies, one
+early morning, and as they passed through the lagoons they saw all the
+islands which, like fortifications, protect Venice against the sea,
+appear through the mist of the morning. There were La Gindecca and San
+Giorgio on the right, and San Michele, Muracco and San Lazzaro on the
+left. Then island followed upon island in a large circle, right on to
+the long Lido lying straight before them, and forming, as it were, the
+clasp of this string of pearls. And beyond Lido was the wide, infinite
+sea.
+
+When they were well at sea, some of them got into a small boat and rowed
+out to set their nets. It was still fine weather, although the waves
+were higher here than inside the islands. None of them, however, dreamt
+of any danger. They had a good boat and were experienced men. But soon
+those left on the vessel saw that the sea and the sky suddenly grew
+darker in the north. They understood that a storm was coming on, and
+they at once shouted to their comrades, but they were already too far
+away to hear them.
+
+The wind first reached the small boat. When the fishermen suddenly saw
+the waves rise around them, as herds of cattle on a large plain arise in
+the morning, one of the men in the boat stood up and beckoned to his
+comrades, but the same moment he fell backwards into the sea.
+Immediately afterwards a wave came which raised the boat on her bows,
+and one could see how the men, as it were, were shaken from off their
+seats and flung into the sea. It only lasted a moment, and everything
+had disappeared. Then the boat again appeared, keel upwards. The men in
+the vessel tried to reach the spot, but could not tack against the wind.
+
+It was a terrific storm which came rushing over the sea, and soon the
+fishermen in the vessel had their work set to save themselves. They
+succeeded in getting home safely, however, and brought with them the
+news of the disaster. It was Cecco's two sons and three others who had
+perished.
+
+Ah me! how strangely things come about! The same morning Cecco had gone
+down to the Rialto to the fish-market. He went about amongst the stands
+and strutted about like a fine gentleman because he had no need to work.
+He even invited a couple of old Lido fishermen to an asteri and stood
+them a beaker of wine. He grew very important as he sat there and
+bragged and boasted about his sons. His spirits rose high, and he took
+out the zecchine--the one the Doge had given him when he had saved a
+child from drowning in Canale Grande. He was very proud of this large
+gold coin, carried it always about him, and showed it to people whenever
+there was an opportunity.
+
+Suddenly a man entered the asteri and began to tell about the disaster,
+without noticing that Cecco was sitting there. But he had not been
+speaking long before Cecco threw himself over him and seized him by the
+throat.
+
+'You do not dare to tell me that they are dead!' he shrieked--'not my
+sons!'
+
+The man succeeded in getting away from him, but Cecco for a long time
+went on as if he were out of his mind. People heard him shout and groan;
+they crowded into the asteri--as many as it could hold--and stood round
+him in a circle as if he were a juggler.
+
+Cecco sat on the floor and moaned. He hit the hard stone floor with his
+fist, and said over and over again:
+
+'It is San Marco, San Marco, San Marco!'
+
+'Cecco, you have taken leave of your senses from grief,' they said to
+him.
+
+'I knew it would happen on the open sea,' Cecco said; 'outside Lido and
+Malamocco, there, I knew it would happen. There San Marco would take
+them. He bore them a grudge. I have feared it, boy. Yes,' he said,
+without hearing what they said to quiet him, 'they once laughed at him,
+once when we were lying outside Lido. He has not forgotten it; he will
+not stand being laughed at.'
+
+He looked with confused glances at the bystanders, as if to seek help.
+
+'Look here, Beppo from Malamocca,' he said, stretching out his hand
+towards a big fisherman, 'don't you believe it was San Marco?'
+
+'Don't imagine any such thing, Cecco.'
+
+'Now you shall hear, Beppo, how it happened. You see, we were lying out
+at sea, and to while away the time I told them how San Marco had come to
+Venice. The evangelist San Marco was first buried in a beautiful
+cathedral at Alexandria in Egypt. But the town got into the possession
+of unbelievers, and one day the Khalifa ordered that they should build
+him a magnificent palace at Alexandria, and take some columns from the
+Christian churches for its decoration. But just at that time there were
+two Venetian merchants at Alexandria who had ten heavily-laden vessels
+lying in the harbour. When these men entered the church where San Marco
+was buried and heard the command of the Khalifa, they said to the
+sorrowful priests: "The precious body which you have in your church may
+be desecrated by the Saracens. Give it to us; we will honour it, for San
+Marco was the first to preach on the Lagoon, and the Doge will reward
+you." And the priests gave their consent, and in order that the
+Christians of Alexandria should not object, the body of another holy man
+was placed in the Evangelist's coffin. But to prevent the Saracens from
+getting any news of the removal of the body, it was placed at the bottom
+of a large chest, and above it were packed hams and smoked bacon, which
+the Saracens could not endure. So when the Custom-house officers opened
+the lid of the chest, they at once hurried away. The two merchants,
+however, brought San Marco safely to Venice; you know, Beppo, that this
+is what they say.'
+
+'I do, Cecco.'
+
+'Yes; but just listen now,' and Cecco half arose, and in his fear spoke
+in a low voice. 'Something terrible now happened. When I told the boys
+that the holy man had been hidden underneath the bacon, they burst out
+laughing. I tried to hush them, but they only laughed the louder.
+Giacomo was lying on his stomach in the bows, and Pietro sat with his
+legs dangling outside the boat, and they both laughed so that it could
+be heard far out over the sea.'
+
+'But, Cecco, surely two children may be allowed to laugh.'
+
+'But don't you understand that is where they have perished to-day--on
+the very spot? Or can you understand why they should have lost their
+lives on that spot?'
+
+Now they all began to talk to him and comfort him. It was his grief
+which made him lose his senses. This was not like San Marco. He would
+not revenge himself upon two children. Was it not natural that when a
+boat was caught in a storm this would happen on the open sea and not in
+the harbour?
+
+Surely his sons had not lived in enmity with San Marco. They had heard
+them shout, '_Eviva San Marco!_' as eagerly as all the others, and had
+he not protected them to this very day. He had never, during the years
+that had passed, shown any sign of being angry with them.
+
+'But, Cecco,' they said, 'you will bring misfortune upon us with your
+talk about San Marco. You, who are an old man and a wise man, should
+know better than to raise his anger against the Venetians. What are we
+without him?'
+
+Cecco sat and looked at them bewildered.
+
+'Then you don't believe it?'
+
+'No one in his senses would believe such a thing.'
+
+It looked as if they had succeeded in quieting him.
+
+'I will also try not to believe it,' he said. He rose and walked towards
+the door. 'It would be too cruel, would it not?' he said. 'They were
+too handsome and too brave for anyone to hate them; I will not believe
+it.'
+
+He went home, and in the narrow street outside his door he met an old
+woman, one of his neighbours.
+
+'They are reading a Mass in the cathedral for the souls of the dead,'
+she said to Cecco, and hurried away. She was afraid of him; he looked so
+strange.
+
+Cecco took his boat and made his way through the small canals down to
+Riva degli Schiavoni. There was a wide view from there; he looked
+towards Lido and the sea. Yes, it was a hard wind, but not a storm by
+any means; there were hardly any waves. And his sons had perished in
+weather like this! It was inconceivable.
+
+He fastened his boat, and went across the Piazetta and the Market Place
+into San Marco. There were many people in the church, and they were all
+kneeling and praying in great fear; for it is much more terrible for the
+Venetians, you know, than any other people when there is a disaster at
+sea. They do not get their living from vineyards or fields, but they are
+all, everyone of them, dependent on the sea. Whenever the sea rose
+against any one of them they were all afraid, and hurried to San Marco
+to pray to him for protection.
+
+As soon as Cecco entered the cathedral he stopped. He thought of how he
+had brought his little sons there, and taught them to pray to San Marco.
+'It is he who carries us over the sea, who opens the gates of Byzance
+for us and gives us the supremacy over the islands of the East,' he
+said to them. Out of gratitude for all this the Venetians had built San
+Marco the most beautiful temple in the world, and no vessel ever
+returned from a foreign port without bringing a gift for San Marco.
+
+Then they had admired the red marble walls of the cathedral and the
+golden mosaic ceiling. It was as if no misfortune could befall a city
+that had such a sanctuary for her patron Saint.
+
+Cecco quickly knelt down and began to pray, the one _Paternoster_ after
+the other. It came back, he felt. He would send it away by prayers. He
+would not believe anything bad about San Marco.
+
+But it had been no storm at all. And so much was certain, that even if
+the Saint had not sent the storm, he had, in any case, not done anything
+to help Cecco's sons, but had allowed them to perish as if by accident.
+When this thought came upon him he began to pray; but the thought would
+not leave him.
+
+And to think that San Marco had a treasury in this cathedral full of all
+the glories of fairyland! To think that he had himself prayed to him all
+his life, and had never rowed past the Piazetta without going into the
+cathedral to invoke him!
+
+Surely it was not by a mere accident that his sons had to-day perished
+on the sea! Oh, it was miserable for the Venetians to have no one better
+to depend upon! Just fancy a Saint who revenged himself upon two
+children--a patron Saint who could not protect against a gust of wind!
+
+He stood up, and he shrugged his shoulders, and disparagingly waved his
+hand when he looked towards the tomb of the Saint in the chancel.
+
+A verger was going about with a large chased silver-gilt dish,
+collecting gifts for San Marco. He went from the one person to the
+other, and also came to Cecco.
+
+Cecco drew back as if it were the Evil One himself who handed him the
+plate. Did San Marco ask for gifts from him? Did he think he deserved
+gifts from him?
+
+All at once he seized the large golden zecchine he had in his belt, and
+flung it into the plate with such violence that the ring of it could be
+heard all over the church. It disturbed those who were praying, and made
+them turn round. And all who saw Cecco's face were terrified; he looked
+as if he were possessed of evil spirits.
+
+Cecco immediately left the church, and at first felt it as a great
+relief that he had been revenged upon the Saint. He had treated him as
+one treats a usurer who demands more than he is entitled to. 'Take this
+too,' one says, and throws his last gold piece in the fellow's face so
+that the blood runs down over his eyes. But the usurer does not strike
+again--simply stoops and picks up the zecchine. So, too, had San Marco
+done. He had accepted Cecco's zecchine, having first robbed him of his
+sons. Cecco had made him accept a gift which had been tendered with such
+bitter hatred. Would an honourable man have put up with such treatment?
+But San Marco was a coward--both cowardly and revengeful. But he was not
+likely to revenge himself upon Cecco. He was, no doubt, pleased and
+thankful he had got the zecchine. He simply accepted it and pretended
+that it had been given as piously as could be.
+
+When Cecco stood at the entrance, two vergers quickly passed him.
+
+'It rises--it rises terribly!' the one said.
+
+'What rises?' asked Cecco.
+
+'The water in the crypt. It has risen a foot in the last two or three
+minutes.'
+
+When Cecco went down the steps, he saw a small pool of water on the
+Market Place close to the bottom step. It was sea-water, which had
+splashed up from the Piazetta. He was surprised that the sea had risen
+so high, and he hurried down to the Riva, where his boat lay. Everything
+was as he had left it, only the water had risen considerably. It came
+rolling in broad waves through the five sea-gates; but the wind was not
+very strong. At the Riva there were already pools of sea-water, and the
+canals rose so that the doors in the houses facing the water had to be
+closed. The sky was all gray like the sea.
+
+It never struck Cecco that it might grow into a serious storm. He would
+not believe any such thing. San Marco had allowed his sons to perish
+without cause. He felt sure this was no real storm. He would just like
+to see if it would be a storm, and he sat down beside his boat and
+waited.
+
+Then suddenly rifts appeared in the dull-gray clouds which covered the
+sky. The clouds were torn asunder and flung aside, and large
+storm-clouds came rushing, black like warships, and from them scourging
+rain and hail fell upon the city. And something like quite a new sea
+came surging in from Lido. Ah, signor! they were not the swan-necked
+waves you have seen out there, the waves that bend their transparent
+necks and hasten towards the shore, and which, when they are pitilessly
+repulsed, float away again with their white foam-hair dispersed over the
+surface of the sea. These were dark waves, chasing each other in furious
+rage, and over their tops the bitter froth of the sea was whipped into
+mist.
+
+The wind was now so strong that the seagulls could no longer continue
+their quiet flight, but, shrieking, were thrust from their course. Cecco
+soon saw them with much trouble making their way towards the sea, so as
+not to be caught by the storm and flung against the walls. Hundreds of
+pigeons on San Marco's square flew up, beating their wings, so that it
+sounded like a new storm, and hid themselves away in all the nooks and
+corners of the church roof.
+
+But it was not the birds alone that were frightened by the storm. A
+couple of gondolas had already got loose, and were thrown against the
+shore, and were nearly shattered. And now all the gondoliers came
+rushing to pull their boats into the boathouses, or place them in
+shelter in the small canals.
+
+The sailors on the ships lying in the harbour worked with the
+anchor-chains to make the vessels fast, in order to prevent them
+drifting on to the shore. They took down the clothes hanging up to dry,
+pulled their long caps well over their foreheads, and began to collect
+all the loose articles lying about in order to bring them below deck.
+Outside Canale Grande a whole fishing-fleet came hurrying home. All the
+people from Lido and Malamocco who had sold their goods at the Rialto
+were rushing homewards, before the storm grew too violent.
+
+Cecco laughed when he saw the fishermen bending over their oars and
+straining themselves as if they were fleeing from death itself. Could
+they not see that it was only a gust of wind? They could very well have
+remained and given the Venetian women time to buy all their cattle,
+fish, and crabs.
+
+He was certainly not going to pull his boat into shelter, although the
+storm was now violent enough for any ordinary man to have taken notice
+of it. The floating bridges were lifted up high and cast on to the
+shore, whilst the washerwomen hurried home shrieking. The broad-brimmed
+hats of the signors were blown off into the canals, from whence the
+street-boys fished them out with great glee. Sails were torn from the
+masts, and fluttered in the air with a cracking sound; children were
+knocked down by the strong wind; and the clothes hanging on the lines in
+the narrow streets were torn to rags and carried far away.
+
+Cecco laughed at the storm--a storm which drove the birds away, and
+played all sorts of pranks in the street, like a boy. But, all the same,
+he pulled his boat under one of the arches of the bridge. One could
+really not allow what that wind might take it into its head to do.
+
+In the evening Cecco thought that it would have been fun to have been
+out at sea. It would have been splendid sailing with such a fresh wind.
+But on shore it was unpleasant. Chimneys were blown down; the roofs of
+the boathouses were lifted right off; it rained tiles from the houses
+into the canals; the wind shook the doors and the window-shutters,
+rushed in under the open loggias of the palaces and tore off the
+decorations.
+
+Cecco held out bravely, but he did not go home to bed. He could not take
+the boat home with him, so it was better to remain and look after it.
+But when anyone went by and said that it was terrible weather he would
+not admit it. He had experienced very different weather in his young
+days.
+
+'Storm!' he said to himself--'call this a storm? And they think,
+perhaps, that it began the same moment I threw the zecchine to San
+Marco. As if he can command a real storm!'
+
+When night came the wind and the sea grew still more violent, so that
+Venice trembled in her foundations. Doge Gradenigo and the Gentlemen of
+the High Council went in the darkness of the night to San Marco to pray
+for the city. Torch-bearers went before them, and the flames were spread
+out by the wind, so that they lay flat, like pennants. The wind tore the
+Doge's heavy brocade gown, so that two men were obliged to hold it.
+
+Cecco thought this was the most remarkable thing he had ever seen--Doge
+Gradenigo going himself to the cathedral on account of this bit of a
+wind! What would those people have done if there had been a real storm?
+
+The waves beat incessantly against the bulwarks. In the darkness of the
+night it was as if white-headed wresters sprang up from the deep, and
+with teeth and claws clung fast to the piles to tear them loose from the
+shore. Cecco fancied he could hear their angry snorts when they were
+hurled back again. But he shuddered when he heard them come again and
+again, and tear in the bulwarks.
+
+It seemed to him that the storm was far more terrible in the night. He
+heard shouts in the air, and that was not the wind. Sometimes black
+clouds came drifting like a whole row of heavy galleys, and it seemed as
+if they advanced to make an assault on the city. Then he heard
+distinctly someone speaking in one of the riven clouds over his head.
+
+'Things look bad for Venice now,' it said from the one cloud. 'Soon our
+brothers the evil spirits will come and overthrow the city.'
+
+'I am afraid San Marco will not allow it to happen,' came as a response
+from the other cloud.
+
+'San Marco has been knocked down by a Venetian, so he lies powerless,
+and cannot help anyone,' said the first.
+
+The storm carried the words down to old Cecco, and from that moment he
+was on his knees, praying San Marco for grace and forgiveness. For the
+evil spirits had spoken the truth. It did indeed look bad for Venice.
+The fair Queen of the Isles was near destruction. A Venetian had mocked
+San Marco, and therefore Venice was in danger of being carried away by
+the sea. There would be no more moonlight sails or her sea and in her
+canals, and no more barcaroles would be heard from her black gondolas.
+The sea would wash over the golden-haired signoras, over the proud
+palaces, over San Marco, resplendent with gold.
+
+If there was no one to protect these islands, they were doomed to
+destruction. Before San Marco came to Venice it had often happened that
+large portions of them had been washed away by the waves.
+
+At early dawn San Marco's Church bells began to ring. People crept to
+the church, their clothes being nearly torn off them.
+
+The storm went on increasing. The priests had resolved to go out and
+adjure the storm and the sea. The main doors of the cathedral were
+opened, and the long procession streamed out of the church. Foremost the
+cross was carried, then came the choir-boys with wax candles, and last
+in the procession were carried the banner of San Marco and the Sacred
+Host.
+
+But the storm did not allow itself to be cowed; on the contrary, it was
+as if it wished for nothing better to play with. It upset the
+choir-boys, blew out the wax candles, and flung the baldachin, which was
+carried over the Host, on to the top of the Doge's palace. It was with
+the utmost trouble that they saved San Marco's banner, with the winged
+lion, from being carried away.
+
+Cecco saw all this, and stole down to his boat moaning loudly. The whole
+day he lay near the shore, often wet by the waves and in danger of being
+washed into the sea. The whole day he was praying incessantly to God and
+San Marco. He felt that the fate of the whole city depended upon his
+prayers.
+
+There were not many people about that day, but some few went moaning
+along the Riva. All spoke about the immeasurable damage the storm had
+wrought. One could see the houses tumbling down on the Murano. It was as
+if the whole island were under water. And also on the Rialto one or two
+houses had fallen.
+
+The storm continued the whole day with unabated violence. In the evening
+a large multitude of people assembled at the Market Place and the
+Piazetta, although these were nearly covered with water. People dared
+not remain in their houses, which shook in their very foundations. And
+the cries of those who feared disaster mingled with the lamentations of
+those whom it had already overtaken. Whole dwellings were under water;
+children were drowned in their cradles. The old and the sick had been
+swept with the overturned houses into the waves.
+
+Cecco was still lying and praying to San Marco. Oh, how could the crime
+of a poor fisherman be taken in such earnest? Surely it was not his
+fault that the saint was so powerless! He would let the demons take him
+and his boat; he deserved no better fate. But not the whole city!--oh,
+God in heaven, not the whole city!
+
+'My sons!' Cecco said to San Marco. 'What do I care about my sons when
+Venice is at stake! I would willingly give a son for each tile in danger
+of being blown into the canal if I could keep them in their place at
+that price. Oh, San Marco, each little stone of Venice is worth as much
+as a promising son.'
+
+At times he saw terrible things. There was a large galley which had torn
+itself from its moorings and now came drifting towards the shore. It
+went straight against the bulwark, and struck it with the ram's head in
+her bows, just as if it had been an enemy's ship. It gave blow after
+blow, and the attack was so violent that the vessel immediately sprang a
+leak. The water rushed in, the leak grew larger, and the proud ship went
+to pieces. But the whole time one could see the captain and two or three
+of the crew, who would not leave the vessel, cling to the deck and meet
+death without attempting to escape it.
+
+The second night came, and Cecco's prayers continued to knock at the
+gate of heaven.
+
+'Let me alone suffer!' he cried. 'San Marco, it is more than a man can
+bear, thus to drag others with him to destruction. Only send thy lion
+and kill me; I shall not attempt to escape. Everything that thou wilt
+have me give up for the city, that will I willingly sacrifice.'
+
+Just as he had uttered these words he looked towards the Piazetta, and
+he thought he could no longer see San Marco's lion on the granite
+pillar. Had San Marco permitted his lion to be overthrown? old Cecco
+cried. He was nearly giving up Venice.
+
+Whilst he was lying there he saw visions and heard voices all the time.
+The demons talked and moved to and fro. He heard them wheeze like wild
+beasts every time they made their assaults on the bulwarks. He did not
+mind them much; it was worse about Venice.
+
+Then he heard in the air above him the beating of strong wings; this
+was surely San Marco's lion flying overhead. It moved backwards and
+forwards in the air; he saw and yet he did not see it. Then it seemed to
+him as if it descended on Riva degli Schiavoni, where he was lying, and
+prowled about there. He was on the point of jumping into the sea from
+fear, but he remained sitting where he was. It was no doubt he whom the
+lion sought. If that could only save Venice, then he was quite willing
+to let San Marco avenge himself upon him.
+
+Then the lion came crawling along the ground like a cat. He saw it
+making ready to spring. He noticed that it beat its wings and screwed
+its large carbuncle eyes together till they were only small fiery slits.
+
+Then old Cecco certainly did think of creeping down to his boat and
+hiding himself under the arch of the bridge, but he pulled himself
+together and remained where he was. The same moment a tall, imposing
+figure stood by his side.
+
+'Good-evening, Cecco,' said the man; 'take your boat and row me across
+to San Giorgio Maggiore.'
+
+'Yes, signor,' immediately replied the old fisherman.
+
+It was as if he had awakened from a dream. The lion had disappeared, and
+the man must be somebody who knew him, although Cecco could not quite
+remember where he had seen him before. He was glad to have company. The
+terrible heaviness and anguish that had been over him since he had
+revolted against the Saint suddenly vanished. As to rowing across to
+San Giorgio, he did not for a moment think that it could be done.
+
+'I don't believe we can even get the boat out,' he said to himself.
+
+But there was something about the man at his side that made him feel he
+must do all he possibly could to serve him; and he did succeed in
+getting out the boat. He helped the stranger into the boat and took the
+oars.
+
+Cecco could not help laughing to himself.
+
+'What are you thinking about? Don't go out further in any case,' he
+said. 'Have you ever seen the like of these waves? Do tell him that it
+is not within the power of man.'
+
+But he felt as if he could not tell the stranger that it was impossible.
+He was sitting there as quietly as if he were sailing to the Lido on a
+summer's eve. And Cecco began to row to San Giorgio Maggiore.
+
+It was a terrible row. Time after time the waves washed over them.
+
+'Oh, stop him!' Cecco said under his breath; 'do stop the man who goes
+to sea in such weather! Otherwise he is a sensible old fisherman. Do
+stop him!'
+
+Now the boat was up a steep mountain, and then it went down into a
+valley. The foam splashed down on Cecco from the waves that rushed past
+him like runaway horses, but in spite of everything he approached San
+Giorgio.
+
+'For whom are you doing all this, risking boat and life?' he said. 'You
+don't even know whether he can pay you. He does not look like a fine
+gentleman. He is no better dressed than you are.'
+
+But he only said this to keep up his courage, and not to be ashamed of
+his tractability. He was simply compelled to do everything the man in
+the boat wanted.
+
+'But in any case not right to San Giorgio, you foolhardy old man,' he
+said. 'The wind is even worse there than at the Rialto.'
+
+But he went there, nevertheless, and made the boat fast whilst the
+stranger went on shore. He thought the wisest thing he could do would be
+to slip away and leave his boat, but he did not do it. He would rather
+die than deceive the stranger. He saw the latter go into the Church of
+San Giorgio. Soon afterwards he returned, accompanied by a knight in
+full armour.
+
+'Row us now to San Nicolo in Lido,' said the stranger.
+
+'Ay, ay,' Cecco thought; 'why not to Lido?' They had already, in
+constant anguish and death, rowed to San Giorgio; why should they not
+set out for Lido?
+
+And Cecco was shocked at himself that he obeyed the stranger even unto
+death, for he now actually steered for the Lido.
+
+Being now three in the boat, it was still heavier work. He had no idea
+how he should be able to do it. 'You might have lived many years yet,'
+he said sorrowfully to himself. But the strange thing was that he was
+not sorrowful, all the same. He was so glad that he could have laughed
+aloud. And then he was proud that he could make headway. 'He knows how
+to use his oars, does old Cecco,' he said.
+
+They laid-to at Lido, and the two strangers went on shore. They walked
+towards San Nicolo in Lido, and soon returned accompanied by an old
+Bishop, with robe and stole, crosier in hand, and mitre on head.
+
+'Now row out to the open sea,' said the first stranger.
+
+Old Cecco shuddered. Should he row out to the sea, where his sons
+perished? Now he had not a single cheerful word to say to himself. He
+did not think so much of the storm, but of the terror it was to have to
+go out to the graves of his sons. If he rowed out there, he felt that he
+gave the stranger more than his life.
+
+The three men sat silently in the boat as if they were on watch. Cecco
+saw them bend forward and gaze into the night. They had reached the gate
+of the sea at Lido, and the great storm-ridden sea lay before them.
+
+Cecco sobbed within himself. He thought of two dead bodies rolling about
+in these waves. He gazed into the water for two familiar faces. But
+onward the boat went. Cecco did not give in.
+
+Then suddenly the three men rose up in the boat; and Cecco fell upon his
+knees, although he still went on holding the oars. A big ship steered
+straight against them.
+
+Cecco could not quite tell whether it was a ship or only drifting mist.
+The sails were large, spread out, as it were, towards the four corners
+of heaven; and the hull was gigantic, but it looked as if it were built
+of the lightest sea-mist. He thought he saw men on board and heard
+shouting; but the crew were like deep darkness, and the shouting was
+like the roar of the storm.
+
+However it was, it was far too terrible to see the ship steer straight
+upon them, and Cecco closed his eyes.
+
+But the three men in the boat must have averted the collision, for the
+boat was not upset. When Cecco looked up the ship had fled out to sea,
+and loud wailings pierced the night.
+
+He rose, trembling to row further. He felt so tired that he could hardly
+hold the oars. But now there was no longer any danger. The storm had
+gone down, and the waves speedily laid themselves to rest.
+
+'Now row us back to Venice,' said the stranger to the fisherman.
+
+Cecco rowed the boat to Lido, where the Bishop went on shore, and to San
+Giorgio, where the knight left them. The first powerful stranger went
+with him all the way to the Rialto.
+
+When they had landed at Riva degli Schiavoni he said to the fisherman:
+
+'When it is daylight thou shalt go to the Doge and tell him what thou
+hast seen this night. Tell him that San Marco and San Giorgio and San
+Nicolo have to-night fought the evil spirits that would destroy Venice,
+and have put them to flight.'
+
+'Yes, signor,' the fisherman answered, 'I will tell everything. But how
+shall I speak so that the Doge will believe me?'
+
+Then San Marco handed him a ring with a precious stone possessed of a
+wonderful lustre.
+
+'Show this to the Doge,' he said, 'then he will understand that it
+brings a message from me. He knows my ring, which is kept in San Marco's
+treasury in the cathedral.'
+
+The fisherman took the ring, and kissed it reverently.
+
+'Further, thou shalt tell the Doge,' said the holy man, 'that this is a
+sign that I shall never forsake Venice. Even when the last Doge has left
+Palazzo Ducali I will live and preserve Venice. Even if Venice lose her
+islands in the East and the supremacy of the sea, and no Doge ever again
+sets out on the Bucintoro, even then I will preserve the city beautiful
+and resplendent. It shall always be rich and beloved, always be lauded
+and its praises sung, always a place of joy for men to live in. Say
+this, Cecco, and the Doge will not forsake thee in thine old age.'
+
+Then he disappeared; and soon the sun rose above the gate of the sea at
+Torcello. With its first beautiful rays it shed a rosy light over the
+white city and over the sea that shone in many colours. A red glow lay
+over San Giorgio and San Marco, and over the whole shore, studded with
+palaces. And in the lovely morning radiant Venetian ladies came out on
+to the loggias and greeted with smiles the rising day.
+
+Venice was once again the beautiful goddess, rising from the sea in her
+shell of rose-coloured pearl. Beautiful as never before, she combed her
+golden hair, and threw the purple robe around her, to begin one of her
+happiest days. For a transport of bliss filled her when the old
+fisherman brought San Marco's ring to the Doge, and she heard how the
+Saint, now, and until the end of time, would hold his protecting hand
+over her.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ V
+
+ _Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA
+
+
+
+
+_Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA
+
+
+At Santa Caterina's house in Siena, on a day towards the end of April,
+in the week when her fête is being celebrated, people come to the old
+house in the Street of the Dyers, to the house with the pretty loggia
+and with the many small chambers, which have now been converted into
+chapels and sanctuaries, bringing bouquets of white lilies; and the
+rooms are fragrant with incense and violets.
+
+Walking through these rooms, one cannot help thinking that it is just as
+if she were dead yesterday, as if all those who go in and out of her
+home to-day had seen and known her.
+
+But, on the other hand, no one could really think that she had died
+recently, for then there would be more grief and tears, and not only a
+quiet sense of loss. It is more as if a beloved daughter had been
+recently married, and had left the parental home.
+
+Look only at the nearest houses. The old walls are still decorated as if
+for a fête. And in her own home garlands of flowers are still hanging
+beneath the portico and loggia, green leaves are strewn on the staircase
+and the doorstep, and large bouquets of flowers fill the rooms with
+their scent.
+
+She cannot possibly have been dead five hundred years. It looks much
+more as if she had celebrated her marriage, and had gone away to a
+country from which she would not return for many years, perhaps never.
+Are not the houses decorated with nothing but red table-cloths, red
+trappings, and red silken banners, and are there not stuck red-paper
+roses in the dark garlands of oak-leaves? and the hangings over the
+doors and the windows, are they not red with golden fringes? Can one
+imagine anything more cheerful?
+
+And notice how the old women go about in the house and examine her small
+belongings. It is as if they had seen her wear that very veil and that
+very shirt of hair. They inspect the room in which she lived, and point
+to the bedstead and the packets of letters, and they tell how at first
+she could not at all learn to write, but that it came to her all at once
+without her having learnt it. And only look at her writing--how good and
+distinct! And then they point to the little bottle she used to carry at
+her belt, so as always to have a little medicine at hand in case she met
+a sick person, and they utter a blessing over the old lantern she held
+in her hand when she went and visited the sick in the long weary nights.
+It is just as if they would say: 'Dear me--dear me! that our little
+Caterina Benincasa should be gone, that she will never come any more and
+look after us old people!' And they kiss her picture, and take a flower
+from the bouquets to keep as a remembrance.
+
+It looks as if those who were left in the home had long ago prepared
+themselves for the separation, and tried to do everything possible to
+keep alive the memory of the one who had gone away. See, there they
+have painted her on the wall; there is the whole of her little history
+represented in every detail. There she is when she cut off her beautiful
+long hair so that no man could ever fall in love with her, for she would
+never marry. Oh dear--oh dear! how much ridicule and scoffing she had
+suffered on that account! It is dreadful to think how her mother
+tormented her and treated her like a servant, and made her sleep on the
+stone floor in the hall, and would not give her any food, all because of
+her being so obstinate about that hair. But what was she to do when they
+continually tried to get her married--she who would have no other
+bridegroom than Christ? And there she is when she was kneeling in
+prayer, and her father coming into the room without her knowing it saw a
+beautiful white dove hovering over her head whilst she was praying. And
+there she is on that Christmas Eve when she had gone secretly to the
+Madonna's altar in order the more fully to rejoice over the birth of the
+Son of God, and the beautiful Madonna leaned out of her picture and
+handed the Child to her that she might be allowed to hold it for a
+moment in her arms. Oh, what a joy it had been for her!
+
+Oh dear, no; it is not at all necessary to say that our little Caterina
+Benincasa is dead. One need only say that she has gone away with the
+Bridegroom.
+
+In her home one will never forget her pious ways and doings. All the
+poor of Siena come and knock at her door because they know that it is
+the marriage-day of the little virgin, and large piles of bread lie in
+readiness for them as if she were still there. They have their pockets
+and baskets filled; had she herself been there, she could not have sent
+them away more heavily laden. She who had gone away had left so great a
+want that one almost wonders the Bridegroom had the heart to take her
+away with him.
+
+In the small chapels which have been arranged in every corner of the
+house they read Mass the whole day, and they invoke the bride and sing
+hymns in her praise.
+
+'Holy Caterina,' they say, 'on this the day of thy death, which is thine
+heavenly wedding-day, pray for us!'
+
+'Holy Caterina, thou who hadst no other love but Christ, thou who in
+life wert His affianced bride, and who in death wast received by Him in
+Paradise, pray for us!'
+
+'Holy Caterina, thou radiant heavenly bride, thou most blessed of
+virgins, thou whom the mother of God exalted to her Son's side, thou who
+on this day wast carried by angels to the kingdom of glory, pray for
+us!'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is strange how one comes to love her, how the home and the pictures
+and the love of the old and the poor seem to make her living, and one
+begins to wonder how she really was, whether she was only a saint, only
+a heavenly bride, and if it is true that she was unable to love any
+other than Christ. And then comes to one's mind an old story which
+warmed one's heart long ago, at first quite vague and without shape, but
+whilst one is sitting there under the loggia in the festively decorated
+home and watching the poor wander away with their full baskets, and
+hearing the subdued murmur from the chapels, the story becomes more and
+more distinct, and suddenly it is vivid and clear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nicola Tungo was a young nobleman of Perugia, who often came to Siena on
+account of the races. He soon found out how badly Siena was governed,
+and often said, both at the festive gatherings of the great and when he
+sat drinking in the inns, that Siena ought to rise against the Signoria
+and procure other rulers.
+
+The Signoria had not been in power for more than half a year; they did
+not feel particularly firm in their office, and did not like the
+Perugian stirring up the people. In order promptly to put a stop to it,
+they had him imprisoned, and after a short trial he was sentenced to
+death. He was placed in a cell in the Palazzo Publico whilst
+preparations were being made for his execution, which was to take place
+the next morning in the Market Place.
+
+At first he was strangely affected. To-morrow he would no more wear his
+green velvet doublet and his beautiful sword; he would no more walk down
+the street in his cap with the ostrich-feather and attract the glances
+of the young maidens, and he had a feeling of painful disappointment
+that he would never ride the new horse which he bought yesterday, and
+which he had only tried once.
+
+Suddenly he called the gaoler, and asked him to go to the gentlemen of
+the Signoria and tell them that he could not possibly allow himself to
+be killed; he had no time. He had far too much to do. Life could not do
+without him. His father was old, and he was the only son; it was through
+his descendants that the family should be continued. It was he who
+should give away his sisters in marriage, he who should build the new
+palace, he who should plant the new vineyard.
+
+He was a strong young man; he did not know what sickness was, had
+nothing but life in his veins. His hair was dark and his cheeks red. He
+could not realize that he should die.
+
+When he thought of their wanting to take him away from pleasure and
+dancing, and the carnival, and from the races next Sunday, and from the
+serenade he was going to sing to the beautiful Giulietta Lombardi, he
+became furiously angry, and his wrath was roused against the councillors
+as though they were thieves and robbers. The scoundrels--the scoundrels
+that would take his life from him!
+
+But as time went on his longings grew deeper; he longed for air and
+water and heaven and earth. He felt he would not mind being a beggar by
+the wayside; he would gladly suffer sickness and hunger and cold if only
+he were allowed to live.
+
+He wished that everything might die with him, that nothing would be left
+when he was gone; that would have been a great consolation.
+
+But that people should go to the Market Place and buy and sell, and that
+the women would fetch water from the well, and that the children would
+run in the streets the next day and all days, and that he would not be
+there to see, that he could not bear. He envied not only those who
+could live in luxury and pleasure, and were happy; he envied quite as
+much the most miserable cripple. What he wanted was life, solely life.
+
+Then the priests and the monks came to see him. It made him almost
+happy, for now he had someone upon whom he could wreak his anger. He
+first allowed them to talk a little. It amused him to hear what they had
+to say to a man so deeply wronged as he was, but when they said that he
+ought to rejoice that he was permitted to leave this life and gain the
+bliss of heaven in the fulness of his youth, then he started up and
+poured forth his wrath upon them. He scoffed at God and the joys of
+heaven--he did not want them. He would have life, and the world, and its
+pomps and vanities. He regretted every day in which he had not revelled
+in earthly enjoyment; he regretted every temptation he had resisted. God
+need not trouble Himself in the least about him; he felt no longing for
+His heaven.
+
+The priests continued to speak; he seized one of them by the throat, and
+would have killed him had not the gaoler thrown himself between them.
+They now bound and gagged him, and then preached to him; but as soon as
+he was allowed to speak he raged as before. They talked to him for many
+hours, but they saw that it was of no avail.
+
+When they could think of nothing else to do, one of them suggested they
+should send for the young Caterina Benincasa, who had shown great power
+in subduing defiant spirits. When the Perugian heard the name he
+suddenly ceased his abuse. In truth, it pleased him. It was something
+quite different, having to do with a young, beautiful maiden.
+
+'By all means send for the maiden,' he said.
+
+He knew that she was the young daughter of a dyer, and that she went
+about alone and preached in the lanes and streets of the town. Some
+thought she was mad, others said that she had visions. For him she
+might, anyhow, be better company than these dirty monks, who made him
+completely beside himself.
+
+The monks then went their way, and he was alone. Shortly afterwards the
+door was again opened, but if she for whom they had sent had really
+entered the cell, she must have walked with very light footsteps, for he
+heard nothing. He lay on the floor just as he had thrown himself down in
+his great anger; now he was too tired to raise himself, or make a
+movement, or even to look up. His arms were tied together with ropes,
+which cut deep into his flesh.
+
+He now felt that someone began to loosen his bands; a warm hand touched
+his arm, and he looked up. Beside him lay a little figure in the white
+dress of the Dominicans, with head and neck so shrouded in a white veil
+that there was not more of her face to be seen than of that of a knight
+in helmet and closed visor.
+
+She did not look so meek by any means; she was evidently a little
+annoyed. He heard her murmur something about the gaolers who had
+tightened the bands. It did not appear as if she had come for any other
+purpose than these knots. She was only taken up with loosening them so
+that they did not hurt. At last she had to bite in them, and then she
+succeeded. She untied the cord with a light hand, and then took the
+little bottle which was suspended from her belt and poured a few drops
+upon the chafed skin.
+
+He lay the whole time and looked at her, but she did not meet his
+glance; it appeared as if she could think of nothing else but what she
+had between her hands. It was as if nothing were further from her
+thoughts than that she was there to prepare him for death. He felt so
+exhausted after his passion, and at the same time so quieted by her
+presence, that he only said:
+
+'I think I will sleep.'
+
+'It is a great shame that they have not given you any straw,' she said.
+
+For a moment she looked about undecided. Then she sat down upon the
+floor, and placed his head in her lap.
+
+'Are you better now?' she said.
+
+Never in his whole life had he felt such a rest. Yet sleep he could not,
+but he lay and looked up in her face, which was like wax, and
+transparent. Such eyes he had never seen before. They were always
+looking far, far away, gazing into another world, whilst she sat quite
+motionless, so as not to disturb his sleep.
+
+'You are not sleeping, Nicola Tungo,' she said, and looked uneasy.
+
+'I cannot sleep,' he replied, 'because I am wondering who you can be.'
+
+'I am a daughter of Luca Benincasa the dyer, and his wife Lapa,' she
+said.
+
+'I know that,' he said, 'and I also know that you go about and preach in
+the streets. And I know that you have attired yourself in the dress of
+a nun, and have taken the vows of chastity. But yet I don't know who you
+are.'
+
+She turned her head away a little. Then she said, whispering like one
+who confesses her first love:
+
+'I am the Bride of Christ.'
+
+He did not laugh. On the contrary, he felt quite a pang in his heart, as
+from jealousy.
+
+'Oh, Christ!' he said, as if she had thrown herself away.
+
+She heard that his tone was contemptuous, but she thought he meant that
+she had spoken too presumptuously.
+
+'I do not understand it myself,' she said, 'but so it is.'
+
+'Is it an imagination or a dream?' he said.
+
+She turned her face towards him. The blood rose red behind the
+transparent skin. He saw suddenly that she was fair as a flower, and she
+became dear to him. He moved his lips as if to speak, but at first no
+sound came.
+
+'How can you expect me to believe that?' he said defiantly.
+
+'Is it not enough for you that I am here in the prison with you?' she
+asked, raising her voice. 'Is it any pleasure for a young girl like me
+to go to you and other evil-doers in their gloomy dungeons? Is it usual
+for a woman to stand and preach at the street corners as I do, and to be
+held in derision? Do I not require sleep as other people? And yet I must
+rise every night and go to the sick in the hospitals. Am I not timid as
+other women? And yet I must go to the high-born gentlemen at their
+castles and reason with them, I must go to the plague-smitten, I must
+see all vice and sin. When have you seen another maiden do all this? But
+I am obliged to do it.'
+
+'Poor thing!' he said, and stroked her hand gently--'poor thing!'
+
+'For I am not braver, or wiser, or stronger than others,' she said. 'It
+is just as hard for me as for other maidens. You can see that. I have
+come here to speak with you about your soul, but I do not at all know
+what I shall say to you.'
+
+It was strange how reluctantly he would allow himself to be convinced.
+
+'You may be mistaken all the same,' he said. 'How do you know that you
+can call yourself the Bride of Christ?'
+
+Her voice trembled, and it was as if she should tear out her heart when
+she replied:
+
+'It began when I was quite young; I was not more than six years old. It
+was one evening when I was walking with my brother in the meadow below
+the church of the Dominicans, and just as I looked up at the church I
+saw Christ sitting on a throne, surrounded by all His power and glory.
+He was attired in shining white garments like the Holy Father in Rome.
+His head was surrounded by all the splendour of Paradise, and around Him
+stood Pietro Paolo and the Evangelist Giovanni. And whilst I gazed upon
+Him my heart was filled with such a love and holy joy that I could
+hardly bear it. He lifted His hand and blessed me, and I sank down on
+the meadow, and was so overcome with bliss, that my brother had to take
+me in his arms and shake me. And ever since that time, Nicola Tungo, I
+have loved Jesus as a bridegroom.'
+
+He again objected.
+
+'You were a child then. You had fallen asleep in the meadow and were
+dreaming.'
+
+'Dreaming?' she repeated. 'Have I been dreaming all the time I have seen
+Him? Was it a dream when He came to me in the church in the likeness of
+a beggar and asked for alms? Then I was wide awake, at any rate. And do
+you think that for the sake of a dream only I could have borne all the
+worries I have had to bear as a young girl because I would not marry?'
+
+Nicola went on contradicting her because he could not bear the thought
+that her heart was filled with love to another.
+
+'But even if you do love Christ, maiden, how do you know that He loves
+you?'
+
+She smiled her very happiest smile and clapped her hands like a child.
+
+'Now you shall hear,' she said. 'Now I will tell you the most important
+of all. It was the last night before Lent. It was after my parents and I
+had been reconciled, and I had obtained their permission to take the vow
+of chastity and wear the dress of a nun, although I continued to live in
+their house; and it was night, as I told you, the last night of the
+carnival, when everybody turns night into day. There were fêtes in every
+street. On the walls of the big palaces hung balconies like cages,
+completely covered with silken hangings and banners, and filled with
+noble ladies. I saw all their beauty by the light of the red torches in
+their bronze-holders, the one row over the other quite up to the roof;
+and in the gaily decorated streets there was a train of carriages, with
+golden towers, and all the gods and goddesses, and all the virtues and
+beauties went by in a long procession. And everywhere there was such a
+play of masks and so much merriment that I am sure that you, sir, have
+never taken part in anything more gay. And I took refuge in my chamber,
+but still I heard laughter from the street, and never before have I
+heard people laugh like that; it was so clear and bell-like that
+everyone was obliged to join in it. And they sang songs which, I
+suppose, were wicked, but they sounded so innocent, and caused such
+pleasure, that one's heart trembled. Then, in the middle of my prayers,
+I suddenly began to wonder why I was not out amongst them, and the
+thought fascinated and tempted me, as if I were dragged along by a
+runaway horse; but never before have I prayed so intensely to Christ to
+show me what was His will with me. Suddenly all the noise ceased, a
+great and wonderful silence surrounded me, and I saw a great meadow,
+where the Mother of God sat amongst the flowers, and on her lap lay the
+Child Jesus, playing with lilies. But I hurried thither in great joy,
+and knelt before the Child, and was at the same moment filled with peace
+and quietness, and then the Holy Child placed a ring on my finger, and
+said to me, "Know, Caterina, that to-day I celebrate My betrothal with
+thee, and bind thee to Me by the strongest faith."'
+
+'Oh, Caterina!'
+
+The young Perugian had turned himself on the floor, so that he could
+bury his face in her lap. It was as if he could not bear to see how
+radiant she was whilst she was speaking, and now her eyes became bright
+as stars. A shadow of pain passed over him. For whilst she spoke a great
+sorrow had sprung up in his heart. This little maiden, this little white
+maiden, he could never win. Her love belonged to another; it could never
+be his. It was of no use even to tell her that he loved her; but he
+suffered; his whole being groaned in love's agony. How could he bear to
+live without her? It almost became a consolation to remember that he was
+sentenced to death. It was not necessary for him to live and do without
+her.
+
+Then the little woman beside him sighed deeply, and came back from the
+joys of heaven in order to think of poor human beings.
+
+'I forgot to speak to you about your soul,' she said.
+
+Then, he thought: 'This burden, at any rate, I can lighten for her.'
+
+'Sister Caterina,' he said, 'I do not know how it is, but heavenly
+consolation has come to me. In God's name I will prepare for death. Now
+you may send for the priests and monks; now I will confess to them. But
+one thing you must promise me before you go: you must come to me
+to-morrow, when I shall die, and hold my head between your hands as you
+are doing now.'
+
+When he said this she burst into tears, from a great feeling of relief,
+and an unspeakable joy filled her.
+
+'How happy you must be, Nicola Tungo!' she said. 'You will be in
+Paradise before I am;' and she stroked his face gently.
+
+He said again:
+
+'You will come to me to-morrow in the Market Place? Perhaps I shall
+otherwise be afraid; perhaps I cannot otherwise die with steadfastness.
+But when you are there I shall feel nothing but joy, and all fear will
+leave me.'
+
+'You do not seem to me any more as a poor mortal,' she said, 'but as a
+dweller of Paradise. You appear to me radiant with life, surrounded by
+incense. Bliss comes to me from you, who shall so soon meet my beloved
+Bridegroom. Be assured I shall come.'
+
+She then led him to confession and the Communion. He felt the whole time
+as if he were asleep. All the fear of death and the longing for life had
+passed away from him. He longed for the morning, when he should see her
+again; he thought only of her, and of the love with which she had
+inspired him. Death seemed to him now but a slight thing compared with
+the pain of the thought that she would never love him.
+
+The young maiden did not sleep much during the night, and early in the
+morning she went to the place of execution, to be there when he came.
+She invoked Jesu, Mother, Marie, and the Holy Caterina of Egypt, virgin
+and martyr, incessantly with prayers to save his soul. Incessantly she
+repeated: 'I will that he shall be saved--I will, I will.' But she was
+afraid that her prayers were unavailing, for she did not feel any longer
+that ecstasy which had filled her the evening before; she only felt an
+infinite pity for him who should die. She was quite overcome with grief
+and sorrow.
+
+Little by little the Market Place filled with people. The soldiers
+marched up, the executioner arrived, and much noise and talking went on
+around her; but she saw and heard nothing. She felt as if she were quite
+alone.
+
+When Nicola Tungo arrived, it was just the same with him. He had no
+thought for all the others, but saw only her. When he saw at the first
+glance that she was entirely overcome with sorrow, his face beamed, and
+he felt almost happy. He called loudly to her:
+
+'You have not slept much this night, maiden?'
+
+'No,' she said; 'I have watched in prayer for you; but now I am in
+despair, for my prayers have no power.'
+
+He knelt down before the block, and she knelt so that she could hold his
+head in her hands.
+
+'Now I am going to your Bridegroom, Caterina.'
+
+She sobbed more and more.
+
+'I can comfort you so badly,' she said.
+
+He looked at her with a strange smile.
+
+'Your tears are my best comfort.'
+
+The executioner stood with his sword drawn, but she bade him with a
+movement stand on one side, for she would speak a few words with the
+doomed man.
+
+'Before you came,' she said, 'I laid my head down on the block to try if
+I could bear it; and then I felt that I was still afraid of death, that
+I do not love Jesus enough to be willing to die in this hour; and I do
+not wish you to die either, and my prayers have no power.'
+
+When he heard this he thought: 'Had I lived I should have won her'; and
+he was glad he should die before he had succeeded in drawing the radiant
+heavenly bride down to earth. But when he had laid his head in her
+hands, a great consolation came to them both.
+
+'Nicola Tungo,' she said, 'I see heaven open. The angels descend to
+receive your soul.'
+
+A wondering smile passed over his face. Could what he had done for her
+sake make him worthy of heaven? He lifted his eyes to see what she saw;
+the same moment the sword fell.
+
+But Caterina saw the angels descend lower and lower, saw them lift his
+soul, saw them carry it to heaven.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All at once it seemed so natural that Caterina Benincasa has lived all
+these five hundred years. How could one forget that gentle little
+maiden, that great loving heart? Again and again they must sing in her
+praise, as they are now singing in the small chapels:
+
+ 'Pia Mater et humilis,
+ Naturæ memor fragilis,
+ In hujus vitæ fluctibus
+ Nos rege tuis precibus.
+ Quem vidi, quem amavi,
+ In quem credidi, quem dilexi,
+ Ora pro nobis.
+ Ut digni efficiamur promessionibus Christi!
+ Santa Caterina, ora pro nobis!'[B]
+
+ [B] Pious and gentle Mother, thou who knowest our weak nature, guide
+ us by thy prayers through this life's vicissitudes. Thou, whom I saw
+ and loved, in whom I believed and whom I adored, pray for us, that we
+ may be worthy of Christ's promises. Holy Caterina, pray for us!
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VI
+
+ _The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST
+
+
+
+
+_The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST
+
+
+The Bishop had summoned Father Verneau to appear before him. It was on
+account of a somewhat unpleasant matter. Father Verneau had been sent to
+preach in the manufacturing districts around Charleroi, but he had
+arrived there in the midst of a strike, when the workmen were rather
+excited and unmanageable. He informed the Bishop that he had immediately
+on his arrival in the Black Country received a letter from one of the
+leaders of the men to the effect that they were quite willing to hear
+him preach, but if he ventured to mention the name of God either
+directly or indirectly, there would be a disturbance in the church.
+
+'And when I went up into the pulpit and saw the congregation to whom I
+should preach,' said the Father, 'I felt no doubt but that the threat
+would be carried out.'
+
+Father Verneau was a little dried-up monk. The Bishop looked down upon
+him as being of a lower order. Such an unshaven, not too clean monk,
+with the most insignificant face, was, of course, a coward. He was,
+probably, also afraid of the Bishop.
+
+'I have been informed,' said the Bishop, 'that you carried out the
+workmen's wishes. But I need not point out----'
+
+'Monseigneur,' interrupted Father Verneau in all humility, 'I thought
+the Church, if possible, would avoid everything that might lead to a
+disturbance.'
+
+'But a Church that dare not mention the name of God----'
+
+'Has Monseigneur heard my sermon?'
+
+The Bishop walked up and down the floor to calm himself.
+
+'You know it by heart, of course?' he said.
+
+'Of course, Monseigneur.'
+
+'Let me hear it, then, as it was delivered, Father Verneau, word for
+word, exactly as you preached it.'
+
+The Bishop sat down in his arm-chair. Father Verneau remained standing.
+
+'"Citizens and citizenesses," he began in the tone of a lecturer.
+
+The Bishop started.
+
+'Yes, that is how they will be addressed, Monseigneur.'
+
+'Never mind, Father Verneau, only proceed.'
+
+The Bishop shuddered slightly; these two words had suddenly shown him
+the whole situation. He saw before him this gathering of the children of
+the Black Country, to whom Father Verneau had preached. He saw many wild
+faces, many rags, much coarse merriment. He saw these people for whom
+nothing had been done.
+
+'"Citizens and citizenesses," began Father Verneau afresh, "there is in
+this country an Empress called Maria Theresa. She is an excellent ruler,
+the best and wisest Belgium has ever had. Other rulers, my
+fellow-citizens, other rulers have successors when they die, and lose
+all power over their people. Not so the great Empress Maria Theresa.
+She may have lost the throne of Austria and Hungary; Brabant and Limburg
+may now be under other rulers, but not her good province of West
+Flanders. In West Flanders, where I have lived the last few years, no
+other ruler is known to this very day than Maria Theresa. We know King
+Leopold lives in Brussels, but that has nothing to do with us. It is
+Maria Theresa who still reigns here by the sea, more especially in the
+fishing villages. The nearer one gets to the sea, the mightier becomes
+her power. Neither the great Revolution, nor the Empire, nor the Dutch
+have had the power to overthrow her. How could they? They have done
+nothing for the children of the sea that can compare with what she has
+done. But what has she not done for the people on the dunes! What an
+invaluable treasure, my fellow-citizens, has she not bestowed upon them!
+
+'"About one hundred and fifty years ago, in the early part of her reign,
+she made a journey through Belgium. She visited Brussels and Bruges, she
+went to Liege and Louvain, and when she had at last seen enough of large
+cities and profusely ornamented town-halls, she went to the coast to see
+the sea and the dunes.
+
+'"It was not a very cheering sight for her. She saw the ocean, so vast
+and mighty that no man can fight against it. She saw the coast, helpless
+and unprotected. There lay the dunes, but the sea had washed over them
+before, and might do so again. There were also dams, but they had fallen
+down and were neglected.
+
+'"She saw harbours filled with sand; she saw marshes overgrown with
+rushes and weeds; she saw, below the dunes, fishing-huts ravaged by the
+wind--huts looking as if they had been thrown there, a prey for the sea;
+she saw poor old churches that had been moved away from the sea, lying
+between quicksands and lyme-grass, in desolate wastes.
+
+'"The great Empress sat a whole day by the sea. She was told all about
+the floods and the towns that had been washed away; she was shown the
+spot where a whole district had sunk under the sea; she was rowed out to
+the place where an old church stood at the bottom of the sea; and she
+was told about all the people who had been drowned, and of all the
+cattle that had been lost, the last time the sea had overflowed the
+dunes.
+
+'"The whole day through the Empress sat thinking: 'How shall I help
+these poor people on the dunes? I cannot forbid the sea to rise and
+fall; I cannot forbid it to undermine the shore; nor can I stay the
+storm, or prevent it from upsetting the fishermen's boats; and still
+less can I lead the fish into their nets, or transform the lyme-grass
+into nutritious wheat. There is no monarch in the world so mighty that
+he can help these poor people in their need.'
+
+'"The next day it was Sunday, and the Empress heard Mass at
+Blankenberghe. All the people from Dunkirk to Sluis had come to see her.
+But before Mass the Empress went about and spoke with the people.
+
+'"The first person she addressed was the harbour-master from Nieuport.
+'What news is there from your town?' asked the Empress. 'Nothing new,'
+answered the harbour-master, 'except that Cornelis Aertsen's boat was
+upset in the storm yesterday; and we found him this morning riding on
+the keel.' 'It was a good thing his life was saved,' said the Empress.
+'Well, I don't know,' said the harbour-master, 'for he was out of his
+mind when he came on shore.' 'Was it from fear?' asked the Empress.
+'Yes,' said the harbour-master; 'it is because we in Nieuport have
+nothing to depend upon in the hour of need. Cornelis knew that his wife
+and his small children would starve to death if he perished; and it was
+this thought, I suppose, that drove him out of his mind.' 'Then that is
+what you need here on the dunes--something to depend upon?' 'Yes, that
+is it,' said the harbour-master. 'The sea is uncertain, the harvest is
+uncertain, the fishing and the earnings are uncertain. Something to
+depend upon, that is what we need.'
+
+'"The Empress then went on, and the next she spoke to was the priest
+from Heyst. 'What news from Heyst?' said she to him. 'Nothing new,' he
+answered, 'except that Jacob van Ravesteyn has given up making ditches
+in the marshes, and dredging the harbour, and attending to the
+lighthouses, and all other useful work he had to do.' 'How is that?'
+said the Empress. 'He has inherited a sum of money,' said the priest;
+'but it was less than he had expected.' 'But now he has something
+certain,' said the Empress. 'Yes,' said the priest; 'but now he has got
+the money he dare not venture to do anything great for fear it will not
+be sufficient.' 'It is something infinitely great, then, that is needed
+to help you at Heyst?' said the Empress. 'It is,' said the priest;
+'there is infinitely much to do. And nothing can be done until we know
+that we have something infinitely great to fall back upon.'
+
+'"The Empress then went on until she came to the master-pilot from
+Middelkerke, whom she began to question about the news from his town. 'I
+do not know of anything new,' said the master-pilot, 'but that Ian van
+der Meer has quarrelled with Luca Neerwinden.' 'Indeed!' said the
+Empress. 'Yes, they have found the cod-bank they have both been looking
+for all their lives. They had heard about it from old people, and they
+had hunted for it all over the sea, and they have been the best of
+friends the whole time, but now they have found it they have fallen
+out.' 'Then it would have been better if they had never found it?' said
+the Empress. 'Yes,' answered the master-pilot, 'it would indeed have
+been better.' 'So, then, that which is to help you in Middelkerke,' said
+the Empress, 'must be hidden so well that no one can find it?' 'Just
+so,' said the master-pilot; 'well hidden it must be, for if anyone
+should find it, there would be nothing but quarrelling and strife over
+it, or else it would be all spent, and then it would be of no further
+use.'
+
+'"The Empress sighed, and felt she could do nothing.
+
+'"She then went to Mass, and the whole time she knelt and prayed that
+power might be given her to help the people. And--you must excuse me,
+citizens--when the Mass was finished, it had become clear to her that it
+was better to do a little than to do nothing. When all the people had
+come out of the church, she stood on the steps in order to address them.
+
+'"No man or woman of West Flanders will ever forget how she looked. She
+was beautiful, like an Empress, and she was attired like an Empress. She
+wore her crown and her ermine mantle, and held the sceptre in her hand.
+Her hair was dressed high and powdered, and a string of large pearls was
+entwined amongst the curls. She wore a robe of red silk, which was
+entirely covered with Flemish lace, and red, high-heeled shoes, with
+large diamond buckles. That is how she appears, she who to this day
+still reigns over our West Flanders.
+
+'"She spoke to the people of the coast, and told them her will. She told
+them of how she had thought of every way in which to help them. She said
+that they knew she could not compel the sea to quietness or chain the
+storm, that she could not lead the fish-shoals to the coast, or
+transform the lyme-grass into wheat; but what a poor mortal could do for
+them, that should be done.
+
+'"They all knelt before her whilst she spoke. Never before had they felt
+such a gentle and motherly heart beat for them. The Empress spoke to
+them in such a manner about their hard and toilsome life that tears came
+into their eyes over her pity.
+
+'"But now the Empress said she had decided to leave with them her
+Imperial money-chest, with all the treasures which it contained. That
+should be her gift to all those who lived on the dunes. That was the
+only assistance she could render them, and she asked them to forgive
+her that it was so poor; and the Empress herself had tears in her eyes
+when she said this.
+
+'"She now asked them if they would promise and swear not to use any of
+the treasure until the need amongst them was so great that it could not
+become any greater. Next, if they would swear to leave it as an
+inheritance for their descendants, if they did not require it
+themselves. And, lastly, she asked every man singly to swear that he
+would not try to take possession of the treasure for his own use without
+having first asked the consent of all his fellow-fishermen.
+
+'"If they were willing to swear? That they all were. And they blessed
+the Empress and cried from gratitude. And she cried and told them that
+she knew that what they needed was a support that would never fail them,
+a treasure that could never be exhausted, and a happiness that was
+unattainable, but that she could not give them. She had never been so
+powerless as here on the dunes.
+
+'"My fellow-citizens, without her knowing it, solely by force of the
+royal wisdom with which this great Queen was endowed, the power was
+given her to attain far more than she had intended, and it is therefore
+one can say that to this day she reigns over West Flanders.
+
+'"What a happiness, is it not, to hear of all the blessings which have
+been spread over West Flanders by the Empress's gift! The people there
+have now something to depend upon which they needed so badly, and which
+we all need. However bad things may be, there is never any despair.
+
+'"They have told me at the dunes what the Empress's money-chest is like.
+They say it is like the holy shrine of Saint Ursula at Bruges, only more
+beautiful. It is a copy of the cathedral at Vienna, and it is of pure
+gold; but on the sides the whole history of the Empress is depicted in
+the whitest alabaster. On the small side-towers are the four diamonds
+which the Empress took from the crown of the Sultan of Turkey, and in
+the gable are her initials inlaid with rubies. But when I ask them
+whether they have seen the money-chest, they reply that shipwrecked
+sailors when in peril always see it swimming before them on the waves as
+a sign that they shall not be in despair for their wives and children,
+should they be compelled to leave them. But they are the only ones who
+have seen the treasure, otherwise no one has been near enough to count
+it. And you know, citizens, that the Empress never told anyone how great
+it was. But if any of you doubt how much use it has been and is, then I
+will ask you to go to the dunes and see for yourself. There has been
+digging and building ever since that time, and the sea now lies cowed by
+bulwarks and dams, and no longer does harm. And there are green meadows
+inside the dunes, and there are flourishing towns and watering-places
+near the shore. But for every lighthouse that has been built, for every
+harbour that has been deepened, for every ship of which the keel has
+been laid, for every dam that has been raised, they have always thought:
+'If our own money should not be sufficient, we shall receive help from
+our Gracious Empress Maria Theresa.' But this has been but a spur to
+them: their own money has always sufficed.
+
+'"You know, also, that the Empress did not say where the treasure was.
+Was not this well considered, citizens? There is one who has it in his
+keeping, but only, when all are agreed upon dividing it, will he who
+keeps the treasure come forward and reveal where it is. Therefore one is
+certain that neither now nor in the future will it be unfairly divided.
+It is the same for all. Everyone knows that the Empress thinks as much
+of him as of his neighbour. There can be no strife or envy amongst the
+people of the dunes as there is amongst other men, for they all share
+alike in the treasure."'
+
+The Bishop interrupted Father Verneau.
+
+'That is enough,' he said. 'How did you continue?'
+
+'I said,' continued the monk, 'that it was very bad the good Empress had
+not also come to Charleroi. I pitied them because they did not own her
+money-chest. Considering the great things they had to accomplish,
+considering the sea which they had to tame, the quicksands which they
+had to bind, considering all this, I said to them surely there was
+nothing they needed so much.'
+
+'And then?' asked the Bishop.
+
+'One or two cabbages, your Eminence, a little hissing; but then I was
+already out of the pulpit. That was all.'
+
+'They had understood that you had spoken to them about the providence of
+God?'
+
+The monk bowed.
+
+'They had understood that you would show them that the power which they
+deride because they do not see it must be kept hidden? that it will be
+abused immediately it assumes a visible form? I congratulate you, Father
+Verneau.'
+
+The monk retired towards the door, bowing. The Bishop followed him,
+beaming benevolently.
+
+'But the money-chest--do they still believe in it at the dunes?'
+
+'As much as ever, Monseigneur.'
+
+'And the treasure--has there ever been a treasure?'
+
+'Monseigneur, I have sworn.'
+
+'But for me,' said the Bishop.
+
+'It is the priest at Blankenberghe, who has it in his keeping. He
+allowed me to see it. It is an old wooden chest with iron mountings.'
+
+'And?'
+
+'And at the bottom lie twenty bright Maria Theresa gold pieces.'
+
+The Bishop smiled, but became grave at once.
+
+'Is it right to compare such a wooden chest with God's providence?'
+
+'All comparisons are incomplete, Monseigneur; all human thoughts are
+vain.'
+
+Father Verneau bowed once again, and quietly withdrew from the
+audience-room.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VII
+
+ _The_ PEACE _of_ GOD
+
+
+
+
+_The_ PEACE _of_ GOD
+
+
+Once upon a time there was an old farmhouse. It was Christmas-eve, the
+sky was heavy with snow, and the north wind was biting. It was just that
+time in the afternoon when everybody was busy finishing their work
+before they went to the bath-house to have their Christmas bath. There
+they had made such a fire that the flames went right up the chimney, and
+sparks and soot were whirled about by the wind, and fell down on the
+snow-decked roofs of the outhouses. And as the flames appeared above the
+chimney of the bath-house, and rose like a fiery pillar above the farm,
+everyone suddenly felt that Christmas was at hand. The girl that was
+scrubbing the entrance floor began to hum, although the water was
+freezing in the bucket beside her. The men in the wood-shed who were
+cutting Christmas logs began to cut two at a time, and swung their axes
+as merrily as if log-cutting were a mere pastime.
+
+An old woman came out of the pantry with a large pile of cakes in her
+arms. She went slowly across the yard into the large red-painted
+dwelling-house, and carried them carefully into the best room, and put
+them down on the long seat. Then she spread the tablecloth on the table,
+and arranged the cakes in heaps, a large and a small cake in each heap.
+She was a singularly ugly old woman, with reddish hair, heavy drooping
+eyelids, and with a peculiar strained look about the mouth and chin, as
+if the muscles were too short. But being Christmas-eve, there was such a
+joy and peace over her that one did not notice how ugly she was.
+
+But there was one person on the farm who was not happy, and that was the
+girl who was tying up the whisks made of birch twigs that were to be
+used for the baths. She sat near the fireplace, and had a whole armful
+of fine birch twigs lying beside her on the floor, but the withes with
+which she was to bind the twigs would not keep knotted. The best room
+had a narrow, low window, with small panes, and through them the light
+from the bath-house shone into the room, playing on the floor and
+gilding the birch twigs. But the higher the fire burned the more unhappy
+was the girl. She knew that the whisks would fall to pieces as soon as
+one touched them, and that she would never hear the last of it until the
+next Christmas fire was lighted.
+
+Just as she sat there bemoaning herself, the person of whom she was most
+afraid came into the room. It was her master, Ingmar Ingmarson. He was
+sure to have been to the bath-house to see if the stove was hot enough,
+and now he wanted to see how the whisks were getting on. He was old, was
+Ingmar Ingmarson, and he was fond of everything old, and just because
+people were beginning to leave off bathing in the bath-houses and being
+whipped with birch twigs, he made a great point of having it done on his
+farm, and having it done properly.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson wore an old coat of sheep's-skin, skin trousers, and
+shoes smeared over with pitch. He was dirty and unshaven, slow in all
+his movements, and came in so softly that one might very well have
+mistaken him for a beggar. His features resembled his wife's features
+and his ugliness resembled his wife's ugliness, for they were relations,
+and from the time the girl first began to notice anything she had
+learned to feel a wholesome reverence for anybody who looked like that;
+for it was a great thing to belong to the old family of the Ingmars,
+which had always been the first in the village. But the highest to which
+a man could attain was to be Ingmar Ingmarson himself, and be the
+richest, the wisest, and the mightiest in the whole parish.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson went up to the girl, took one of the whisks, and swung
+it in the air. It immediately fell to pieces; one of the twigs landed on
+the Christmas table, another on the big four-poster.
+
+'I say, my girl,' said old Ingmar, laughing, 'do you think one uses that
+kind of whisk when one takes a bath at the Ingmar's, or are you very
+tender, my girl?'
+
+When the girl saw that her master did not take it more seriously than
+that, she took heart, and answered that she could certainly make whisks
+that would not go to pieces if she could get proper withes to bind them
+with.
+
+'Then I suppose I must try to get some for you, my girl,' said old
+Ingmar, for he was in a real Christmas humour.
+
+He went out of the room, stepped over the girl who was scouring the
+floor, and remained standing on the doorstep, to see if there were
+anyone about whom he could send to the birch-wood for some withes. The
+farm hands were still busy cutting Yule logs; his son came out of the
+barn with the Christmas sheaf; his two sons-in-law were putting the
+carts into the shed so that the yard could be tidy for the Christmas
+festival. None of them had time to leave their work.
+
+The old man then quietly made up his mind to go himself. He went across
+the yard as if he were going into the cowshed, looked cautiously round
+to make sure no one noticed him, and stole along outside the barn where
+there was a fairly good road to the wood. The old man thought it was
+better not to let anyone know where he was going, for either his son or
+his sons-in-law might then have begged him to remain at home, and old
+people like to have their own way.
+
+He went down the road, across the fields, through the small pine-forest
+into the birch-wood. Here he left the road, and waded in the snow to
+find some young birches.
+
+About the same time the wind at last accomplished what it had been busy
+with the whole day: it tore the snow from the clouds, and now came
+rushing through the wood with a long train of snow after it.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson had just stooped down and cut off a birch twig, when
+the wind came tearing along laden with snow. Just as the old man was
+getting up the wind blew a whole heap of snow in his face. His eyes were
+full of snow, and the wind whirled so violently around him that he was
+obliged to turn round once or twice.
+
+The whole misfortune, no doubt, arose from Ingmar Ingmarson being so
+old. In his young days a snowstorm would certainly not have made him
+dizzy. But now everything danced round him as if he had joined in a
+Christmas polka, and when he wanted to go home he went in the wrong
+direction. He went straight into the large pine-forest behind the
+birch-wood instead of going towards the fields.
+
+It soon grew dark, and the storm continued to howl and whirl around him
+amongst the young trees on the outskirts of the forest. The old man saw
+quite well that he was walking amongst fir-trees, but he did not
+understand that this was wrong, for there were also fir-trees on the
+other side of the birch-wood nearest the farm. But by-and-by he got so
+far into the forest that everything was quiet and still--one could not
+feel the storm, and the trees were high with thick stems--then he found
+out that he had mistaken the road, and would turn back.
+
+He became excited and upset at the thought that he _could_ lose his way,
+and as he stood there in the midst of the pathless wood he was not
+sufficiently clear-headed to know in which direction to turn. He first
+went to the one side and then to the other. At last it occurred to him
+to retrace his way in his own footprints, but darkness came on, and he
+could no longer follow them. The trees around him grew higher and
+higher. Whichever way he went, it was evident to him that he got further
+and further into the forest.
+
+It was like witchcraft and sorcery, he thought, that he should be
+running about the woods like this all the evening and be too late for
+the bathing. He turned his cap and rebound his garter, but his head was
+no clearer. It had become quite dark, and he began to think that he
+would have to remain the whole night in the woods.
+
+He leant against a tree, stood still for a little, and tried to collect
+his thoughts. He knew this forest so well, and had walked in it so much,
+that he ought to know every single tree. As a boy he had gone there and
+tended sheep. He had gone there and laid snares for the birds. In his
+young days he had helped to fell trees there. He had seen old trees cut
+down and new ones grow up. At last he thought he had an idea where he
+was, and fancied if he went that and that way he must come upon the
+right road; but all the same, he only went deeper and deeper into the
+forest.
+
+Once he felt smooth, firm ground under his feet, and knew from that,
+that he had at last come to some road. He tried now to follow this, for
+a road, he thought, was bound to lead to some place or other; but then
+the road ended at an open space in the forest, and there the snowstorm
+had it all its own way; there was neither road nor path, only drifts and
+loose snow. Then the old man's courage failed him; he felt like some
+poor creature destined to die a lonely death in the wilderness.
+
+He began to grow tired of dragging himself through the snow, and time
+after time he sat down on a stone to rest; but as soon as he sat down he
+felt he was on the point of falling asleep, and he knew he would be
+frozen to death if he did fall asleep, therefore he tried to walk and
+walk; that was the only thing that could save him. But all at once he
+could not resist the inclination to sit down. He thought if he could
+only rest, it did not matter if it did cost him his life.
+
+It was so delightful to sit down that the thought of death did not in
+the least frighten him. He felt a kind of happiness at the thought that
+when he was dead the account of his whole life would be read aloud in
+the church. He thought of how beautifully the old Dean had spoken about
+his father, and how something equally beautiful would be sure to be said
+about him. The Dean would say that he had owned the oldest farm in the
+district, and he would speak about the honour it was to belong to such a
+distinguished family, and then something would be said about
+responsibility. Of course there was responsibility in the matter; that
+he had always known. One must endure to the very last when one was an
+Ingmar.
+
+The thought rushed through him that it was not befitting for him to be
+found frozen to death in the wild forest. He would not have that handed
+down to posterity; and he stood up again and began to walk. He had been
+sitting so long that masses of snow fell from his fur coat when he
+moved. But soon he sat down again and began to dream.
+
+The thought of death now came quite gently to him. He thought about the
+whole of the funeral and all the honour they would show his dead body.
+He could see the table laid for the great funeral feast in the large
+room on the first floor, the Dean and his wife in the seats of honour,
+the Justice of the Peace, with the white frill spread over his narrow
+chest; the Major's wife in full dress, with a low silk bodice, and her
+neck covered with pearls and gold; he saw all the best rooms draped in
+white--white sheets before the windows, white over the furniture;
+branches of fir strewn the whole way from the entrance-hall to the
+church; house-cleaning and butchering, brewing and baking for a
+fortnight before the funeral; the corpse on a bier in the inmost room;
+smoke from the newly-lighted fires in the rooms; the whole house crowded
+with guests; singing over the body whilst the lid of the coffin was
+being screwed on; silver plates on the coffin; twenty loads of wood
+burned in a fortnight; the whole village busy cooking food to take to
+the funeral; all the tall hats newly ironed; all the corn-brandy from
+the autumn drunk up during the funeral feast; all the roads crowded with
+people as at fair-time.
+
+Again the old man started up. He had heard them sitting and talking
+about him during the feast.
+
+'But how did he manage to go and get frozen to death?' asked the Justice
+of the Peace. 'What could he have been doing in the large forest?'
+
+And the Captain would say that it was probably from Christmas ale and
+corn-brandy. And that roused him again. The Ingmars had never been
+drunkards. It should never be said of him that he was muddled in his
+last moments. And he began again to walk and walk; but he was so tired
+that he could scarcely stand on his legs. It was quite clear to him now
+that he had got far into the forest, for there were no paths anywhere,
+but many large rocks, of which he knew there were none lower down. His
+foot caught between two stones, so that he had difficulty in getting it
+out, and he stood and moaned. He was quite done for.
+
+Suddenly he fell over a heap of fagots. He fell softly on to the snow
+and branches, so he was not hurt, but he did not take the trouble to get
+up again. He had no other desire in the world than to sleep. He pushed
+the fagots to one side and crept under them as if they were a rug; but
+when he pushed himself under the branches he felt that underneath there
+was something warm and soft. This must be a bear, he thought.
+
+He felt the animal move, and heard it sniff; but he lay still. The bear
+might eat him if it liked, he thought. He had not strength enough to
+move a single step to get out of its way.
+
+But it seemed as if the bear did not want to harm anyone who sought its
+protection on such a night as this. It moved a little further into its
+lair, as if to make room for its visitor, and directly afterwards it
+slept again with even, snorting breath.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the meantime there was but scanty Christmas joy in the old farm of
+the Ingmars. The whole of Christmas-eve they were looking for Ingmar
+Ingmarson. First they went all over the dwelling-house and all the
+outhouses. They searched high and low, from loft to cellar. Then they
+went to the neighbouring farms and inquired for Ingmar Ingmarson.
+
+As they did not find him, his sons and his sons-in-law went into the
+fields and roads. They used the torches which should have lighted the
+way for people going to early service on Christmas morning in the search
+for him. The terrible snowstorm had hidden all traces, and the howling
+of the wind drowned the sound of their voices when they called and
+shouted. They were out and about until long after midnight, but then
+they saw that it was useless to continue the search, and that they must
+wait until daylight to find the old man.
+
+At the first pale streak of dawn everybody was up at Ingmar's farm, and
+the men stood about the yard ready to set out for the wood. But before
+they started the old housewife came and called them into the best room.
+She told them to sit down on the long benches; she herself sat down by
+the Christmas table with the Bible in front of her and began to read.
+She tried her best to find something suitable for the occasion, and
+chose the story of the man who was travelling from Jerusalem to Jericho,
+and fell among thieves.
+
+She read slowly and monotonously about the unfortunate man who was
+succoured by the good Samaritan. Her sons and sons-in-law, her daughters
+and daughters-in-law, sat around her on the benches. They all resembled
+her and each other, big and clumsy, with plain, old-fashioned faces, for
+they all belonged to the old race of the Ingmars. They had all reddish
+hair, freckled skin, and light-blue eyes with white eyelashes. They
+might be different enough from each other in some ways, but they had all
+a stern look about the mouth, dull eyes, and heavy movements, as if
+everything were a trouble to them. But one could see that they all,
+every one of them, belonged to the first people in the neighbourhood,
+and that they knew themselves to be better than other people.
+
+All the sons and daughters of the house of Ingmar sighed deeply during
+the reading of the Bible. They wondered if some good Samaritan had found
+the master of the house and taken care of him, for all the Ingmars felt
+as if they had lost part of their own soul when a misfortune happened to
+anyone belonging to the family.
+
+The old woman read and read, and came to the question: 'Who was
+neighbour unto him that fell amongst thieves?' But before she had read
+the answer the door opened and old Ingmar came into the room.
+
+'Mother, here is father,' said one of the daughters; and the answer,
+that the man's neighbour was he who had shown mercy unto him, was never
+read.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Later in the day the housewife sat again in the same place, and read her
+Bible. She was alone; the women had gone to church, and the men were
+bear-hunting in the forest. As soon as Ingmar Ingmarson had eaten and
+drunk, he took his sons with him and went out to the forest; for it is
+every man's duty to kill a bear wherever and whenever he comes across
+one. It does not do to spare a bear, for sooner or later it will get a
+taste for flesh, and then it will spare neither man nor beast.
+
+But after they were gone a great feeling of fear came over the old
+housewife, and she began to read her Bible. She read the lesson for the
+day, which was also the text for the Pastor's sermon; but she did not
+get further than this: 'Peace on earth, goodwill towards men.' She
+remained sitting and staring at these words with her dull eyes, now and
+again sighing deeply. She did not read any further, but she repeated
+time after time in her slow, drawling voice, 'Peace on earth, goodwill
+towards men.'
+
+The eldest son came into the room just as she was going to repeat the
+words afresh.
+
+'Mother!' he said softly.
+
+She heard him, but did not take her eyes from the book whilst she asked:
+
+'Are you not with the others in the forest?'
+
+'Yes,' said he, still more softly, 'I have been there.'
+
+'Come to the table,' she said, 'so that I can see you.'
+
+He came nearer, but when she looked at him she saw that he was
+trembling. He had to press his hands hard against the edge of the table
+in order to keep them still.
+
+'Have you got the bear?' she asked again.
+
+He could not answer; he only shook his head.
+
+The old woman got up and did what she had not done since her son was a
+child. She went up to him, laid her hand on his arm, and drew him to the
+bench. She sat down beside him and took his hand in hers.
+
+'Tell me now what has happened, my boy.'
+
+The young man recognised the caress which had comforted him in bygone
+days when he had been in trouble and unhappy, and he was so overcome
+that he began to weep.
+
+'I suppose it is something about father?' she said.
+
+'It is worse than that,' the son sobbed. 'Worse than that?'
+
+The young man cried more and more violently; he did not know how to
+control his voice. At last he lifted his rough hand, with the broad
+fingers, and pointed to what she had just read: 'Peace on earth. . . .'
+
+'Is it anything about that?' she asked.
+
+'Yes,' he answered.
+
+'Is it anything about the peace of Christmas?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'You wished to do an evil deed this morning?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'And God has punished us?'
+
+'God has punished us.'
+
+So at last she was told how it had happened. They had with some trouble
+found the lair of the bear, and when they had got near enough to see the
+heap of fagots, they stopped in order to load their guns. But before
+they were ready the bear rushed out of its lair straight against them.
+It went neither to the right nor to the left, but straight for old
+Ingmar Ingmarson, and struck him a blow on the top of the head that
+felled him to the ground as if he had been struck by lightning. It did
+not attack any of the others, but rushed past them into the forest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the afternoon Ingmar Ingmarson's wife and son drove to the Dean's
+house to announce his death. The son was spokesman, and the old
+housewife sat and listened with a face as immovable as a stone figure.
+
+The Dean sat in his easy-chair near his writing-table. He had entered
+the death in the register. He had done it rather slowly; he wanted time
+to consider what he should say to the widow and the son, for this was,
+indeed, an unusual case. The son had frankly told him how it had all
+happened, but the Dean was anxious to know how they themselves looked at
+it. They were peculiar people, the Ingmars.
+
+When the Dean had closed the book, the son said:
+
+'We wanted to tell you, sir, that we do not wish any account of father's
+life to be read in church.'
+
+The Dean pushed his spectacles over his forehead and looked searchingly
+at the old woman. She sat just as immovable as before. She only crumpled
+the handkerchief a little which she held in her hand.
+
+'We wish to have him buried on a week day,' continued the son.
+
+'Indeed!' said the Dean.
+
+He could hardly believe his own ears. Old Ingmar Ingmarson to be buried
+without anyone taking any notice of it! The congregation not to stand on
+railings and mounds in order to see the display when he was being
+carried to the grave!
+
+'There will not be any funeral feast. We have let the neighbours know
+that they need not think of preparing anything for the funeral.'
+
+'Indeed, indeed!' said the Dean again.
+
+He could think of nothing else to say. He knew quite well what it meant
+for such people to forego the funeral feast. He had seen both widows and
+fatherless comforted by giving a splendid funeral feast.
+
+'There will be no funeral procession, only I and my brothers.'
+
+The Dean looked almost appealingly at the old woman. Could she really be
+a party to all this? He asked himself if it could be her wishes to which
+the son had given expression. She was sitting there and allowing herself
+to be robbed of what must be dearer to her than gold and silver.
+
+'We will not have the bells rung, or any silver plates on the coffin.
+Mother and I wish it to be done in this way, but we tell you all this,
+sir, in order to hear, sir, if you think we are wronging father.'
+
+Now the old woman spoke:
+
+'We should like to hear if your Reverence thinks we are doing father a
+wrong.'
+
+The Dean remained silent, and the old woman continued, more eagerly:
+
+'I must tell your Reverence that if my husband had sinned against the
+King or the authorities, or if I had been obliged to cut him down from
+the gallows, he should all the same have had an honourable funeral, as
+his father before him, for the Ingmars are not afraid of anyone, and
+they need not go out of their way for anybody. But at Christmas God has
+made peace between man and beast, and the poor beast kept God's
+commandment, whilst we broke it, and therefore we now suffer God's
+punishment; and it is not becoming for us to show any ostentatious
+display.'
+
+The Dean rose and went up to the old woman.
+
+'What you say is right,' he said, 'and you shall follow the dictates of
+your own conscience.' And involuntarily he added, perhaps most to
+himself: 'The Ingmars are a grand family.'
+
+The old woman straightened herself a little at these words. At that
+moment the Dean saw in her the symbol of her whole race. He understood
+what it was that had made these heavy, silent people, century after
+century, the leaders of the whole parish.
+
+'It behooves the Ingmars to set the people a good example,' she said.
+'It behooves us to show that we humble ourselves before God.'
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VIII
+
+ _A_ STORY _from_ HALSTANÄS
+
+
+
+
+_A_ STORY _from_ HALSTANÄS
+
+
+In olden times there stood by the roadside an old country-house called
+Halstanäs. It comprised a long row of red-painted houses, which were of
+low structure, and right behind them lay the forest. Close to the
+dwelling-house was a large wild cherry-tree, which showered its black
+fruit over the red-tiled roof. A bell under a small belfry hung over the
+gable of the stables.
+
+Just outside the kitchen-door was a dovecote, with a neat little
+trelliswork outside the holes. From the attic a cage for squirrels was
+hanging; it consisted of two small green houses and a large wheel, and
+in front of a big hedge of lilacs stood a long row of beehives covered
+with bark.
+
+There was a pond belonging to the farm, full of fat carp and slim
+water-snakes; there was also a kennel at the entrance; there were white
+gates at the end of the avenue, and at the garden walks, and in every
+place where they could possibly have a gate. There were big lofts with
+dark lumber-rooms, where old-fashioned uniforms and ladies' head-gear a
+hundred years old were stored away; there were large chests full of silk
+gowns and bridal finery; there were old pianos and violins, guitars and
+bassoons. In bureaus and cabinets were manuscript songs and old yellow
+letters; on the walls of the entrance-hall hung guns, pistols and
+hunting-bags; on the floor were rugs, in which patches of old silken
+gowns were woven together with pieces of threadbare cotton curtains.
+There was a large porch, where the deadly nightshade summer after summer
+grew up a thin trelliswork; there were large, yellow front-doors, which
+were fastened with bolts and catches; the hall was strewn with sprigs of
+juniper, and the windows had small panes and heavy wooden shutters.
+
+One summer old Colonel Beerencreutz came on a visit to this house. It is
+supposed to have been the very year after he left Ekeby. At that time he
+had taken rooms at a farm at Svartsjö, and it was only on rare occasions
+that he went visiting. He still had his horse and gig, but he scarcely
+ever used them. He said that he had grown old in earnest now, and that
+home was the best place for old people.
+
+Beerencreutz was also loath to leave the work he had in hand. He was
+weaving rugs for his two rooms--large, many-coloured rugs in a rich and
+strangely-thought-out pattern. It took him an endless time, because he
+had his own way of weaving, for he used no loom, but stretched his wool
+from the one wall to the other right across the one room. He did this in
+order to see the whole rug at one time; but to cross the woof and
+afterwards bring the threads together to a firm web was no easy matter.
+And then there was the pattern, which he himself thought out, and the
+colours which should match. This took the Colonel more time than anyone
+would have imagined; for whilst Beerencreutz was busy getting the
+pattern right, and whilst he was working with warp and woof, he often
+sat and thought of God. Our Lord, he thought, was likewise sitting at a
+loom, still larger, and with an even more peculiar pattern to weave. And
+he knew that there must be both light and dark shades in that weaving.
+But Beerencreutz would at times sit and think so long about this, until
+he fancied he saw before him his own life and the life of the people
+whom he had known, and with whom he had lived, forming a small portion
+of God's great weaving; and he seemed to see that piece so distinctly
+that he could discern both outlines and colouring. And if one asked
+Beerencreutz what the pattern in his work really meant, he would be
+obliged to confess that it was the life of himself and his friends which
+he wove into the rug as a faint imitation of what he thought he had seen
+represented on God's loom.
+
+The Colonel, however, was accustomed to pay a little visit to some old
+friends every year just after midsummer. He had always liked best to
+travel through the country when the fields were still scented with
+clover, and blue and yellow flowers grew along the roadside in two long
+straight rows.
+
+This year the Colonel had hardly got to the great highroad before he met
+his old friend Ensign von Örneclou. And the Ensign, who was travelling
+about all the year round, and who knew all the country houses in
+Värmland, gave him some good advice.
+
+'Go to Halstanäs and call upon Ensign Vestblad,' he said to the Colonel.
+'I can only tell you, old man, I don't know a house in the whole country
+where one fares better.'
+
+'What Vestblad are you speaking about?' asked the Colonel. 'I suppose
+you don't mean the old Ensign whom the Major's wife showed the door?'
+
+'The very man,' said the Ensign. 'But Vestblad is not the same man he
+was. He has married a fine lady--a real stunning woman, Colonel--who has
+made a man of him. It was a wonderful piece of good luck for Vestblad
+that such a splendid girl should take a fancy to him. She was not
+exactly young any longer; but no more was he. You should go to
+Halstanäs, Colonel, and see what wonders love can work.'
+
+And the Colonel went to Halstanäs to see if Örneclou spoke the truth. He
+had, as a matter of fact, now and then wondered what had become of
+Vestblad; in his young days he had kicked so recklessly over the traces
+that even the Major's wife at Ekeby could not put up with him. She had
+not been able to keep him at Ekeby more than a couple of years before
+she was obliged to turn him out. Vestblad had become such a heavy
+drinker that a Cavalier could hardly associate with him. And now
+Örneclou declared that he owned a country house, and had made an
+excellent match.
+
+The Colonel consequently went to Halstanäs, and saw at the first glance
+that it was a real old country-seat. He had only to look at the avenue
+of birches with all the names cut on the fine old trees. Such birches he
+had only seen at good old country-houses. The Colonel drove slowly up to
+the house, and every moment his pleasure increased. He saw lime hedges
+of the proper kind, so close that one could walk on the top of them,
+and there were a couple of terraces with stone steps so old that they
+were half buried in the ground. When the Colonel drove past the pond, he
+saw indistinctly the dark carp in the yellowish water. The pigeons flew
+up from the road flapping their wings; the squirrel stopped its wheel;
+the watch-dog lay with its head on its paws, wagging its tail, and at
+the same time faintly growling. Close to the porch the Colonel saw an
+ant-hill, where the ants, unmolested, went to and fro--to and fro. He
+looked at the flower-beds inside the grass border. There they grew, all
+the old flowers: narcissus and pyrola, sempervivum and marigold; and on
+the bank grew small white daisies, which had been there so long that
+they now sowed themselves like weeds. Beerencreutz again said to himself
+that this was indeed a real old country-house, where both plants and
+animals and human beings throve as well as could be.
+
+When at last he drove up to the front-door he had as good a reception as
+he could wish for, and as soon as he had brushed the dust off him he was
+taken to the dining-room, and he was offered plenty of good
+old-fashioned food--the same old cakes for dessert that his mother used
+to give him when he came home from school; and any so good he had never
+tasted elsewhere.
+
+Beerencreutz looked with surprise at Ensign Vestblad. He went about
+quiet and content, with a long pipe in his mouth and a skull-cap on his
+head. He wore an old morning-coat, which he had difficulty in getting
+out of when it was time to dress for dinner. That was the only sign of
+the Bohemian left, as far as Beerencreutz could see. He went about and
+looked after his men, calculated their wages, saw how things were
+getting on in the fields and meadows, gathered a rose for his wife when
+he went through the garden, and he indulged no longer in either swearing
+or spitting. But what astonished the Colonel most of all was the
+discovery that old Ensign Vestblad kept his books. He took the Colonel
+into his office and showed him large books with red backs. And those he
+kept himself. He had lined them with red ink and black ink, written the
+headings with large letters, and put down everything, even to a stamp.
+
+But Ensign Vestblad's wife, who was a born lady, called Beerencreutz
+cousin, and they soon found out the relationship between them; and they
+talked all their relatives over. At last Beerencreutz became so intimate
+with Mrs. Vestblad that he consulted her about the rug he was weaving.
+
+It was a matter of course that the Colonel should stay the night. He was
+taken to the best spare room to the right of the hall and close to his
+host's bedroom, and his bed was a large four-poster, with heaps of
+eiderdowns.
+
+The Colonel fell asleep as soon as he got into bed, but awoke later on
+in the night. He immediately got out of bed and went and opened the
+window-shutters. He had a view over the garden, and in the light summer
+night he could see all the gnarled old apple-trees, with their
+worm-eaten leaves, and with numerous props under the decayed branches.
+He saw the large wild apple-tree, which in the autumn would give barrels
+of uneatable fruit; he saw the strawberries, which had just begun to
+ripen under their profusion of green leaves.
+
+The Colonel stood and looked at it as if he could not afford to waste
+his time in sleeping. Outside his window at the peasant farm where he
+lived all he could see was a stony hill and a couple of juniper-bushes;
+and it was natural that a man like Beerencreutz should feel more at home
+amongst well-trimmed hedges and roses in bloom.
+
+When in the quiet stillness of the night one looks out upon a garden,
+one often has a feeling that it is not real and natural. It can be so
+still that one can almost fancy one's self in the theatre; one imagines
+that the trees are painted and the roses made of paper. And it was
+something like this the Colonel felt as he stood there. 'It cannot be
+possible,' he thought, 'that all this is real. It can only be a dream.'
+But then a few rose-leaves fell softly to the ground from the big
+rose-tree just outside his window, and then he realized that everything
+was genuine. Everything was real and genuine; both day and night the
+same peace and contentment everywhere.
+
+When he went and laid down again he left the window-shutters open. He
+lay in the high bed and looked time after time at the rose-tree; it is
+impossible to describe his pleasure in looking at it. He thought what a
+strange thing it was that such a man as Vestblad should have this flower
+of Paradise outside his window.
+
+The more the Colonel thought of Vestblad the more surprised he became
+that such a foal should end his days in such a stable. He was not good
+for much at the time he was turned away from Ekeby. Who would have
+thought he would have become a staid and well-to-do man?
+
+The Colonel lay and laughed to himself, and wondered whether Vestblad
+still remembered how he used to amuse himself in the olden days when he
+was living at Ekeby. On dark and stormy nights he used to rub himself
+over with phosphorus, mount a black horse, and ride over the hills to
+the ironworks, where the smiths and the workmen lived; and if anyone
+happened to look out of his window and saw a horseman shining with a
+bluish-white light tearing past, he hastened to bar and bolt everywhere,
+saying it was best to say one's prayers twice that night, for the devil
+was abroad.
+
+Oh yes, to frighten simple folks by such tricks was a favourite
+amusement in olden days; but Vestblad had carried his jokes further than
+anyone else the Colonel knew of.
+
+An old woman on the parish had died at Viksta, which belonged to Ekeby.
+Vestblad happened to hear about this. He also heard that the corpse had
+been taken from the house and placed in a barn. At night Vestblad put on
+his fiery array, mounted his black horse, and rode to the farmstead; and
+people there who were about had seen a fiery horseman ride up to the
+barn, where the corpse lay, ride three times round it and disappear
+through the door. They had also seen the horseman come out again, ride
+three times round the house and then disappear. But in the morning, when
+they went into the barn to see the corpse, it was gone, and they
+thought the devil had been there and carried her off. This supposition
+had been enough for them. But a couple of weeks later they found the
+body, which had been thrown on to a hay-loft in the barn, and then there
+was a great outcry. They found out who the fiery horseman was, and the
+peasants were on the watch to give Vestblad a good hiding. But the
+Major's wife would not have him at her table or in her house any longer;
+she packed his knapsack and asked him to betake himself elsewhere. And
+Vestblad went out into the world and made his fortune.
+
+A strange feeling of uneasiness came over the Colonel as he lay in bed.
+He felt as if something were going to happen. He had hardly realized
+before what an ugly story it was. He had no doubt even laughed at it at
+the time. They had not been in the habit of taking much notice of what
+happened to a poor old pauper in those days; but, great God! how furious
+one would have been if anybody had done that to one's own mother!
+
+A suffocating feeling came over the Colonel; he breathed heavily. The
+thought of what Vestblad had done appeared so vile and hateful to him,
+it weighed him down like a nightmare. He was half afraid of seeing the
+dead woman, of seeing her appear from behind the bed. He felt as if she
+must be quite near. And from the four corners of the room the Colonel
+heard terrible words: 'God will not forgive it! God has never forgotten
+it!'
+
+The Colonel closed his eyes, but then he suddenly saw before him God's
+great loom, where the web was woven with the fates of men; and he
+thought he saw Ensign Vestblad's square, and it was dark on three sides;
+and he, who understood something about weaving and patterns, knew that
+the fourth side would also have to be covered with the dark shade. It
+could not be done in any other way, otherwise there would be a mistake
+in the weaving.
+
+A cold sweat broke out on his forehead; it seemed to him that he looked
+upon what was the hardest and the most immovable in all the world. He
+saw how the fate which a man has worked out in his past life will pursue
+him to the end. And to think there were actually people who thought they
+could escape it!
+
+Escape it! escape! All was noted and written down; the one colour and
+the one figure necessitated the other, and everything came about as it
+was bound to come about.
+
+Suddenly Colonel Beerencreutz sat up in bed; he would look at the
+flowers and the roses, and think that perhaps our Lord could forget
+after all. But at the moment Beerencreutz sat up in bed the bedroom door
+opened, and one of the farm-labourers--a stranger to him--put his head
+in and nodded to the Colonel.
+
+It was now so light that the Colonel saw the man quite distinctly. It
+was the most hideous face he had ever seen. He had small gray eyes like
+a pig, a flat nose, and a thin, bristly beard. One could not say that
+the man looked like an animal, for animals have nearly always good
+faces, but still, he had something of the animal about him. His lower
+jaw projected, his neck was thick, and his forehead was quite hidden by
+his rough, unkempt hair.
+
+He nodded three times to the Colonel, and every time his mouth opened
+with a broad grin; and he put out his hand, red with blood, and showed
+it triumphantly. Up to this moment the Colonel had sat up in bed as if
+paralyzed, but now he jumped up and was at the door in two steps. But
+when he reached the door, the fellow was gone and the door closed.
+
+The Colonel was just on the point of raising the alarm, when it struck
+him that the door must be fastened on the inside, on his side, as he had
+himself locked it the night before; and on examining it, he found that
+it had not been unlocked.
+
+The Colonel felt almost ashamed to think that in his old age he had
+begun to see ghosts. He went straight back to bed again.
+
+When the morning came, and he had breakfasted, the Colonel felt still
+more ashamed. He had excited himself to such an extent that he had
+trembled all over and perspired from fear. He said not a word about it.
+But later on in the day he and Vestblad went over the estate. As they
+passed a labourer who was cutting sods on a bank Beerencreutz recognised
+him again. It was the man he had seen in the night. He recognised
+feature for feature.
+
+'I would not keep that man a day longer in my service, my friend,' said
+Beerencreutz, when they had walked a short distance. And he told
+Vestblad what he had seen in the night. 'I tell you this simply to warn
+you, in order that you may dismiss the man.'
+
+But Vestblad would not; he was just the man he would not dismiss. And
+when Beerencreutz pressed him more and more, he at last confessed that
+he would not do anything to the man, because he was the son of an old
+pauper woman who had died at Viksta close to Ekeby.
+
+'You no doubt remember the story?' he added.
+
+'If that's the case, I would rather go to the end of the world than live
+another day with that man about the place,' said Beerencreutz. An hour
+after he left, and was almost angry that his warning was not heeded.
+'Some misfortune will happen before I come here again,' said the Colonel
+to Vestblad, as he took leave.
+
+Next year, at the same time, the Colonel was preparing for another visit
+to Halstanäs. But before he got so far, he heard some sad news about his
+friends. As the clock struck one, a year after the very night he had
+slept there, Ensign Vestblad and his wife had been murdered in their
+bedroom by one of their labourers--a man with a neck like a bull, a flat
+nose, and eyes like a pig.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ IX
+
+ _The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE
+
+
+
+
+_The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE
+
+
+Nowadays no one ever takes any notice of the little cross standing in
+the corner of Svartsjö Churchyard. People on their way to and from
+church go past it without giving it a glance. This is not so very
+wonderful, because it is so low and small that clover and bluebells grow
+right up to the arms of the cross, and timothy-grass to the very top of
+it. Neither does anyone think of reading the inscription which stands on
+the cross. The white letters are almost entirely washed out by the rain,
+and it never occurs to anyone to try and decipher what is still left,
+and try to make it out. But so it has not always been. The little cross
+in its time has been the cause of much surprise and curiosity. There was
+a time when not a person put his foot inside Svartsjö Churchyard without
+going up to look at it. And when one of the old people from those days
+now happens to see it, a whole story comes back to him of people and
+events that have been long forgotten. He sees before him the whole of
+Svartsjö parish in the lethargic sleep of winter, covered by even white
+snow, quite a yard deep, so that it is impossible to discern road or
+pathway, or to know where one is going. It is almost as necessary to
+have a compass here as at sea. There is no difference between sea and
+shore. The roughest ground is as even as the field which in the autumn
+yielded such a harvest of oats. The charcoal-burner living near the
+great bogs might imagine himself possessed of as much cultivated land as
+the richest peasant.
+
+The roads have left their secure course between the gray fences, and are
+running at random across the meadows and along the river. Even on one's
+own farm one may lose one's way, and suddenly discover that on one's way
+to the well one has walked over the spirea-hedge and round the little
+rose-bed.
+
+But nowhere is it so impossible to find one's way as in the churchyard.
+In the first place, the stone wall which separates it from the pastor's
+field is entirely buried under the snow, so with that it is all one; and
+secondly, the churchyard itself is only a simple large, white plain,
+where not even the smallest unevenness in the snow-cover betrays the
+many small mounds and tufts of the garden of the dead.
+
+On most of the graves are iron crosses, from which hang small, thin
+hearts of tin, which the summer wind sets in motion. These little hearts
+are now all hidden under the snow, and cannot tinkle their sad songs of
+sorrow and longing.
+
+People who work in the towns have brought back with them to their dead
+wreaths with flowers of beads and leaves of painted tin; and these
+wreaths are so highly treasured that they are kept in small glass cases
+on the graves. But now all this is hidden and buried under the snow, and
+the grave that possesses such an ornament is in no way more remarkable
+than any of the other graves.
+
+One or two lilac bushes raise their heads above the snow-cover, but
+their little stiff branches look so alike, that it is impossible to tell
+one from the other, and they are of no use whatever to anyone trying to
+find his way in the churchyard. Old women who are in the habit of going
+on Sundays to visit their graves can only get a little way down the main
+walk on account of the snow. There they stand, trying to make out where
+their own grave lies--is it near that bush, or that?--and they begin to
+long for the snow to melt. It is as if the one for whom they are
+sorrowing has gone so far away from them, now that they cannot see the
+spot where he lies.
+
+There are also a few large gravestones and crosses that are higher than
+the snow, but they are not many; and as these are also covered with
+snow, they cannot be distinguished either.
+
+There is only one pathway kept clear in the churchyard. It is the one
+leading from the entrance to the small mortuary. When anyone is to be
+buried the coffin is carried into the mortuary, and there the pastor
+reads the service and casts the earth upon the coffin. It is impossible
+to place the coffin in the ground as long as such a winter lasts. It
+must remain standing in the mortuary until God sees fit to thaw the
+earth, and the ground can be digged and made ready.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Just when the winter was at its hardest, and the churchyard quite
+inaccessible, a child died at Sander's, the ironmaster at Lerum
+ironworks.
+
+The ironworks at Lerum were large, and Sander, the ironmaster, was a
+great man in that part of the country. He had recently had a family
+grave made in the churchyard--a splendid grave, the position of which
+one could not easily forget, although the snow had laid its thick carpet
+over it. It was surrounded by heavy, hewn stones, with a massive chain
+between them, and in the middle of the grave stood a huge granite block,
+with their name inscribed upon it. There was only the one word 'Sander,'
+engraved in large letters, but it could be seen over the whole
+churchyard. But now that the child was dead, and was to be buried, the
+ironmaster said to his wife:
+
+'I will not allow this child to lie in my grave.'
+
+One can picture them both at that moment. It was in their dining-room at
+Lerum. The ironmaster was sitting at the breakfast-table alone, as was
+his wont. His wife, Ebba Sander, was sitting in a rocking-chair at the
+window, from where she had a wide view of the lake, with its small
+islands covered with birches.
+
+She had been weeping, but when her husband said this, her eyes became
+immediately dry. Her little figure seemed to shrink from fear, and she
+began to tremble.
+
+'What do you say? What are you saying?' she asked, and her voice sounded
+as if she were shivering from cold.
+
+'I object to it,' he said. 'My father and my mother lie there, and the
+name "Sander" stands on the stone. I will not allow that child to lie
+there.'
+
+'Oh,' she said, still trembling, 'is that what you have been thinking
+about? I always did think that some day you would have your revenge.'
+
+He threw down his serviette, rose from the table, and stood before her,
+broad and big. It was not his intention to assert his will with many
+words, but she could see, as he stood there, that nothing could make him
+change his mind. Stern, immovable, obstinate he was from top to toe.
+
+'I will not revenge myself,' he said, 'only I will not have it.'
+
+'You speak as if it were only a question of removing him from one bed to
+the other,' she said. 'He is dead. It does not matter to him where he
+lies, I suppose; but for me it is ruin, you know.'
+
+'I have also thought of that,' he said, 'but I cannot.'
+
+When two people have been married, and have lived together for some
+years, they do not require many words to understand one another. She
+knew it would be quite useless to try and move him.
+
+'Why did you forgive me, then?' she said, wringing her hands. 'Why did
+you let me stay with you as your wife and promise to forgive me?'
+
+He knew that he would not do her any harm. It was not his fault that he
+had now reached the limit of his forbearance.
+
+'Say to people what you like,' he said; 'I shall not say anything. You
+can say, if you like, that there is water in the vault, or that there is
+only room for father and mother and you and me.'
+
+'And you imagine that they will believe that!'
+
+'Well, you must manage that as best you can.'
+
+He was not angry; she knew that he was not. It was only as he said: on
+that point he could not give way.
+
+She went further into the room, put her hands at the back of her head,
+and sat gazing out of the window without saying anything. The terrible
+thing is that so much happens to one in life over which one has no
+control, and, above all, that something may spring up within one's self
+over which one is entirely powerless. Some years ago, when she was
+already a staid married woman, love came to her; and what a love--so
+violent that it was quite impossible for her to resist.
+
+Was not the feeling which now mastered her husband--was not that, after
+all, a desire to be revenged?
+
+He had never been angry with her. He forgave her at once when she came
+and confessed her sin.
+
+'You have been out of your senses,' he said, and allowed her to remain
+with him at Lerum as if nothing had happened.
+
+But although it is easy enough to say one forgives, it may be hard to do
+so, especially for one whose mind is slow and heavy, who ponders over
+but never forgets or gives vent to his feelings. Whatever he may say,
+and however much he may have made up his mind, something is always left
+within his heart which gnaws and longs to be satisfied with someone
+else's suffering. She had always had a strange feeling that it would
+have been better for her if he had been so enraged that he had struck
+her. Then, perhaps, things could have come right between them. All these
+years he had been morose and irritable, and she had become frightened.
+She was like a horse between the traces. She knew that behind her was
+one who held a whip over her, even if he did not use it; and now he had
+used it. He had not been able to refrain any longer. And now it was all
+over with her.
+
+Those who were about her said they had never seen such sorrow as hers.
+She seemed to be petrified. The whole time before the funeral it was as
+if there were no real life in her. One could not tell if she heard what
+was said to her, if she had any idea who was speaking to her. She did
+not eat; it was as if she felt no hunger. She went out in the bitterest
+cold; she did not feel it. But it was not grief that petrified her--it
+was fear.
+
+It never struck her for a moment to stay at home on the day of the
+funeral. She must go to the churchyard, she must walk in the funeral
+procession--must go there, feeling that all who were present expected
+that the body would be laid in the family vault of the Sanders. She
+thought she would sink into the ground at all the surprise and scorn
+which would rise up against her when the grave-digger, who headed the
+procession, led the way to an out-of-the-way grave. An outburst of
+astonishment would be heard from everybody, although it was a funeral
+procession: 'Why is the child not going to be buried in the Sanders'
+family vault?' Thoughts would go back to the vague rumours which were
+once circulated about her. 'There must have been something in them,
+after all,' people will whisper to each other. And before the mourners
+left the churchyard she would be condemned and lost. The only thing for
+her to do was to be present herself. She would go there with a quiet
+face, as if everything was as it ought to be. Then, perhaps, they might
+believe what she said to explain the matter. . . .
+
+Her husband went with her to the church; he had looked after everything,
+invited people, ordered the coffin, and arranged who should be the
+bearers. He was kind and good now that he had got his own way.
+
+It was on a Sunday. The service was over, and the mourners had assembled
+outside the porch, where the coffin was standing. The bearers had placed
+the white bands over their shoulders; all people of any position had
+joined in the procession, as did also many of the congregation. She had
+a feeling as if they had all gathered together in order to accompany a
+criminal to the scaffold.
+
+How they would all look at her when they came back from the funeral! She
+was there to prepare them for what was to happen, but she had not been
+able to utter a single word. She felt quite unable to speak quietly and
+sensibly. There was only one thing she wanted: to scream and moan so
+violently and loudly that it could be heard all over the churchyard; and
+she had to bite her lips so as not to cry out.
+
+The bells commenced to ring in the tower, and the procession began to
+move. Now all these people would find it out without the slightest
+preparation. Oh, why had she not spoken in time? She had to restrain
+herself to the utmost from shouting out and telling them that they must
+not go to the grave with the dead child. Those who are dead are dead and
+gone. Why should her whole life be spoiled for the sake of this dead
+child? They could put him in the earth, where they liked, only not in
+the churchyard. She had a confused idea that she would frighten them
+away from the churchyard; it was risky to go there; it was
+plague-smitten; there were marks of a wolf in the snow; she would
+frighten them as one frightens children.
+
+She did not know where they had digged the child's grave. She would know
+soon enough, she thought; and when the procession entered the
+churchyard, she glanced around the snow-covered ground to see where
+there was a new grave; but she saw neither path nor grave--nothing but
+the white snow. And the procession advanced towards the small mortuary.
+As many as possibly could pressed into the building and saw the earth
+cast on to the coffin. There was no question whatever about this or that
+grave. No one found out that the little one which was now laid to rest
+was never to be taken to the family vault.
+
+Had she but thought of that, had she not forgotten everything else in
+her fear and terror, then she need not have been afraid, not for a
+single moment.
+
+'In the spring,' she thought, 'when the coffin has to be placed in the
+ground, there will probably be no one there except the grave-digger;
+everybody will think that the child is lying in the Sanders' vault.' And
+she felt that she was saved.
+
+She sank down sobbing violently. People looked at her with sympathy.
+'How terribly she felt it!' they said. But she herself knew that she
+cried like one who has escaped from a mortal danger.
+
+A day or two after the funeral she was sitting in the twilight in her
+accustomed place in the dining-room, and as it grew darker she caught
+herself waiting and longing. She sat and listened for the child; that
+was the time when he always used to come in and play with her. Why did
+he not come that day? Then she started. 'Oh, he is dead, he is dead!'
+
+The next day she sat again in the twilight, and longed for him, and day
+by day this longing grew. It grew as the light does in the springtime,
+until at last it filled all the hours both of day and night.
+
+It almost goes without saying that a child like hers was more loved
+after death than whilst it was living. While it was living its mother
+had thought of nothing but regaining the trust and the love of her
+husband. And for him the child could never be a source of happiness. It
+was necessary to keep it away from him as much as possible; and the
+child had often felt he was in the way.
+
+She, who had failed in and neglected her duty, would show her husband
+that she was worth something after all. She was always about in the
+kitchen and in the weaving-room. Where could there be any room, then,
+for the little boy?
+
+But now, afterwards, she remembered how his eyes could beg and beseech.
+In the evening he liked so much to have her sitting at his bedside. He
+said he was afraid to lie in the dark; but now it struck her that that
+had probably only been an excuse to get her to stay with him. She
+remembered how he lay and tried not to fall asleep. Now she knew that he
+kept himself awake in order that he might lie a little longer and feel
+his hand in hers. He had been a shrewd little fellow, young as he was.
+He had exerted all his little brain to find out how he could get a
+little share of her love. It is incomprehensible that children can love
+so deeply. She never understood it whilst he was alive.
+
+It was really first now that she had begun to love the child. It was
+first now that she was really impressed by his beauty. She would sit and
+dream of his big, strange eyes. He had never been robust and ruddy like
+most children, but delicate and slender. But how sweet he had been! He
+seemed to her now as something wonderfully beautiful--more and more
+beautiful for every day that went. Children were indeed the best of all
+in this world. To think that there were little beings stretching out
+their hands to everybody, and thinking good of all; that never ask if a
+face be plain or pretty, but are equally willing to kiss either, loving
+equally old and young, rich and poor. And yet they were real little
+people.
+
+For every day that went she was drawn nearer and nearer to the child.
+She wished that the child had been still alive; but, on the other hand,
+she was not sure that in that case she would have been drawn so near to
+it. At times she was quite in despair at the thought that she had not
+done more for the child whilst he was alive. That was probably why he
+had been taken from her, she thought.
+
+But it was not often that she sorrowed like this. Earlier in life she
+had always been afraid lest some great sorrow should overtake her, but
+now it seemed to her that sorrow was not what she had then thought it to
+be. Sorrow was only to live over and over again through something which
+was no more. Sorrow in her case was to become familiar with her child's
+whole being, and to seek to understand him. And that sorrow had made her
+life so rich.
+
+What she was most afraid of now was that time would take him from her
+and wipe out the memory of him. She had no picture of him; perhaps his
+features little by little would fade for her. She sat every day and
+tried to think how he looked. 'Do I see him exactly as he was?' she
+said.
+
+Week by week, as the winter wore away, she began to long for the time
+when he would be taken from the mortuary and buried in the ground, so
+that she could go to his grave and speak with him. He should lie towards
+the west, that was the most beautiful, and she would deck the grave with
+roses. There should also be a hedge round the grave, and a seat where
+she could sit often and often. People would perhaps wonder at it; but
+they were not to know that her child did not lie in the family grave;
+and they were sure to think it strange that she placed flowers on an
+unknown grave and sat there for hours. What could she say to explain it?
+
+Sometimes she thought that she could, perhaps, do it in this way: First
+she would go to the big grave and place a large bouquet of flowers on
+it, and remain sitting there for some time, and afterwards she would
+steal away to the little grave; and he would be sure to be content with
+the little flower she would secretly give him. But even if he were
+satisfied with the one little flower, could she be? Could she really
+come quite near to him in this way? Would he not notice that she was
+ashamed of him? Would he not understand what a disgrace his birth had
+been to her? No, she would have to protect him from that. He must only
+think that the joy of having possessed him weighed against all the rest.
+
+At last the winter was giving way. One could see the spring was coming.
+The snow-cover began to melt, and the earth to peep out. It would still
+be a week or two before the ground was thawed, but it would not be long
+now before the dead could be taken away from the mortuary. And she
+longed--she longed so exceedingly for it.
+
+Could she still picture to herself how he looked? She tried every day;
+but it was easier when it was winter. Now, when the spring was coming,
+it seemed as if he faded away from her. She was filled with despair. If
+she were only soon able to sit by his grave and be near to him again,
+then she would be able to see him again, to love him. Would he never be
+laid in his little grave? She must be able to see him again, see him
+through her whole life; she had no one else to love.
+
+At last all her fears and scruples vanished before this great longing.
+She loved, she loved; she could not live without the dead! She knew now
+that she could not consider anybody or anything but him--him alone. And
+when the spring came in earnest, when mounds and graves once again
+appeared all over the churchyard, when the little hearts of the iron
+crosses again began to tinkle in the wind, and the beaded wreaths to
+sparkle in their glass cases, and when the earth at last was ready to
+receive the little coffin, she had ready a black cross to place on his
+grave. On the cross from arm to arm was written in plain white letters,
+
+'HERE RESTS MY CHILD,'
+
+and underneath, on the stem of the cross, stood her name.
+
+She did not mind that the whole world would know how she had sinned.
+Other things were of no consequence to her; all she thought about was
+that she would now be able to pray at the grave of her child.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ X
+
+ _The_ BROTHERS
+
+
+
+
+_The_ BROTHERS
+
+
+It is very possible that I am mistaken, but it seems to me that an
+astonishing number of people die this year. I have a feeling that I
+cannot go down the street without meeting a hearse. One cannot help
+thinking about all those who are carried to the churchyard. I always
+feel as if it were so sad for the dead who have to be buried in towns. I
+can hear how they moan in their coffins. Some complain that they have
+not had plumes on the hearse; some count up the wreaths, and are not
+satisfied; and then there are some who have only been followed by two or
+three carriages, and who are hurt by it.
+
+The dead ought never to know and experience such things; but people in
+towns do not at all understand how they ought to honour those who have
+entered into eternal rest.
+
+When I really think over it I do not know any place where they
+understand it better than at home in Svartsjö. If you die in the parish
+of Svartsjö you know you will have a coffin like that of everyone
+else--an honest black coffin which is like the coffins in which the
+country judge and the local magistrate were buried a year or two ago.
+For the same joiner makes all the coffins, and he has only one pattern;
+the one is made neither better nor worse than the other. And you know
+also, for you have seen it so many times, that you will be carried to
+the church on a waggon which has been painted black for the occasion.
+You need not trouble yourself at all about any plumes. And you know that
+the whole village will follow you to the church, and that they will
+drive as slowly and as solemnly for you as for a landed proprietor.
+
+But you will have no occasion to feel annoyed because you have not
+enough wreaths, for they do not place a single flower on the coffin; it
+shall stand out black and shining, and nothing must cover it; and it is
+not necessary for you to think whether you will have a sufficiently
+large number of people to follow you, for those who live in your town
+will be sure to follow you, every one. Nor will you be obliged to lie
+and listen if there is lamenting and weeping around your coffin. They
+never weep over the dead when they stand on the church hill outside
+Svartsjö Church. No, they weep as little over a strong young fellow who
+falls a prey to death just as he is beginning to provide for his old
+people as they will for you. You will be placed on a couple of black
+trestles outside the door of the parish room, and a whole crowd of
+people will gradually gather round you, and all the women will have
+handkerchiefs in their hands. But no one will cry; all the handkerchiefs
+will be kept tightly rolled up; not one will be applied to the eyes. You
+need not speculate as to whether people will shed as many tears over you
+as they would over others. They would cry if it were the proper thing,
+but it is not the proper thing.
+
+You can understand that if there were much sorrowing over one grave, it
+would not look well for those over whom no one sorrowed. They know what
+they were about at Svartsjö. They do as it has been the custom to do
+there for many hundred years. But whilst you stand there, on the church
+hill, you are a great and important personage, although you receive
+neither flowers nor tears. No one comes to church without asking who you
+are, and then they go quietly up to you and stand and gaze at you; and
+it never occurs to anyone to wound the dead by pitying him. No one says
+anything but that it is well for him that it is all over.
+
+It is not at all as it is in a town, where you can be buried any day. At
+Svartsjö you must be buried on a Sunday, so that you can have the whole
+parish around you. There you will have standing near your coffin both
+the girl with whom you danced at the last midsummer night's festival and
+the man with whom you exchanged horses at the last fair. You will have
+the schoolmaster who took so much trouble with you when you were a
+little lad, and who had forgotten you, although you remembered him so
+well; and you will have the old Member of Parliament who never before
+thought it worth his while to bow to you. This is not as in a town,
+where people hardly turn round when you are carried past. When they
+bring the long bands and place them under the coffin, there is not one
+who does not watch the proceedings.
+
+You cannot imagine what a churchwarden we have at Svartsjö. He is an old
+soldier, and he looks like a Field-Marshal. He has short white hair and
+twisted moustaches, and a pointed imperial; he is slim and tall and
+straight, with a light and firm step. On Sundays he wears a
+well-brushed frock-coat of fine cloth. He really looks a very fine old
+gentleman, and it is he who walks at the head of the procession. Then
+comes the verger. Not that the verger is to be compared with the
+churchwarden. It is more than probable that his Sunday hat is too large
+and old-fashioned; as likely as not he is awkward--but when is a verger
+not awkward?
+
+Then you come next in your coffin, with the six bearers, and then follow
+the clergyman and the clerk and the Town Council and the whole parish.
+All the congregation will follow you to the churchyard, you may be sure
+of that. But I will tell you something: All those who follow you look so
+small and poor. They are not fine town's-people, you know--only plain,
+simple Svartsjö folk. There is only one who is great and important, and
+that is you in your coffin--you who are dead.
+
+The others the next day will have to resume their heavy and toilsome
+work. They will have to live in poor old cottages and wear old, patched
+clothes; the others will always be plagued and worried, and dragged down
+and humbled by poverty.
+
+Those who follow you to your grave become far more sad by looking at the
+living than by thinking of you who are dead. You need not look any more
+at the velvet collar of your coat to see if it is not getting worn at
+the edges; you need not make a special fold of your silk handkerchief to
+hide that it is beginning to fray; you will never more be compelled to
+ask the village shopkeeper to let you have goods on credit; you will
+not find out that your strength is failing; you will not have to wait
+for the day when you must go on the parish.
+
+While they are following you to the grave everyone will be thinking that
+it is best to be dead--better to soar heavenwards, carried on the white
+clouds of the morning--than to be always experiencing life's manifold
+troubles. When they come to the wall of the churchyard, where the grave
+has been made, the bands are exchanged for strong ropes, and people get
+on to the loose earth and lower you down. And when this has been done
+the clerk advances to the grave and begins to sing: 'I walk towards
+death.'
+
+He sings the hymn quite alone; neither the clergyman nor any of the
+congregation help him. But the clerk must sing; however keen the north
+wind and however glaring the sun which shines straight in his face, sing
+he does.
+
+The clerk, however, is getting old now, and he has not much voice left;
+he is quite aware that it does not sound as well now as formerly when he
+sang people into their graves; but he does it all the same--it is part
+of his duty. For the day, you understand, when his voice quite fails
+him, so that he cannot sing any more, he must resign his office, and
+this means downright poverty for him. Therefore the whole gathering
+stands in apprehension while the old clerk sings, wondering whether his
+voice will last through the whole verse. But no one joins him, not a
+single person, for that would not do; it is not the custom. People never
+sing at a grave at Svartsjö. People do not sing in the church either,
+except the first hymn on Christmas Day morning.
+
+Still, if one listened very attentively, one could hear that the clerk
+does not sing alone. There really is another voice, but it sounds so
+exactly the same that the two voices blend as if they were only one. The
+other who sings is a little old man in a long, coarse gray coat. He is
+still older than the clerk, but he gives out all the voice he has to
+help him. And the voice, as I have told you, is exactly the same kind as
+the clerk's; they are so alike one cannot help wondering at it.
+
+But when one looks closer, the little gray old man is also exactly like
+the clerk; he has the same nose and chin and mouth, only somewhat older,
+and, as it were, more hardly dealt with in life. And then one
+understands that the little gray man is the clerk's brother; and then
+one knows why he helps him. For, you see, things have never gone well
+with him in this world, and he has always had bad luck; and once he was
+made a bankrupt, and brought the clerk into his misfortunes. He knows
+that it is his fault that his brother has always had to struggle. And
+the clerk, you know, has tried to help him on to his legs again, but
+with no avail, for he has not been one of those one can help. He has
+always been unfortunate; and then, he has had no strength of purpose.
+
+But the clerk has been the shining light in the family; and for the
+other it has been a case of receiving and receiving, and he has never
+been able to make any return at all. Great God! even to talk of making
+any return--he who is so poor! You should only see the little hut in
+the forest where he lives. He knows that he has always been dull and
+sad, only a burden--only a burden for his brother and for others. But
+now of late he has become a great man; now he is able to give some
+return. And that he does. Now he helps his brother, the clerk, who has
+been the sunshine and life and joy for him all his days. Now he helps
+him to sing, so that he may keep his office.
+
+He does not go to church, for he thinks that everyone looks at him
+because he has no black Sunday clothes; but every Sunday he goes up to
+the church to see whether there is a coffin on the black trestles
+outside the parish room; and if there is one he goes to the grave, in
+spite of his old gray coat, and helps his brother with his pitiful old
+voice.
+
+The little old man knows very well how badly he sings; he places himself
+behind the others, and does not push forward to the grave. But sing he
+does; it would not matter so much if the clerk's voice should fail on
+one or other note, his brother is there and helps him.
+
+At the churchyard no one laughs at the singing; but when people go home
+and have thrown off their devoutness, then they speak about the service,
+and then they laugh at the clerk's singing--laugh both at his and his
+brother's. The clerk does not mind it, it is the same to him; but his
+brother thinks about it and suffers from it; he dreads the Sunday the
+whole week, but still he comes punctually to the churchyard and does his
+duty. But you in your coffin, you do not think so badly of the singing.
+You think that it is good music. Is it not true that one would like to
+be buried in Svartsjö, if only for the sake of that singing?
+
+It says in the hymn that life is but a walk towards death, and when the
+two old men sing this--the two who have suffered for each other during
+their whole life--then one understands better than ever before how
+wearisome it is to live, and one is so entirely satisfied with being
+dead.
+
+And then the singing stops, and the clergyman throws earth on the coffin
+and says a prayer over you. Then the two old voices sing: 'I walk
+towards heaven.' And they do not sing this verse any better than the
+former; their voices grow more feeble and querulous the longer they
+sing. But for you a great and wide expanse opens, and you soar upwards
+with tremulous joy, and everything earthly fades and disappears.
+
+But still the last which you hear of things earthly tells of
+faithfulness and love. And in the midst of your trembling flight the
+poor song will awake memories of all the faithfulness and love you have
+met with here below, and this will bear you upwards. This will fill you
+with radiance and make you beautiful as an angel.
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
+ GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+In this Latin-1 text version:
+ text in italics is marked with underscores, e.g. _italics_
+ text in small capitals is shown in upper-case.
+
+Hyphenation is inconsistent, for example sheepskin, sheep-skin and
+sheep's-skin all occur. These have been left as printed.
+
+On page 184 "... and the nip reddened on the naked branch of the
+hawthorn" has been left as printed, however the original Swedish talks
+of nyponet (rosehip) and törnbuskens (rosehip and thornbush), rather
+than nip and hawthorn.
+
+Changes that have been made are:
+
+ Page 4 from: then I feel that I must speak
+ to: then I feel that I must speak.
+
+ Page 55 from: the newly-buried birl
+ to: the newly-buried girl
+
+ Page 94 from: the everlasting unrest that tormened him
+ to: the everlasting unrest that tormented him
+
+ Page 124 from: why had be been unhappy?
+ to: why had he been unhappy?
+
+ Page 229 from: found friends in the solitude above
+ to: found friends in the solitude above.
+
+ Page 264 from: Guilietta Lombardi
+ to: Giulietta Lombardi
+
+ Page 328 from: the snow had laid its thinck carpet
+ to: the snow had laid its thick carpet
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerlöf
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FROM A SWEDISH HOMESTEAD ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerlöf
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: From a Swedish Homestead
+
+Author: Selma Lagerlöf
+
+Translator: Jessie Brochner
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2014 [EBook #44630]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FROM A SWEDISH HOMESTEAD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Fay Dunn, sp1nd and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <img src="images/front_cover.jpg" alt="Front Cover" title="Front Cover" width="381" height="597" />
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h1 title="From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerl&ouml;f, translated by Jessie Brochner"><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span><br />
+<span class="dec_italic">Homestead</span></h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<div class="title_page">
+<p class="title1"><span class="dec_italic">From a SWEDISH</span></p>
+
+<p class="title2"><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+
+<p class="by"><span class="dec_italic">By</span></p>
+
+<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Selma Lagerl&ouml;f</span></p>
+
+<p class="trans_by"><span class="dec_italic">Translated by</span></p>
+
+<p class="translator"><span class="smcap">Jessie Brochner</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter_crest">
+ <img src="images/crest.jpg" alt="Publisher&apos;s logo" title="Publisher&apos;s logo" width="97" height="103" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="pub_places"><span class="smcap">Garden City</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class="smcap">New York</span></p>
+<p class="publisher">DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY<br />
+1916
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="dec_italic">Copyright, 1901, by</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Doubleday, Page &amp; Company</span>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h2><span class="dec_italic">A</span> LIST <span class="dec_italic">of the</span> STORIES</h2>
+
+<table summary="Contents">
+<tr><th class="tdl_head"></th><th class="tdr_head"><span class="dec_italic">Page</span></th></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#The_Story_of_a_Country_House" title="The Story of a Country House"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">of a</span> <span class="smcap">Country House</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1" title="Page 1">1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Queens_at_Kungahalla" title="Queens at Kungah&auml;lla"><span class="dec_italic">Queens at</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_135" title="Page 135">135</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl_in"><a href="#Site" title="On the Site of the Great Kungah&auml;lla"><span class="dec_italic">On the</span> <span class="smcap">Site</span> <span class="dec_italic">of the Great</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_135" title="Page 135">135</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl_in"><a href="#Forest" title="The Forest Queen"><span class="dec_italic">The Forest</span> <span class="smcap">Queen</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_141" title="Page 141">141</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl_in"><a href="#Sigrid" title="Sigrid Storr&auml;de"><span class="smcap">Sigrid Storr&auml;de</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_157" title="Page 157">157</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl_in"><a href="#Astrid" title="Astrid"><span class="smcap">Astrid</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_172" title="Page 172">172</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Old_Agnete" title="Old Agnete"><span class="dec_italic">Old</span> <span class="smcap">Agnete</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_219" title="Page 219">219</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#The_Fishermans_Ring" title="The Fisherman&apos;s Ring"><span class="dec_italic">The Fisherman's</span> <span class="smcap">Ring</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_231" title="Page 231">231</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Santa_Caterina_of_Siena" title="Santa Caterina of Siena"><span class="dec_italic" lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span> <span class="smcap">Caterina</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">Siena</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_257" title="Page 257">257</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Money-Chest" title="The Empress&apos;s Money-Chest"><span class="dec_italic">The Empress's</span> <span class="smcap">Money-Chest</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_277" title="Page 277">277</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Peace" title="The Peace of God"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Peace</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">God</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_291" title="Page 291">291</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Story" title="Story from Halstan&auml;s"><span class="dec_italic">A</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">from</span> <span class="smcap">Halstan&auml;s</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_309" title="Page 309">309</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Inscription" title="The Inscription on the Grave"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Inscription</span> <span class="dec_italic">on the</span> <span class="smcap">Grave</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_323" title="Page 323">323</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl"><a href="#Brothers" title="The Brothers"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Brothers</span></a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_339" title="Page 339">339</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="The Story of a Country House">I.<a name="The_Story_of_a_Country_House" id="The_Story_of_a_Country_House"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">of a</span> <span class="smcap">Country House</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">I</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">of a</span> <span class="smcap">Country House</span></p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">of a</span> <span class="smcap">Country House</span></p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>It was a beautiful autumn day towards the
+end of the thirties. There was in Upsala at
+that time a high, yellow, two-storied house,
+which stood quite alone in a little meadow on the
+outskirts of the town. It was a rather desolate
+and dismal-looking house, but was rendered less
+so by the Virginia-creepers which grew there in
+profusion, and which had crept so high up the
+yellow wall on the sunny side of the house that
+they completely surrounded the three windows
+on the upper story.</p>
+
+<p>At one of these windows a student was sitting,
+drinking his morning coffee. He was a tall,
+handsome fellow, of distinguished appearance.
+His hair was brushed back from his forehead; it
+curled prettily, and a lock was continually falling
+into his eyes. He wore a loose, comfortable suit,
+but looked rather smart all the same.</p>
+
+<p>His room was well furnished. There was a
+good sofa and comfortable chairs, a large writing-table,
+a capital bookcase, but hardly any
+books.</p>
+
+<p>Before he had finished his coffee another student
+entered the room. The new-comer was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+totally different-looking man. He was a short,
+broad-shouldered fellow, squarely built and
+strong, ugly, with a large head, thin hair, and
+coarse complexion.</p>
+
+<p>'Hede,' he said, 'I have come to have a serious
+talk with you.'</p>
+
+<p>'Has anything unpleasant happened to you?'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh no, not to me,' the other answered; 'it is
+really you it concerns.' He sat silent for a while,
+and looked down. 'It is so awfully unpleasant
+having to tell you.'</p>
+
+<p>'Leave it alone, then,' suggested Hede.</p>
+
+<p>He felt inclined to laugh at his friend's solemnity.</p>
+
+<p>'I can't leave it alone any longer,' said his
+visitor. 'I ought to have spoken to you long ago,
+but it is hardly my place. You understand? I
+can't help thinking you will say to yourself:
+"There's Gustaf Alin, son of one of our cottagers,
+thinks himself such a great man now that he can
+order me about."'</p>
+
+<p>'My dear fellow,' Hede said, 'don't imagine I
+think anything of the kind. My father's father
+was a peasant's son.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, but no one thinks of that now,' Alin answered.
+He sat there, looking awkward and
+stupid, resuming every moment more and more
+of his peasant manners, as if that could help him
+out of his difficulty. 'When I think of the difference
+there is between your family and mine, I feel
+as if I ought to keep quiet; but when I remember
+that it was your father who, by his help in days
+gone by, enabled me to study, then I feel that I
+must <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Punctuation added">speak.</span>'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hede looked at him with a pleasant smile.</p>
+
+<p>'You had better speak out and have done with
+it,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'The thing is,' Alin said, 'I have heard people
+say that you don't do any work. They say you
+have hardly opened a book during the four terms
+you have been at the University. They say you
+don't do anything but play on the violin the
+whole day; and that I can quite believe, for you
+never wanted to do anything else when you were
+at school in Falu, although there you were
+obliged to work.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede straightened himself a little in his chair.
+Alin grew more and more uncomfortable, but he
+continued with stubborn resolution:</p>
+
+<p>'I suppose you think that anyone owning an
+estate like Munkhyttan ought to be able to do as
+he likes&mdash;work if he likes, or leave it alone. If he
+takes his exam., good; if he does not take his
+exam., what does it matter? for in any case you
+will never be anything but a landed proprietor
+and iron-master. You will live at Munkhyttan
+all your life. I understand quite well that is what
+you must think.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede was silent, and Alin seemed to see him
+surrounded by the same wall of distinction which
+in Alin's eyes had always surrounded his father,
+the Squire, and his mother.</p>
+
+<p>'But, you see, Munkhyttan is no longer what it
+used to be when there was iron in the mine,' he
+continued cautiously. 'The Squire knew that
+very well, and that was why it was arranged before
+his death that you should study. Your poor
+mother knows it, too, and the whole parish knows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+it. The only one who does not know anything
+is you, Hede.'</p>
+
+<p>'Don't you think I know,' Hede said a little
+irritably, 'that the iron-mine cannot be worked
+any longer?'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh yes,' Alin said, 'I dare say you know that
+much, but you don't know that it is all up with
+the property. Think the matter over, and you
+will understand that one cannot live from farming
+alone at Vesterdalarne. I cannot understand
+why your mother has kept it a secret from you.
+But, of course, she has the sole control of the
+estate, so she need not ask your advice about anything.
+Everybody at home knows that she is
+hard up. They say she drives about borrowing
+money. I suppose she did not want to disturb
+you with her troubles, but thought that she could
+keep matters going until you had taken your degree.
+She will not sell the estate before you have
+finished, and made yourself a new home.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede rose, and walked once or twice up and
+down the floor. Then he stopped opposite Alin.</p>
+
+<p>'But what on earth are you driving at, Alin?
+Do you want to make me believe that we are not
+rich?'</p>
+
+<p>'I know quite well that, until lately, you have
+been considered rich people at home,' Alin said.
+'But you can understand that things must come
+to an end when it is a case of always spending and
+never earning anything. It was a different thing
+when you had the mine.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede sat down again.</p>
+
+<p>'My mother would surely have told me if there
+were anything the matter,' he said. 'I am grateful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+to you, Alin; but you have allowed yourself
+to be frightened by some silly stories.'</p>
+
+<p>'I thought that you did not know anything,'
+Alin continued obstinately. 'At Munkhyttan
+your mother saves and works in order to get
+the money to keep you at Upsala, and to make
+it cheerful and pleasant for you when you are at
+home in the vacations. And in the meantime you
+are here doing nothing, because you don't know
+there is trouble coming. I could not stand any
+longer seeing you deceiving each other. Her
+ladyship thought you were studying, and you
+thought she was rich. I could not let you destroy
+your prospects without saying anything.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede sat quietly for a moment, and meditated.
+Then he rose and gave Alin his hand with rather
+a sad smile.</p>
+
+<p>'You understand that I feel you are speaking
+the truth, even if I <em>will</em> not believe you?
+Thanks.'</p>
+
+<p>Alin joyfully shook his hand.</p>
+
+<p>'You must know, Hede, that if you will only
+work no harm is done. With your brains, you
+can take your degree in three or four years.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede straightened himself.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not be uneasy, Alin,' he said; 'I am
+going to work hard now.'</p>
+
+<p>Alin rose and went towards the door, but hesitated.
+Before he reached it he turned round.</p>
+
+<p>'There was something else I wanted,' he said.
+He again became embarrassed. 'I want you to
+lend me your violin until you have commenced
+reading in earnest.'</p>
+
+<p>'Lend you my violin?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Yes; pack it up in a silk handkerchief, and
+put it in the case, and let me take it with me,
+or otherwise you will read to no purpose. You
+will begin to play as soon as I am out of the
+room. You are so accustomed to it now you
+cannot resist if you have it here. One cannot
+get over that kind of thing unless someone helps
+one; it gets the mastery over one.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede appeared unwilling.</p>
+
+<p>'This is madness, you know,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'No, Hede, it is not. You know you have inherited
+it from the Squire. It runs in your blood.
+Ever since you have been your own master here
+in Upsala you have done nothing else but play.
+You live here in the outskirts of the town simply
+not to disturb anyone by your playing. You
+cannot help yourself in this matter. Let me have
+the violin.'</p>
+
+<p>'Well,' said Hede, 'before I could not help
+playing, but now Munkhyttan is at stake; I am
+more fond of my home than of my violin.'</p>
+
+<p>But Alin was determined, and continued to ask
+for the violin.</p>
+
+<p>'What is the good of it?' Hede said. 'If I
+want to play, I need not go many steps to borrow
+another violin.'</p>
+
+<p>'I know that,' Alin replied, 'but I don't think
+it would be so bad with another violin. It is
+your old Italian violin which is the greatest danger
+for you. And besides, I would suggest your
+locking yourself in for the first few days&mdash;only
+until you have got fairly started.'</p>
+
+<p>He begged and begged, but Hede resisted; he
+would not stand anything so unreasonable as being
+a prisoner in his own room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Alin grew crimson.</p>
+
+<p>'I must have the violin with me,' he said, 'or
+it is no use at all.' He spoke eagerly and excitedly.
+'I had not intended to say anything
+about it, but I know that it concerns more than
+Munkhyttan. I saw a young girl at the Promotion
+Ball in the spring who, people said, was engaged
+to you. I don't dance, you know, but I
+liked to watch her when she was dancing, looking
+radiant like one of the lilies of the field. And
+when I heard that she was engaged to you, I felt
+sorry for her.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why?'</p>
+
+<p>'Because I knew that you would never succeed
+if you continued as you had begun. And
+then I swore that she should not have to spend
+her whole life waiting for one who never came.
+She should not sit and wither whilst waiting for
+you. I did not want to meet her in a few years
+with sharpened features and deep wrinkles round
+her mouth&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>He stopped suddenly; Hede's glance had
+rested so searchingly upon him.</p>
+
+<p>But Gunnar Hede had already understood
+that Alin was in love with his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em>. It moved
+him deeply that Alin under these circumstances
+tried to save him, and, influenced by this feeling,
+he yielded and gave him the violin.</p>
+
+<p>When Alin had gone, Hede read desperately
+for a whole hour, but then he threw away his
+book.</p>
+
+<p>It was not of much good his reading. It would
+be three or four years before he could be finished,
+and who could guarantee that the estate would
+not be sold in the meantime?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He felt almost with terror how deeply he loved
+the old home. It was like witchery. Every
+room, every tree, stood clearly before him. He
+felt he could not part with any of it if he were
+to be happy. And he was to sit quietly with his
+books whilst all this was about to pass away from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He became more and more restless; he felt
+the blood beating in his temples as if in a fever.
+And then he grew quite beside himself because
+he could not take his violin and play himself calm
+again.</p>
+
+<p>'My God!' he said, 'Alin will drive me mad.
+First to tell me all this, and then to take away
+my violin! A man like I must feel the bow between
+his fingers in sorrow and in joy. I must
+do something; I must get money, but I have not
+an idea in my head. I cannot think without my
+violin.'</p>
+
+<p>He could not endure the feeling of being
+locked in. He was so angry with Alin, who had
+thought of this absurd plan, that he was afraid
+he might strike him the next time he came.</p>
+
+<p>Of course he would have played, if he had had
+the violin, for that was just what he needed. His
+blood rushed so wildly, that he was nearly going
+out of his mind.</p>
+
+<p>Just as Hede was longing most for his violin
+a wandering musician began to play outside. It
+was an old blind man. He played out of tune
+and without expression, but Hede was so overcome
+by hearing a violin just at this moment
+that he listened with tears in his eyes and with
+his hands folded.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The next moment he flung open the window
+and climbed to the ground by the help of the
+creepers. He had no compunction at leaving
+his work. He thought the violin had simply
+come to comfort him in his misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>Hede had probably never before begged so
+humbly for anything as he did now, when he
+asked the old blind man to lend him his violin.
+He stood the whole time with his cap in his hand,
+although the old man was blind.</p>
+
+<p>The musician did not seem to understand what
+he wanted. He turned to the young girl who
+was leading him. Hede bowed to the poor girl
+and repeated his request. She looked at him, as
+if she must have eyes for them both. The glance
+from her big eyes was so steady that Hede
+thought he could feel where it struck him. It
+began with his collar, and it noticed that the frills
+of his shirt were well starched, then it saw that
+his coat was brushed, next that his boots were
+polished.</p>
+
+<p>Hede had never before been subjected to such
+close scrutiny. He saw clearly that he would not
+pass muster before those eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not so, all the same. The young
+girl had a strange way of smiling. Her face
+was so serious, that one had the impression when
+she smiled that it was the first and only time she
+had ever looked happy; and now one of these
+rare smiles passed over her lips. She took the
+violin from the old man and handed it to
+Hede.</p>
+
+<p>'Play the waltz from "Freisch&uuml;tz," then,' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hede thought it was strange that he should
+have to play a waltz just at that moment, but, as
+a matter of fact, it was all the same to him what
+he played, if he could only have a bow in his
+hand. That was all he wanted. The violin at
+once began to comfort him; it spoke to him in
+faint, cracked tones.</p>
+
+<p>'I am only a poor man's violin,' it said; 'but
+such as I am, I am a comfort and help to a poor
+blind man. I am the light and the colour and
+the brightness in his life. It is I who must comfort
+him in his poverty and old age and blindness.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede felt that the terrible depression that had
+cowed his hopes began to give way.</p>
+
+<p>'You are young and strong,' the violin said to
+him. 'You can fight and strive; you can hold
+fast that which tries to escape you. Why are you
+downcast and without courage?'</p>
+
+<p>Hede had played with lowered eyes; now he
+threw back his head and looked at those who
+stood around him. There was quite a crowd of
+children and people from the street, who had
+come into the yard to listen to the music. It appeared,
+however, that they had not come solely
+for the sake of the music. The blind man and
+his companion were not the only ones in the
+troupe.</p>
+
+<p>Opposite Hede stood a figure in tights and
+spangles, and with bare arms crossed over his
+chest. He looked old and worn, but Hede
+could not help thinking that he looked a devil of
+a fellow with his high chest and long moustaches.
+And beside him stood his wife, little and fat, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+not so very young either, but beaming with joy
+over her spangles and flowing gauze skirts.</p>
+
+<p>During the first bars of the music they stood
+still and counted, then a gracious smile passed
+over their faces, and they took each other's
+hands and began to dance on a small carpet.
+And Hede saw that during all the equilibristic
+tricks they now performed the woman stood almost
+still, whilst her husband did all the work.
+He sprang over her, and twirled round her, and
+vaulted over her. The woman scarcely did
+anything else but kiss her hand to the spectators.</p>
+
+<p>But Hede did not really take much notice of
+them. His bow began to fly over the strings.
+It told him that there was happiness in fighting
+and overcoming. It almost deemed him happy
+because everything was at stake for him. Hede
+stood there, playing courage and hope into himself,
+and did not think of the old tight-rope
+dancers.</p>
+
+<p>But suddenly he saw that they grew restless.
+They no longer smiled; they left off kissing their
+hands to the spectators; the acrobat made mistakes,
+and his wife began to sway to and fro in
+waltz time.</p>
+
+<p>Hede played more and more eagerly. He left
+off 'Freisch&uuml;tz' and rushed into an old 'Nixie
+Polka,' one which generally sent all the people
+mad when played at the peasant festivals.</p>
+
+<p>The old tight-rope dancers quite lost their
+heads. They stood in breathless astonishment,
+and at last they could resist no longer. They
+sprang into each other's arms, and then they began
+to dance a waltz in the middle of the carpet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>How they danced! dear me, how they danced!
+They took small, tripping steps, and whirled
+round in a small circle; they hardly went outside
+the carpet, and their faces beamed with joy
+and delight. There was the happiness of youth
+and the rapture of love over these two old people.</p>
+
+<p>The whole crowd was jubilant at seeing them
+dance. The serious little companion of the blind
+man smiled all over her face, and Hede grew
+much excited.</p>
+
+<p>Just fancy what an effect his violin could have!
+It made people quite forget themselves. It was
+a great power to have at his disposal. Any moment
+he liked he could take possession of his
+kingdom. Only a couple of years' study abroad
+with a great master, and he could go all over the
+world, and by his playing earn riches and honour
+and fame.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Hede that these acrobats must
+have come to tell him this. That was the road
+he should follow; it lay before him clear and
+smooth. He said to himself: 'I will&mdash;I <em>will</em> become
+a musician! I <em>must</em> be one! This is better
+than studying. I can charm my fellow-men with
+my violin; I can become rich.'</p>
+
+<p>Hede stopped playing. The acrobats at once
+came up and complimented him. The man said
+his name was Blomgren. That was his real
+name; he had other names when he performed.
+He and his wife were old circus people. Mrs.
+Blomgren in former days had been called Miss
+Viola, and had performed on horseback; and
+although they had now left the circus, they were
+still true artists&mdash;artists body and soul. That he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+had probably already noticed; that was why they
+could not resist his violin.</p>
+
+<p>Hede walked about with the acrobats for a
+couple of hours. He could not part with the
+violin, and the old artists' enthusiasm for their
+profession appealed to him. He was simply testing
+himself. 'I want to find out whether there
+is the proper stuff for an artist in me. I want to
+see if I can call forth enthusiasm. I want to
+see whether I can make children and idlers follow
+me from house to house.'</p>
+
+<p>On their way from house to house Mr. Blomgren
+threw an old threadbare mantle around him,
+and Mrs. Blomgren enveloped herself in a brown
+cloak. Thus arrayed, they walked at Hede's side
+and talked.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blomgren would not speak of all the
+honour he and Mrs. Blomgren had received during
+the time they had performed in a real circus;
+but the <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">directeur</span></em> had given Mrs. Blomgren her
+dismissal under the pretence that she was getting
+too stout. Mr. Blomgren had not been dismissed:
+he had himself resigned his position.
+Surely no one could think that Mr. Blomgren
+would remain with a <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">directeur</span></em> who had dismissed
+his wife!</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Blomgren loved her art, and for her sake
+Mr. Blomgren had made up his mind to live as a
+free artist, so that she could still continue to perform.
+During the winter, when it was too cold
+to give performances in the street, they performed
+in a tent. They had a very comprehensive
+repertoire. They gave pantomimes, and
+were jugglers and conjurers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The circus had cast them off, but Art had not,
+said Mr. Blomgren. They served Art always.
+It was well worth being faithful to Art, even unto
+death. Always artists&mdash;always. That was Mr.
+Blomgren's opinion, and it was also Mrs. Blomgren's.</p>
+
+<p>Hede walked quietly and listened. His
+thoughts flew restlessly from plan to plan. Sometimes
+events happen which become like symbols,
+like signs, which one must obey. There must be
+some meaning in what had now happened to
+him. If he could only understand it rightly, it
+might help him towards arriving at a wise resolution.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blomgren asked the student to notice the
+young girl who was leading the blind man. Had
+he ever before seen such eyes? Did he not think
+that such eyes must mean something? Could
+one have those eyes without being intended for
+something great?</p>
+
+<p>Hede turned round and looked at the little pale
+girl. Yes, she had eyes like stars, set in a sad
+and rather thin face.</p>
+
+<p>'Our Lord knows always what He is about,'
+said Mrs. Blomgren; 'and I also believe that He
+has some reason for letting such an artist as Mr.
+Blomgren perform in the street. But what was
+He thinking about when He gave that girl those
+eyes and that smile?'</p>
+
+<p>'I will tell you something,' said Mr. Blomgren;
+'she has not the slightest talent for Art.
+And with those eyes!'</p>
+
+<p>Hede had a suspicion that they were not talking
+to him, but simply for the benefit of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+young girl. She was walking just behind them,
+and could hear every word.</p>
+
+<p>'She is not more than thirteen years old, and
+not by any means too old to learn something;
+but, impossible&mdash;impossible, without the slightest
+talent! If one does not want to waste one's
+time, sir, teach her to sew, but not to stand on
+her head. Her smile makes people quite mad
+about her,' Mr. Blomgren continued. 'Simply
+on account of her smile she has had many offers
+from families wishful to adopt her. She could
+grow up in a well-to-do home if she would only
+leave her grandfather. But what does she want
+with a smile that makes people mad about her,
+when she will never appear either on horseback
+or on a trapeze?'</p>
+
+<p>'We know other artists,' said Mrs. Blomgren,
+'who pick up children in the street and train them
+for the profession when they cannot perform any
+longer themselves. There is more than one who
+has been lucky enough to create a star and obtain
+immense salaries for her. But Mr. Blomgren
+and I have never thought of the money; we have
+only thought of some day seeing Ingrid flying
+through a hoop whilst the whole circus resounded
+with applause. For us it would have
+been as if we were beginning life over again.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why do we keep her grandfather?' said Mr.
+Blomgren. 'Is he an artist fit for us? We
+could, no doubt, have got a previous member of
+a Hofkapell if we had wished. But we love that
+child; we cannot do without her; we keep the
+old man for her sake.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it not naughty of her that she will not allow
+us to make an artist of her?' they said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hede turned round. The little girl's face wore
+an expression of suffering and patience. He
+could see that she knew that anyone who could
+not dance on the tight-rope was a stupid and
+contemptible person.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment they came to another
+house, but before they began their performance
+Hede sat down on an overturned wheelbarrow
+and began to preach. He defended the poor
+little girl. He reproached Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren
+for wishing to hand her over to the great,
+cruel public, who would love and applaud her
+for a time, but when she grew old and worn out,
+they would let her trudge along the streets in
+rain and cold. No; he or she was artist enough,
+who made a fellow-being happy. Ingrid should
+only have eyes and smiles for one, should keep
+them for one only; and this one should never
+leave her, but give her a safe home as long as he
+lived.</p>
+
+<p>Tears came into Hede's eyes whilst he spoke.
+He spoke more to himself than to the others.
+He felt it suddenly as something terrible to be
+thrust out into the world, to be severed from the
+quiet home-life. He saw that the great, star-like
+eyes of the girl began to sparkle. It seemed as
+if she had understood every single word. It
+seemed as if she again felt the right to live.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Blomgren and his wife had become
+very serious. They pressed Hede's hand and
+promised him that they would never again try
+and persuade the little girl to become an artist.
+She should be allowed to lead the life she wished.
+He had touched them. They were artists&mdash;artists<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+body and soul; they understood what he
+meant when he spoke of love and faithfulness.</p>
+
+<p>Then Hede parted from them and went home.
+He no longer tried to find any secret meaning
+in his adventure. After all, it had meant nothing
+more than that he should save this poor sorrowful
+child from always grieving over her incapacity.</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>Munkhyttan, the home of Gunnar Hede, was
+situated in a poor parish in the forests of Vesterdalarne.
+It was a large, thinly-populated parish,
+with which Nature had dealt very stingily. There
+were stony, forest-covered hills, and many
+small lakes. The people could not possibly
+have earned a livelihood there had they not had
+the right to travel about the country as pedlars.
+But to make up for it, the whole of this poor
+district was full of old tales of how poor peasant
+lads and lassies had gone into the world with a
+pack of goods on their backs, to return in gilded
+coaches, with the boxes under the seats filled
+with money.</p>
+
+<p>One of the very best stories was about Hede's
+grandfather. He was the son of a poor musician,
+and had grown up with his violin in his
+hand, and when he was seventeen years old he
+had gone out into the world with his pack on
+his back. But wherever he went his violin had
+helped him in his business. He had by turns
+gathered people together by his music and sold
+them silk handkerchiefs, combs, and pins. All<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+his trading had been brought about with music
+and merriment, and things had gone so well with
+him that he had at last been able to buy Munkhyttan,
+with its mine and ironworks, from the
+poverty-stricken Baron who then owned the
+property. Then he became the Squire, and the
+pretty daughter of the Baron became his wife.</p>
+
+<p>From that time the old family, as they were
+always called, had thought of nothing else but
+beautifying the place. They removed the main
+building on to the beautiful island which lay on
+the edge of a small lake, round which lay their
+fields and their mines. The upper story had
+been added in their time, for they wanted to have
+plenty of room for their numerous guests; and
+they had also added the two large flights of
+steps outside. They had planted ornamental
+trees all over the fir-covered island. They had
+made small winding pathways in the stony soil,
+and on the most beautiful spots they had built
+small pavilions, hanging like large birds'-nests
+over the lake. The beautiful French roses that
+grew on the terrace, the Dutch furniture, the
+Italian violin, had all been brought to the house
+by them. And it was they who had built the
+wall protecting the orchard from the north wind,
+and the conservatory.</p>
+
+<p>The old family were merry, kind-hearted, old-fashioned
+people. The Squire's wife certainly
+liked to be a little aristocratic; but that was not at
+all in the old Squire's line. In the midst of all
+the luxury which surrounded him he never
+forgot what he had been, and in the room where
+he transacted his business, and where people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+came and went, the pack and the red-painted,
+home-made violin were hung right above the
+old man's desk.</p>
+
+<p>Even after his death the pack and the violin
+remained in the same place. And every time
+the old man's son and grandson saw them their
+hearts swelled with gratitude. It was these two
+poor implements that had created Munkhyttan,
+and Munkhyttan was the best thing in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the reason might be&mdash;and it was
+probably because it seemed natural to the place
+that one lived a good, genial life there, free from
+trouble&mdash;Hede's family clung to the place with
+greater love than was good for it. And more
+especially Gunnar Hede was so strongly attached
+to it that people said that it was incorrect
+to say of him that he owned an estate.
+On the contrary, it was an old estate in Vesterdalarne
+that owned Gunnar Hede.</p>
+
+<p>If he had not made himself a slave of an old
+rambling manor-house and some acres of land
+and forest, and some stunted apple-trees, he
+would probably have continued his studies, or,
+better still, gone abroad to study music, which,
+after all, was no doubt his proper vocation in
+this world. But when he returned from Upsala,
+and it became clear to him that they really would
+have to sell the estate if he could not soon earn
+a lot of money, he decided upon giving up all
+his other plans, and made up his mind to go
+out into the world as a pedlar, as his grandfather
+before him had done.</p>
+
+<p>His mother and his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em> besought him
+rather to sell the place than to sacrifice himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+for it in this manner, but he was not to be moved.
+He put on peasant's attire, bought goods, and
+began to travel about the country as a pedlar.
+He thought that if he only traded a couple of
+years he could earn enough to pay the debt and
+save the estate.</p>
+
+<p>And as far as the latter was concerned he
+was successful enough. But he brought upon
+himself a terrible misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>When he had walked about with his pack for
+a year or so he thought that he would try and
+earn a large sum of money at one stroke. He
+went far north and bought a large flock of
+goats, about a couple of hundred. And he
+and a comrade intended to drive them down to
+a large fair in Vermland, where goats cost twice
+as much as in the north. If he succeeded in
+selling all his goats, he would do a very good
+business.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the beginning of November, and
+there had not yet been any snow, when Hede
+and his comrade set out with their goats. The
+first day everything went well with them, but
+the second day, when they came to the great
+Fifty-Mile Forest, it began to snow. Much
+snow fell, and it stormed and blew severely. It
+was not long before it became difficult for the
+animals to make their way through the snow.
+Goats are certainly both plucky and hardy animals,
+and the herd struggled on for a considerable
+time; but the snow-storm lasted two days
+and two nights, and it was terribly cold.</p>
+
+<p>Hede did all he could to save the animals,
+but after the snow began to fall he could get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+them neither food nor water. And when they
+had worked their way through deep snow for
+a whole day they became very footsore. Their
+feet hurt them, and they would not go any
+longer. The first goat that threw itself down
+by the roadside and would not get up again
+and follow the herd Hede lifted on to his
+shoulder so as not to leave it behind. But when
+another and again another lay down he could
+not carry them. There was nothing to do but
+to look the other way and go on.</p>
+
+<p>Do you know what the Fifty-Mile Forest is
+like? Not a farmhouse, not a cottage, mile after
+mile, only forest; tall-stemmed fir-trees, with
+bark as hard as wood, and high branches; no
+young trees with soft bark and soft twigs that
+the animals could eat. If there had been no
+snow, they could have got through the forest
+in a couple of days; now they could not get
+through it at all. All the goats were left there,
+and the men too nearly perished. They did
+not meet a single human being the whole time.
+No one helped them.</p>
+
+<p>Hede tried to throw the snow to one side
+so that the goats could eat the moss; but the
+snow fell so thickly, and the moss was frozen
+fast to the ground. And how could he get food
+for two hundred animals in this way?</p>
+
+<p>He bore it bravely until the goats began to
+moan. The first day they were a lively, rather
+noisy herd. He had had hard work to make
+them all keep together, and prevent them from
+butting each other to death. But when they
+seemed to understand that they could not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+saved their nature changed, and they completely
+lost their courage. They all began to bleat and
+moan, not faintly and peevishly, as goats usually
+do, but loudly, louder and louder as the danger
+increased. And when Hede heard their cries he
+felt quite desperate.</p>
+
+<p>They were in the midst of the wild, desolate
+forest; there was no help whatever obtainable.
+Goat after goat dropped down by the roadside.
+The snow gathered round them and covered
+them. When Hede looked back at this row of
+drifts by the wayside, each hiding the body of
+an animal, of which one could still see the projecting
+horns and the hoofs, then his brain began
+to give way.</p>
+
+<p>He rushed at the animals, which allowed
+themselves to be covered by the snow, swung
+his whip over them, and hit them. It was the
+only way to save them, but they did not stir.
+He took them by the horns and dragged them
+along. They allowed themselves to be dragged,
+but they did not move a foot themselves. When
+he let go his hold of their horns, they licked
+his hands, as if beseeching him to help them.
+As soon as he went up to them they licked his
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>All this had such a strong effect upon Hede
+that he felt he was on the point of going out
+of his mind.</p>
+
+<p>It is not certain, however, that things would
+have gone so badly with him had he not, after
+it was all over in the forest, gone to see one
+whom he loved dearly. It was not his mother,
+but his sweetheart. He thought himself that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+he had gone there because he ought to tell
+her at once that he had lost so much money
+that he would not be able to marry for many
+years. But no doubt he went to see her solely
+to hear her say that she loved him quite as
+much in spite of his misfortunes. He thought
+that she could drive away the memory of the
+Fifty-Mile Forest.</p>
+
+<p>She could, perhaps, have done this, but she
+would not. She was already displeased because
+Hede went about with a pack and looked like
+a peasant; she thought that for that reason
+alone it was difficult to love him as much as
+before. Now, when he told her that he must
+still go on doing this for many years, she said
+that she could no longer wait for him. This
+last blow was too much for Hede; his mind
+gave way.</p>
+
+<p>He did not grow quite mad, however; he retained
+so much of his senses that he could attend
+to his business. He even did better than others,
+for it amused people to make fun of him; he
+was always welcome at the peasants' houses.
+People plagued and teased him, but that was
+in a way good for him, as he was so anxious
+to become rich. And in the course of a few
+years he had earned enough to pay all his debts,
+and he could have lived free from worry on his
+estate. But this he did not understand; he
+went about half-witted and silly from farm to
+farm, and he had no longer any idea to what
+class of people he really belonged.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>Raglanda was the name of a parish in the
+north of East Vermland, near the borders of
+Dalarne, where the Dean had a large house,
+but the pastor only a small and poor one. But
+poor as they were at the small parsonage, they
+had been charitable enough to adopt a poor
+girl. She was a little girl, Ingrid by name,
+and she had come to the parsonage when she
+was thirteen years old.</p>
+
+<p>The pastor had accidentally seen her at a
+fair, where she sat crying outside the tent of
+some acrobats. He had stopped and asked her
+why she was crying, and she had told him that
+her blind grandfather was dead, and that she
+had no relatives left. She now travelled with
+a couple of acrobats, and they were good to
+her, but she cried because she was so stupid
+that she could never learn to dance on the tight-rope
+and help to earn any money.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sorrowful grace over the child
+which touched the pastor's heart. He said at
+once to himself that he could not allow such a
+little creature to go to the bad amongst these
+wandering tramps. He went into the tent, where
+he saw Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren, and offered to
+take the child home with him. The old acrobats
+began to weep, and said that although the girl
+was entirely unfitted for the profession, they
+would so very much like to keep her; but at
+the same time they thought she would be happier
+in a real home with people who lived in the same
+place all the year round, and therefore they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+willing to give her up to the pastor if he would
+only promise them that she should be like one
+of his own children.</p>
+
+<p>This he had promised, and from that time the
+young girl had lived at the parsonage. She was
+a quiet, gentle child, full of love and tender care
+for those around her. At first her adopted
+parents loved her very dearly, but as she grew
+older she developed a strong inclination to lose
+herself in dreams and fancies. She lived in a
+world of visions, and in the middle of the day
+she could let her work fall and be lost in dreams.
+But the pastor's wife, who was a clever and
+hard-working woman, did not approve of this.
+She found fault with the young girl for being
+lazy and slow, and tormented her by her severity
+so that she became timid and unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>When she had completed her nineteenth year,
+she fell dangerously ill. They did not quite
+know what was the matter with her, for this
+happened long ago, when there was no doctor
+at Raglanda, but the girl was very ill. They
+soon saw she was so ill that she could not live.</p>
+
+<p>She herself did nothing but pray to God that
+He would take her away from this world. She
+would so like to die, she said.</p>
+
+<p>Then it seemed as if our Lord would try
+whether she was in earnest. One night she felt
+that she grew stiff and cold all over her body,
+and a heavy lethargy fell upon her. 'I think
+this must be death,' she said to herself.</p>
+
+<p>But the strange thing was that she did not
+quite lose consciousness. She knew that she lay
+as if she were dead, knew that they wrapped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+her in her shroud and laid her in her coffin,
+but she felt no fear of being buried, although
+she was still alive. She had but the one thought
+that she was happy because she was about to
+die and leave this troublesome life.</p>
+
+<p>The only thing she was uneasy about was
+lest they should discover that she was not really
+dead and would not bury her. Life must have
+been very bitter to her, inasmuch as she felt
+no fear of death whatever.</p>
+
+<p>But no one discovered that she was living.
+She was conveyed to the church, carried to the
+churchyard, and lowered into the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The grave, however, was not filled in; she
+had been buried before the service on Sunday
+morning, as was the custom at Raglanda. The
+mourners had gone into church after the funeral,
+and the coffin was left in the open grave; but
+as soon as the service was over they would
+come back, and help the grave-digger to fill
+in the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl knew everything that happened,
+but felt no fear. She had not been able
+to make the slightest movement to show that
+she was alive, even if she had wanted to; but
+even if she had been able to move, she would
+not have done so; the whole time she was happy
+because she was as good as dead.</p>
+
+<p>But, on the other hand, one could hardly say
+that she was alive. She had neither the use of
+her mind nor of her senses. It was only that
+part of the soul which dreams dreams during
+the night that was still living within her.</p>
+
+<p>She could not even think enough to realize<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+how terrible it would be for her to awake when
+the grave was filled in. She had no more power
+over her mind than has one who dreams.</p>
+
+<p>'I should like to know,' she thought, 'if there
+is anything in the whole wide world that could
+make me wish to live.'</p>
+
+<p>As soon as that thought rushed through her
+it seemed to her as if the lid of the coffin, and
+the handkerchief which had been placed over
+her face, became transparent, and she saw before
+her riches and beautiful raiment, and lovely
+gardens with delicious fruits.</p>
+
+<p>'No, I do not care for any of these things,'
+she said, and she closed her eyes for their
+glories.</p>
+
+<p>When she again looked up they had disappeared,
+but instead she saw quite distinctly a
+little angel of God sitting on the edge of the
+grave.</p>
+
+<p>'Good-morning, thou little angel of God,' she
+said to him.</p>
+
+<p>'Good-morning, Ingrid,' the angel said.
+'Whilst thou art lying here doing nothing, I
+would like to speak a little with thee about days
+gone by.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid heard distinctly every word the angel
+said; but his voice was not like anything she
+had ever heard before. It was more like a
+stringed instrument; it was not like singing,
+but like the tones of a violin or the clang of
+a harp.</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' the angel said, 'dost thou remember,
+whilst thy grandfather was still living, that thou
+once met a young student, who went with thee<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+from house to house playing the whole day on
+thy grandfather's violin?'</p>
+
+<p>The girl's face was lighted by a smile.</p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou think I have forgotten this?' she
+said. 'Ever since that time no day has passed
+when I have not thought of him.'</p>
+
+<p>'And no night when thou hast not dreamt
+of him?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, not a night when I have not dreamt of
+him.'</p>
+
+<p>'And thou wilt die, although thou rememberest
+him so well,' said the angel. 'Then thou
+wilt never be able to see him again.'</p>
+
+<p>When he said this it was as if the dead girl
+felt all the happiness of love, but even that could
+not tempt her.</p>
+
+<p>'No, no,' she said; 'I am afraid to live; I
+would rather die.'</p>
+
+<p>Then the angel waved his hand, and Ingrid
+saw before her a wide waste of desert. There
+were no trees, and the desert was barren and
+dry and hot, and extended in all directions
+without any limits. In the sand there lay, here
+and there, objects which at the first glance
+looked like pieces of rock, but when she examined
+them more closely, she saw they were
+the immense living animals of fairy tales, with
+huge claws and great jaws, with sharp teeth;
+they lay in the sand, watching for prey. And
+between these terrible animals the student came
+walking along. He went quite fearlessly, without
+suspecting that the figures around him were
+living.</p>
+
+<p>'But warn him! do warn him!' Ingrid said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+to the angel in unspeakable fear. 'Tell him that
+they are living, and that he must take care.'</p>
+
+<p>'I am not allowed to speak to him,' said the
+angel with his clear voice; 'thou must thyself
+warn him.'</p>
+
+<p>The apparently dead girl felt with horror that
+she lay powerless, and could not rush to save
+the student. She made one futile effort after
+the other to raise herself, but the impotence of
+death bound her. But then at last, at last, she
+felt her heart begin to beat, the blood rushed
+through her veins, the stiffness of death was
+loosened in her body. She arose and hastened
+towards him.</p>
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>It is quite certain the sun loves the open
+places outside the small village churches. Has
+no one ever noticed that one never sees so
+much sunshine as during the morning service
+outside a small, whitewashed church? Nowhere
+else does one see such radiant streams of light,
+nowhere else is the air so devoutly quiet. The
+sun simply keeps watch that no one remains
+on the church hill gossiping. It wants them all
+to sit quietly in church and listen to the sermon&mdash;that
+is why it sends such a wealth of sunny
+rays on to the ground outside the church wall.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps one must not take it for granted
+that the sun keeps watch outside the small
+churches every Sunday; but so much is certain,
+that the morning Ingrid had been placed
+in the grave in the churchyard at Raglanda,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+it spread a burning heat over the open space
+outside the church. Even the flint stones
+looked as if they might take fire as they lay
+and sparkled in the wheel-ruts. The short,
+down-trodden grass curled, so that it looked
+like dry moss, whilst the yellow dandelions
+which grew amongst the grass spread themselves
+out on their long stems, so that they
+became as large as asters.</p>
+
+<p>A man from Dalarne came wandering along
+the road&mdash;one of those men who go about selling
+knives and scissors. He was clad in a
+long, white sheep-skin coat, and on his back
+he had a large black leather pack. He had
+been walking with this burden for several hours
+without finding it too hot, but when he had
+left the highroad, and came to the open place
+outside the church, he stopped and took off
+his hat in order to dry the perspiration from
+his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>As the man stood there bare-headed, he
+looked both handsome and clever. His forehead
+was high and white, with a deep wrinkle
+between the eyebrows; the mouth was well
+formed, with thin lips. His hair was parted
+in the middle; it was cut short at the back,
+but hung over his ears, and was inclined to
+curl. He was tall, and strongly, but not coarsely,
+built; in every respect well proportioned. But
+what was wrong about him was his glance,
+which was unsteady, and the pupils of his eyes
+rolled restlessly, and were drawn far into the
+sockets, as if to hide themselves. There was
+something drawn about the mouth, something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+dull and heavy, which did not seem to belong
+to the face.</p>
+
+<p>He could not be quite right, either, or he
+would not have dragged that heavy pack about
+on a Sunday. If he had been quite in his
+senses, he would have known that it was of
+no use, as he could not sell anything in any
+case. None of the other men from Dalarne
+who walked about from village to village bent
+their backs under this burden on a Sunday,
+but they went to the house of God free and
+erect as other men.</p>
+
+<p>But this poor fellow probably did not know
+it was a holy day until he stood in the sunshine
+outside the church and heard the singing.
+He was sensible enough at once to understand
+that he could not do any business, and
+then his brain began to work as to how he
+should spend the day.</p>
+
+<p>He stood for a long time and stared in front
+of him. When everything went its usual course,
+he had no difficulty in managing. He was not
+so bad but that he could go from farm to farm
+all through the week and attend to his business,
+but he never could get accustomed to
+the Sunday&mdash;that always came upon him as a
+great, unexpected trouble.</p>
+
+<p>His eyes became quite fixed, and the muscles
+of his forehead swelled.</p>
+
+<p>The first thought that took shape in his brain
+was that he should go into the church and
+listen to the singing, but he would not accept
+this suggestion. He was very fond of singing,
+but he dared not go into the church. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+was not afraid of human beings, but in some
+churches there were such quaint, uncanny pictures,
+which represented creatures of which he
+would rather not think.</p>
+
+<p>At last his brain worked round to the thought
+that, as this was a church, there would probably
+also be a churchyard, and when he could
+take refuge in a churchyard all was well. One
+could not offer him anything better. If on his
+wanderings he saw a churchyard, he always went
+in and sat there awhile, even if it were in the
+middle of a workaday week.</p>
+
+<p>Now that he wanted to go to the churchyard
+a new difficulty suddenly arose. The
+burial-place at Raglanda does not lie quite
+near the church, which is built on a hill, but
+on the other side of the road; and he could
+not get to the entrance of the churchyard without
+passing along the road where the horses
+of the church-goers were standing tied up.</p>
+
+<p>All the horses stood with their heads deep
+in bundles of hay and nosebags, chewing. There
+was no question of their being able to do the
+man any harm, but he had his own ideas as
+to the danger of going past such a long row of
+animals.</p>
+
+<p>Two or three times he made an attempt, but
+his courage failed him, so that he was obliged
+to turn back. He was not afraid that the
+horses would bite or kick. It was quite enough
+for him that they were so near that they could
+see him. It was quite enough that they could
+shake their bridles and scrape the earth with
+their hoofs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last a moment came when all the horses
+were looking down, and seemed to be eating
+for a wager. Then he began to make his way
+between them. He held his sheepskin cloak
+tightly around him so that it should not flap
+and betray him, and he went on tiptoe as lightly
+as he could. When a horse raised its eyelid
+and looked at him, he at once stopped and
+curtsied. He wanted to be polite in this great
+danger, but surely animals were amenable to
+reason, and could understand that he could not
+bow when he had a pack full of hardware upon
+his back; he could only curtsy.</p>
+
+<p>He sighed deeply, for in this world it was
+a sad and troublesome thing to be so afraid of
+all four-footed animals as he was. He was
+really not afraid of any other animals than
+goats, and he would not have been at all afraid
+of horses and dogs and cats had he only been
+quite sure that they were not a kind of transformed
+goats. But he never was quite sure of
+that, so as a matter of fact it was just as bad
+for him as if he had been afraid of all kinds of
+four-footed animals.</p>
+
+<p>It was no use his thinking of how strong he
+was, and that these small peasant horses never
+did any harm to anyone: he who has become
+possessed of such fears cannot reason with himself.
+Fear is a heavy burden, and it is hard for
+him who must always carry it.</p>
+
+<p>It was strange that he managed to get past
+all the horses. The last few steps he took in
+two long jumps, and when he got into the
+churchyard he closed the gate after him, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+began to threaten the horses with his clenched
+fist.</p>
+
+<p>'You wretched, miserable, accursed goats!'</p>
+
+<p>He did that to all animals. He could not
+help calling them goats, and that was very stupid
+of him, for it had procured him a name which
+he did not like. Everyone who met him called
+him the 'Goat.' But he would not own to this
+name. He wanted to be called by his proper
+name, but apparently no one knew his real name
+in that district.</p>
+
+<p>He stood a little while at the gate, rejoicing
+at having escaped from the horses, but he soon
+went further into the churchyard. At every
+cross and every stone he stopped and curtsied,
+but this was not from fear: this was simply
+from joy at seeing these dear old friends. All
+at once he began to look quite gentle and mild.
+They were exactly the same crosses and stones
+he had so often seen before. They looked just
+as usual. How well he knew them again! He
+must say 'Good-morning' to them.</p>
+
+<p>How nice it was in the churchyard! There
+were no animals about there, and there were
+no people to make fun of him. It was best
+there, when it was quite quiet as now; but
+even if there were people, they did not disturb
+him. He certainly knew many pretty meadows
+and woods which he liked still better, but there
+he was never left in peace. They could not by
+any means compare with the churchyard. And
+the churchyard was better than the forest, for
+in the forest the loneliness was so great that
+he was frightened by it. Here it was quiet, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+in the depths of the forest; but he was not
+without company. Here people were sleeping
+under every stone and every mound; just the
+company he wanted in order not to feel lonely
+and strange.</p>
+
+<p>He went straight to the open grave. He
+went there partly because there were some
+shady trees, and partly because he wanted company.
+He thought, perhaps, that the dead who
+had so recently been laid in the grave might
+be a better protection against his loneliness than
+those who had passed away long ago.</p>
+
+<p>He bent his knees, with his back to the great
+mound of earth at the edge of the grave, and
+succeeded in pushing the pack upwards, so that
+it stood firmly on the mound, and he then
+loosened the heavy straps that fastened it. It
+was a great day&mdash;a holiday. He also took off
+his coat. He sat down on the grass with a
+feeling of great pleasure, so close to the grave
+that his long legs, with the stockings tied under
+the knee, and the heavy laced shoes dangled over
+the edge of the grave.</p>
+
+<p>For a while he sat still, with his eyes steadily
+fixed upon the coffin. When one was possessed
+by such fear as he was, one could not
+be too careful. But the coffin did not move
+in the least; it was impossible to suspect it of
+containing any snare.</p>
+
+<p>He was no sooner certain of this than he put
+his hand into a side-pocket of the pack and took
+out a violin and bow, and at the same time he
+nodded to the dead in the grave. As he was
+so quiet he should hear something pretty.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This was something very unusual for him.
+There were not many who were allowed to hear
+him play. No one was ever allowed to hear
+him play at the farms, where they set the dogs
+at him and called him the 'Goat'; but sometimes
+he would play in a house where they
+spoke softly, and went about quietly, and did
+not ask him if he wanted to buy any goat-skins.
+At such places he took out his violin
+and treated them to some music; and this was
+a great favour&mdash;the greatest he could bestow
+upon anybody.</p>
+
+<p>As he sat there and played at the edge of
+the grave it did not sound amiss; he did not
+play a wrong note, and he played so softly and
+gently that it could hardly be heard at the next
+grave. The strange thing about it was that it
+was not the man who could play, but it was
+his violin that could remember some small
+melodies. They came forth from the violin as
+soon as he let the bow glide over it. It might
+not, perhaps, have meant so much to others,
+but for him, who could not remember a single
+tune, it was the most precious gift of all to possess
+such a violin that could play by itself.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst he played he sat with a beaming
+smile on his face. It was the violin that
+spoke and spoke; he only listened. Was it not
+strange that one heard all these beautiful things
+as soon as one let the bow glide over the strings?
+The violin did that. It knew how it ought to
+be, and the Dalar man only sat and listened.
+Melodies grew out of that violin as grass grows
+out of the earth. No one could understand how
+it happened. Our Lord had ordered it so.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man intended to remain sitting
+there the whole day, and let the dear tunes grow
+out of the violin like small white and many-coloured
+flowers. He would play a whole
+meadowful of flowers, play a whole long valleyful,
+a whole wide plain.</p>
+
+<p>But she who lay in the coffin distinctly heard
+the violin, and upon her it had a strange effect.
+The tones had made her dream, and what she
+had seen in her dreams caused her such emotion
+that her heart began to beat, her blood to flow,
+and she awoke.</p>
+
+<p>But all she had lived through while she lay
+there, apparently dead, the thoughts she had had,
+and also her last dream&mdash;everything vanished
+in the same moment she awoke to consciousness.
+She did not even know that she was lying
+in her coffin, but thought she was still lying ill
+at home in her bed. She only thought it strange
+that she was still alive. A little while ago, before
+she fell asleep, she had been in the pangs of
+death. Surely, all must have been over with
+her long ago. She had taken leave of her
+adopted parents, and of her brothers and sisters,
+and of the servants. The Dean had been there
+himself to administer the last Communion, for
+her adopted father did not think he could bear
+to give it to her himself. For several days she
+had put away all earthly thoughts from her mind.
+It was incomprehensible that she was not dead.</p>
+
+<p>She wondered why it was so dark in the room
+where she lay. There had been a light all the
+other nights during her illness. And then they
+had let the blankets fall off the bed. She was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+lying there getting as cold as ice. She raised
+herself a little to pull the blankets over her.
+In doing so she knocked her head against the
+lid of the coffin, and fell back with a little scream
+of pain. She had knocked herself rather severely,
+and immediately became unconscious
+again. She lay as motionless as before, and it
+seemed as if life had again left her.</p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man, who had heard both the
+knock and the cry, immediately laid down his
+violin and sat listening; but there was nothing
+more to be heard&mdash;nothing whatever. He began
+again to look at the coffin as attentively
+as before. He sat nodding his head, as if he
+would say 'Yes' to what he was himself thinking
+about, namely, that nothing in this world
+was to be depended upon. Here he had had
+the best and most silent of comrades, but had
+he not also been disappointed in him?</p>
+
+<p>He sat and looked at the coffin, as if trying
+to see right through it. At last, when it continued
+quite still, he took his violin again and
+began to play. But the violin would not play
+any longer. However gently and tenderly he
+drew his bow, there came forth no melody. This
+was so sad that he was nearly crying. He had
+intended to sit still and listen to his violin the
+whole day, and now it would not play any more.</p>
+
+<p>He could quite understand the reason. The
+violin was uneasy and afraid of what had moved
+in the coffin. It had forgotten all its melodies,
+and thought only of what it could be that had
+knocked at the coffin-lid. That is how it is
+one forgets everything when one is afraid. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+saw that he would have to quiet the violin if he
+wanted to hear more.</p>
+
+<p>He had felt so happy, more so than for many
+years. If there was really anything bad in the
+coffin, would it not be better to let it out? Then
+the violin would be glad, and beautiful flowers
+would again grow out of it.</p>
+
+<p>He quickly opened his big pack, and began
+to rummage amongst his knives and saws and
+hammers until he found a screw-driver. In
+another moment he was down in the grave on
+his knees and unscrewing the coffin-lid. He
+took out one screw after the other, until at last
+he could raise the lid against the side of the
+grave; at the same moment the handkerchief
+fell from off the face of the apparently dead girl.
+As soon as the fresh air reached Ingrid, she
+opened her eyes. Now she saw that it was
+light. They must have removed her. Now
+she was lying in a yellow chamber with a green
+ceiling, and a large chandelier was hanging from
+the ceiling. The chamber was small, but the
+bed was still smaller. Why had she the sensation
+of her arms and legs being tied? Was
+it because she should lie still in the little narrow
+bed? It was strange that they had placed a
+hymn-book under her chin; they only did that
+with corpses. Between her fingers she had a
+little bouquet. Her adopted mother had cut
+a few sprigs from her flowering myrtle, and
+laid them in her hands. Ingrid was very much
+surprised. What had come to her adopted
+mother? She saw that they had given her a
+pillow with broad lace, and a fine hem-stitched<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+sheet. She was very glad of that; she liked to
+have things nice. Still, she would rather have
+had a warm blanket over her. It could surely
+not be good for a sick person to lie without a
+blanket. Ingrid was nearly putting her hands
+to her eyes and beginning to cry, she was so
+bitterly cold. At the same moment she felt
+something hard and cold against her cheek.
+She could not help smiling. It was the old,
+red wooden horse, the old three-legged Camilla,
+that lay beside her on the pillow. Her little
+brother, who could never sleep at night without
+having it with him in his bed, had put it in
+her bed. It was very sweet of her little brother.
+Ingrid felt still more inclined to cry when she
+understood that her little brother had wanted
+to comfort her with his wooden horse.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not get so far as crying. The
+truth all at once flashed upon her. Her little
+brother had given her the wooden horse, and
+her mother had given her her white myrtle flowers,
+and the hymn-book had been placed under
+her chin, because they had thought she was dead.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid took hold of the sides of the coffin
+with both hands and raised herself. The little
+narrow bed was a coffin, and the little narrow
+chamber was a grave. It was all very difficult
+to understand. She could not understand that
+this concerned her, that it was she who had
+been swathed like a corpse and placed in the
+grave. She must be lying all the same in her
+bed, and be seeing or dreaming all this. She
+would soon find out that this was no reality,
+but that everything was as usual.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All at once she found the explanation of the
+whole thing&mdash;'I often have such strange dreams.
+This is only a vision'&mdash;and she sighed, relieved
+and happy. She laid herself down in her coffin
+again; she was so sure that it was her own
+bed, for that was not very wide either.</p>
+
+<p>All this time the Dalar man stood in the
+grave, quite close to the foot of the coffin. He
+only stood a few feet from her, but she had not
+seen him; that was probably because he had
+tried to hide himself in the corner of the grave
+as soon as the dead in the coffin had opened
+her eyes and begun to move. She could, perhaps,
+have seen him, although he held the coffin-lid
+before him as a screen, had there not been
+something like a white mist before her eyes so
+that she could only see things quite near her
+distinctly. Ingrid could not even see that there
+were earthen walls around her. She had taken
+the sun to be a large chandelier, and the shady
+lime-trees for a roof. The poor Dalar man stood
+and waited for the thing that moved in the coffin
+to go away. It did not strike him that it would
+not go unrequested. Had it not knocked because
+it wanted to get out? He stood for a long time
+with his head behind the coffin-lid and waited,
+that it should go. He peeped over the lid when
+he thought that now it must have gone. But
+it had not moved; it remained lying on its bed
+of shavings.</p>
+
+<p>He could not put up with it any longer; he
+must really make an end of it. It was a long
+time since his violin had spoken so prettily as
+to-day, he longed to sit again quietly with it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+Ingrid, who had nearly fallen asleep again, suddenly
+heard herself addressed in the sing-song
+Dalar dialect:</p>
+
+<p>'Now, I think it is time you got up.'</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he had said this he hid his head.
+He shook so much over his boldness that he
+nearly let the lid fall.</p>
+
+<p>But the white mist which had been before
+Ingrid's eyes disappeared completely when she
+heard a human being speaking. She saw a man
+standing in the corner, at the foot of the coffin,
+holding a coffin-lid before him. She saw at
+once that she could not lie down again and think
+it was a vision. Surely he was a reality, which
+she must try and make out. It certainly looked
+as if the coffin were a coffin, and the grave a
+grave, and that she herself a few minutes ago
+was nothing but a swathed and buried corpse.
+For the first time she was terror-stricken at what
+had happened to her. To think that she could
+really have been dead that moment! She could
+have been a hideous corpse, food for worms.
+She had been placed in the coffin for them to
+throw earth upon her; she was worth no more
+than a piece of turf; she had been thrown aside
+altogether. The worms were welcome to eat
+her; no one would mind about that.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid needed so badly to have a fellow-creature
+near her in her great terror. She had
+recognized the Goat directly he put up his head.
+He was an old acquaintance from the parsonage;
+she was not in the least afraid of him. She
+wanted him to come close to her. She did not
+mind in the least that he was an idiot. He was,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+at any rate, a living being. She wanted him to
+come so near to her that she could feel she belonged
+to the living and not to the dead.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, for God's sake, come close to me!' she
+said, with tears in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>She raised herself in the coffin and stretched
+out her arms to him.</p>
+
+<p>But the Dalar man only thought of himself.
+If she were so anxious to have him near her, he
+resolved to make his own terms.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' he said, 'if you will go away.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid at once tried to comply with his request,
+but she was so tightly swathed in the
+sheet that she found it difficult to get up.</p>
+
+<p>'You must come and help me,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>She said this, partly because she was obliged
+to do it, and partly because she was afraid that
+she had not quite escaped death. She must be
+near someone living.</p>
+
+<p>He actually went near her, squeezing himself
+between the coffin and the side of the grave.
+He bent over her, lifted her out of the coffin,
+and put her down on the grass at the side of
+the open grave.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid could not help it. She threw her arms
+round his neck, laid her head on his shoulder
+and sobbed. Afterwards she could not understand
+how she had been able to do this, and
+that she was not afraid of him. It was partly
+from joy that he was a human being&mdash;a living
+human being&mdash;and partly from gratitude, because
+he had saved her.</p>
+
+<p>What would have become of her if it had not
+been for him? It was he who had raised the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+coffin-lid, who had brought her back to life.
+She certainly did not know how it had all happened,
+but it was surely he who had opened
+the coffin. What would have happened to her
+if he had not done this? She would have
+awakened to find herself imprisoned in the
+black coffin. She would have knocked and
+shouted; but who would have heard her six
+feet below the ground? Ingrid dared not think of
+it; she was entirely absorbed with gratitude
+because she had been saved. She must have
+someone she could thank. She must lay her
+head on someone's breast and cry from gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>The most extraordinary thing, almost, that
+happened that day was, that the Dalar man did
+not repulse her. But it was not quite clear to
+him that she was alive. He thought she was
+dead, and he knew it was not advisable to offend
+anyone dead. But as soon as he could manage,
+he freed himself from her and went down into
+the grave again. He placed the lid carefully on
+the coffin, put in the screws and fastened it as
+before. Then he thought the coffin would be
+quite still, and the violin would regain its peace
+and its melodies.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime Ingrid sat on the grass and
+tried to collect her thoughts. She looked
+towards the church and discovered the horses
+and the carriages on the hillside. Then she
+began to realize everything. It was Sunday;
+they had placed her in the grave in the morning,
+and now they were in church.</p>
+
+<p>A great fear now seized Ingrid. The service<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+would, perhaps, soon be over, and then all the
+people would come out and see her. And she
+had nothing on but a sheet! She was almost
+naked. Fancy, if all these people came and saw
+her in this state! They would never forget the
+sight. And she would be ashamed of it all her
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Where should she get some clothes? For a
+moment she thought of throwing the Dalar
+man's fur coat round her, but she did not think
+that that would make her any more like other
+people.</p>
+
+<p>She turned quickly to the crazy man, who
+was still working at the coffin-lid.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh,' she said, 'will you let me creep into
+your pack?'</p>
+
+<p>In a moment she stood by the great leather
+pack, which contained goods enough to fill a
+whole market-stall, and began to open it.</p>
+
+<p>'You must come and help me.'</p>
+
+<p>She did not ask in vain. When the Dalar
+man saw her touching his wares he came up at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>'Are you touching my pack?' he asked threateningly.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid did not notice that he spoke angrily;
+she considered him to be her best friend all
+the time.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, dear good man,' she said, 'help me to
+hide, so that people will not see me. Put your
+wares somewhere or other, and let me creep
+into the pack, and carry me home. Oh, do do
+it! I live at the Parsonage, and it is only a
+little way from here. You know where it is.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The man stood and looked at her with stupid
+eyes. She did not know whether he had understood
+a word of what she said. She repeated
+it, but he made no sign of obeying her. She
+began again to take the things out of the pack.
+Then he stamped on the ground and tore the
+pack from her.</p>
+
+<p>However should Ingrid be able to make him
+do what she wanted?</p>
+
+<p>On the grass beside her lay a violin and a
+bow. She took them up mechanically&mdash;she did
+not know herself why. She had probably been
+so much in the company of people playing the
+violin that she could not bear to see an instrument
+lying on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as she touched the violin he let go
+the pack, and tore the violin from her. He was
+evidently quite beside himself when anyone
+touched his violin. He looked quite malicious.</p>
+
+<p>What in the world could she do to get away
+before people came out of church?</p>
+
+<p>She began to promise him all sorts of things,
+just as one promises children when one wants
+them to be good.</p>
+
+<p>'I will ask father to buy a whole dozen of
+scythes from you. I will lock up all the dogs
+when you come to the Parsonage. I will ask
+mother to give you a good meal.'</p>
+
+<p>But there was no sign of his giving way. She
+bethought herself of the violin, and said in her
+despair:</p>
+
+<p>'If you will carry me to the Parsonage, I will
+play for you.'</p>
+
+<p>At last a smile flashed across his face. That
+was evidently what he wanted.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I will play for you the whole afternoon; I
+will play for you as long as you like.'</p>
+
+<p>'Will you teach the violin new melodies?'
+he asked.</p>
+
+<p>'Of course I will.'</p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid now became both surprised and
+unhappy, for he took hold of the pack and pulled
+it towards him. He dragged it over the graves,
+and the sweet-williams and southernwood that
+grew on them were crushed under it as if it
+were a roller. He dragged it to a heap of
+branches and wizened leaves and old wreaths
+lying near the wall round the churchyard. There
+he took all the things out of the pack, and hid
+them well under the heap. When it was empty
+he returned to Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'Now you can get in,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid stepped into the pack, and crouched
+down on the wooden bottom. The man fastened
+all the straps as carefully as when he went about
+with his usual wares, bent down so that he nearly
+went on his knees, put his arms through the
+braces, buckled a couple of straps across his
+chest, and stood up. When he had gone a few
+steps he began to laugh. His pack was so light
+that he could have danced with it.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was only about a mile from the church to
+the Parsonage. The Dalar man could walk it
+in twenty minutes. Ingrid's only wish was that
+he would walk so quickly that she could get
+home before the people came back from church.
+She could not bear the idea of so many people
+seeing her. She would like to get home when
+only her mother and the maid-servants were there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ingrid had taken with her the little bouquet
+of flowers from her adopted mother's myrtle.
+She was so pleased with it that she kissed it
+over and over again. It made her think more
+kindly of her adopted mother than she had ever
+done before. But in any case she would, of
+course, think kindly of her now. One who has
+come straight from the grave must think kindly
+and gently of everything living and moving on
+the face of the earth.</p>
+
+<p>She could now understand so well that the
+Pastor's wife was bound to love her own children
+more than her adopted daughter. And
+when they were so poor at the Parsonage that
+they could not afford to keep a nursemaid, she
+could see now that it was quite natural that
+she should look after her little brothers and
+sisters. And when her brothers and sisters
+were not good to her, it was because they had
+become accustomed to think of her as their
+nurse. It was not so easy for them to remember
+that she had come to the Parsonage to be
+their sister.</p>
+
+<p>And, after all, it all came from their being
+poor. When father some day got another living,
+and became Dean, or even Rector, everything
+would surely come right. Then they would love
+her again, as they did when she first came to
+them. The good old times would be sure to
+come back again. Ingrid kissed her flowers.
+It had not been mother's intention, perhaps, to
+be hard; it was only worry that had made her
+so strange and unkind.</p>
+
+<p>But now it would not matter how unkind they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+were to her. In the future nothing could hurt
+her, for now she would always be glad, simply
+because she was alive. And if things should
+ever be really bad again, she would only think
+of mother's myrtle and her little brother's horse.</p>
+
+<p>It was happiness enough to know that she was
+being carried along the road alive. This morning
+no one had thought that she would ever again
+go over these roads and hills. And the fragrant
+clover and the little birds singing and the beautiful
+shady trees, which had all been a source of
+joy for the living, had not even existed for her.
+But she had not much time for reflection, for in
+twenty minutes the Dalar man had reached the
+Parsonage.</p>
+
+<p>No one was at home but the Pastor's wife and
+the maid-servants, just as Ingrid had wished.
+The Pastor's wife had been busy the whole
+morning cooking for the funeral feast. She soon
+expected the guests, and everything was nearly
+ready. She had just been into the bedroom to
+put on her black dress. She glanced down the
+road to the church, but there were still no carriages
+to be seen. So she went once again into
+the kitchen to taste the food.</p>
+
+<p>She was quite satisfied, for everything was as
+it ought to be, and one cannot help being glad
+for that, even if one is in mourning. There was
+only one maid in the kitchen, and that was the
+one the Pastor's wife had brought with her from
+her old home, so she felt she could speak to her
+in confidence.</p>
+
+<p>'I must confess, Lisa,' she said, 'I think anyone
+would be pleased with having such a funeral.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'If she could only look down and see all the
+fuss you make of her,' Lisa said, 'she would be
+pleased.'</p>
+
+<p>'Ah!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I don't think she
+would ever be pleased with me.'</p>
+
+<p>'She is dead now,' said the girl, 'and I am not
+the one to say anything against one who is hardly
+yet under the ground.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have had to bear many a hard word from
+my husband for her sake,' said the mistress.</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor's wife felt she wanted to speak with
+someone about the dead girl. Her conscience
+had pricked her a little on her account, and this
+was why she had arranged such a grand funeral
+feast. She thought her conscience might leave
+her alone now she had had so much trouble over
+the funeral, but it did not do so by any means.
+Her husband also reproached himself, and said
+that the young girl had not been treated like one
+of their own children, and that they had promised
+she should be when they adopted her; and
+he said it would have been better if they had
+never taken her, when they could not help letting
+her see that they loved their own children more.
+And now the Pastor's wife felt she must talk to
+someone about the young girl, to hear whether
+people thought she had treated her badly.</p>
+
+<p>She saw that Lisa began to stir the pan violently,
+as if she had difficulty in controlling her
+anger. She was a clever girl, who thoroughly
+understood how to get into her mistress's good
+books.</p>
+
+<p>'I must say,' Lisa began, 'that when one has
+a mother who always looks after one, and takes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+care that one is neat and clean, one might at
+least try to obey and please her. And when one
+is allowed to live in a good Parsonage, and to
+be educated respectably, one ought at least to
+give some return for it, and not always go idling
+about and dreaming. I should like to know what
+would have happened if you had not taken the
+poor thing in. I suppose she would have been
+running about with those acrobats, and have died
+in the streets, like any other poor wretch.'</p>
+
+<p>A man from Dalarne came across the yard;
+he had his pack on his back, although it was Sunday.
+He came very quietly through the open
+kitchen-door, and curtsied when he entered, but
+no one took any notice of him. Both the mistress
+and the maid saw him, but as they knew
+him, they did not think it necessary to interrupt
+their conversation.</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor's wife was anxious to continue it;
+she felt she was about to hear what she needed to
+ease her conscience.</p>
+
+<p>'It is perhaps as well she is gone,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, ma'am,' the servant said eagerly; 'and
+I am sure the Pastor thinks just the same. In
+any case he soon will. And the mistress will
+see that now there will be more peace in the
+house, and I am sure the master needs it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I was obliged
+to be careful. There were always so many
+clothes to be got for her, that it was quite dreadful.
+He was so afraid that she should not get as
+much as the others that she sometimes even had
+more. And it cost so much, now that she was
+grown up.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I suppose, ma'am, Greta will get her muslin
+dress?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes; either Greta will have it, or I shall use
+it myself.'</p>
+
+<p>'She does not leave much behind her, poor
+thing!'</p>
+
+<p>'No one expects her to leave anything,' said
+her adopted mother. 'I should be quite content
+if I could remember ever having had a kind word
+from her.'</p>
+
+<p>This is only the kind of thing one says when
+one has a bad conscience, and wants to excuse
+one's self. Her adopted mother did not really
+mean what she said.</p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man behaved exactly as he always
+did when he came to sell his wares. He stood
+for a little while looking round the kitchen; then
+he slowly pushed the pack on to a table, and unfastened
+the braces and the straps; then he
+looked round to see if there were any cats or
+dogs about. He then straightened his back, and
+began to unfasten the two leather flaps, which
+were fastened with numerous buckles and knots.</p>
+
+<p>'He need not trouble about opening his pack
+to-day,' Lisa said; 'it is Sunday, and he knows
+quite well we don't buy anything on Sundays.'</p>
+
+<p>She, however, took no notice of the crazy fellow,
+who continued to unfasten his straps. She
+turned round to her mistress. This was a good
+opportunity for insinuating herself.</p>
+
+<p>'I don't even know whether she was good to
+the children. I have often heard them cry in
+the nursery.'</p>
+
+<p>'I suppose it was the same with them as it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+was with their mother,' said the Pastor's wife;
+'but now, of course, they cry because she is
+dead.'</p>
+
+<p>'They don't understand what is best for them,'
+said the servant; 'but the mistress can be certain
+that before a month is gone there will be no one
+to cry over her.'</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment they both turned round
+from the kitchen range, and looked towards the
+table, where the Dalar man stood opening his
+big pack. They had heard a strange noise, something
+like a sigh or a sob. The man was just
+opening the inside lid, and out of the pack rose
+the newly-buried <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has birl">girl</span>, exactly the same as when
+they laid her in the coffin.</p>
+
+<p>And yet she did not look quite the same. She
+looked almost more dead now than when she was
+laid in her coffin. Then she had nearly the same
+colour as when she was alive; now her face was
+ashy-gray, there was a bluish-black shadow
+round her mouth, and her eyes lay deep in her
+head. She said nothing, but her face expressed
+the greatest despair, and she held out beseechingly,
+and as if to avert their anger, the bouquet
+of myrtle which she had received from her
+adopted mother.</p>
+
+<p>This sight was more than flesh and blood could
+stand. Her mother fell fainting to the ground;
+the maid stood still for a moment, gazing at the
+mother and daughter, covered her eyes with her
+hands, and rushed into her own room and locked
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>'It is not me she has come for; this does not
+concern me.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid turned round to the Dalar man.</p>
+
+<p>'Put me in your pack again, and take me away.
+Do you hear? Take me away. Take me back to
+where you found me.'</p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man happened to look through the
+window. A long row of carts and carriages was
+coming up the avenue and into the yard. Ah,
+indeed! then he was not going to stay. He did
+not like that at all.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid crouched down at the bottom of the
+pack. She said not another word, but only
+sobbed. The flaps and the lids were fastened,
+and she was again lifted on to his back and carried
+away. Those who were coming to the funeral
+feast laughed at the Goat, who hastened away,
+curtsying and curtsying to every horse he met.</p>
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<p>Anna Stina was an old woman who lived in
+the depths of the forest. She gave a helping hand
+at the Parsonage now and then, and always
+managed opportunely to come down the hillside
+when they were baking or washing. She was a
+nice, clever old woman, and she and Ingrid were
+good friends. As soon as the young girl was able
+to collect her thoughts, she made up her mind to
+take refuge with her.</p>
+
+<p>'Listen,' she said to the Dalar man. 'When
+you get onto the highroad, turn into the forest;
+then go straight on until you come to a gate; there
+you must turn to the left; then you must go
+straight on until you come to the large gravel-pit.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+From there you can see a house: take me there,
+and I will play to you.'</p>
+
+<p>The short and harsh manner in which she gave
+her orders jarred upon her ears, but she was
+obliged to speak in this way in order to be obeyed;
+it was the only chance she had. What right had
+she to order another person about&mdash;she who had
+not even the right to be alive?</p>
+
+<p>After all this she would never again be able to
+feel as if she had any right to live. This was the
+most dreadful part of all that had happened to
+her: that she could have lived in the Parsonage
+for six years, and not even been able to make herself
+so much loved that they wished to keep her
+alive. And those whom no one loves have no
+right to live. She could not exactly say how she
+knew it was so, but it was as clear as daylight.
+She knew it from the feeling that the same moment
+she heard that they did not care about her
+an iron hand seemed to have crushed her heart as
+if to make it stop. Yes, it was life itself that had
+been closed for her. And the same moment she
+had come back from death, and felt the delight of
+being alive burn brightly and strongly within her,
+just at that moment the one thing that gave her
+the right of existing had been torn from her.</p>
+
+<p>This was worse than sentence of death. It was
+much more cruel than an ordinary sentence of
+death. She knew what it was like. It was like
+felling a tree&mdash;not in the usual manner, when the
+trunk is cut through, but by cutting its roots and
+leaving it standing in the ground to die by itself.
+There the tree stands, and cannot understand why
+it no longer gets nourishment and support. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+struggles and strives to live, but the leaves get
+smaller and smaller, it sends forth no fresh shoots,
+the bark falls off, and it must die, because it is severed
+from the spring of life. Thus it is it must die.</p>
+
+<p>At last the Dalar man put down his pack on the
+stone step outside a little house in the midst of the
+wild forest. The door was locked, but as soon as
+Ingrid had got out of the pack she took the key
+from under the doorstep, opened the door, and
+walked in.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid knew the house thoroughly and all it
+contained. It was not the first time she had come
+there for comfort; it was not the first time she had
+come and told old Anna Stina that she could not
+bear living at home any longer&mdash;that her adopted
+mother was so hard to her that she would not go
+back to the Parsonage. But every time she came
+the old woman had talked her over and quieted
+her. She had made her some terrible coffee from
+roasted peas and chicory, without a single coffee-bean
+in it, but which had all the same given her
+new courage, and in the end she had made her
+laugh at everything, and encouraged her so much,
+that she had simply danced down the hillside on
+her way home.</p>
+
+<p>Even if Anna Stina had been at home, and had
+made some of her terrible coffee, it would probably
+not have helped Ingrid this time. But the
+old woman was down at the Parsonage to the
+funeral feast, for the Pastor's wife had not forgotten
+to invite any of those of whom Ingrid had
+been fond. That, too, was probably the result of
+an uneasy conscience.</p>
+
+<p>But in Anna's room everything was as usual.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+And when Ingrid saw the sofa with the wooden
+seat, and the clean, scoured table, and the cat, and
+the coffee-kettle, although she did not feel comforted
+or cheered, she felt that here was a place
+where she could give vent to her sorrow. It was
+a relief that here she need not think of anything
+but crying and moaning.</p>
+
+<p>She went straight to the settle, threw herself on
+the wooden seat, and lay there crying, she did not
+know for how long.</p>
+
+<p>The Dalar man sat outside on the stone step;
+he did not want to go into the house on account of
+the cat. He expected that Ingrid would come
+out and play to him. He had taken the violin out
+long ago. As it was such a long time before she
+came, he began to play himself. He played softly
+and gently, as was his wont. It was barely possible
+for the young girl to hear him playing.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid had one fit of shivering after the other.
+This was how she had been before she fell ill.
+She would no doubt be ill again. It was also best
+that the fever should come and put an end to her
+in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>When she heard the violin, she rose and looked
+round with bewildered glance. Who was that
+playing? Was that her student? Had he come
+at last? It soon struck her, however, that it was
+the Dalar man, and she lay down again with a
+sigh. She could not follow what he was playing.
+But as soon as she closed her eyes the violin assumed
+the student's voice. She also heard what
+he said; he spoke with her adopted mother and
+defended her. He spoke just as nicely as he had
+done to Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren. Ingrid needed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+love so much, he said. That was what she
+had missed. That was why she had not always
+attended to her work, but allowed dreams to
+fill her mind. But no one knew how she could
+work and slave for those who loved her. For
+their sake she could bear sorrow and sickness, and
+contempt and poverty; for them she would be as
+strong as a giant, and as patient as a slave.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid heard him distinctly and she became
+quiet. Yes, it was true. If only her adopted
+mother had loved her, she would have seen what
+Ingrid was worth. But as she did not love her,
+Ingrid was paralyzed in her efforts. Yes, so it
+had been.</p>
+
+<p>Now the fever had left her, she only lay and
+listened to what the student said. She slept a
+little now and then; time after time she thought
+she was lying in her grave, and then it was always
+the student who came and took her out of the coffin.
+She lay and disputed with him.</p>
+
+<p>'When I am dreaming it is you who come,' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>'It is always I who come to you, Ingrid,' he
+said. 'I thought you knew that. I take you out
+of the grave; I carry you on my shoulders; I
+play you to sleep. It is always I.'</p>
+
+<p>What disturbed and awoke her was the thought
+that she had to get up and play for the Dalar man.
+Several times she rose up to do it, but could not.
+As soon as she fell back upon the settle she began
+to dream. She sat crouching in the pack and the
+student carried her through the forest. It was
+always he.</p>
+
+<p>'But it was not you,' she said to him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Of course it was I,' he said, smiling at her
+contradicting him. 'You have been thinking
+about me every day for all these years; so you
+can understand I could not help saving you when
+you were in such great danger.'</p>
+
+<p>Of course she saw the force of his argument;
+and then she began to realize that he was right,
+and that it was he. But this was such infinite bliss
+that she again awoke. Love seemed to fill her
+whole being. It could not have been more real
+had she seen and spoken with her beloved.</p>
+
+<p>'Why does he never come in real life?' she
+said, half aloud. 'Why does he only come in my
+dreams?'</p>
+
+<p>She did not dare to move, for then love would
+fly away. It was as if a timid bird had settled on
+her shoulder, and she was afraid of frightening
+it away. If she moved, the bird would fly away,
+and sorrow would overcome her.</p>
+
+<p>When at last she really awoke, it was twilight.
+She must have slept the whole afternoon and evening.
+At that time of the year it was not dark until
+after ten o'clock. The violin had ceased playing,
+and the Dalar man had probably gone away.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina had not yet come back. She would
+probably be away the whole night. It did not
+matter to Ingrid; all she wanted was to lie down
+again and sleep. She was afraid of all the sorrow
+and despair that would overwhelm her as soon as
+she awoke. But then she got something new to
+think about. Who could have closed the door?
+who had spread Anna Stina's great shawl over
+her? and who had placed a piece of dry bread
+beside her on the seat? Had he, the Goat, done<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+all this for her? For a moment she thought she
+saw dream and reality standing side by side, trying
+which could best console her. And the dream
+stood joyous and smiling, showering over her all
+the bliss of love to comfort her. But life, poor,
+hard, and bitter though it was, also brought its
+kindly little mite to show that it did not mean to
+be so hard upon her as perhaps she thought.</p>
+
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+<p>Ingrid and Anna Stina were walking through
+the dark forest. They had been walking for four
+days, and had slept three nights in the S&auml;ter huts.
+Ingrid was weak and weary; her face was transparently
+pale; her eyes were sunken, and shone
+feverishly. Old Anna Stina now and then secretly
+cast an anxious look at her, and prayed to God
+that He would sustain her so that she might not
+die by the wayside. Now and then the old
+woman could not help looking behind her with
+uneasiness. She had an uncomfortable feeling
+that the old man with his scythe came stealthily
+after them through the forest to reclaim the
+young girl who, both by the word of God and the
+casting of earth upon her, had been consecrated
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>Old Anna Stina was little and broad, with a
+large, square face, which was so intelligent that
+it was almost good-looking. She was not superstitious&mdash;she
+lived quite alone in the midst of the
+forest without being afraid either of witches or
+evil spirits&mdash;but as she walked there by the side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+of Ingrid she felt as distinctly as if someone had
+told her that she was walking beside a being who
+did not belong to this world. She had had that
+sensation ever since she had found Ingrid lying in
+her house that Monday morning.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina had not returned home on the Sunday
+evening, for down at the Parsonage the Pastor's
+wife had been taken very ill, and Anna Stina,
+who was accustomed to nurse sick people, had
+stayed to sit up with her. The whole night she
+had heard the Pastor's wife raving about Ingrid's
+having appeared to her; but that the old woman
+had not believed. And when she returned home
+the next day and found Ingrid, the old woman
+would at once have gone down to the Parsonage
+again to tell them that it was not a ghost they had
+seen; but when she had suggested this to Ingrid,
+it had affected her so much that she dared not do
+it. It was as if the little life which burnt in her
+would be extinguished, just as the flame of a candle
+is put out by too strong a draught. She could
+have died as easily as a little bird in its cage.
+Death was prowling around her. There was
+nothing to be done but to nurse her very tenderly
+and deal very gently with her if her life was to be
+preserved.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman hardly knew what to think of
+Ingrid. Perhaps she was a ghost; there seemed
+to be so little life in her. She quite gave up trying
+to talk her to reason. There was nothing else for
+it but giving in to her wishes that no one should
+hear anything about her being alive. And then
+the old woman tried to arrange everything as
+wisely as possible. She had a sister who was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+housekeeper on a large estate in Dalarne, and she
+made up her mind to take Ingrid to her, and persuade
+her sister, Stafva, to give the girl a situation
+at the Manor House. Ingrid would have to be
+content with being simply a servant. There was
+nothing else for it.</p>
+
+<p>They were now on their way to the Manor
+House. Anna Stina knew the country so well
+that they were not obliged to go by the highroad,
+but could follow the lonely forest paths. But they
+had also undergone much hardship. Their shoes
+were worn and in pieces, their skirts soiled and
+frayed at the bottom, and a branch had torn a
+long rent in Ingrid's sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the fourth day they came to a
+hill from which they could look down into a deep
+valley. In the valley was a lake, and near the
+edge of the lake was a high, rocky island, upon
+which stood a large white building. When Anna
+Stina saw the house, she said it was called Munkhyttan,
+and that it was there her sister lived.</p>
+
+<p>They made themselves as tidy as they could on
+the hillside. They arranged the handkerchiefs
+which they wore on their heads, dried their shoes
+with moss, and washed themselves in a forest
+stream, and Anna Stina tried to make a fold in Ingrid's
+sleeve so that the rent could not be seen.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman sighed when she looked at
+Ingrid, and quite lost courage. It was not only
+that she looked so strange in the clothes she had
+borrowed from Anna Stina, and which did not at
+all fit her, but her sister Stafva would never take
+her into her service, she looked so wretched and
+pitiful. It was like engaging a breath of wind.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+The girl could be of no more use than a sick
+butterfly.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as they were ready, they went down the
+hill to the lake. It was only a short distance.
+Then they came to the land belonging to the
+Manor House.</p>
+
+<p>Was that a country house?</p>
+
+<p>There were large neglected fields, upon which
+the forest encroached more and more. There
+was a bridge leading on to the island, so shaky
+that they hardly thought it would keep together
+until they were safely over. There was an avenue
+leading from the bridge to the main building,
+covered with grass, like a meadow, and a tree
+which had been blown down had been left lying
+across the road.</p>
+
+<p>The island was pretty enough, so pretty that a
+castle might very well have been built there. But
+nothing but weeds grew in the garden, and in the
+large park the trees were choking each other, and
+black snakes glided over the green, wet walks.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina felt uneasy when she saw how neglected
+everything was, and went along mumbling
+to herself: 'What does all this mean? Is Stafva
+dead? How can she stand everything looking
+like this? Things were very different thirty years
+ago, when I was last here. What in the world
+can be the matter with Stafva?' She could not
+imagine that there could be such neglect in any
+place where Stafva lived.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid walked behind her, slowly and reluctantly.
+The moment she put her foot on the
+bridge she felt that there were not two walking
+there, but three. Someone had come to meet her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+there, and had turned back to accompany her.
+Ingrid heard no footsteps, but he who accompanied
+them appeared indistinctly by her side.
+She could see there was someone.</p>
+
+<p>She became terribly afraid. She was just going
+to beg Anna Stina to turn back and tell her that
+everything seemed so strange here that she dare
+not go any further. But before she had time to
+say anything, the stranger came quite close to her,
+and she recognised him. Before, she only saw
+him indistinctly; now she saw him so clearly
+that she could see it was the student.</p>
+
+<p>It no longer seemed weird and ghost-like that
+he walked there. It was only strangely delightful
+that he came to receive her. It was as if it were
+he who had brought her there, and would, by
+coming to welcome her, show that it was.</p>
+
+<p>He walked with her over the bridge, through
+the avenue, quite up to the main building.</p>
+
+<p>She could not help turning her head every
+moment to the left. It was there she saw his face,
+quite close to her cheek. It was really not a face
+that she saw, only an unspeakably beautiful smile
+that drew tenderly near her. But if she turned
+her head quite round to see it properly, it was no
+longer there. No, there was nothing one could
+see distinctly. But as soon as she looked straight
+before her, it was there again, quite close to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Her invisible companion did not speak to her,
+he only smiled. But that was enough for her. It
+was more than enough to show her that there was
+one in the world who kept near her with tender
+love.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She felt his presence as something so real, that
+she firmly believed he protected her and watched
+over her. And before this happy consciousness
+vanished all the despair which her adopted mother's
+hard words had called forth.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid felt herself again given back to life. She
+had the right to live, as there was one who loved
+her.</p>
+
+<p>And this was why she entered the kitchen at
+Munkhyttan with a faint blush on her cheeks, and
+with radiant eyes, fragile, weak, and transparent,
+but sweet as a newly-opened rose.</p>
+
+<p>She still went about as if in a dream, and did not
+know much about where she was; but what surprised
+her so much that it nearly awakened her
+was to see a new Anna Stina standing by the fireplace.
+She stood there, little and broad, with a
+large, square face, exactly like the other. But
+why was she so fine, with a white cap with strings
+tied in a large bow under her chin, and with a
+black bombazine dress? Ingrid's head was so
+confused, that it was some time before it occurred
+to her that this must be Miss Stafva.</p>
+
+<p>She felt that Anna Stina looked uneasily at her,
+and she tried to pull herself together and say
+'Good-day.' But the only thing her mind could
+grasp was the thought that he had come to her.</p>
+
+<p>Inside the kitchen there was a small room, with
+blue-checked covering on the furniture. They
+were taken into that room, and Miss Stafva gave
+them coffee and something to eat.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina at once began to talk about
+their errand. She spoke for a long time; said
+that she knew her sister stood so high in her ladyship's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+favour that she left it to her to engage the
+servants. Miss Stafva said nothing, but she gave
+a look at Ingrid as much as to say that it would
+hardly have been left with her if she had chosen
+servants like her.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina praised Ingrid, and said she was a
+good girl. She had hitherto served in a parsonage,
+but now that she was grown up she wanted
+really to learn something, and that was why Anna
+Stina had brought her to one who could teach her
+more than any other person she knew.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Stafva did not reply to this remark either.
+But her glance plainly showed that she was surprised
+that anyone who had had a situation in a
+parsonage had no clothes of her own, but was
+obliged to borrow old Anna Stina's.</p>
+
+<p>Then old Anna Stina began to tell how she lived
+quite alone in the forest, deserted by all her relatives.
+And this young girl had come running up
+the hill many an evening and many an early
+morning to see her. She had therefore thought
+and hoped that she could now help her to get a
+good situation.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Stafva said it was a pity that they had gone
+such a long way to find a place. If she were a
+clever girl, she could surely get a situation in
+some good family in their own neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina could now clearly see that Ingrid's
+prospects were not good, and therefore she began
+in a more solemn vein:</p>
+
+<p>'Here you have lived, Stafva, and had a good,
+comfortable home all your life, and I have had to
+fight my way in great poverty. But I have never
+asked you for anything before to-day. And now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+you will send me away like a beggar, to whom
+one gives a meal and nothing more.'</p>
+
+<p>Miss Stafva smiled a little; then she said:</p>
+
+<p>'Sister Anna Stina, you are not telling me the
+truth. I, too, come from Raglanda, and I should
+like to know at what peasant's house in that
+parish grow such eyes and such a face.'</p>
+
+<p>And she pointed at Ingrid, and continued:</p>
+
+<p>'I can quite understand, Anna Stina, that you
+would like to help one who looks like that. But I
+do not understand how you can think that your
+sister Stafva has not more sense than to believe
+the stories you choose to tell her.'</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina was so frightened that she could not
+say a word, but Ingrid made up her mind to confide
+in Miss Stafva, and began at once to tell her
+whole story in her soft, beautiful voice.</p>
+
+<p>And Ingrid had hardly told of how she had
+been lying in the grave, and that a Dalar man had
+come and saved her, before old Miss Stafva grew
+red and quickly bent down to hide it. It was only
+a second, but there must have been some cause for
+it, for from that moment she looked so kind.</p>
+
+<p>She soon began to ask full particulars about it;
+more especially she wanted to know about the
+crazy man, whether Ingrid had not been afraid of
+him. Oh no, he did no harm. He was not mad,
+Ingrid said; he could both buy and sell. He was
+only frightened of some things.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid thought the hardest of all was to tell
+what she had heard her adopted mother say. But
+she told everything, although there were tears in
+her voice.</p>
+
+<p>Then Miss Stafva went up to her, drew back the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+handkerchief from her head, and looked into her
+eyes. Then she patted her lightly on the cheek.</p>
+
+<p>'Never mind that, little miss,' she said. 'There
+is no need for me to know about that. Now sister
+and Miss Ingrid must excuse me,' she said soon
+after, 'but I must take up her ladyship's coffee. I
+shall soon be down again, and you can tell me
+more.'</p>
+
+<p>When she returned, she said she had told her
+ladyship about the young girl who had lain in the
+grave, and now her mistress wanted to see her.</p>
+
+<p>They were taken upstairs, and shown into her
+ladyship's boudoir.</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina remained standing at the door of
+the fine room. But Ingrid was not shy; she went
+straight up to the old lady and put out her hand.
+She had often been shy with others who looked
+much less aristocratic; but here, in this house,
+she did not feel embarrassed. She only felt so
+wonderfully happy that she had come there.</p>
+
+<p>'So it is you, my child, who have been buried,'
+said her ladyship, nodding friendlily to her. 'Do
+you mind telling me your story, my child? I sit
+here quite alone, and never hear anything, you
+know.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Ingrid began again to tell her story. But
+she had not got very far before she was interrupted.
+Her ladyship did exactly the same as
+Miss Stafva had done. She rose, pushed the
+handkerchief back from Ingrid's forehead and
+looked into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' her ladyship said to herself, 'that I can
+understand. I can understand that he must obey
+those eyes.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For the first time in her life Ingrid was praised
+for her courage. Her ladyship thought she had
+been very brave to place herself in the hands of a
+crazy fellow.</p>
+
+<p>She <em>was</em> afraid, she said, but she was still more
+afraid of people seeing her in that state. And he
+did no harm; he was almost quite right, and then
+he was so good.</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship wanted to know his name, but
+Ingrid did not know it. She had never heard of
+any other name but the Goat. Her ladyship asked
+several times how he managed when he came to
+do business. Had she not laughed at him, and did
+she not think that he looked terrible&mdash;the Goat?
+It sounded so strange when her ladyship said 'the
+Goat.' There was so much bitterness in her voice
+when she said it, and yet she said it over and over
+again.</p>
+
+<p>No; Ingrid did not think so, and she never
+laughed at unfortunate people. The old lady
+looked more gentle than her words sounded.</p>
+
+<p>'It appears you know how to manage mad people,
+my child,' she said. 'That is a great gift.
+Most people are afraid of such poor creatures.'
+She listened to all Ingrid had to say, and sat meditating.
+'As you have not any home, my child,'
+she said, 'will you not stay here with me? You
+see, I am an old woman living here by myself, and
+you can keep me company, and I shall take care
+that you have everything you want. What do
+you say to it, my child? There will come a time,
+I suppose,' continued her ladyship, 'when we
+shall have to inform your parents that you are still
+living; but for the present everything shall remain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+as it is, so that you can have time to rest
+both body and mind. And you shall call me
+"Aunt"; but what shall I call you?'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid&mdash;Ingrid Berg.'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' said her ladyship thoughtfully. 'I
+would rather have called you something else. As
+soon as you entered the room with those star-like
+eyes, I thought you ought to be called Mignon.'</p>
+
+<p>When it dawned upon the young girl that here
+she would really find a home, she felt more sure
+than ever that she had been brought here in some
+supernatural manner, and she whispered her
+thanks to her invisible protector before she
+thanked her ladyship, Miss Stafva, and Anna
+Stina.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Ingrid slept in a four-poster, on luxurious
+featherbeds three feet high, and had hem-stitched
+sheets, and silken quilts embroidered with Swedish
+crowns and French lilies. The bed was so
+broad that she could lie as she liked either way,
+and so high that she must mount two steps to get
+into it. At the top sat a Cupid holding the
+brightly-coloured hangings, and on the posts sat
+other Cupids, which held them up in festoons.</p>
+
+<p>In the same room where the bed stood was an
+old curved chest of drawers inlaid with olive-wood,
+and from it Ingrid might take as much
+sweetly-scented linen as she liked. There was
+also a wardrobe containing many gay and pretty
+silk and muslin gowns that only hung there and
+waited until it pleased her to put them on.</p>
+
+<p>When she awoke in the morning there stood by
+her bedside a tray with a silver coffee-set and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+old Indian china. And every morning she
+set her small white teeth in fine white bread and
+delicious almond-cakes; every day she was
+dressed in a fine muslin gown with a lace fichu.
+Her hair was dressed high at the back, but round
+her forehead there was a row of little light curls.</p>
+
+<p>On the wall between the windows hung a mirror,
+with a narrow glass in a broad frame, where
+she could see herself, and nod to her picture, and
+ask:</p>
+
+<p>'Is it you? Is it really you? How have you
+come here?'</p>
+
+<p>In the daytime, when Ingrid had left the chamber
+with the four-poster, she sat in the drawing-room
+and embroidered or painted on silk, and
+when she was tired of that, she played a little on
+the guitar and sang, or talked with the old lady,
+who taught her French, and amused herself by
+training her to be a fine lady.</p>
+
+<p>But she had come to an enchanted castle&mdash;she
+could not get away from that idea. She had
+had that feeling the first moment, and it was
+always coming back again. No one arrived at
+the house, no one left it. In this big house only
+two or three rooms were kept in order; in the
+others no one ever went. No one walked in the
+garden, no one looked after it. There was only
+one man-servant, and an old man who cut the firewood.
+And Miss Stafva had only two servants,
+who helped her in the kitchen and in the dairy.</p>
+
+<p>But there was always dainty food on the
+table, and her ladyship and Ingrid were always
+waited upon and dressed like fine ladies of rank.</p>
+
+<p>If nothing thrived on the old estate, there was,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+at any rate, fertile soil for dreams, and even if
+they did not nurse and cultivate flowers there, Ingrid
+was not the one to neglect her dream-roses.
+They grew up around her whenever she was
+alone. It seemed to her then as if red dream-roses
+formed a canopy over her.</p>
+
+<p>Round the island where the trees bent low over
+the water, and sent long branches in between the
+reeds, and where shrubs and lofty trees grew luxuriantly,
+was a pathway where Ingrid often
+walked. It looked so strange to see so many letters
+carved on the trees, to see the old seats and
+summer-houses; to see the old tumble-down pavilions,
+which were so worm-eaten that she dared
+not go into them; to think that real people had
+walked here, that here they had lived, and longed,
+and loved, and that this had not always been an
+enchanted castle.</p>
+
+<p>Down here she felt even more the witchery of
+the place. Here the face with the smile came to
+her. Here she could thank him, the student, because
+he had brought her to a home where she
+was so happy, where they loved her, and made
+her forget how hardly others had treated her.
+If it had not been he who had arranged all this
+for her, she could not possibly have been allowed
+to remain here; it was quite impossible.</p>
+
+<p>She knew that it must be he. She had never
+before had such wild fancies. She had always
+been thinking of him, but she had never felt that
+he was so near her that he took care of her. The
+only thing she longed for was that he himself
+should come, for of course he would come some
+day. It was impossible that he should not come.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+In these avenues he had left behind part of his
+soul.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Summer went, and autumn; Christmas was
+drawing near.</p>
+
+<p>'Miss Ingrid,' said the old housekeeper one
+day, in a rather mysterious manner, 'I think I
+ought to tell you that the young master who owns
+Munkhyttan is coming home for Christmas. In
+any case, he generally comes,' she added, with a
+sigh.</p>
+
+<p>'And her ladyship, who has never even mentioned
+that she has a son,' said Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>But she was not really surprised. She might
+just as well have answered that she had known
+it all along.</p>
+
+<p>'No one has spoken to you about him, Miss
+Ingrid,' said the housekeeper, 'for her ladyship
+has forbidden us to speak about him.'</p>
+
+<p>And then Miss Stafva would not say any
+more.</p>
+
+<p>Neither did Ingrid want to ask any more. Now
+she was afraid of hearing something definite.
+She had raised her expectations so high that she
+was herself afraid they would fail. The truth
+might be well worth hearing, but it might also
+be bitter, and destroy all her beautiful dreams.
+But from that day he was with her night and day.
+She had hardly time to speak to others. She
+must always be with him.</p>
+
+<p>One day she saw that they had cleared the
+snow away from the avenue. She grew almost
+frightened. Was he coming now?</p>
+
+<p>The next day her ladyship sat from early morn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>ing
+in the window looking down the avenue. Ingrid
+had gone further into the room. She was
+so restless that she could not remain at the window.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you know whom I am expecting to-day,
+Ingrid?'</p>
+
+<p>The young girl nodded; she dared not depend
+upon her voice to answer.</p>
+
+<p>'Has Miss Stafva told you that my son is peculiar?'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>'He is very peculiar&mdash;he&mdash;I cannot speak
+about it. I cannot&mdash;you must see for yourself.'</p>
+
+<p>It sounded heartrending. Ingrid grew very
+uneasy. What was there with this house that
+made everything so strange? Was it something
+terrible that she did not know about? Was her
+ladyship not on good terms with her son? What
+was it, what was it?</p>
+
+<p>The one moment in an ecstasy of joy, the next
+in a fever of uncertainty, she was obliged to call
+forth the long row of visions in order again to
+feel that it must be he who came. She could not
+at all say why she so firmly believed that he must
+be the son just of this house. He might, for the
+matter of that, be quite another person. Oh,
+how hard it was that she had never heard his
+name!</p>
+
+<p>It was a long day. They sat waiting in silence
+until evening came.</p>
+
+<p>The man came driving a cartload of Christmas
+logs, and the horse remained in the yard
+whilst the wood was unloaded.</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' said her ladyship in a commanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+and hasty tone, 'run down to Anders and tell him
+that he must be quick and get the horse into the
+stable. Quick&mdash;quick!'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid ran down the stairs and on to the veranda;
+but when she came out she forgot to call
+to the man. Just behind the cart she saw a tall
+man in a sheepskin coat, and with a large pack
+on his back. It was not necessary for her to see
+him standing curtsying and curtsying to recognise
+him. But, but&mdash;&mdash;She put her hand to her
+head and drew a deep breath. How would all
+these things ever become clear to her? Was it
+for that fellow's sake her ladyship had sent her
+down? And the man, why did he pull the horse
+away in such great haste? And why did he take
+off his cap and salute? What had that crazy man
+to do with the people of this house?</p>
+
+<p>All at once the truth flashed upon Ingrid so
+crushingly and overwhelmingly that she could
+have screamed. It was not her beloved who had
+watched over her; it was this crazy man. She
+had been allowed to remain here because she had
+spoken kindly of him, because his mother wanted
+to carry on the good work which he had commenced.</p>
+
+<p>The Goat&mdash;that was the young master.</p>
+
+<p>But to her no one came. No one had brought
+her here; no one had expected her. It was all
+dreams, fancies, illusions! Oh, how hard it was!
+If she had only never expected him!</p>
+
+<p>But at night, when Ingrid lay in the big bed
+with the brightly-coloured hangings, she dreamt
+over and over again that she saw the student
+come home. 'It was not you who came,' she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+said. 'Yes, of course it was I,' he replied. And
+in her dreams she believed him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>One day, the week after Christmas, Ingrid sat
+at the window in the boudoir embroidering. Her
+ladyship sat on the sofa knitting, as she always
+did now. There was silence in the room.</p>
+
+<p>Young Hede had been at home for a week.
+During all that time Ingrid had never seen him.
+In his home, too, he lived like a peasant, slept in
+the men-servants' quarters, and had his meals in
+the kitchen. He never went to see his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid knew that both her ladyship and Miss
+Stafva expected that she should do something
+for Hede, that at the least she would try and persuade
+him to remain at home. And it grieved her
+that it was impossible for her to do what they
+wished. She was in despair about herself and
+about the utter weakness that had come over her
+since her expectations had been so shattered.</p>
+
+<p>To-day Miss Stafva had just come in to say
+that Hede was getting his pack ready to start.
+He was not even staying as long as he generally
+did at Christmas, she said with a reproachful look
+at Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid understood all they had expected from
+her, but she could do nothing. She sewed and
+sewed without saying anything.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Stafva went away, and there was again
+silence in the room. Ingrid quite forgot that she
+was not alone; a feeling of drowsiness suddenly
+came over her, whilst all her sad thoughts wove
+themselves into a strange fancy.</p>
+
+<p>She thought she was walking up and down the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+whole of the large house. She went through a
+number of rooms and salons; she saw them before
+her with gray covers over the furniture. The
+paintings and the chandeliers were covered with
+gauze, and on the floors was a layer of thick dust,
+which whirled about when she went through the
+rooms. But at last she came to a room where she
+had never been before; it was quite a small chamber,
+where both walls and ceiling were black.
+But when she came to look more closely at them,
+she saw that the chamber was neither painted
+black, nor covered with black material, but it was
+so dark on account of the walls and the ceiling being
+completely covered with bats. The whole room
+was nothing but a huge nest for bats. In one of
+the windows a pane was broken, so one could
+understand how the bats had got in in such incredible
+numbers that they covered the whole
+room. They hung there in their undisturbed
+winter sleep; not one moved when she entered.
+But she was seized by such terror at this sight
+that she began to shiver and shake all over. It
+was dreadful to see the quantity of bats she so distinctly
+saw hanging there. They all had black
+wings wrapped around them like cloaks; they all
+hung from the walls by a single long claw in undisturbable
+sleep. She saw it all so distinctly that
+she wondered if Miss Stafva knew that the bats
+had taken possession of a whole room. In her
+thoughts she then went to Miss Stafva and asked
+her whether she had been into that room and seen
+all the bats.</p>
+
+<p>'Of course I have seen them,' said Miss Stafva.
+'It is their own room. I suppose you know, Miss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+Ingrid, that there is not a single old country
+house in all Sweden where they have not to give
+up a room to the bats?'</p>
+
+<p>'I have never heard that before,' Ingrid said.</p>
+
+<p>'When you have lived as long in the world as I
+have, Miss Ingrid, you will find out that I am
+speaking the truth,' said Miss Stafva.</p>
+
+<p>'I cannot understand that people will put up
+with such a thing,' Ingrid said.</p>
+
+<p>'We are obliged to,' said Miss Stafva. 'Those
+bats are Mistress Sorrow's birds, and she has
+commanded us to receive them.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid saw that Miss Stafva did not wish to
+say anything more about that matter, and she began
+to sew again; but she could not help speculating
+over who that Mistress Sorrow could be
+who had so much power here that she could compel
+Miss Stafva to give up a whole room to the
+bats.</p>
+
+<p>Just as she was thinking about all this, she saw
+a black sledge, drawn by black horses, pull up
+outside the veranda. She saw Miss Stafva come
+out and make a low curtsy. An old lady in a
+long black velvet cloak, with many small capes
+on the shoulders, alighted from the sledge. She
+was bent, and had difficulty in walking. She
+could hardly lift her feet sufficiently to walk up
+the steps.</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' said her ladyship, looking up from
+her knitting, 'I think I heard Mistress Sorrow
+arrive. It must have been her jingle I heard.
+Have you noticed that she never has sledge-bells
+on her horses, but only quite a small jingle? But
+one can hear it&mdash;one can hear it! Go down into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+the hall, Ingrid, and bid Mistress Sorrow welcome.'</p>
+
+<p>When Ingrid came down into the front hall,
+Mistress Sorrow stood talking with Miss Stafva
+on the veranda. They did not notice her.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid saw with surprise that the round-backed
+old lady had something hidden under all her
+capes which looked like crape; it was put well
+up and carefully hidden. Ingrid had to look very
+closely before she discovered that they were two
+large bat's wings which she tried to hide. The
+young girl grew still more curious and tried to
+see her face, but she stood and looked into the
+yard, so it was impossible. So much, however,
+Ingrid did see when she put out her hand to the
+housekeeper&mdash;that one of her fingers was much
+longer than the others, and at the end of it was a
+large, crooked claw.</p>
+
+<p>'I suppose everything is as usual here?' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, honoured Mistress Sorrow,' said Miss
+Stafva.</p>
+
+<p>'You have not planted any flowers, nor pruned
+any trees? You have not mended the bridge,
+nor weeded the avenue?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, honoured mistress.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is quite as it should be,' said the honoured
+mistress. 'I suppose you have not had the
+audacity to search for the vein of ore, or to cut
+down the forest which is encroaching on the
+fields?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, honoured mistress.'</p>
+
+<p>'Or to clean the wells?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, nor to clean the wells.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'This is a nice place,' said Mistress Sorrow;
+'I always like being here. In a few years things
+will be in such a state that my birds can live all
+over the house. You are really very good to my
+birds, Miss Stafva.'</p>
+
+<p>At this praise the housekeeper made a deep
+curtsy.</p>
+
+<p>'How are things otherwise at the house?' said
+Mistress Sorrow. 'What sort of a Christmas
+have you had?'</p>
+
+<p>'We have kept Christmas as we always do,'
+said Miss Stafva. 'Her ladyship sits knitting in
+her room day after day, thinks of nothing but her
+son, and does not even know that it is a festival.
+Christmas Eve we allowed to pass like any other
+day&mdash;no presents and no candles.'</p>
+
+<p>'No Christmas tree, no Christmas fare?'</p>
+
+<p>'Nor any going to church; not so much as a
+candle in the windows on Christmas morning.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why should her ladyship honour God's Son
+when God will not heal her son?' said Mistress
+Sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>'No, why should she?'</p>
+
+<p>'He is at home at present, I suppose? Perhaps
+he is better now?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, he is no better. He is as much afraid
+of things as ever.'</p>
+
+<p>'Does he still behave like a peasant? Does
+he never go into the rooms?'</p>
+
+<p>'We cannot get him to go into the rooms;
+he is afraid of her ladyship, as the honoured mistress
+knows.'</p>
+
+<p>'He has his meals in the kitchen, and sleeps
+in the men-servants' room?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Yes, he does.'</p>
+
+<p>'And you have no idea how to cure him?'</p>
+
+<p>'We know nothing, we understand nothing.'</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Sorrow was silent for a moment;
+when she spoke again there was a hard, sharp
+ring in her voice:</p>
+
+<p>'This is all right as far as it goes, Miss Stafva;
+but I am not quite satisfied with you, all the
+same.'</p>
+
+<p>The same moment she turned round and
+looked sharply at Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid shuddered. Mistress Sorrow had a little,
+wrinkled face, the under part of which was
+so doubled up that one could hardly see the
+lower jaw. She had teeth like a saw, and thick
+hair on the upper lip. Her eyebrows were one
+single tuft of hair, and her skin was quite
+brown.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid thought Miss Stafva could not see what
+she saw: Mistress Sorrow was not a human
+being; she was only an animal.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Sorrow opened her mouth and
+showed her glittering teeth when she looked at
+Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'When this girl came here,' she said to Miss
+Stafva, 'you thought she had been sent by God.
+You thought you could see from her eyes that
+she had been sent by Our Lord to save him.
+She knew how to manage mad people. Well,
+how has it worked?'</p>
+
+<p>'It has not worked at all. She has not done
+anything.'</p>
+
+<p>'No, I have seen to that,' said Mistress Sorrow.
+'It was my doing that you did not tell her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+why she was allowed to stay here. Had she
+known that, she would not have indulged in
+such rosy dreams about seeing her beloved. If
+she had not had such expectations, she would
+not have had such a bitter disappointment. Had
+disappointment not paralyzed her, she could perhaps
+have done something for this mad fellow.
+But now she has not even been to see him. She
+hates him because he is not the one she expected
+him to be. That is my doing, Miss Stafva, my
+doing.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes; the honoured mistress knows her business,'
+said Miss Stafva.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Sorrow took her lace handkerchief
+and dried her red-rimmed eyes. It looked as if
+it were meant for an expression of joy.</p>
+
+<p>'You need not make yourself out to be any
+better than you are, Miss Stafva,' she said. 'I
+know you do not like my having taken that room
+for my birds. You do not like the thought of
+my having the whole house soon. I know that.
+You and your mistress had intended to cheat
+me. But it is all over now.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' said Miss Stafva, 'the honoured mistress
+can be quite easy. It is all over. The
+young master is leaving to-day. He has packed
+up his pack, and then we always know he is
+about to leave. Everything her ladyship and I
+have been dreaming about the whole autumn is
+over. Nothing has been done. We thought she
+might at least have persuaded him to remain at
+home, but in spite of all we have done for her,
+she has not done anything for us.'</p>
+
+<p>'No, she has only been a poor help, I know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+that,' said Mistress Sorrow. 'But, all the same,
+she must be sent away now. That was really
+what I wanted to see her ladyship about.'</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Sorrow began to drag herself up the
+steps on her tottering legs. At every step she
+raised her wings a little, as if they should help
+her. She would, no doubt, much rather have
+flown.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid went behind her. She felt strangely
+attracted and fascinated. If Mistress Sorrow
+had been the most beautiful woman in the world,
+she could not have felt a greater inclination to
+follow her.</p>
+
+<p>When she went into the boudoir she saw Mistress
+Sorrow sitting on the sofa by the side of
+her ladyship, whispering confidentially with her,
+as if they were old friends.</p>
+
+<p>'You must be able to see that you cannot
+keep her with you,' said Mistress Sorrow impressively.
+'You, who cannot bear to see a
+flower growing in your garden, can surely not
+stand having a young girl about in the house.
+It always brings a certain amount of brightness
+and life, and that would not suit you.'</p>
+
+<p>'No; that is just what I have been sitting and
+thinking about.'</p>
+
+<p>'Get her a situation as lady's companion
+somewhere or other, but don't keep her here.'</p>
+
+<p>She rose to say good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>'That was all I wanted to see you about,' she
+said. 'But how are you yourself?'</p>
+
+<p>'Knives and scissors cut my heart all day
+long,' said her ladyship. 'I only live in him as
+long as he is at home. It is worse than usual,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+much worse this time. I cannot bear it much
+longer.'.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid started; it was her ladyship's bell that
+rang. She had been dreaming so vividly that
+she was quite surprised to see that her ladyship
+was alone, and that the black sledge was not
+waiting before the door.</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship had rung for Miss Stafva, but
+she did not come. She asked Ingrid to go down
+to her room and call her.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid went, but the little blue-checked room
+was empty. The young girl was going into the
+kitchen to ask for the housekeeper, but before
+she had time to open the door she heard Hede
+talking. She stopped outside; she could not
+persuade herself to go in and see him.</p>
+
+<p>She tried, however, to argue with herself. It
+was not his fault that he was not the one she had
+been expecting. She must try to do something
+for him; she must persuade him to remain at
+home. Before, she had not had such a feeling
+against him. He was not so very bad.</p>
+
+<p>She bent down and peeped through the keyhole.
+It was the same here as at other places.
+The servants tried to lead him on in order to
+amuse themselves by his strange talk. They
+asked him whom he was going to marry. Hede
+smiled; he liked to be asked about that kind of
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>'She is called Grave-Lily&mdash;don't you know
+that?' he said.</p>
+
+<p>The servant said she did not know that she
+had such a fine name.</p>
+
+<p>'But where does she live?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Neither has she home nor has she farm,'
+Hede said. 'She lives in my pack.'</p>
+
+<p>The servant said that was a queer home, and
+asked about her parents.</p>
+
+<p>'Neither has she father nor has she mother,'
+Hede said. 'She is as fine as a flower; she has
+grown up in a garden.'</p>
+
+<p>He said all this with a certain amount of clearness,
+but when he wanted to describe how beautiful
+his sweetheart was he could not get on at
+all. He said a number of words, but they were
+strangely mixed together. One could not follow
+his thoughts, but evidently he himself derived
+much pleasure from what he said. He sat
+smiling and happy.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid hurried away. She could not bear it
+any longer. She could not do anything for him.
+She was afraid of him. She disliked him. But
+she had not got further than the stairs before
+her conscience pricked her. Here she had received
+so much kindness, and she would not
+make any return.</p>
+
+<p>In order to master her dislike she tried in her
+own mind to think of Hede as a gentleman. She
+wondered how he had looked when he wore good
+clothes, and had his hair brushed back. She
+closed her eyes for a moment and thought. No,
+it was impossible, she could not imagine him as
+being any different from what he was. The
+same moment she saw the outlines of a beloved
+face by her side. It appeared at her left side
+wonderfully distinct. This time the face did not
+smile. The lips trembled as if in pain, and unspeakable
+suffering was written in sharp lines
+round the mouth.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ingrid stopped half-way up the stairs and
+looked at it. There it was, light and fleeting, as
+impossible to grasp and hold fast as a sun-spot
+reflected by the prism of a chandelier, but just
+as visible, just as real. She thought of her recent
+dream, but this was different&mdash;this was reality.</p>
+
+<p>When she had looked a little at the face, the
+lips began to move; they spoke, but she could
+not hear a sound. Then she tried to see what
+they said, tried to read the words from the lips,
+as deaf people do, and she succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not let me go,' the lips said; 'do not let
+me go.'</p>
+
+<p>And the anguish with which it was said! If a
+fellow-creature had been lying at her feet begging
+for life, it could not have affected her more.
+She was so overcome that she shook. It was
+more heart-rending than anything she had ever
+heard in her whole life. Never had she thought
+that anyone could beg in such fearful anguish.
+Again and again the lips begged, 'Do not let
+me go!' And for every time the anguish was
+greater.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid did not understand it, but remained
+standing, filled with unspeakable pity. It seemed
+to her that more than life itself must be at stake
+for one who begged like this, that his very soul
+must be at stake.</p>
+
+<p>The lips did not move any more; they stood
+half open in dull despair. When they assumed
+this expression she uttered a cry and stumbled.
+She recognised the face of the crazy fellow as
+she had just seen it.</p>
+
+<p>'No, no, no!' she said. 'It cannot be so! It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+must not! it cannot! It is not possible that it
+is he!'</p>
+
+<p>The same moment the face vanished. She
+must have sat for a whole hour on the cold staircase,
+crying in helpless despair. But at last hope
+sprang up in her, strong and fair. She again
+took courage to raise her head. All that had
+happened seemed to show that she should save
+him. It was for that she had come here. She
+should have the great, great happiness of saving
+him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the little boudoir her ladyship was talking
+to Miss Stafva. It sounded so pitiful to hear her
+asking the housekeeper to persuade her son to
+remain a few days longer. Miss Stafva tried to
+appear hard and severe.</p>
+
+<p>'Of course, I can ask him,' she said; 'but
+your ladyship knows that no one can make him
+stay longer than he wants.'</p>
+
+<p>'We have money enough, you know. There
+is not the slightest necessity for him to go. Can
+you not tell him that?' said her ladyship.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment Ingrid came in. The
+door opened noiselessly. She glided through
+the room with light, airy steps; her eyes were radiant,
+as if she beheld something beautiful afar off.</p>
+
+<p>When her ladyship saw her she frowned a
+little. She also felt an inclination to be cruel, to
+give pain.</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid,' she said, 'come here; I must speak
+with you about your future.'</p>
+
+<p>The young girl had fetched her guitar and
+was about to leave the room. She turned round
+to her ladyship.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'My future?' she said, putting her hand to her
+forehead. 'My future is already decided, you
+know,' she continued, with the smile of a martyr;
+and without saying any more she left the room.</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship and Stafva looked in surprise at
+each other. They began to discuss where they
+should send the young girl. But when Miss
+Stafva came down to her room she found Ingrid
+sitting there, singing some little songs and playing
+on the guitar, and Hede sat opposite her,
+listening, his face all sunshine.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Ever since Ingrid had recognised the student
+in the poor crazy fellow, she had no other
+thought but that of trying to cure him; but this
+was a difficult task, and she had no idea whatever
+as to how she should set about it. To begin
+with, she only thought of how she could persuade
+him to remain at Munkhyttan; and this
+was easy enough. Only for the sake of hearing
+her play the violin or the guitar a little every day
+he would now sit patiently from morning till
+evening in Miss Stafva's room waiting for her.</p>
+
+<p>She thought it would be a great thing if she
+could get him to go into the other rooms, but
+that she could not. She tried keeping in her
+room, and said she would not play any more for
+him if he did not come to her. But after she
+had remained there two days, he began to pack
+up his pack to go away, and then she was obliged
+to give in.</p>
+
+<p>He showed great preference for her, and distinctly
+showed that he liked her better than
+others; but she did not make him less frightened.
+She begged him to leave off his sheep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>skin
+coat, and wear an ordinary coat. He consented
+at once, but the next day he had it on
+again. Then she hid it from him; but he then
+appeared in the man-servant's skin coat. So
+then they would rather let him keep his own.
+He was still as frightened as ever, and took great
+care no one came too near him. Even Ingrid
+was not allowed to sit quite close to him.</p>
+
+<p>One day she said to him that now he must
+promise her something: he must give over curtsying
+to the cat. She would not ask him to do
+anything so difficult as give up curtsying to
+horses and dogs, but surely he could not be
+afraid of a little cat.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, he said; the cat was a goat.</p>
+
+<p>'It can't be a goat,' she said; 'it has no horns,
+you know.'</p>
+
+<p>He was pleased to hear that. It seemed as if
+at last he had found something by which he could
+distinguish a goat from other animals.</p>
+
+<p>The next day he met Miss Stafva's cat.</p>
+
+<p>'That goat has no horns,' he said; and laughed
+quite proudly.</p>
+
+<p>He went past it, and sat down on the sofa to
+listen to Ingrid playing. But after he had sat a
+little while he grew restless, and he rose, went
+up to the cat, and curtsied.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was in despair. She took him by his
+arm and shook him. He ran straight out of the
+room, and did not appear until the next day.</p>
+
+<p>'Child, child,' said her ladyship, 'you do exactly
+as I did; you try the same as I did. It will
+end by your frightening him so that he dare not
+see you any more. It is better to leave him in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+peace. We are satisfied with things as they are
+if he will only remain at home.'</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing else for Ingrid to do but
+wring her hands in sorrow that such a fine,
+lovable fellow should be concealed in this crazy
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid thought again and again, had she
+really only come here to play her grandfather's
+tunes to him? Should they go on like that all
+through life? Would it never be otherwise?</p>
+
+<p>She also told him many stories, and in the
+midst of a story his face would lighten up, and
+he would say something wonderfully subtle and
+beautiful. A sane person would never have
+thought of anything like it. And no more was
+needed to make her courage rise, and then she
+began again with these endless experiments.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was late one afternoon, and the moon was
+just about to rise. White snow lay on the
+ground, and bright gray ice covered the lake.
+The trees were blackish-brown, and the sky was
+a flaming red after the sunset.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was on her way to the lake to skate.
+She went along a narrow path where the snow
+was quite trodden down. Gunnar Hede went
+behind her. There was something cowed in his
+bearing that made one think of a dog following
+its master.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid looked tired; there was no brightness
+in her eyes, and her complexion was gray.</p>
+
+<p>As she walked along she wondered whether
+the day, which was now so nearly over, was
+content with itself&mdash;if it were from joy it had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+lighted the great flaming red sunset far away in
+the west.</p>
+
+<p>She knew she could light no bonfire over this
+day, nor over any other day. In the whole
+month that had passed since she recognised Gunnar
+Hede she had gained nothing.</p>
+
+<p>And to-day a great fear had come upon her.
+It seemed to her as if she might perhaps lose
+her love over all this. She was nearly forgetting
+the student, only for thinking of the poor fellow.
+All that was bright and beautiful and youthful
+vanished from her love. Nothing was left but
+dull, heavy earnest.</p>
+
+<p>She was quite in despair as she walked towards
+the lake. She felt she did not know what ought
+to be done&mdash;felt that she must give it all up.
+Oh, God, to have him walking behind her apparently
+strong and hale, and yet so helplessly,
+incurably sick!</p>
+
+<p>They had reached the lake, and she was putting
+on her skates. She also wanted him to
+skate, and helped him to put on his skates; but
+he fell as soon as he got on to the ice. He
+scrambled to the bank and sat down on a stone,
+and she skated away from him.</p>
+
+<p>Just opposite the stone upon which Gunnar
+Hede was sitting was an islet overgrown with
+birches and poplars, and behind it the radiant
+evening sky, which was still flaming red. And
+the fine, light, leafless tops of the trees stood
+against the glorious sky with such beauty that it
+was impossible not to notice it.</p>
+
+<p>Is it not a fact that one always recognises a
+place by a single feature? One does not exactly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+know how even the most familiar spot looks from
+all sides. And Munkhyttan one always knew
+by the little islet. If one had not seen the place
+for many years, one would know it again by this
+islet, where the dark tree-tops were lifted towards
+the sunset.</p>
+
+<p>Hede sat quite still, and looked at the islet and
+at the branches of the trees and at the gray ice
+which surrounded it.</p>
+
+<p>This was the view he knew best of all; there
+was nothing on the whole estate he knew so well,
+for it was always this islet that attracted the eye.
+And soon he was sitting looking at the islet
+without thinking about it, just as one does with
+things one knows so well. He sat for a long
+time gazing. Nothing disturbed him, not a
+human being, not a gust of wind, no strange object.
+He could not see Ingrid; she had skated
+far away on the ice.</p>
+
+<p>A rest and peace fell upon Gunnar Hede such
+as one only feels in home surroundings. Security
+and peace came to him from the little islet; it
+quieted the everlasting unrest that <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has tormened">tormented</span>
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Hede always imagined he was amongst
+enemies, and always thought of defending himself.
+For many years he had not felt that peace
+which made it possible for him to forget himself.
+But now it came upon him.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Gunnar Hede was sitting thus and not
+thinking of anything, he happened mechanically
+to make a movement as one may do when one
+finds one's self in accustomed circumstances. As
+he sat there with the shining ice before him and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+with skates on his feet, he got up and skated on
+to the lake, and he thought as little of what he
+was doing as one thinks of how one is holding
+fork or spoon when eating.</p>
+
+<p>He glided over the ice; it was glorious skating.
+He was a long way off the shore before he realized
+what he was doing.</p>
+
+<p>'Splendid ice!' he thought. 'I wonder why I
+did not come down earlier in the day. It is a
+good thing I was more here yesterday,' he said.
+'I will really not waste a single day during the
+rest of my vacation.'</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it was because Gunnar Hede happened
+to do something he was in the habit of
+doing before he was ill that his old self awakened
+within him.</p>
+
+<p>Thoughts and associations connected with his
+former life began to force themselves upon his
+consciousness, and at the same time all the
+thoughts connected with his illness sank into oblivion.</p>
+
+<p>It had been his habit when skating to take a
+wide turn on the lake in order to see beyond a
+certain point. He did so now without thinking,
+but when he had turned the point he knew he
+had skated there to see if there was a light in
+his mother's window.</p>
+
+<p>'She thinks it is time I was coming home, but
+she must wait a little; the ice is too good.'</p>
+
+<p>But it was mostly vague sensations of pleasure
+over the exercise and the beautiful evening that
+were awakened within him. A moonlight evening
+like this was just the time for skating; he
+was so fond of this peaceful transition from day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+to night. It was still light, but the stillness of
+night was already there, the best both of day and
+of night.</p>
+
+<p>There was another skater on the ice; it was a
+young girl. He was not sure if he knew her, but
+he skated towards her to find out. No; it was
+no one he knew, but he could not help making a
+remark when he passed her about the splendid
+ice.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger was probably a young girl from
+the town. She was evidently not accustomed to
+be addressed in this unceremonious manner; she
+looked quite frightened when he spoke to her.
+He certainly was queerly dressed; he was
+dressed quite like a peasant.</p>
+
+<p>Well, he did not want to frighten her away.
+He turned off and skated further up the lake; the
+ice was big enough for them both.</p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid had nearly screamed with astonishment.
+He had come towards her skating elegantly,
+with his arms crossed, the brim of his
+hat turned up, and his hair thrown back, so that
+it did not fall over his ears.</p>
+
+<p>He had spoken with the voice of a gentleman,
+almost without the slightest Dalar accent. She
+did not stop to think about it. She skated quickly
+towards the shore. She came breathless into the
+kitchen. She did not know how to say it shortly
+and quickly enough.</p>
+
+<p>'Miss Stafva, the young master has come
+home!'</p>
+
+<p>The kitchen was empty; neither the housekeeper
+nor the servants were there. Nor was
+there anybody in the housekeeper's room. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>grid
+rushed through the whole house, went into
+rooms where no one ever went. The whole
+time she cried out, 'Miss Stafva, Miss Stafva!
+the young master has come home!'</p>
+
+<p>She was quite beside herself, and went on calling
+out, even when she stood on the landing upstairs,
+surrounded by the servants, Miss Stafva,
+and her ladyship herself. She said it over and
+over again. She was too much excited to stop.
+They all understood what she meant. They
+stood there quite as much overcome as she was.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid turned restlessly from the one to the
+other. She ought to give explanations and
+orders, but about what? That she could so lose
+her presence of mind! She looked wildly questioning
+at her ladyship.</p>
+
+<p>'What was it I wanted?'</p>
+
+<p>The old lady gave some orders in a low,
+trembling voice. She almost whispered.</p>
+
+<p>'Light the candles and make a fire in the
+young master's room. Lay out the young master's
+clothes.'</p>
+
+<p>It was neither the place nor the time for Miss
+Stafva to be important. But there was all the
+same a certain superior ring in her voice as she
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>'There is always a fire in the young master's
+room. The young master's clothes are always in
+readiness for him.'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingrid had better go up to her room,' said her
+ladyship.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl did just the opposite. She
+went into the drawing-room, placed herself at
+the window, sobbed and shook, but did not her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>self
+know that she was not still. She impatiently
+dried the tears from her eyes, so that she could
+see over the snowfield in front of the house. If
+only she did not cry, there was nothing she could
+miss seeing in the clear moonlight. At last he
+came.</p>
+
+<p>'There he is! there he is!' she cried to her
+ladyship. 'He walks quickly! he runs! Do
+come and see!'</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship sat quite still before the fire. She
+did not move. She strained her ears to hear,
+just as much as the other strained her eyes to
+see. She asked Ingrid to be quiet, so that she
+could hear how he walked. Ah, yes, she would
+be quiet. Her ladyship should hear how he
+walked. She grasped the window-sill, as if that
+could help her.</p>
+
+<p>'You <em>shall</em> be quiet,' she whispered, 'so that
+her ladyship can hear how he walks.'</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship sat bending forward, listening
+with all her soul. Did she already hear his steps
+in the court-yard? She probably thought he
+would go towards the kitchen. Did she hear
+that it was the front steps that creaked? Did
+she hear that it was the door to the front hall that
+opened? Did she hear how quickly he came up
+the stairs, two or three steps at a time? Had his
+mother heard that? It was not the dragging step
+of a peasant, as it had been when he left the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>It was almost more than they could bear, to
+hear him coming towards the door of the drawing-room.
+Had he come in then, they would no
+doubt both have screamed. But he turned down
+the corridor to his own rooms.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship fell back in her chair, and her
+eyes closed. Ingrid thought her ladyship would
+have liked to die at that moment. Without opening
+her eyes, she put out her hand. Ingrid went
+softly up and took it; the old lady drew her
+towards her.</p>
+
+<p>'Mignon, Mignon,' she said; 'that was the
+right name after all. But,' she continued, 'we
+must not cry. We must not speak about it. Take
+a stool and come and sit down by the fire. We
+must be calm, my little friend. Let us speak
+about something else. We must be perfectly calm
+when he comes in.'</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour afterwards Hede came in; the
+tea was on the table, and the chandelier was
+lighted. He had dressed; every trace of the
+peasant had disappeared. Ingrid and her ladyship
+pressed each other's hands.</p>
+
+<p>They had been sitting trying to imagine how
+he would look when he came in. It was impossible
+to say what he might say or do, said her
+ladyship. One never had known what he might
+do. But in any case they would both be quite
+calm. A feeling of great happiness had come
+over her, and that had quieted her. She was
+resting, free from all sorrow, in the arms of
+angels carrying her upwards, upwards.</p>
+
+<p>But when Hede came in, there was no sign of
+confusion about him.</p>
+
+<p>'I have only come to tell you,' he said, 'that I
+have got such a headache, that I shall have to go
+to bed at once. I felt it already when I was on
+the ice.'</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship made no reply. Everything was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+so simple; she had never thought it would be
+like that. It took her a few moments to realize
+that he did not know anything about his illness,
+that he was living somewhere in the past.</p>
+
+<p>'But perhaps I can first drink a cup of tea,'
+he said, looking a little surprised at their silence.</p>
+
+<p>Her ladyship went to the tea-tray. He looked
+at her.</p>
+
+<p>'Have you been crying, mother? You are so
+quiet.'</p>
+
+<p>'We have been sitting talking about a sad
+story, I and my young friend here,' said her
+ladyship, pointing to Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'I beg your pardon,' he said. 'I did not see
+you had visitors.'</p>
+
+<p>The young girl came forward towards the
+light, beautiful as one would be who knew that
+the gates of heaven the next moment would open
+before her.</p>
+
+<p>He bowed a little stiffly. He evidently did not
+know who she was. Her ladyship introduced
+them to each other. He looked curiously at Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'I think I saw Miss Berg on the ice,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>He knew nothing about her&mdash;had never
+spoken to her before.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>A short, happy time followed. Gunnar Hede
+was certainly not quite himself; but those around
+him were happy in the belief that he soon would
+be. His memory was partly gone. He knew
+nothing about certain periods of his life; he
+could not play the violin; he had almost forgotten
+all he knew; and his power of thinking was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+weak; and he preferred neither to read nor to
+write. But still he was very much better. He
+was not frightened; he was fond of his mother;
+he had again assumed the manners and habits
+of a gentleman. One can easily understand that
+her ladyship and all her household were delighted.</p>
+
+<p>Hede was in the best of spirits&mdash;bright and
+joyous all day long. He never speculated over
+anything, put to one side everything he could
+not understand, never spoke about anything that
+necessitated mental exertion, but talked merrily
+and cheerfully. He was most happy when he
+was engaged in bodily exercise. He took Ingrid
+out with him sledging and skating. He did not
+talk much to her, but she was happy to be with
+him. He was kind to Ingrid, as he was to everyone
+else, but not in the least in love with her.
+He often wondered about his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em>&mdash;wondered
+why she never wrote. But after a short time
+that trouble, too, left him. He always put away
+from him anything that worried him.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid thought that he would never get really
+well by doing like this. He must some time be
+made to think&mdash;to face his own thoughts, which
+he was afraid of doing now. But she dared not
+compel him to do this, and there was no one else
+who dared. If he began to care for her a little,
+perhaps she might dare. She thought all they
+now wanted, every one of them, was a little happiness.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was just at that time that a little child died
+at the Parsonage at Raglanda where Ingrid had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+been brought up; and the grave-digger was
+about to dig the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The man dug the grave quite close to the spot
+where the previous summer he had dug the
+grave for Ingrid. And when he had got a few
+feet into the ground he happened to lay bare a
+corner of her coffin. The grave-digger could not
+help smiling a little to himself. Of course he had
+heard that the dead girl lying in this coffin had
+appeared. She was supposed to have unscrewed
+her coffin-lid on the very day of her funeral, risen
+from the grave, and appeared at the Parsonage.
+The Pastor's wife was not so much liked but that
+people in the parish rather enjoyed telling this
+story about her. The grave-digger thought that
+people should only know how securely the dead
+were lying in the ground, and how fast the coffin-lids.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>He interrupted himself in the midst of this
+thought. On the corner of the coffin which was
+exposed the lid was not quite straight, and one
+of the screws was not quite fast. He did not
+say anything, he did not think anything, but
+stopped digging and whistled the whole reveille
+of the Vermland Regiment&mdash;for he was an old
+soldier. Then he thought he had better examine
+the thing properly. It would never do for a
+grave-digger to have thoughts about the dead
+which might come and trouble him during the
+dark autumn nights. He hastily removed some
+more earth. Then he began to hammer on the
+coffin with his shovel. The coffin answered quite
+distinctly that it was empty&mdash;empty.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour after the grave-digger was at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+Parsonage. There was no end to the questionings
+and surmises. So much they were all
+agreed upon&mdash;that the young girl had been in
+the Dalar man's pack. But what had become of
+her afterwards?</p>
+
+<p>Anna Stina stood at the oven in the Parsonage
+and looked after the baking, for of course there
+was baking to be done for the new funeral. She
+stood for a long time listening to all this talk
+without saying a word. All she took care of
+was that the cakes were not burnt. She put
+sheet-tins in and took sheet-tins out, and it was
+dangerous to approach her as she stood there
+with the long baker's shovel. But suddenly she
+took off her kitchen-apron, wiped the worst of
+the sweat and the soot from her face, and was
+talking with the Pastor in his study almost before
+she knew how it had come about.</p>
+
+<p>After this it was not so very wonderful that one
+day in March the Pastor's little red-painted
+sledge, ornamented with green tulips, and drawn
+by the Pastor's little red horse, pulled up at
+Munkhyttan. Ingrid was of course obliged to
+go back with the Pastor home to her mother. The
+Pastor had come to fetch her. He did not say
+much about their being glad that she was alive,
+but one could see how happy he was. He had
+never been able to forgive himself that they had
+not been more kind to their adopted daughter.
+And now he was radiant at the thought that he
+was allowed to make a new beginning and make
+everything good for her this time.</p>
+
+<p>They did not speak a word about the reason
+why she had run away. It was of no use bring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>ing
+that up again so long after. But Ingrid understood
+that the Pastor's wife had had a hard
+time, and had suffered many pangs of conscience,
+and that they wanted to have her back again in
+order to be good to her. She felt that she was
+almost obliged to go back to the Parsonage to
+show that she had no ill-feeling against her
+adopted parents.</p>
+
+<p>They all thought it was the most natural thing
+that she should go to the Parsonage for a week
+or two. And why should she not? She could
+not make the excuse that they needed her at
+Munkhyttan. She could surely be away for
+some weeks without it doing Gunnar Hede any
+harm. She felt it was hard, but it was best she
+should go away, as they all thought it was the
+right thing.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps she had hoped they would ask her not
+to go away. She took her seat in the sledge
+with the feeling that her ladyship or Miss Stafva
+would surely come and lift her out of it, and carry
+her into the house again. It was impossible to
+realize that she was actually driving down the
+avenue, that she was turning into the forest, and
+that Munkhyttan was disappearing behind her.</p>
+
+<p>But supposing it was from pure goodness that
+they let her go? They thought, perhaps, that
+youth, with its craving for pleasure, wanted to
+get away from the loneliness of Munkhyttan.
+They thought, perhaps, she was tired of being
+the keeper of a crazy man. She raised her hand,
+and was on the point of seizing the reins and
+turning the horse. Now that she was several
+miles from the house it struck her that that was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+why they had let her go. She would have liked
+so much to have gone back and asked them.</p>
+
+<p>In her utter loneliness she felt as if she were
+groping about in the wild forest. There was not
+a single human being who answered her or advised
+her. She received just as much answer
+from fir and pine, and squirrel and owl, as she
+did from any human being.</p>
+
+<p>It was really a matter of utter indifference to
+her how they treated her at the Parsonage. They
+were very kind to her, as far as she knew, but
+it really did not matter. If she had come to a
+palace full of everything one could most desire,
+that would likewise have been the same to her.
+No bed is soft enough to give rest unto one
+whose heart is full of longing.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning she had asked them every
+day, as modestly as she could, if they would not
+let her go home, now that she had had the great
+happiness of seeing her mother and her brothers
+and sisters. But the roads were really too bad.
+She must stay with them until the frost had disappeared.
+It was not a matter of life and death,
+they supposed, to go back to that place.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid could not understand why it annoyed
+people when she said she wanted to go back to
+Munkhyttan. But this seemed to be the case
+with her father and her mother and everybody
+else in the parish. One had no right, it appeared,
+to long for any other place in the world,
+when one was at Raglanda.</p>
+
+<p>She soon saw it was best not to speak about
+her going away. There were so many difficulties
+in the way whenever she spoke about it. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+was not enough that the roads were still in the
+same bad condition; they surrounded her with
+walls and ramparts and moats. She would knit
+and weave, and plant out in the forcing-frames.
+And surely she would not go away until after
+the large birthday party at the Dean's? And she
+could not think of leaving till after Karin Landberg's
+wedding.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing for her to do but to lift her
+hands in supplication to the spring, and beg it to
+make haste with its work, beg for sunshine and
+warmth, beg the gentle sun to do its very best
+for the great border forest, send small piercing
+rays between the fir-trees, and melt the snow beneath
+them. Dear, dear sun! It did not matter
+if the snow were not melted in the valley, if only
+the snow would vanish from the mountains, if
+only the forest paths became passable, if only
+the S&auml;ter girls were able to go to their huts, if
+only the bogs became dry, if only it became
+possible to go by the forest road, which was half
+the distance of the highroad.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid knew one who would not wait for carriage,
+or ask for money to drive, if only the road
+through the forest became passable. She knew
+one who would leave the Parsonage some moonlight
+night, and who would do it without asking
+a single person's permission.</p>
+
+<p>She thought she had waited for the spring before.
+That everybody does. But now Ingrid
+knew that she had never before longed for it.
+Oh no, no! She had never before known what
+it was to long. Before she had waited for green
+leaves and anemones, and the song of the thrush<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+and the cuckoo. But that was childishness&mdash;nothing
+more. They did not long for the spring
+who only thought of what was beautiful. One
+should take the first bit of earth that peeped
+through the snow, and kiss it. One should pluck
+the first coarse leaf of the nettle simply to burn
+into one that now the spring had come.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody was very good to her. But although
+they did not say anything, they seemed
+to think that she was always thinking of leaving
+them.</p>
+
+<p>'I can't understand why you want to go back
+to that place and look after that crazy fellow,'
+said Karin Landberg one day. It seemed as if
+she could read Ingrid's thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, she has given up thinking of that now,'
+said the Pastor's wife, before the young girl had
+time to answer.</p>
+
+<p>When Karin was gone the Pastor's wife said:</p>
+
+<p>'People wonder that you want to leave us.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was silent.</p>
+
+<p>'They say that when Hede began to improve
+perhaps you fell in love with him.'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh no! Not after he had begun to improve,'
+Ingrid said, feeling almost inclined to laugh.</p>
+
+<p>'In any case, he is not the sort of person one
+could marry,' said her adopted mother. 'Father
+and I have been speaking about it, and we think
+it is best that you should remain with us.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is very good of you that you want to keep
+me,' Ingrid said. And she was touched that now
+they wanted to be so kind to her.</p>
+
+<p>They did not believe her, however obedient
+she was. She could not understand what little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+bird it was that told them about her longing.
+Now her adopted mother had told her that she
+must not go back to Munkhyttan. But even
+then she could not leave the matter alone.</p>
+
+<p>'If they really wanted you,' she said, 'they
+would write for you.'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid again felt inclined to laugh. That
+would be the strangest thing of all, should there
+be a letter from the enchanted castle. She
+would like to know if her adopted mother
+thought that the King of the Mountain wrote
+for the maiden who had been swallowed by the
+mountain to come back when she had gone to
+see her mother?</p>
+
+<p>But if her adopted mother had known how
+many messages she had received she would
+probably have been even more uneasy. There
+came messages to her in her dreams by nights,
+and there came messages to her in her visions by
+day. He let Ingrid know that he was in need of
+her. He was so ill&mdash;so ill!</p>
+
+<p>She knew that he was nearly going out of his
+mind again, and that she must go to him. If
+anyone had told her this, she would simply have
+answered that she knew it.</p>
+
+<p>The large star-like eyes looked further and
+further away. Those who saw that look would
+never believe that she meant to stay quietly and
+patiently at home.</p>
+
+<p>It is not very difficult either to see whether a
+person is content or full of longing. One only
+needs to see a little gleam of happiness in the
+eyes when he or she comes in from work and sits
+down by the fire. But in Ingrid's eyes there was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+no gleam of happiness, except when she saw the
+mountain stream come down through the forest,
+broad and strong. It was that that should prepare
+the way for her.</p>
+
+<p>It happened one day that Ingrid was sitting
+alone with Karin Landberg, and she began to
+tell her about her life at Munkhyttan. Karin
+was quite shocked. How could Ingrid stand
+such a life?</p>
+
+<p>Karin Landberg was to be married very soon.
+And she was now at that stage when she could
+speak of nothing but her lover. She knew nothing
+but what he had taught her, and she could
+do nothing without first consulting him.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to her that Oluf had said something
+about Gunnar Hede which would help to
+frighten Ingrid if she had begun to like that
+crazy fellow. And then she began to tell her how
+mad he had really been. For Oluf had told her
+that when he was at the fair last autumn some
+gentlemen had said that they did not think the
+Goat was mad at all. He only pretended to be
+in order to attract customers. But Oluf had
+maintained that he was mad, and in order to
+prove it went to the market and bought a
+wretched little goat. And then it was plain
+enough to see that he was mad. Oluf had only
+put the goat in front of him on the counter
+where his knives and things lay, and he had run
+away and left both his pack and his wares, and
+they had all laughed so awfully when they saw
+how frightened he was. And it was impossible
+that Ingrid could care for anyone who had been
+so crazy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was, no doubt, unwise of Karin Landberg
+that she did not look at Ingrid whilst she told
+this story. If she had seen how she frowned,
+she would perhaps have taken warning.</p>
+
+<p>'And you will marry anyone who could do
+such a thing!' Ingrid said. 'I think it would be
+better to marry the Goat himself.'</p>
+
+<p>This Ingrid said in downright earnest, and it
+seemed so strange to Karin that she, who was
+always so gentle, should have said anything so
+unkind, that it quite worried her. For several
+days she was quite unhappy, because she feared
+Oluf was not what she would like him to be. It
+simply embittered Karin's life until she made up
+her mind to tell Oluf everything; but he was so
+nice and good, that he quite reassured her.</p>
+
+<p>It is not an easy task to wait for the spring in
+Vermland. One can have sun and warmth in the
+evening, and the next morning find the ground
+white with snow. Gooseberry-bushes and lawns
+may be green, but the trees of the birch-forest
+are bare, and seem as if they will never spring
+out.</p>
+
+<p>At Whitsuntide there was spring in the air,
+but Ingrid's prayers had been of no avail. Not a
+single S&auml;ter girl had taken up her abode in the
+forest, not a fen was dry; it was impossible to go
+through the forest.</p>
+
+<p>On Whit-Sunday Ingrid and her adopted
+mother went to church. As it was such a great
+festival, they had driven to church. In olden
+days Ingrid had very much enjoyed driving up
+to the church in full gallop, whilst people along
+the roadside politely took off their hats, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+those who were standing on the road rushed to
+the side as if they were quite frightened. But at
+the present moment she could not enjoy anything.
+'Longing takes the fragrance from the
+rose, and the light from the full moon,' says an
+old proverb.</p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid was glad for what she heard in
+church. It did her good to hear how the disciples
+were comforted in their longing. She was
+glad that Jesus thought of comforting those who
+longed so greatly for Him.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Ingrid and the rest of the congregation
+were in church a tall Dalar man came walking
+down the road. He wore a sheepskin coat, and
+had a large pack on his back, like one who cannot
+tell winter from summer, or Sunday from
+any other day. He did not go into the church,
+but stole timidly past the horses that were tied
+to the railings, and went into the churchyard.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down on a grave and thought of all the
+dead who were still sleeping, and of one of the
+dead who had awakened to life again. He was
+still sitting there when the people left the church.
+Karin Landberg's Oluf was one of the first to
+leave the church, and when he happened to look
+across the churchyard he discovered the Dalar
+man. It is hard to say whether it was curiosity
+or some other motive that prompted him, but
+he went up to talk to him. He wanted to see if
+it were possible that he who was supposed to
+have been cured had become mad again.</p>
+
+<p>And it was possible. He told him at once
+that he sat there waiting for her who was
+called Grave-Lily. She was to come and play to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+him. She played so beautifully that the sun and
+the stars danced.</p>
+
+<p>Then Karin Landberg's Oluf told him that
+she for whom he was waiting was standing outside
+the church. If he stood up, he could see
+her. She would, no doubt, be glad to see him.</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor's wife and Ingrid were just getting
+into the carriage, when a tall Dalar man came
+running up to them. He came at a great pace
+in spite of all the horses he must curtsy to, and
+he beckoned eagerly to the young girl.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Ingrid saw him she stood quite
+still. She could not have told whether she was
+most glad to see him again or most grieved that
+he had again gone out of his mind; she only
+forgot everything else in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes began to sparkle. In that moment
+she saw nothing of the poor wretched man. She
+only felt that she was once again near the beautiful
+soul of the man for whom she had longed
+so terribly.</p>
+
+<p>There were a great many people about, and
+they could not help looking at her. They could
+not take their eyes from her face. She did not
+move; she stood waiting for him. But those
+who saw how radiant she was with happiness
+must have thought that she was waiting for
+some great and noble man, instead of a poor,
+half-witted fellow.</p>
+
+<p>They said afterwards that it almost seemed as
+if there were some affinity between his soul and
+hers&mdash;some secret affinity which lay so deeply
+hidden beneath their consciousness that no
+human being could understand it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But when Hede was only a step or two from
+Ingrid her adopted mother took her resolutely
+round the waist and lifted her into the carriage.
+She would not have a scene between the two
+just outside the church, with so many people
+present. And as soon as they were in the carriage
+the man sent his horses off at full gallop.</p>
+
+<p>A wild, terrified cry was heard as they drove
+away. The Pastor's wife thanked God that she
+had got the young girl into the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>It was still early in the afternoon when a
+peasant came to the Parsonage to speak with the
+Pastor. He came to speak about the crazy Dalar
+man. He had now gone quite raving mad, and
+they had been obliged to bind him. What did
+the Pastor advise them to do? What should
+they do with him?</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor could give them no other advice
+but to take him home. He told the peasant who
+he was, and where he lived.</p>
+
+<p>Later on in the evening he told Ingrid everything.
+It was best to tell her the truth, and
+trust to her own common-sense.</p>
+
+<p>But when night came it became clear to her
+that she had not time to wait for the spring. The
+poor girl set out for Munkhyttan by the highroad.
+She would no doubt be able to get there
+by that road, although she knew that it was
+twice as long as the way through the forest.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was Whit-Monday, late in the afternoon.
+Ingrid walked along the highroad. There was a
+wide expanse of country, with low mountains
+and small patches of birch forest between the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+fields. The mountain-ash and the bird-cherry
+were in bloom; the light, sticky leaves of the
+aspen were just out. The ditches were full of
+clear, rippling water which made the stones at
+the bottom glisten and sparkle.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid walked sorrowfully along, thinking of
+him whose mind had again given way, wondering
+whether she could do anything for him,
+whether it was of any use that she had left her
+home in this manner.</p>
+
+<p>She was tired and hungry; her shoes had begun
+to go to pieces. Perhaps it would be better
+for her to turn back. She could never get to
+Munkhyttan.</p>
+
+<p>The further she walked, the more sorrowful
+she became. She could not help thinking that
+it could be of no use her coming now that he
+had gone quite out of his mind. There was no
+doubt it was too late now; it was quite hopeless
+to do anything for him.</p>
+
+<p>But as soon as she thought of turning back
+she saw Gunnar Hede's face close to her cheek,
+as she had so often seen it before. It gave her
+new courage; she felt as if he were calling for
+her. She again felt hopeful and confident of
+being able to help him.</p>
+
+<p>Just as Ingrid raised her head, looking a little
+less downcast, a queer little procession came
+towards her.</p>
+
+<p>There was a little horse, drawing a little cart;
+a fat woman sat in the cart, and a tall, thin
+man, with long, thin moustaches walked by the
+side of it.</p>
+
+<p>In the country, where no one understood any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>thing
+about art, Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren always
+went in for looking like ordinary people. The
+little cart in which they travelled about was well
+covered over, and no one could suspect that it
+only contained fireworks and conjuring apparatus
+and marionettes.</p>
+
+<p>No one could suspect that the fat woman
+who sat on the top of the load, looking like a
+well-to-do shopkeeper's wife, was formerly Miss
+Viola, who once sprang through the air, or that
+the man who walked by her side, and looked
+like a pensioned soldier, was the same Mr.
+Blomgren who occasionally, to break the monotony
+of the journey, took it into his head to
+turn a somersault over the horse, and play the
+ventriloquist with thrushes and siskins that sang
+in the trees by the roadside, so that he made
+them quite mad.</p>
+
+<p>The horse was very small, and had formerly
+drawn a roundabout, and therefore it would
+never go unless it heard music. On that account
+Mrs. Blomgren generally sat playing the
+Jews'-harp, but as soon as they met anyone, she
+put it in her pocket, so that no one should discover
+they were artists, for whom country
+people have no respect whatever. Owing to this
+they did not travel very fast, but they were not
+in any hurry either.</p>
+
+<p>The blind man, who played the violin, had to
+walk some little distance behind the others in order
+not to betray the fact of his belonging to the
+company. The blind man was led by a little dog;
+he was not allowed to have a child to lead him,
+for that would always have reminded Mr. and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+Mrs. Blomgren of a little girl who was called Ingrid.
+That would have been too sad.</p>
+
+<p>And now they were all in the country on account
+of the spring. For however much money
+Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren were making in the
+towns, they felt they <em>must</em> be in the country at
+that time of the year, for Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren
+were artists.</p>
+
+<p>They did not recognise Ingrid, and she went
+past them without taking any notice of them, for
+she was in a hurry; she was afraid of their detaining
+her. But directly afterwards she felt that
+it was heartless and unkind of her, and turned
+back.</p>
+
+<p>If Ingrid could have felt glad about anything,
+she would have been glad by seeing the old people's
+joy at meeting her. You may be sure they
+had plenty to talk about. The little horse turned
+its head time after time to see what was wrong
+with the roundabout.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, it was Ingrid who talked the
+most. The two old people saw at once that she
+had been crying, and they were so concerned that
+she was obliged to tell them everything that had
+happened to her.</p>
+
+<p>But it was a relief to Ingrid to speak. The old
+people had their own way of taking things; they
+clapped their hands when she told them how she
+had got out of the grave and how she had frightened
+the Pastor's wife. They caressed her and
+praised her because she had run away from the
+Parsonage. For them nothing was dull or sad,
+but everything was bright and hopeful. They
+simply had no standard by which to measure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+reality, and therefore its hardness could not affect
+them. They compared everything they heard
+with the pieces from marionette theatres and pantomimes.
+Of course, one also put a little sorrow
+and misery into the pantomime, but that was only
+done to heighten the effect. And, of course,
+everything would end well. In the pantomimes
+it always ended well.</p>
+
+<p>There was something infectious in all this
+hopefulness. Ingrid knew they did not at all understand
+how great her trouble was, but it was
+cheering all the same to listen to them.</p>
+
+<p>But they were also of real help to Ingrid. They
+told her that they had had dinner a short time
+since at the inn at Tors&auml;ker, and just as they were
+getting up from the table some peasants came
+driving up with a man who was mad. Mrs.
+Blomgren could not bear to see mad people, and
+wanted to go away at once, and Mr. Blomgren
+had consented. But supposing it was Ingrid's
+madman! And they had hardly said the words
+before Ingrid said that it was very likely, and
+wanted to set off at once.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blomgren then asked his wife in his own
+ceremonious manner if they were not in the country
+solely on account of the spring, and if it were
+not just the same where they went. And old Mrs.
+Blomgren asked him equally ceremoniously in
+her turn if he thought she would leave her beloved
+Ingrid before she had reached the harbour
+of her happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Then the old roundabout horse was turned,
+and conversation grew more difficult, because
+they again had to play on the Jews'-harp. As<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+soon as Mrs. Blomgren wished to say anything,
+she was obliged to hand the instrument to Mr.
+Blomgren, and when Mr. Blomgren wanted to
+speak, he gave it back again to his wife. And
+the little horse stood still every time the instrument
+passed from mouth to mouth.</p>
+
+<p>The whole time they did their best to comfort
+Ingrid. They related all the fairy tales they had
+seen represented at the dolls' theatre. They comforted
+her with the 'Enchanted Princess,' they
+comforted her with 'Cinderella,' they comforted
+her with all the fairy tales under the sun.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren watched Ingrid when
+they saw that her eyes grew brighter. 'Artist's
+eyes,' they said, nodding contentedly to each
+other. 'What did we say? Artist's eyes!'</p>
+
+<p>In some incomprehensible manner they had
+got the idea that Ingrid had become one of them,
+an artist. They thought she was playing a part
+in a drama. It was a triumph for them in their
+old age.</p>
+
+<p>On they went as fast as they could. The old
+couple were only afraid that the madman would
+not be at the inn any longer. But he was there,
+and the worst of it was, no one knew how to get
+him away.</p>
+
+<p>The two peasants from Raglanda who had
+brought him had taken him to one of the rooms
+and locked him in whilst they were waiting for
+fresh horses. When they left him his arms had
+been tied behind him, but he had somehow managed
+to free his hands from the cord, and when
+they came to fetch him he was free, and, beside
+himself with rage, had seized a chair, with which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+he threatened to strike anyone who approached
+him. They could do nothing but beat a hasty retreat
+and lock the door. The peasants now only
+waited for the landlord and his men to return and
+help them to bind him again.</p>
+
+<p>All the hope which Ingrid's old friends had reawakened
+within her was, however, not quenched.
+She quite saw that Gunnar Hede was worse than
+he had ever been before, but that was what she
+had expected. She still hoped. It was not their
+fairy tales, it was their great love that had given
+her new hope.</p>
+
+<p>She asked the men to let her go to the madman.
+She said she knew him, and he would not
+do her any harm; but the peasants said they were
+not mad. The man in the room would kill anybody
+who went in.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid sat down to think. She thought how
+strange it was that she should meet Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren just to-day. Surely that meant something.
+She would never have met them if it had
+not been for some purpose. And Ingrid thought
+of how Hede had regained his senses the last
+time. Could she not again make him do something
+which would remind him of olden days, and
+drive away his mad thoughts? She thought and
+thought.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren sat on a seat outside
+the inn, looking more unhappy than one would
+have thought was possible. They were not far
+from crying.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid, their 'child,' came up to them with a
+smile&mdash;such a smile as only she could have&mdash;and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+stroked their old, wrinkled cheeks, and said it
+would please her so much if they would let her
+see a performance like those she used to see every
+day in the olden time. It would be such a comfort
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>At first they said no, for they were not at all in
+proper artist humour, but when she had expended
+a few smiles upon them they could not resist her.
+They went to their cart and unpacked their costumes.</p>
+
+<p>When they were ready they called for the blind
+man, and Ingrid selected the place where the performance
+was to be held. She would not let them
+perform in the yard, but took them into the garden
+belonging to the inn, for there was a garden
+belonging to this inn. It was mostly full of beds
+for vegetables which had not yet come up, but
+here and there was an apple-tree in bloom. And
+Ingrid said she would like them to perform under
+one of the apple-trees in bloom.</p>
+
+<p>Some lads and servant-girls came running
+when they heard the violin, so there was a small
+audience. But it was hard work for Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren to perform. Ingrid had asked too
+much of them; they were really much too sad.</p>
+
+<p>And it was very unfortunate that Ingrid had
+taken them out into the garden. She had evidently
+not remembered that the rooms in the inn
+faced this way. Mrs. Blomgren was very nearly
+running away when she heard a window in one
+of the rooms quickly opened. Supposing the
+madman had heard the music, and supposing he
+jumped out of the window and came to them?</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Blomgren was somewhat reassured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+when she saw who had opened the window. It
+was a young gentleman with a pleasant face. He
+was in shirt-sleeves, but otherwise very decently
+dressed. His eye was quiet, his lips smiled, and
+he stroked his hair back from his forehead with
+his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blomgren was working, and was so taken
+up with the performance that he did not notice
+anything. Mrs. Blomgren, who had nothing else
+to do but kiss her hands in all directions, had
+time to observe everything.</p>
+
+<p>It was astonishing how radiant Ingrid suddenly
+looked. Her eyes shone as never before,
+and her face was so white that light seemed to
+come from it. And all this radiancy was directed
+towards the man in the window.</p>
+
+<p>He did not hesitate long. He stood up on the
+window-sill and jumped down to them, and he
+went up to the blind man and asked him to lend
+him his violin. Ingrid at once took the violin
+from the blind man and gave it to him.</p>
+
+<p>'Play the waltz from "Freisch&uuml;tz,"' she said.</p>
+
+<p>Then the man began to play, and Ingrid smiled,
+but she looked so unearthly that Mrs. Blomgren
+almost thought that she would dissolve into a
+sunbeam, and fly away from them. But as soon
+as Mrs. Blomgren heard the man play she knew
+him again.</p>
+
+<p>'Is that how it is?' she said to herself. 'Is it
+he? That was why she wanted to see two old
+people perform.'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede, who had been walking up and
+down his room in such a rage that he felt inclined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+to kill someone, had suddenly heard a blind man
+playing outside his window, and that had taken
+him back to an incident in his former life.</p>
+
+<p>He could not at first understand where his
+own violin was, but then he remembered that Alin
+had taken it away with him, and now the only
+thing left for him to do was to try and borrow the
+blind man's violin to play himself quiet again; he
+was so excited. And as soon as he had got the
+violin in his hand he began to play. It never occurred
+to him that he could not play. He had no
+idea that for several years he had only been able
+to play some poor little tunes.</p>
+
+<p>He thought all the time he was in Upsala, outside
+the house with the Virginia-creepers, and he
+expected the acrobats would begin to dance as
+they had done last time. He endeavoured to
+play with more life to make them do so, but his
+fingers were stiff and awkward; the bow would
+not properly obey them. He exerted himself so
+much that the perspiration stood on his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>At last, however, he got hold of the right tune&mdash;the
+same they had danced to the last time. He
+played it so enticingly, so temptingly, that it
+ought to have melted their hearts. But the old
+acrobats did not begin to dance. It was a long
+time since they had met the student at Upsala;
+they did not remember how enthusiastic they
+were then. They had no idea what he expected
+them to do.</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede looked at Ingrid for an explanation
+why they did not dance. When he looked at
+her there was such an unearthly radiance in her
+eyes that in his astonishment he gave up playing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+He stood a moment looking round the small
+crowd. They all looked at him with such strange,
+uneasy glances. It was impossible to play with people
+staring at him so. He simply went away from
+them. There were some apple-pears in bloom at
+the other end of the garden, so he went there.</p>
+
+<p>He saw now that nothing fitted in with the ideas
+he had just had that Alin had locked him in, and
+that he was at Upsala. The garden was too large,
+and the house was not covered with red creepers.
+No, it could not be Upsala. But he did not mind
+very much where he was. It seemed to him as if
+he had not played for centuries, and now he had
+got hold of a violin. Now he would play. He
+placed the violin against his cheek, and began.
+But again he was stopped by the stiffness in his
+fingers. He could only play the very simplest
+things.</p>
+
+<p>'I shall have to begin at the beginning,' he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>And he smiled and played a little minuet. It
+was the first thing he had learnt. His father had
+played it to him, and he had afterwards played it
+from ear. He saw all at once the whole scene before
+him, and he heard the words:</p>
+
+<p>'The little Prince should learn to dance, but he
+broke his little leg.'</p>
+
+<p>Then he tried to play several other small
+dances. They were some he had played as a
+school boy. They had asked him to play at the
+dancing-lessons at the young ladies' boarding-school.
+He could see the girls dance and swing
+about, and could hear the dancing-mistress beat
+the time with her foot.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then he grew bolder. He played first violin in
+one of Mozart's quartettes. When he learnt that,
+he was in the Sixth Form at the Latin school at
+Falun. Some old gentlemen had practised this
+quartette for a concert, but the first violin had
+been taken ill, and he was asked to take his part,
+young as he was. He remembered how proud he
+had been.</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede only thought of getting his fingers
+into practice when he played these childish
+exercises. But he soon noticed that something
+strange was happening to him. He had a distinct
+sensation that in his brain there was some great
+darkness that hid his past. As soon as he tried
+to remember anything, it was as if he were trying
+to find something in a dark room; but when he
+played, some of the darkness vanished. Without
+his having thought of it, the darkness had vanished
+so much that he could now remember his
+childhood and school life.</p>
+
+<p>Then he made up his mind to let himself be led
+by the violin; perhaps it could drive away all the
+darkness. And so it did, for every piece he
+played the darkness vanished a little. The violin
+led him through the one year after the other,
+awoke in him memories of studies, friends and
+pleasures. The darkness stood like a wall before
+him, but when he advanced against it, armed with
+the violin, it vanished step by step. Now and
+then he looked round to see whether it closed
+again behind him. But behind him was bright
+day.</p>
+
+<p>The violin came to a series of duets for piano
+and violin. He only played a bar or two of each.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+But a large portion of the darkness vanished; he
+remembered his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em> and his engagement. He
+would like to have dwelt a little over this, but
+there was still much darkness left to be played
+away. He had no time.</p>
+
+<p>He glided into a hymn. He had heard it once
+when he was unhappy. He remembered he was
+sitting in a village church when he heard it. But
+why <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has had be">had he</span> been unhappy? Because he went
+about the country selling goods like a poor pedlar.
+It was a hard life. It was sad to think
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>The bow went over the strings like a whirlwind,
+and again cut through a large portion of the
+darkness. Now he saw the Fifty-Mile Forest, the
+snow-covered animals, the weird shapes, the drifts
+made of them. He remembered the journey to
+see his <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fianc&eacute;e</span></em>, remembered that she had broken
+the engagement. All this became clear to him at
+one time.</p>
+
+<p>He really felt neither sorrow nor joy over anything
+he remembered. The most important thing
+was that he did remember. This of itself was an
+unspeakable pleasure. But all at once the bow
+stopped, as if of its own accord. It would not
+lead him any further. And yet there was more&mdash;much
+more&mdash;that he must remember. The darkness
+still stood like a solid wall before him.</p>
+
+<p>He compelled the bow to go on. And it played
+two quite common tunes, the poorest he had ever
+heard. How could his bow have learned such
+tunes? The darkness did not vanish in the least
+for these tunes. They really taught him nothing;
+but from them came a terror which he could not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+remember having ever felt before&mdash;an inconceivable,
+awful fear, the mad terror of a doomed soul.</p>
+
+<p>He stopped playing; he could not bear it.
+What was there in these tunes&mdash;what was there?
+The darkness did not vanish for them, and the
+awful thing was, that it seemed to him that when
+he did not advance against the darkness with the
+violin and drive it before him, it came gliding
+towards him to overwhelm him.</p>
+
+<p>He had been standing playing, with his eyes
+half closed; now he opened them and looked into
+the world of reality. He saw Ingrid, who had
+been standing listening to him the whole time.
+He asked her, not expecting an answer, but simply
+to keep back the darkness for a moment:</p>
+
+<p>'When did I last play this tune?'</p>
+
+<p>But Ingrid stood trembling. She had made up
+her mind, whatever happened, now he should
+hear the truth. Afraid she was, but at the same
+time full of courage, and quite decided as to what
+she meant to do. He should not again escape
+her, not be allowed to slip away from her. But
+in spite of her courage she did not dare to tell him
+straight out that these were the tunes he had
+played whilst he was out of his mind; she evaded
+the question.</p>
+
+<p>'That was what you used to play at Munkhyttan
+last winter,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>Hede felt as if he were surrounded by nothing
+but mysteries. Why did this young girl say '<em><span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">du</span></em>'
+to him? She was not a peasant girl.<a name="FNanchor_A" id="FNanchor_A"></a><a href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> Her hair<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+was dressed like other young ladies', on the top of
+the head and in small curls. Her dress was home-woven,
+but she wore a lace collar. She had small
+hands and a refined face. This face, with the
+large, dreamy eyes, could not belong to a peasant
+girl. Hede's memory could not tell him anything
+about her. Why did she, then, say '<em><span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">du</span></em>' to
+him? How did she know that he had played
+these tunes at home?</p>
+
+<p>'What is your name?' he said. 'Who are
+you?'</p>
+
+<p>'I am Ingrid, whom you saw at Upsala many
+years ago, and whom you comforted because she
+could not learn to dance on the tight-rope.'</p>
+
+<p>This went back to the time he could partly remember.
+Now he did remember her.</p>
+
+<p>'How tall and pretty you have grown, Ingrid!'
+he said. 'And how fine you have become!
+What a beautiful brooch you have!'</p>
+
+<p>He had been looking at her brooch for some
+time. He thought he knew it; it was like a
+brooch of enamel and pearls his mother used to
+wear. The young girl answered at once.</p>
+
+<p>'Your mother gave it to me. You must have
+seen it before.'</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede put down the violin and went up
+to Ingrid. He asked her almost violently:</p>
+
+<p>'How is it possible&mdash;how can you wear her
+brooch? How is it that I don't know anything
+about your knowing my mother?'</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was frightened. She grew almost gray
+with terror. She knew already what the next
+question would be.</p>
+
+<p>'I know nothing, Ingrid. I don't know why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+I am here. I don't know why you are here. Why
+don't I know all this?'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, don't ask me!'</p>
+
+<p>She went back a step or two, and stretched out
+her hands as if to protect herself.</p>
+
+<p>'Won't you tell me?'</p>
+
+<p>'Don't ask! don't ask!'</p>
+
+<p>He seized her roughly by the wrist to compel
+her to tell the truth.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me! I am in my full senses! Why is
+there so much I can't remember?'</p>
+
+<p>She saw something wild and threatening in his
+eyes. She knew now that she would be obliged
+to tell him. But she felt as if it were impossible
+to tell a man that he had been mad. It was much
+more difficult than she had thought. It was impossible&mdash;impossible!</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me!' he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>But she could hear from his voice that he would
+not hear it. He was almost ready to kill her if
+she told him. Then she summoned up all her
+love, and looked straight into Gunnar Hede's
+eyes, and said:</p>
+
+<p>'You have not been quite right.'</p>
+
+<p>'Not for a long time?'</p>
+
+<p>'I don't quite know&mdash;not for three or four
+years.'</p>
+
+<p>'Have I been out of my mind?'</p>
+
+<p>'No, no! You have bought and sold and gone
+to the fairs.'</p>
+
+<p>'In what way have I been mad?'</p>
+
+<p>'You were frightened.'</p>
+
+<p>'Of whom was I frightened?'</p>
+
+<p>'Of animals.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Of goats, perhaps?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, mostly of goats.'</p>
+
+<p>He had stood clutching her by the wrist the
+whole time. He now flung her hand away from
+him&mdash;simply flung it. He turned away from Ingrid
+in a rage, as if she had maliciously told him
+an infamous lie.</p>
+
+<p>But this feeling gave way for something else
+which excited him still more. He saw before his
+eyes, as distinctly as if it had been a picture, a tall
+Dalar man, weighed down by a huge pack. He
+was going into a peasant's house, but a wretched
+little dog came rushing at him. He stopped and
+curtsied and curtsied, and did not dare to go in
+until a man came out of the house, laughing, and
+drove the dog away.</p>
+
+<p>When he saw this he again felt that terrible
+fear. In this anguish the vision disappeared, but
+then he heard voices. They shouted and shrieked
+around him. They laughed. Derision was showered
+upon him. Worst and loudest were the
+shrill voices of children. One word, one name
+came over and over again: it was shouted,
+shrieked, whispered, wheezed into his ear&mdash;'The
+Goat! the Goat!' And that all meant him, Gunnar
+Hede. All that he had lived in. He felt in
+full consciousness the same unspeakable fear he
+had suffered whilst out of his mind. But now it
+was not fear for anything outside himself&mdash;now
+he was afraid of himself.</p>
+
+<p>'It was I! it was I!' he said, wringing his
+hands. The next moment he was kneeling
+against a low seat. He laid his head down and
+cried, cried: 'It was I!' He moaned and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+sobbed. 'It was I!' How could he have courage
+to bear this thought&mdash;a madman, scorned
+and laughed at by all? 'Ah! let me go mad
+again!' he said, hitting the seat with his fist.
+'This is more than a human being can bear.'</p>
+
+<p>He held his breath a moment. The darkness
+came towards him as the saviour he invoked. It
+came gliding towards him like a mist. A smile
+passed over his lips. He could feel the muscles
+of his face relax, feel that he again had the look
+of a madman. But that was better. The other
+he could not bear. To be pointed at, jeered at,
+scorned, mad! No, it was better to be so again
+and not to know it. Why should he come back
+to life? Everyone must loathe him. The first
+light, fleeting clouds of the great darkness began
+to enwrap him.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid stood there, seeing and hearing all his
+anguish, not knowing but that all would soon be
+lost again. She saw clearly that madness was
+again about to seize him. She was so frightened,
+so frightened, all her courage had gone. But before
+he again lost his senses, and became so
+scared that he allowed no one to come near him,
+she would at least take leave of him and of all
+her happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede felt that Ingrid came and knelt
+down beside him, laid her arm round his neck,
+put her cheek to his, and kissed him. She did not
+think herself too good to come near him, the
+madman, did not think herself too good to kiss
+him.</p>
+
+<p>There was a faint hissing in the darkness. The
+mist lifted, and it was as if serpents had raised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+their heads against him, and now wheezed with
+anger that they could not reach to sting him.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not be so unhappy,' Ingrid said. 'Do not
+be so unhappy. No one thinks of the past, if you
+will only get well.'</p>
+
+<p>'I want to be mad again,' he said. 'I cannot
+bear it. I cannot bear to think how I have been.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, you can,' said Ingrid.</p>
+
+<p>'No; that no one can forget,' he moaned. 'I
+was so dreadful! No one can love me.'</p>
+
+<p>'I love you,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>'You kissed me in order that I should not go
+out of my mind again. You pity me.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will kiss you again,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>'You say that now because you think I am in
+need of hearing it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Are you in need of hearing that someone loves
+you?'</p>
+
+<p>'If I am&mdash;if I am? Ah, child,' he said, and tore
+himself away from her, 'how can I possibly bear
+it, when I know that everyone who sees me
+thinks: "That fellow has been mad; he has gone
+about curtsying for dogs and cats."'</p>
+
+<p>Then he began again. He lay crying with his
+face in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>'It is better to go out of one's mind again. I
+can hear them shouting after me, and I see myself,
+and the anguish, the anguish, the anguish&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>But then Ingrid's patience came to an end.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, that is right,' she cried; 'go out of your
+mind again. I call that manly to go mad in order
+to escape a little anguish.'</p>
+
+<p>She sat biting her lips, struggling with her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+tears, and as she could not get the words out
+quickly enough, she seized him by the shoulder
+and shook him. She was enraged and quite beside
+herself with anger because he would again
+escape her, because he did not struggle and
+fight.</p>
+
+<p>'What do you care about me? What do you
+care about your mother? You go mad, and then
+you will have peace.' She shook him again by
+the arm. 'To be saved from anguish, you say,
+but you don't care about one who has been waiting
+for you all her life. If you had any thought
+for anyone but yourself, you would fight against
+this and get well; but you have no thought for
+others. You can come so touchingly in visions
+and dreams and beg for help, but in reality you
+will not have any help. You imagine that your
+sufferings are greater than anyone else's, but
+there are others who have suffered more than
+you.'</p>
+
+<p>At last Gunnar Hede raised his eyes, and
+looked her straight in the face. She was anything
+but beautiful at this moment. Tears were
+streaming down her cheeks, and her lips trembled,
+whilst she tried to get out the words between her
+sobs. But in his eyes her emotion only made her
+more beautiful. A wonderful peace came over
+him, and a great and humble thankfulness.
+Something great and wonderful had come to him
+in his deepest humiliation. It must be a great
+love&mdash;a great love.</p>
+
+<p>He had sat bemoaning his wretchedness, and
+Love came and knocked at his door. He would
+not merely be tolerated when he came back to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+life; people would not only with difficulty refrain
+from laughing at him.</p>
+
+<p>There was one who loved him and longed for
+him. She spoke hardly to him, but he heard love
+trembling in every single word. He felt as if she
+were offering him thrones and kingdoms. She
+told him that whilst he had been out of his mind
+he had saved her life. He had awakened her from
+the dead, had helped her, protected her. But this
+was not enough for her; she would possess him
+altogether.</p>
+
+<p>When she kissed him he had felt a life-giving
+balm enter his sick soul, but he had hardly dared
+to think that it was love that made her. But he
+could not doubt her anger and her tears. He
+was beloved&mdash;he, poor wretched creature! he
+who had been held in derision by everybody! and
+before the great and humble bliss which now
+filled Gunnar Hede vanished the last darkness. It
+was drawn aside like a heavy curtain, and he saw
+plainly before him the region of terror through
+which he had wandered. But there, too, he had
+met Ingrid; there he had lifted her from the
+grave; there he had played for her at the hut in
+the forest; there she had striven to heal him.</p>
+
+<p>But only the memory of her came back: the
+feelings with which she had formerly inspired him
+now awoke. Love filled his whole being; he felt
+the same burning longing that he had felt in the
+churchyard at Raglanda when she was taken from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>In that region of terror, in that great desert,
+there had at any rate grown one flower that had
+comforted him with fragrance and beauty, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+now he felt that love would dwell with him forever.
+The wild flower of the desert had been
+transplanted into the garden of life, and had taken
+root and grown and thriven, and when he felt this
+he knew he was saved; he knew that the darkness
+had found its master.</p>
+
+<p>Ingrid was silent. She was tired, as one is tired
+after hard work; but she was also content, for
+she felt she had carried out her work in the best
+possible manner. She knew she had conquered.</p>
+
+<p>At last Gunnar Hede broke the silence.</p>
+
+<p>'I promise you that I will not give in,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'Thank you,' Ingrid answered.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing more was said.</p>
+
+<p>Gunnar Hede thought he would never be able
+to tell her how much he loved her. It could never
+be told in words, only shown every day and every
+hour of his life.</p>
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_A" id="Footnote_A" href="#FNanchor_A"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> The peasants in the Dalar district used formerly to address
+everybody by the pronoun <em><span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">du</span></em> (thou), even when speaking to
+the King; this custom is now, however, not so general.&mdash;I.B.</p></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Queens at Kungah&auml;lla">II. <a name="Queens_at_Kungahalla" id="Queens_at_Kungahalla"><span class="dec_italic">Queens at</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">II</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">Queens at</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">Queens at</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="Site" id="Site"><span class="dec_italic">On the</span> <span class="smcap">Site</span> <span class="dec_italic">of the Great</span> <span class="smcap">Kungah&auml;lla</span></a></h3>
+
+<p>Should a stranger who had heard about
+the old city of Kungah&auml;lla ever visit the site
+on the northern river where it once lay, he
+would assuredly be much surprised. He would
+ask himself whether churches and fortifications
+could melt away like snow, or if the earth had
+opened and swallowed them up. He stands on
+a spot where formerly there was a mighty city,
+and he cannot find a street or a landing-stage.
+He sees neither ruins nor traces of devastating
+fires; he only sees a country seat, surrounded by
+green trees and red outbuildings. He sees nothing
+but broad meadows and fields, where the
+plough does its work year after year without being
+hindered either by brick foundations or old
+pavements.</p>
+
+<p>He would probably first of all go down to the
+river. He would not expect to see anything of
+the great ships that went to the Baltic ports or to
+distant Spain, but he would in all likelihood think
+that he might find traces of the old ship-yards, of
+the large boat-houses and landing-stages. He
+presumes that he will find some of the old kilns
+where they used to refine salt; he will see the
+worn-out pavement on the main street that led to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+the harbour. He will inquire about the German
+pier and the Swedish pier; he would like to see
+the Weeping Bridge where the women of Kungah&auml;lla
+took leave of their husbands and sons when
+they went to distant lands, but when he comes
+down to the river's edge he sees nothing but a
+forest of waving reeds. He sees a road full of
+holes leading down to the ferry; he sees a couple
+of common barges and a little flat-bottomed ferryboat
+that is taking a peasant cart over to Hisingen,
+but no big ships come gliding up the river.
+He does not even see any dark hulls lying and
+rotting at the bottom of the river.</p>
+
+<p>As he does not find anything remarkable down
+at the harbour, he will probably begin to look for
+the celebrated Convent Hill. He expects to see
+traces of the palisading and ramparts which in
+olden days surrounded it. He is hoping to see
+the ruins of the high walls and the long cloisters.
+He says to himself that anyhow there must be
+ruins of that magnificent church where the cross
+was kept&mdash;that miracle-working cross which had
+been brought from Jerusalem. He thinks of the
+number of monuments covering the holy hills
+which rise over other ancient cities, and his heart
+begins to beat with glad expectation. But when
+he comes to the old Convent Hill which rises
+above the fields, he finds nothing but clusters of
+murmuring trees; he finds neither walls, nor towers,
+nor gables perforated with pointed arched
+windows. Garden seats and benches he will find
+under the shadow of the trees, but no cloisters
+decorated with pillars, no hewn gravestones.</p>
+
+<p>Well, if he has not found anything here, he will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+in any case try to find the old King's Hall. He
+thinks about the large halls from which Kungah&auml;lla
+is supposed to have derived its name. It
+might be that there was something left of the
+timber&mdash;a yard thick&mdash;that formed the walls, or
+of the deep cellars under the great hall where the
+Norwegian kings celebrated their banquets. He
+thinks of the smooth green courtyard of the
+King's Hall, where the kings used to ride their
+silver-shod chargers, and where the queens used
+to milk the golden-horned cows. He thinks of
+the lofty ladies' bower; of the brewing-room, with
+its large boilers; of the huge kitchen, where half
+an ox at a time was placed in the pot, and where a
+whole hog was roasted on the spit. He thinks of
+the serfs' house, of the falcon's cages, of the great
+pantries&mdash;house by house all round the courtyard,
+moss-grown with age, decorated with
+dragons' heads. Of such a number of buildings
+there must be some traces left, he thinks.</p>
+
+<p>But should he then inquire for the old King's
+Hall, he will be taken to a modern country-house,
+with glass veranda and conservatories. The
+King's seat has vanished, and with it all the drinking-horns,
+inlaid with silver, and the shields, covered
+with skin. One cannot even show him the
+well-kept courtyard, with its short, close grass,
+and with narrow paths of black earth. He sees
+strawberry-beds and hedges of rose-trees; he
+sees happy children and young girls dancing under
+apple and pear trees. But he does not see
+strong men wrestling, or knights playing at ball.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps he asks about the great oak on the
+Market Place, beneath which the Kings sat in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+judgment, and where the twelve stones of judgment
+were set up. Or about the long street,
+which was said to be seven miles long! Or about
+the rich merchants' houses, separated by dark
+lanes, each having its own landing-stage and
+boathouse down by the river. Or about the
+Marie Church in the Market Place, where the
+seamen brought their offerings of small, full-rigged
+ships, and the sorrowful, small silver
+hearts.</p>
+
+<p>But there is nothing left to show him of all
+these things. Cows and sheep graze where the
+long street used to be. Rye and barley grow on
+the Market Place, and stables and barns stand
+where people used to flock round the tempting
+market-stalls.</p>
+
+<p>How can he help feeling disappointed? Is
+there not a single thing to be found, he says, not
+a single relic left? And he thinks perhaps that
+they have been deceiving him. The great Kungah&auml;lla
+can never have stood here, he says. It
+must have stood in some other place.</p>
+
+<p>Then they take him down to the riverside, and
+show him a roughly-hewn stone block, and they
+scrape away the silver-gray lichen, so that he can
+see there are some figures hewn in the stone. He
+will not be able to understand what they represent;
+they will be as incomprehensible to him as
+the spots in the moon. But they will assure him
+that they represent a ship and an elk, and that
+they were cut in the stone in the olden days
+to commemorate the foundation of the city.</p>
+
+<p>And should he still not be able to understand,
+they will tell him what is the meaning of the inscription
+on the stone.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="Forest" id="Forest"><span class="dec_italic">The Forest</span> <span class="smcap">Queen</span></a></h3>
+
+<p>Marcus Antonius Poppius was a Roman
+merchant of high standing. He traded with distant
+lands; and from the harbour at Ostia he
+sent well-equipped triremas to Spain, to Britain,
+and even to the north coast of Germany. Fortune
+favoured him, and he amassed immense
+riches, which he hoped to leave as an inheritance
+to his only son. Unfortunately, this only son
+had not inherited his father's ability. This happens,
+unfortunately, all the world over. A rich
+man's only son. Need one say more? It is,
+and always will be, the same story.</p>
+
+<p>One would almost think that the gods give rich
+men these incorrigible idlers, these dull, pale, languid
+fools of sons, to show man what unutterable
+folly it is to amass riches. When will the eyes of
+mankind be opened? When will men listen to
+the warning voice of the gods?</p>
+
+<p>Young Silvius Antonius Poppius, at the age of
+twenty, had already tried all the pleasures of life.
+He was also fond of letting people see that he was
+tired of them; but in spite of that, one did not notice
+any diminution in the eagerness with which
+he sought them. On the contrary, he was quite
+in despair when a singularly persistent ill-luck began
+to pursue him, and to interfere with all his
+pleasures. His Numidian horses fell lame the
+day before the great chariot race of the year; his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+illicit love affairs were found out; his cleverest
+cook died from malaria. This was more than
+enough to crush a man whose strength had not
+been hardened by exertion and toil. Young
+Poppius felt so unhappy that he made up his mind
+to take his own life. He seemed to think that this
+was the only way in which he could cheat the God
+of Misfortune who pursued him and made his life
+a burden.</p>
+
+<p>One can understand that an unhappy creature
+commits suicide in order to escape the persecution
+of man; but only a fool like Silvius Antonius
+could think of adopting such means to flee from
+the gods. One recalls involuntarily the story of
+the man who, to escape from the lion, sprang right
+into its open jaws.</p>
+
+<p>Young Silvius was much too effeminate to
+choose a bloody death. Neither had he any inclination
+to die from a painful poison. After careful
+consideration, he resolved to die the gentle
+death of the waves.</p>
+
+<p>But when he went down to the Tiber to drown
+himself he could not make up his mind to give his
+body to the dirty, sluggish water of the river.
+For a long time he stood undecided, staring into
+the stream. Then he was seized by the magic
+charm which lies dreamily over a river. He felt
+that great, holy longing which fills these never-resting
+wanderers of nature; he would see the sea.</p>
+
+<p>'I will die in the clear blue sea, through which
+the sun's rays penetrate right to the bottom,' said
+Silvius Antonius. 'My body shall rest upon a
+couch of pink coral. The foamy waves which I
+set in motion when I sink into the deep shall be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+snow-white and fresh; they shall not be like the
+sooty froth which lies quivering at the river-side.'</p>
+
+<p>He immediately hurried home, had his horses
+harnessed and drove to Ostia. He knew that one
+of his father's ships was lying in the harbour
+ready to sail. Young Poppius drove his horses
+at a furious pace, and he succeeded in getting on
+board just as the anchor was being weighed. Of
+course he did not think it necessary to take any
+baggage with him. He did not even trouble to
+ask the skipper for what place the craft was
+bound. To the sea they were going, in any case&mdash;that
+was enough for him.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was it very long before the young suicide
+reached the goal of his desire. The trirema
+passed the mouth of the Tiber, and the Mediterranean
+lay before Silvius Antonius, its sparkling
+waves bathed in sun. Its beauty made Silvius
+Antonius believe in the poet's assertion that the
+swelling ocean is but a thin veil which covers the
+most beautiful world. He felt bound to believe
+that he who boldly makes his way through this
+cover will immediately reach the sea-god's palace
+of pearls. The young man congratulated himself
+that he had chosen this manner of death. And
+one could scarcely call it that; it was impossible
+to believe that this beautiful water could kill. It
+was only the shortest road to a land where pleasure
+is not a delusion, leaving nothing but distaste
+and loathing. He could only with difficulty suppress
+his eagerness. But the whole deck was
+full of sailors. Even Silvius could understand
+that if he now sprang into the sea the consequence
+would simply be that one of his father's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+sailors would quickly spring overboard and fish
+him out.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the sails were set and the oarsmen
+were well in swing, the skipper came up to him
+and saluted him with the greatest politeness.</p>
+
+<p>'You intend, then, to go with me to Germany,
+my Silvius?' he said. 'You do me great honour.'</p>
+
+<p>Young Poppius suddenly remembered that
+this man used never to return from a voyage without
+bringing him some curious thing or other
+from the barbarous countries he had visited.
+Sometimes it was a couple of pieces of wood with
+which the savages made fire; sometimes it was
+the black horn of an ox, which they used as a
+drinking-vessel; sometimes a necklace of bear's
+teeth, which had been a great chief's mark of distinction.</p>
+
+<p>The good man beamed with joy at having his
+master's son on board his ship. He saw in it a
+new proof of the wisdom of old Poppius, in sending
+his son to distant lands, instead of letting him
+waste more time amongst the effeminate young
+Roman idlers.</p>
+
+<p>Young Poppius did not wish to undeceive him.
+He was afraid that if he disclosed his intention
+the skipper would at once turn back with him.</p>
+
+<p>'Verily, Galenus,' he said, 'I would gladly accompany
+you on this voyage, but I fear I must
+ask you to put me ashore at Baj&aelig;. I made up my
+mind too late. I have neither clothes nor money.'</p>
+
+<p>But Galenus assured him that that need was
+soon remedied. Was he not upon his father's
+well-appointed vessel? He should not want for
+anything&mdash;neither warm fur tunic when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+weather was cold, or light Syrian clothing of the
+kind that seamen wear when they cruise in fair
+weather in the friendly seas between the islands.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Three months after their departure from Ostia,
+Galenus's trirema rowed in amongst a cluster of
+rocky islands. Neither the skipper nor any of his
+crew were quite clear as to where they really
+were, but they were glad to take shelter for a
+time from the storms that raged on the open sea.</p>
+
+<p>One could almost think that Silvius Antonius
+was right in his belief that some deity persecuted
+him. No one on the ship had ever before experienced
+such a voyage. The luckless sailors
+said to each other that they had not had fair
+weather for two days since they left Ostia. The
+one storm had followed upon the other. They
+had undergone the most terrible sufferings. They
+had suffered hunger and thirst, whilst they, day
+and night, exhausted and almost fainting from
+want of sleep, had had to manage sails and oars.
+The fact of the seamen being unable to trade had
+added to their despondency. How could they
+approach the coast and display their wares on the
+shore to effect an exchange in such weather? On
+the contrary, every time they saw the coast appear
+through the obstinate heavy mist that surrounded
+them, they had been compelled to put
+out to sea again for fear of the foam-decked rocks.
+One night, when they struck on a rock, they had
+been obliged to throw the half of their cargo into
+the sea. And as for the other half, they dared not
+think about it, as they feared it was completely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+spoiled by the breakers which had rolled over the
+ship.</p>
+
+<p>Certain it was that Silvius Antonius had proved
+himself not to be lucky at sea either. Silvius
+Antonius was still living; he had not drowned
+himself. It is difficult to say why he prolonged an
+existence which could not be of any more pleasure
+to him now than when he first made up his
+mind to cut it short. Perhaps he had hoped that
+the sea would have taken possession of him without
+he himself doing anything to bring it about.
+Perhaps his love for the sea had passed away during
+its bursts of anger; perhaps he had resolved
+to die in the opal-green perfumed water of his
+bath.</p>
+
+<p>But had Galenus and his men known why the
+young man had come on board, they would assuredly
+have bitterly complained that he had not
+carried out his intention, for they were all convinced
+that it was his presence which had called
+forth their misfortunes. Many a dark night Galenus
+had feared that the sailors would throw him
+into the sea. More than one of them related that
+in the terrible stormy nights he had seen dark
+hands stretching out of the water, grasping after
+the ship. And they did not think it was necessary
+to cast lots to find out who it was that these hands
+wanted to draw down into the deep. Both the
+skipper and the crew did Silvius Antonius the
+special honour to think that it was for his sake
+these storms rent the air and scourged the sea.</p>
+
+<p>If Silvius during this time had behaved like a
+man, if he had taken his share of their work and
+anxiety, then perhaps some of his companions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+might have had pity upon him as a being who had
+brought upon himself the wrath of the gods. But
+the young man had not understood how to win
+their sympathy. He had only thought of seeking
+shelter for himself from the wind, and of sending
+them to fetch furs and rugs from the stores for his
+protection from the cold.</p>
+
+<p>But for the moment all complaints over his
+presence had ceased. As soon as the storm had
+succeeded in driving the trirema into the quiet
+waters between the islands, its rage was spent.
+It behaved like a sheep-dog that becomes silent
+and keeps quiet as soon as it sees the sheep on the
+right way to the fold. The heavy clouds disappeared
+from the sky; the sun shone. For the first
+time during the voyage the sailors felt the joys
+of summer spreading over Nature.</p>
+
+<p>Upon these storm-beaten men the sunshine and
+the warmth had almost an intoxicating effect.
+Instead of longing for rest and sleep, they became
+as merry as happy children in the morning.
+They expected they would find a large continent
+behind all these rocks and boulders. They hoped
+to find people, and&mdash;who could tell?&mdash;on this
+foreign coast, which had probably never before
+been visited by a Roman ship, their wares would
+no doubt find a ready sale. In that case they
+might after all do some good business, and bring
+back with them skins of bear and elk, and large
+quantities of white wax and golden amber.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the trirema slowly made its way between
+the rocks, which grew higher and higher
+and richer with verdure and trees, the crew made
+haste to decorate it so that it could attract the at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>tention
+of the barbarians. The ship, which, even
+without any decoration, was a beautiful specimen
+of human handiwork, soon rivalled in splendour
+the most gorgeous bird. Recently tossed about
+by storms and ravaged by tempests, it now bore
+on its topmast a golden sceptre and sails striped
+with purple. In the bows a resplendent figure of
+Neptune was raised, and in the stern a tent of
+many-coloured silken carpets. And do not think
+the sailors neglected to hang the sides of the ship
+with rugs, the fringes of which trailed in the
+water, or to wind the long oars of the ship with
+golden ribbons. Neither did the crew of the ship
+wear the clothes they had worn during the
+voyage, and which the sea and the storm had
+done their best to destroy. They arrayed themselves
+in white garments, wound purple scarves
+round their waists, and placed glittering bands in
+their hair.</p>
+
+<p>Even Silvius Antonius roused himself from his
+apathy. It was as if he was glad of having at last
+found something to do which he thoroughly understood.
+He was shaved, had his hair trimmed,
+and his whole person rubbed over with fragrant
+scents. Then he put on a flowing robe, hung a
+mantle over his shoulders, and chose from the
+large casket of jewels which Galenus opened for
+him rings and bracelets, necklaces, and a golden
+belt. When he was ready he flung aside the purple
+curtains of the silken tent, and laid himself on
+a couch in the opening of the tent in order to be
+seen by the people on the shore.</p>
+
+<p>During these preparations the sea became
+narrower and narrower, and the sailors dis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>covered
+that they were entering the mouth of
+a river. The water was fresh, and there was
+land on both sides. The trirema glided slowly
+onwards up the sparkling river. The weather
+was brilliant, and the whole of nature was
+gloriously peaceful. And how the magnificent
+merchantman enlivened the great solitude!</p>
+
+<p>On both sides of the river primeval forests,
+high and thick, met their view. Pine-trees grew
+right to the water's edge. The river in its eternal
+course had washed away the earth from the
+roots, and the hearts of the seamen were moved
+with solemn awe at the sight, not only of these
+venerable trees, but even more by that of the
+naked roots, which resembled the mighty limbs
+of a giant. 'Here,' they thought, 'man will
+never succeed in planting corn; here the ground
+will never be cleared for the building of a city,
+or even a farmstead. For miles round the earth
+is woven through with this network of roots,
+hard as steel. This alone is sufficient to make
+the dominion of the forest everlasting and unchangeable.'</p>
+
+<p>Along the river the trees grew so close, and
+their branches were so entangled, that they
+formed firm, impenetrable walls. These walls of
+prickly firs were so strong and high that no fortified
+city need wish for stronger defences. But
+here and there there was, all the same, an opening
+in this wall of firs. It was the paths the wild
+beasts had made on their way to the river to
+drink. Through these openings the strangers
+could obtain a glimpse of the interior of the forest.
+They had never seen anything like it. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+sunless twilight there grew trees with trunks
+of greater circumference than the gate-towers on
+the walls of Rome. There was a multitude of
+trees, fighting with each other for light and air.
+Trees strove and struggled, trees were crippled
+and weighed down by other trees. Trees took
+root in the branches of other trees. Trees strove
+and fought as if they had been human beings.</p>
+
+<p>But if man or beast moved in this world of
+trees they must have other modes of making
+their way than those which the Romans knew,
+for from the ground right up to the top of the
+forest was a network of stiff bare branches.
+From these branches fluttered long tangles of
+gray lichen, transforming the trees into weird
+beings with hair and beard. And beneath them
+the ground was covered with rotten and rotting
+trunks, and one's feet would have sunk into the
+decayed wood as into melting snow.</p>
+
+<p>The forest sent forth a fragrance which had
+a drowsy effect upon the men on board the
+ship. It was the strong odour of resin and wild
+honey that blended with the sickly smell from
+the decayed wood, and from innumerable gigantic
+red and yellow mushrooms.</p>
+
+<p>There was no doubt something awe-inspiring
+in all this, but it was also elevating to see nature
+in all its power before man had yet interfered
+with its dominion. It was not long before one
+of the sailors began to sing a hymn to the God
+of the Forest, and involuntarily the whole crew
+joined in. They had quite given up all thought
+of meeting human beings in this forest-world.
+Their hearts were filled with pious thoughts;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+they thought of the forest god and his nymphs.
+They said to themselves that when Pan was
+driven from the woods of Hellas he must have
+taken refuge here in the far north. With pious
+songs they entered his kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Every time there was a pause in the song
+they heard a gentle music from the forest. The
+tops of the fir-trees, vibrating in the noonday
+heat, sang and played. The sailors often discontinued
+their song in order to listen, if Pan
+was not playing upon his flute.</p>
+
+<p>The oarsmen rowed slower and slower. The
+sailors gazed searchingly into the golden-green
+and black-violet water flowing under the fir-trees.
+They peered between the tall reeds which
+quivered and rustled in the wash of the ship.
+They were in such a state of expectation that
+they started at the sight of the white water-lilies
+that shone in the dark water between the
+reeds.</p>
+
+<p>And again they sang the song, 'Pan, thou
+ruler of the forest!' They had given up all
+thoughts of trading. They felt that they stood
+at the entrance to the dwelling of the gods.
+All earthly cares had left them. Then, all of
+a sudden, at the outlet of one of the tracks, there
+stood an elk, a royal deer with broad forehead
+and a forest of antlers on its horns.</p>
+
+<p>There was a breathless silence on the trirema.
+They stemmed the oars to slacken speed. Silvius
+Antonius arose from his purple couch.</p>
+
+<p>All eyes were fixed upon the elk. They
+thought they could discern that it carried something
+on its back, but the darkness of the forest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+and the drooping branches made it impossible
+to see distinctly.</p>
+
+<p>The huge animal stood for a long time and
+scented the air, with its muzzle turned towards
+the trirema. At last it seemed to understand
+that there was no danger. It made a step towards
+the water. Behind the broad horns one
+could now discern more distinctly something
+light and white. They wondered if the elk carried
+on its back a harvest of wild roses.</p>
+
+<p>The crew gently plied their oars. The trirema
+drew nearer to the animal, which gradually
+moved towards the edge of the reeds.</p>
+
+<p>The elk strode slowly into the water, put down
+its feet carefully, so as not to be caught by the
+roots at the bottom. Behind the horns one
+could now distinctly see the face of a maiden,
+surrounded by fair hair. The elk carried on its
+back one of those nymphs whom they had been
+expectantly awaiting, and whom they felt sure
+would be found in this primeval world.</p>
+
+<p>A holy enthusiasm filled the men on the
+trirema. One of them, who hailed from Sicily,
+remembered a song which he had heard in his
+youth, when he played on the flowery plains
+around Syracuse. He began to sing softly:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou who in sheltered wood wanders, white like the moon.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And when the weather-beaten men understood
+the words, they tried to subdue the storm-like
+roar in their voices in order to sing:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name.'<br /></span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span></div></div>
+
+<p>They steered the ship nearer and nearer the
+reeds. They did not heed that it had already
+once or twice touched the bottom.</p>
+
+<p>But the young forest maiden sat and played
+hide-and-seek between the horns. One moment
+she hid herself, the next she peeped out. She
+did not stop the elk; she drove it further into
+the river.</p>
+
+<p>When the elk had gone some little distance,
+she stroked it to make it stop. Then she bent
+down and gathered two or three water-lilies.
+The men on the ship looked a little foolishly at
+each other. The nymph had, then, come solely
+for the purpose of plucking the white water-lilies
+that rocked on the waters of the river. She had
+not come for the sake of the Roman seamen.</p>
+
+<p>Then Silvius Antonius drew a ring from off
+his finger, sent up a shout that made the nymph
+look up, and threw her the ring. She stretched
+out her hand and caught it. Her eyes sparkled.
+She stretched out her hands for more. Silvius
+Antonius again threw a ring.</p>
+
+<p>Then she flung the water-lilies back into the
+river and drove the elk further into the water.
+Now and again she stopped, but then a ring
+came flying from Silvius Antonius, and enticed
+her further.</p>
+
+<p>All at once she overcame her hesitation. The
+colour rose in her cheeks. She came nearer to
+the ship without it being necessary to tempt her.
+The water was already up to the shoulders of
+the elk. She came right under the side of the
+vessel.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors hung over the gunwales to help<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+the beautiful nymph, should she wish to go on
+board the trirema.</p>
+
+<p>But she saw only Silvius Antonius, as he stood
+there, decked with pearls and rings, and fair as
+the sunrise. And when the young Roman saw
+that the eyes of the nymph were fastened upon
+him, he leant over even further than the others.
+They cried to him that he should take care, lest
+he should lose his balance and fall into the sea.
+But this warning came too late. It is not known
+whether the nymph, with a quick movement,
+drew Silvius Antonius to her, or how it really
+happened, but before anyone thought of grasping
+him, he was overboard.</p>
+
+<p>All the same, there was no danger of Silvius
+Antonius drowning. The nymph stretched forth
+her lovely arms and caught him in them. He
+hardly touched the surface of the water. At the
+same moment her steed turned, rushed through
+the water, and disappeared in the forest. And
+loudly rang the laugh of the wild rider as she
+carried off Silvius Antonius.</p>
+
+<p>Galenus and his men stood for a moment
+horror-stricken. Then some of the men involuntarily
+threw off their clothes to swim to the
+shore; but Galenus stopped them.</p>
+
+<p>'Without doubt this is the will of the gods,'
+he said. 'Now we see the reason why they have
+brought Silvius Antonius Poppius through a
+thousand storms to this unknown land. Let us
+be glad that we have been an instrument in their
+hands; and let us not seek to hinder their
+will.'</p>
+
+<p>The seamen obediently took their oars and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+rowed down the river, softly singing to their
+even stroke the song of Arethusa's flight.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>When one has finished this story, surely the
+stranger must be able to understand the inscription
+on the old stone. He must be able to see
+both the elk with its many-antlered horns, and
+the trirema with its long oars. One does not
+expect that he shall be able to see Silvius Antonius
+Poppius and the beautiful queen of the
+primeval forest, for in order to see them he
+must have the eyes of the relaters of fairy-tales
+of bygone days. He will understand that the
+inscription hales from the young Roman himself,
+and that this also applies to the whole of the
+old story. Silvius Antonius has handed it down
+to his descendants word for word. He knew
+that it would gladden their hearts to know that
+they sprang from the world-famed Romans.</p>
+
+<p>But the stranger, of course, need not believe
+that any of Pan's nymphs have wandered here
+by the river's side. He understands quite well
+that a tribe of wild men have wandered about
+in the primeval forest, and that the rider of the
+elk was the daughter of the King who ruled over
+these people; and that the maiden who carried
+off Silvius Antonius would only rob him of his
+jewels, and that she did not at all think of Silvius
+Antonius himself, scarcely knew, perhaps, that
+he was a human being like herself. And the
+stranger can also understand that the name of
+Silvius Antonius would have been forgotten long
+ago in this country had he remained the fool he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+was. He will hear how misfortune and want
+roused the young Roman, so that from being
+the despised slave of the wild men he became
+their King. It was he who attacked the forest
+with fire and steel. He erected the first firmly-timbered
+house. He built vessels and planted
+corn. He laid the foundation of the power and
+glory of great Kungah&auml;lla.</p>
+
+<p>And when the stranger hears this, he looks
+around the country with a more contented
+glance than before. For even if the site of the
+city has been turned into fields and meadows,
+and even if the river no longer boasts of busy
+craft, still, this is the ground that has enabled
+him to breathe the air of the land of dreams, and
+shown him visions of bygone days.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="Sigrid" id="Sigrid"><span class="smcap">Sigrid Storr&auml;de</span></a></h3>
+
+<p>Once upon a time there was an exceedingly
+beautiful spring. It was the very spring that the
+Swedish Queen Sigrid Storr&auml;de summoned the
+Norwegian King Olaf Trygveson to meet her at
+Kungah&auml;lla in order to settle about their marriage.</p>
+
+<p>It was strange that King Olaf would marry
+Queen Sigrid; for although she was fair and
+well-gifted, she was a wicked heathen, whilst
+King Olaf was a Christian, who thought of
+nothing but building churches and compelling
+the people to be baptized. But maybe the King
+thought that God the Almighty would convert
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But it was even more strange that when Storr&auml;de
+had announced to King Olaf's messenger
+that she would set out for Kungah&auml;lla as soon
+as the sea was no longer ice-bound, spring should
+come almost immediately. Cold and snow disappeared
+at the time when winter is usually at
+its height. And when Storr&auml;de made known
+that she would begin to equip her ships, the ice
+vanished from the fjords, the meadows became
+green, and although it was yet a long time to
+Lady-day, the cattle could already be put out
+to grass.</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen rowed between the rocks of
+East Gothland into the Baltic, she heard the
+cuckoo's song, although it was so early in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+year that one could scarcely expect to hear the
+lark.</p>
+
+<p>And great joy prevailed everywhere when Storr&auml;de
+proceeded on her way. All the trolls who
+had been obliged to flee from Norway during
+King Olaf's reign because they could not bear
+the sound of the church bells came on the rocks
+when they saw Storr&auml;de sailing past. They
+pulled up young birch-trees by the roots and
+waved them to the Queen, and then they went
+back to their rocky dwellings, where their wives
+were sitting, full of longing and anxiety, and
+said:</p>
+
+<p>'Woman, thou shalt not be cast down any
+longer. Storr&auml;de is now sailing to King Olaf.
+Now we shall soon return to Norway.'</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen sailed past Kullen, the Kulla
+troll came out of his cave, and he made the black
+mountain open, so that she saw the gold and
+silver veins which twisted through it, and it made
+the Queen happy to see his riches.</p>
+
+<p>When Storr&auml;de went past the Holland rivers,
+the Nixie came down from his waterfall, swam
+right out to the mouth of the river, and played
+upon his harp, so that the ship danced upon the
+waves.</p>
+
+<p>When she sailed past the Nidinge rocks, the
+mermen lay there and blew upon their seashell
+horns, and made the water splash in frothy
+pillars. And when the wind was against them,
+the most loathsome trolls came out of the deep
+to help Storr&auml;de's ship over the waves. Some
+lay at the stern and pushed, others took ropes of
+seaweed in their mouth and harnessed themselves
+before the ship like horses.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The wild heathen, whom King Olaf would not
+allow to remain in the country on account of
+their great wickedness, came rowing towards the
+Queen's ship, with sails furled, and with their
+pole-axes raised as if for attack. But when they
+recognised the Queen, they allowed her to pass
+unhurt, and shouted after her:</p>
+
+<p>'We empty a beaker to thy wedding, Storr&auml;de.'</p>
+
+<p>All the heathen who lived along the coast laid
+firewood upon their stone altars, and sacrificed
+both sheep and goats to the old gods, in order
+that they should aid Storr&auml;de in her expedition
+to the Norwegian King.</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen sailed up the northern river,
+a mermaid swam alongside the ship, stretched
+her white arm out of the water, and gave her a
+large clear pearl.</p>
+
+<p>'Wear this, Storr&auml;de,' she said; 'then King
+Olaf will be so bewitched by thy beauty that he
+will never be able to forget thee.'</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen had sailed a short distance
+up the river, she heard such a roar and such a
+rushing noise that she expected to find a waterfall.
+The further she proceeded, the louder grew
+the noise. But when she rowed past the Golden
+Isle, and passed into a broad bay, she saw at
+the riverside the great Kungah&auml;lla.</p>
+
+<p>The town was so large, that as far as she could
+see up the river there was house after house, all
+imposing and well timbered, with many outhouses.
+Narrow lanes between the gray wooden
+walls led down to the river; there were large
+courtyards before the dwelling-houses, well-laid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+pathways went from each house down to its
+boathouse and landing-stage.</p>
+
+<p>Storr&auml;de commanded her men to row quite
+slowly. She herself stood on the poop of the
+ship and looked towards the shore.</p>
+
+<p>'Never before have I seen the like of this,' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>She now understood that the roar she had
+heard was nothing but the noise of the work
+which went on at Kungah&auml;lla in the spring, when
+the ships were being made ready for their long
+cruises. She heard the smiths hammering with
+huge sledge-hammers, the baker's shovel clattered
+in the ovens; beams were hoisted on to
+heavy lighters with much crashing noise; young
+men planed oars and stripped the bark from the
+trees which were to be used for masts.</p>
+
+<p>She saw green courtyards, where handmaidens
+were twining ropes for the seafaring men, and
+where old men sat mending the gray wadmal
+sails. She saw the boat-builders tarring the new
+boats. Enormous nails were driven into strong
+oaken planks. The hulls of the ships were
+hauled out of the boathouses to be tightened;
+old ships were done up with freshly-painted
+dragon-heads; goods were stowed away; people
+took a hurried leave of each other; heavily-filled
+ships' chests were carried on board. Ships that
+were ready to sail left the shore. Storr&auml;de saw
+that the vessels rowing up the river were heavily
+laden with herrings and salt, but those making
+for the open sea were laden high up the masts
+with costly oak timber, hides, and skins.</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen saw all this she laughed with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+joy. She thought that she would willingly marry
+King Olaf in order to rule over such a city.
+Storr&auml;de rowed up to the King's Landing-Stage.
+There King Olaf stood ready to receive her, and
+when she advanced to meet him he thought that
+she was the fairest woman he had ever seen.</p>
+
+<p>They then proceeded to the King's Hall, and
+there was great harmony and friendship between
+them. When they went to table Storr&auml;de
+laughed and talked the whole time the Bishop
+was saying grace, and the King laughed and
+talked also, because he saw that it pleased Storr&auml;de.
+When the meal was finished, and they all
+folded their hands to listen to the Bishop's
+prayer, Storr&auml;de began to tell the King about
+her riches. She continued doing this as long as
+the prayer lasted, and the King listened to Storr&auml;de,
+and not to the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>The King placed Storr&auml;de in the seat of
+honour, whilst he sat at her feet; and Storr&auml;de
+told him how she had caused two minor kings
+to be burnt to death for having had the presumption
+to woo her. The King was glad at
+hearing this, and thought that all minor kings
+who had the audacity to woo a woman like Storr&auml;de
+should share the same fate.</p>
+
+<p>When the bells rang for Evensong, the King
+rose to go to the Marie Church to pray, as was
+his wont. But then Storr&auml;de called for her bard,
+and he sang the lay of Brynhild Budles-dotter,
+who caused Sigurd Fofnersbane to be slain; and
+King Olaf did not go to church, but instead sat
+and looked into Storr&auml;de's radiant eyes, under the
+thick, black, arched eyebrows; and he under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>stood
+that Storr&auml;de was Brynhild, and that she
+would kill him if ever he forsook her. He also
+thought that she was no doubt a woman who
+would be willing to burn on the pile with him.
+And whilst the priests were saying Mass and
+praying in the Marie Church at Kungah&auml;lla,
+King Olaf sat thinking that he would ride to
+Valhalla with Sigrid Storr&auml;de before him on the
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>That night the ferryman who conveyed people
+over the G&ouml;ta River was busier than he had ever
+been before. Time after time he was called to
+the other side, but when he crossed over there
+was never anybody to be seen. But all the same
+he heard steps around him, and the boat was
+so full that it was nearly sinking. He rowed the
+whole night backwards and forwards, and did
+not know what it could all mean. But in the
+morning the whole shore was full of small footprints,
+and in the footprints the ferryman found
+small withered leaves, which on closer examination
+proved to be pure gold, and he understood
+they were the Brownies and Dwarfs who had
+fled from Norway when it became a Christian
+country, and who had now come back again.
+And the giant who lived in the Fortin mountain
+right to the east of Kungah&auml;lla threw one big
+stone after the other at the Marie Church the
+whole night through; and had not the giant
+been so strong that all the stones went too far
+and fell down at Hisingen, on the other side of
+the river, a great disaster would assuredly have
+happened.</p>
+
+<p>Every morning King Olaf was in the habit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+of going to Mass, but the day Storr&auml;de was at
+Kungah&auml;lla he thought he had not the time.
+As soon as he arose, he at once wanted to go
+down to the harbour, where her ship lay, in order
+to ask her if she would drink the wedding-cup
+with him before eventide.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop had caused the bells to be rung
+the whole morning, and when the King left the
+King's Hall, and went across the Market Place,
+the church doors were thrown open, and beautiful
+singing was heard from within. But the King
+went on as if he had not heard anything. The
+Bishop ordered the bells to be stopped, the
+singing ceased, and the candles were extinguished.</p>
+
+<p>It all happened so suddenly that the King
+involuntarily stopped and looked towards the
+church, and it seemed to him that the church
+was more insignificant than he had ever before
+thought. It was smaller than the houses in the
+town; the peat roof hung heavily over its low
+walls without windows; the door was low, with
+a small projecting roof covered with fir-bark.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the King stood thinking, a slender
+young woman came out of the dark church door.
+She wore a red robe and a blue mantle, and
+she bore in her arms a child with fair locks. Her
+dress was poor, and yet it seemed to the King
+that he had never before seen a more noble-looking
+woman. She was tall, dignified, and fair of
+face.</p>
+
+<p>The King saw with emotion that the young
+woman pressed the child close to her, and carried
+it with such care, that one could see it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+the most precious thing she possessed in the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>As the woman stood in the doorway she turned
+her gentle face round and looked back, looked
+into the poor, dark little church with great longing
+in look and mien. When she again turned
+round towards the Market Place there were tears
+in her eyes. But just as she was about to step
+over the threshold into the Market Place her
+courage failed her. She leant against the doorposts
+and looked at the child with a troubled
+glance, as if to say:</p>
+
+<p>'Where in all the wide world shall we find a
+roof over our heads?'</p>
+
+<p>The King stood immovable, and looked at the
+homeless woman. What touched him the most
+was to see the child, who lay in her arms free from
+sorrow, stretch out his hand with a flower towards
+her, as if to win a smile from her. And
+then he saw she tried to drive away the sorrow
+from her face and smile at her son.</p>
+
+<p>'Who can that woman be?' thought the King.
+'It seems to me that I have seen her before.
+She is undoubtedly a high-born woman who is
+in trouble.'</p>
+
+<p>However great a hurry the King was in to
+go to Storr&auml;de, he could not take his eyes away
+from the woman. It seemed to him that he had
+seen these tender eyes and this gentle face before,
+but where, he could not call to mind. The
+woman still stood in the church door, as if she
+could not tear herself away. Then the King
+went up to her and asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Why art thou so sorrowful?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I am turned out of my home,' answered the
+woman, pointing to the little dark church.</p>
+
+<p>The King thought she meant that she had
+taken refuge in the church because she had no
+other place to go to. He again asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Who hath turned thee out?'</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with an unutterably sorrowful
+glance.</p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou not know?' she asked.</p>
+
+<p>But then the King turned away from her. He
+had no time to stand guessing riddles, he
+thought. It appeared as if the woman meant
+that it was he who had turned her out. He did
+not understand what she could mean.</p>
+
+<p>The King went on quickly. He went down to
+the King's Landing-Stage, where Storr&auml;de's
+ship was lying. At the harbour the Queen's
+servants met the King. Their clothes were
+braided with gold, and they wore silver helmets
+on their heads.</p>
+
+<p>Storr&auml;de stood on her ship looking towards
+Kungah&auml;lla, rejoicing in its power and wealth.
+She looked at the city as if she already regarded
+herself as its Queen. But when the King saw
+Storr&auml;de, he thought at once of the gentle
+woman who, poor and sorrowful, had been
+turned out of the church.</p>
+
+<p>'What is this?' he thought. 'It seems to me
+as if she were fairer than Storr&auml;de.'</p>
+
+<p>When Storr&auml;de greeted him with smiles, he
+thought of the tears that sparkled in the eyes of
+the other woman. The face of the strange
+woman was so clear to King Olaf that he could
+not help comparing it, feature for feature, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+Storr&auml;de's. And when he did that all Storr&auml;de's
+beauty vanished. He saw that Storr&auml;de's eyes
+were cruel and her mouth sensual. In each of
+her features he saw a sin. He could still see
+she was beautiful, but he no longer took pleasure
+in her countenance. He began to loathe her
+as if she were a beautiful poisonous snake.</p>
+
+<p>When the Queen saw the King come a victorious
+smile passed over her lips.</p>
+
+<p>'I did not expect thee so early, King Olaf,'
+she said. 'I thought thou wast at Mass.'</p>
+
+<p>The King felt an irresistible inclination to contradict
+Storr&auml;de, and do everything she did not
+want.</p>
+
+<p>'Mass has not yet begun,' he said. 'I have
+come to ask thee to go with me to the house of
+my God.'</p>
+
+<p>When the King said this he saw an angry look
+in Storr&auml;de's eyes, but she continued to smile.</p>
+
+<p>'Rather come to me on my ship,' she said,
+'and I will show thee the presents I have
+brought for thee.'</p>
+
+<p>She took up a sword inlaid with gold, as if to
+tempt him; but the King thought all the
+time that he could see the other woman at her
+side, and it appeared to him that Storr&auml;de stood
+amongst her treasures like a foul dragon.</p>
+
+<p>'Answer me first,' said the King, 'if thou wilt
+go with me to church.'</p>
+
+<p>'What have I to do in thy church?' she asked
+mockingly.</p>
+
+<p>Then she saw that the King's brow darkened,
+and she perceived that he was not of the same
+mind as the day before. She immediately<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+changed her manner, and became gentle and
+submissive.</p>
+
+<p>'Go thou to church as much as thou likest,
+even if I do not go. There shall be no discord
+between us on that account.'</p>
+
+<p>The Queen came down from the ship and went
+up to the King. She held in her hand a sword
+and a mantle trimmed with fur which she would
+give him. But in the same moment the King
+happened to look towards the harbour. At some
+distance he saw the other woman; her head
+was bowed, and she walked with weary steps,
+but she still bore the child in her arms.</p>
+
+<p>'What art thou looking so eagerly after, King
+Olaf?' Storr&auml;de asked.</p>
+
+<p>Then the other woman turned round and
+looked at the King, and as she looked at him
+it appeared to him as if a ring of golden light
+surrounded her head and that of the child, more
+beautiful than the crown of any King or Queen.
+Then she immediately turned round and walked
+again towards the town, and he saw her no more.</p>
+
+<p>'What art thou looking so eagerly after?'
+again asked Storr&auml;de.</p>
+
+<p>But when King Olaf now turned to the Queen
+she appeared to him old and ugly, and full of
+the world's sin and wickedness, and he was terrified
+at the thought that he might have fallen
+into her snares.</p>
+
+<p>He had taken off his glove to give her his
+hand; but he now took the glove and threw it
+in her face instead.</p>
+
+<p>'I will not own thee, foul woman and heathen
+dog that thou art!' he said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Storr&auml;de drew backwards. But she soon
+regained the command over herself, and answered:</p>
+
+<p>'That blow may prove thy destruction, King
+Olaf Trygveson.'</p>
+
+<p>And she was white as H&eacute;l when she turned
+away from him and went on board her ship.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Next night King Olaf had a strange dream.
+What he saw in his dream was not the earth, but
+the bottom of the sea. It was a grayish-green
+field, over which there were many fathoms of
+water. He saw fish swimming after their prey;
+he saw ships gliding past on the surface of the
+water, like dark clouds; and he saw the disc of
+the sun, dull as a pale moon.</p>
+
+<p>Then he saw the woman he had seen at the
+church-door wandering along the bottom of the
+sea. She had the same stooping gait and the
+same worn garments as when he first saw her,
+and her face was still sorrowful. But as she
+wandered along the bottom of the sea the water
+divided before her. He saw that it rose into
+pillars, as if in deep reverence, forming itself into
+arches, so that she walked in the most glorious
+temple.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the King saw that the water which
+surrounded the woman began to change colour.
+The pillars and the arches first became pale pink;
+but they soon assumed a darker colour. The
+whole sea around was also red, as if it had been
+changed into blood.</p>
+
+<p>At the bottom of the sea, where the woman
+walked, the King saw broken swords and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+arrows, and bows and spears in pieces. At first
+there were not many, but the longer she
+walked in the red water the more closely they
+were heaped together.</p>
+
+<p>The King saw with emotion that the woman
+went to one side in order not to tread upon a
+dead man who lay stretched upon the bed of
+green seaweed. The man, who had a deep cut
+in his head, wore a coat of mail, and had a sword
+in his hand. It seemed to the King that the
+woman closed her eyes so as not to see the dead
+man. She moved towards a fixed goal without
+hesitation or doubt. But he who dreamt could
+not turn his eyes away.</p>
+
+<p>He saw the bottom of the sea covered with
+wreckage. He saw heavy anchors, thick ropes
+twined about like snakes, ships with their sides
+riven asunder; golden dragon-heads from the
+bows of ships stared at him with red, threatening
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'I should like to know who has fought a battle
+here and left all this as a prey to destruction,'
+thought the dreamer.</p>
+
+<p>Everywhere he saw dead men. They were
+hanging on the ships' sides, or had sunk into
+the green seaweed. But he did not give himself
+time to look at them, for his eyes were obliged
+to follow the woman, who continued to walk onwards.</p>
+
+<p>At last the King saw her stop at the side of
+a dead man. He was clothed in a red mantle,
+had a bright helmet on his head, a shield on his
+arm, and a naked sword in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>The woman bent over him and whispered to
+him, as if awaking someone sleeping:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf! King Olaf!'</p>
+
+<p>Then he who was dreaming saw that the man
+at the bottom of the sea was himself. He could
+distinctly see that he was the dead man.</p>
+
+<p>As the dead did not move, the woman knelt
+by his side and whispered into his ear:</p>
+
+<p>'Now Storr&auml;de hath sent her fleet against thee
+and avenged herself. Dost thou repent what
+thou hast done, King Olaf?'</p>
+
+<p>And again she asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Now thou sufferest the bitterness of death
+because thou hast chosen me instead of Storr&auml;de.
+Dost thou repent? dost thou repent?'</p>
+
+<p>Then at last the dead opened his eyes, and the
+woman helped him to rise. He leant upon her
+shoulder, and she walked slowly away with him.</p>
+
+<p>Again King Olaf saw her wander and wander,
+through night and day, over sea and land. At
+last it seemed to him that they had gone further
+than the clouds and higher than the stars. Now
+they entered a garden, where the earth shone
+as light and the flowers were clear as dewdrops.</p>
+
+<p>The King saw that when the woman entered
+the garden she raised her head, and her step grew
+lighter. When they had gone a little further into
+the garden her garments began to shine. He
+saw that they became, as of themselves, bordered
+with golden braid, and coloured with the
+hues of the rainbow. He saw also that a halo
+surrounded her head that cast a light over her
+countenance.</p>
+
+<p>But the slain man who leant upon her shoulder
+raised his head, and asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Who art thou?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou not know, King Olaf?' she answered;
+and an infinite majesty and glory
+encompassed her.</p>
+
+<p>But in the dream King Olaf was filled with
+a great joy because he had chosen to serve the
+gentle Queen of Heaven. It was a joy so great
+that he had never before felt the like of it, and it
+was so strong that it awoke him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>When King Olaf awoke his face was bathed
+in tears, and he lay with his hands folded in
+prayer.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="Astrid" id="Astrid"><span class="smcap">Astrid</span></a></h3>
+
+<h4>I</h4>
+
+<p>In the midst of the low buildings forming the
+old Castle of the Kings at Upsala towered the
+Ladies' Bower. It was built on poles, like
+a dovecote. The staircase leading up to it was
+as steep as a ladder, and one entered it by a very
+low door. The walls inside were covered with
+runes, signifying love and longing; the sills of
+the small loopholes were worn by the maidens
+leaning on their elbows and looking down into
+the courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>Old Hjalte, the bard, had been a guest at the
+King's Castle for some time, and he went up
+every day to the Ladies' Bower to see Princess
+Ingegerd, and talk with her about Olaf Haraldsson,
+the King of Norway, and every time Hjalte
+came Ingegerd's bondwoman Astrid sat and listened
+to his words with as much pleasure as the
+Princess. And whilst Hjalte talked, both the
+maidens listened so eagerly that they let their
+hands fall in their laps and their work rest.</p>
+
+<p>Anyone seeing them would not think much
+spinning or weaving could be done in the
+Ladies' Bower. No one would have thought
+that they gathered all Hjalte's words as if they
+were silken threads, and that each of his listeners
+made from them her own picture of King Olaf.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+No one could know that in their thoughts they
+wove the Bard's words each into her own radiant
+picture.</p>
+
+<p>But so it was. And the Princess's picture was
+so beautiful that every time she saw it before
+her she felt as if she must fall on her knees and
+worship it. For she saw the King sitting on
+his throne, crowned and great; she saw a red,
+gold-embroidered mantle hanging from his
+shoulders to his feet. She saw no sword in his
+hand, but holy writings; and she also saw that
+his throne was supported by a chained troll.
+His face shone for her, white like wax, surrounded
+by long, soft locks, and his eyes beamed
+with piety and peace. Oh, she became nearly
+afraid when she saw the almost superhuman
+strength that shone from that pale face. She
+understood that King Olaf was not only a King,
+she saw that he was a saint, and the equal of the
+angels.</p>
+
+<p>But quite different was the picture which
+Astrid had made of the King. The fair-haired
+bondwoman, who had experienced both hunger
+and cold and suffered much hardship, but who
+all the same was the one who filled the Ladies'
+Bower with merriment and laughter, had in her
+mind an entirely different picture of the King.
+She could not help that every time she heard
+him spoken about she saw before her the wood-cutter's
+son who at eventide came out of the
+wood with the axe over his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>'I can see thee&mdash;I can see thee so well,'
+Astrid said to the picture, as if it were a living
+being. 'Tall thou art not, but broad of shoulders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+and light and agile, and because thou hast
+walked about in the dark forest the whole long
+summer day thou takest the last few steps in
+one spring, and laughest when thou reachest
+the road. Then thy white teeth shine, and thy
+hair flies about, and that I love to see. I can
+see thee; thou hast a fair, ruddy face and freckles
+on thy nose, and thou hast blue eyes, which become
+dark and stern in the deep forest; but
+when thou comest so far that thou seest the
+valley and thy home, they become light and
+gentle. As soon as thou seest thine own hut
+down in the valley, thou raisest thy cap for a
+greeting, and then I see thy forehead. Is not
+that forehead befitting a King? Should not that
+broad forehead be able to wear both crown and
+helmet?'</p>
+
+<p>But however different these two pictures were,
+one thing is certain: just as much as the Princess
+loved the holy picture she had conjured
+forth, so did the poor bondwoman love the bold
+swain whom she saw coming from the depths of
+the forest to meet her.</p>
+
+<p>And had Hjalte the Bard been able to see
+these pictures he would have assuredly praised
+them both. He would assuredly have said that
+they both were like the King. For that is King
+Olaf's good fortune, he would have been sure to
+say, that he is a fresh and merry swain at the
+same time that he is God's holy warrior. For
+old Hjalte loved King Olaf, and although he
+had wandered from court to court he had never
+been able to find his equal.</p>
+
+<p>'Where can I find anyone to make me forget<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+Olaf Haraldsson?' he was wont to say. 'Where
+shall I find a greater hero?'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte the Bard was a rough old man and
+severe of countenance. Old as he was, his hair
+was still black, he was dark of complexion, and
+his eyes were keen, and his song had always
+tallied with his appearance. His tongue never
+uttered other words than those of strife; he had
+never made other lays than songs of war.</p>
+
+<p>Old Hjalte's heart had hitherto been like the
+stony waste outside the wood-cutter's hut; it had
+been like a rocky plain, where only poor ferns
+and dry mugworts could grow. But now
+Hjalte's roving life had brought him to the
+Court at Upsala, and he had seen the Princess
+Ingegerd. He had seen that she was the noblest
+of all the women he had met in his life&mdash;in truth,
+the Princess was just as much fairer than all
+other women as King Olaf was greater than all
+other men.</p>
+
+<p>Then the thought suddenly arose within
+Hjalte that he would try to awaken love between
+the Swedish Princess and the Norwegian
+King. He asked himself why she, who was the
+best amongst women, should not be able to love
+King Olaf, the most glorious amongst men?
+And after that thought had taken root in Hjalte's
+heart he gave up making his stern war-songs.
+He gave up trying to win praise and honour
+from the rough warriors at the Court of Upsala,
+and sat for many hours with the women in the
+Ladies' Bower, and one would never have
+thought that it was Hjalte who spoke. One
+would never have believed that he possessed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+such soft and fair and gentle words which he
+now used in speaking about King Olaf.</p>
+
+<p>No one would have known Hjalte again; he
+was entirely transformed ever since the thought
+of the marriage had arisen within him. When
+the beautiful thought took root in Hjalte's soul,
+it was as if a blushing rose, with soft and fragrant
+petals, had sprung up in the midst of a
+wilderness.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>One day Hjalte sat with the Princess in the
+Ladies' Bower. All the maidens were absent
+except Astrid. Hjalte thought that now he had
+spoken long enough about Olaf Haraldsson.
+He had said all the fair words he could about
+him, but had it been of any avail? What did
+the Princess think of the King? Then he began
+to lay snares for the Princess to find out what
+she thought of King Olaf.</p>
+
+<p>'I can see from a look or a blush,' he thought.</p>
+
+<p>But the Princess was a high-born lady; she
+knew how to conceal her thoughts. She neither
+blushed nor smiled, neither did her eyes betray
+her. She would not let Hjalte divine what she
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>When the Bard looked into her noble face he
+was ashamed of himself.</p>
+
+<p>'She is too good for anyone to take her by
+stealth,' he said; 'one must meet her in open
+warfare.' So Hjalte said straight out: 'Daughter
+of a King, if Olaf Haraldsson asked thee in
+marriage of thy father, what wouldst thou answer?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then the young Princess's face lit up, as does
+the face of a man when he reaches the mountain-top
+and discovers the ocean. Without hesitation
+she replied at once:</p>
+
+<p>'If he be such a King and such a Christian as
+thou sayest, Hjalte, then I consider it would be
+a great happiness.'</p>
+
+<p>But scarcely had she said this before the light
+faded from her eyes. It was as if a cloud rose
+between her and the beautiful far-off vision.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, Hjalte,' she said, 'thou forgettest one
+thing. King Olaf is our enemy. It is war and
+not wooing we may expect from him.'</p>
+
+<p>'Do not let that trouble thee,' said Hjalte.
+'If thou only wilt, all is well. I know King
+Olaf's mind in this matter.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bard was so glad that he laughed when
+he said this; but the Princess grew more and
+more sorrowful.</p>
+
+<p>'No,' she said, 'neither upon me nor King
+Olaf does it depend, but upon my father, Oluf
+Sk&ouml;tkonung, and you know that he hates Olaf
+Haraldsson, and cannot bear that anyone should
+even mention his name. Never will he let me
+leave my father's house with an enemy; never
+will he give his daughter to Olaf Haraldsson.'</p>
+
+<p>When the Princess had said this, she laid aside
+all her pride and began to lament her fate.</p>
+
+<p>'Of what good is it that I have now learnt to
+know Olaf Haraldsson,' she said, 'that I dream
+of him every night, and long for him every day?
+Would it not have been better if thou hadst
+never come hither and told me about him?'</p>
+
+<p>When the Princess had spoken these words,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+her eyes filled with tears; but when Hjalte saw
+her tears, he lifted his hand fervent and eager.</p>
+
+<p>'God wills it,' he cried. 'Ye belong to one
+another. Strife must exchange its red mantle
+for the white robe of peace, that your happiness
+may give joy unto the earth.'</p>
+
+<p>When Hjalte had said this, the Princess bowed
+her head before God's holy name, and when she
+raised it, it was with a newly awakened hope.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>When old Hjalte stepped through the low door
+of the Ladies' Bower, and went down the narrow
+open corridor, Astrid followed him.</p>
+
+<p>'Hjalte,' she cried, 'why dost thou not ask
+me what I would answer if Olaf Haraldsson
+asked for my hand?'</p>
+
+<p>It was the first time Astrid had spoken to
+Hjalte; but Hjalte only cast a hurried glance
+at the fair bondwoman, whose golden hair curled
+on her temples and neck, who had the broadest
+bracelets and the heaviest ear-rings, whose dress
+was fastened with silken cords, and whose bodice
+was so embroidered with pearls that it was as
+stiff as armour, and went on without answering.</p>
+
+<p>'Why dost thou only ask Princess Ingegerd?'
+continued Astrid. 'Why dost thou not also ask
+me? Dost thou not know that I, too, am the
+Svea-King's daughter? Dost thou not know,'
+she continued, when Hjalte did not answer, 'that
+although my mother was a bondwoman, she was
+the bride of the King's youth? Dost thou not
+know that whilst she lived no one dared to remind
+her of her birth? Oh, Hjalte, dost thou<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+not know that it was only after she was dead,
+when the King had taken to himself a Queen,
+that everyone remembered that she was a bondwoman?
+It was first after I had a stepmother
+that the King began to think I was not of free
+birth. But am I not a King's daughter, Hjalte,
+even if my father counts me for so little, that he
+has allowed me to fall into bondage? Am I not
+a King's daughter, even if my stepmother allowed
+me to go in rags, whilst my sister went
+in cloth of gold? Am I not a King's daughter,
+even if my stepmother has allowed me to tend the
+geese and taste the whip of the slave? And if I
+am a King's daughter, why dost thou not ask
+me whether I will wed Olaf Haraldsson? See, I
+have golden hair that shines round my head like
+the sun. See, I have sparkling eyes; I have
+roses in my cheeks. Why should not King Olaf
+woo me?'</p>
+
+<p>She followed Hjalte across the courtyard all
+the way to the King's Hall; but Hjalte took no
+more heed of her words than a warrior clad in
+armour heeds a boy throwing stones. He took
+no more notice of her words than if she had
+been a chattering magpie in the top of a tree.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>No one must think that Hjalte contented himself
+with having won Ingegerd for his King.
+The next day the old Icelander summoned up his
+courage and spoke to Oluf Sk&ouml;tkonung about
+Olaf Haraldsson. But he hardly had time to
+say a word; the King interrupted him as soon as
+he mentioned the name of his foe. Hjalte saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+that the Princess was right. He thought he had
+never before seen such bitter hatred.</p>
+
+<p>'But that marriage will take place all the
+same,' said Hjalte. 'It is the will of God&mdash;the
+will of God.'</p>
+
+<p>And it really seemed as if Hjalte were right.
+Two or three days later a messenger came from
+King Olaf of Norway to make peace with the
+Swedes. Hjalte sought the messenger, and told
+him that peace between the two countries could
+be most firmly established by a marriage taking
+place between Princess Ingegerd and Olaf Haraldsson.</p>
+
+<p>The King's messenger hardly thought that old
+Hjalte was the man to incline a young maiden's
+heart to a stranger; but he thought, all the same,
+that the plan was a good one; and he promised
+Hjalte that he would lay the proposal of the
+marriage before King Oluf Sk&ouml;tkonung at the
+great Winter Ting.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately afterwards Hjalte left Upsala.
+He went from farm to farm on the great plain;
+he went far into the forests; he went even to the
+borders of the sea. He never met either man or
+woman without speaking to them about Olaf
+Haraldsson and Princess Ingegerd. 'Hast thou
+ever heard of a greater man or of a fairer
+woman?' he said. 'It is assuredly the will of
+God that they shall wander through life together.'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte came upon old Vikings, who wintered
+at the seashore, and who had formerly carried
+off women from every coast. He talked to them
+about the beautiful Princess until they sprang<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+up and promised him, with their hand on the
+hilt of their sword, that they would do what they
+could to help her to happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte went to stubborn old peasants who
+had never listened to the prayers of their own
+daughters, but had given them in marriage as
+shrewdness, family honour, and advantage required,
+and he spoke to them so wisely about the
+peace between the two countries and the marriage
+that they swore they would rather deprive
+the King of his kingdom than that this marriage
+should not come to pass.</p>
+
+<p>But to the young women Hjalte spoke so
+many good words about Olaf Haraldsson that
+they vowed they would never look with kindly
+eyes at the swain who did not stand by the Norwegian
+King's messenger at the Ting and help
+to break down the King's opposition.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Hjalte went about talking to people until
+the Winter Ting should assemble, and all the
+people, along snow-covered roads, proceeded to
+the great Ting Hills at Upsala.</p>
+
+<p>When the Ting was opened, the eagerness of
+the people was so great that it seemed as if the
+stars would fall down from the sky were this
+marriage not decided upon. And although the
+King twice roughly said 'No' both to the peace
+and to the wooing, it was of no avail. It was
+of no avail that he would not hear the name of
+King Olaf mentioned. The people only shouted:
+'We will not have war with Norway. We will
+that these two, who by all are accounted the
+greatest, shall wander through life together.'</p>
+
+<p>What could old Oluf Sk&ouml;tkonung do when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+people rose against him with threats, strong
+words, and clashing of shields? What was he to
+do when he saw nothing but swords lifted and
+angry men before him? Was he not compelled
+to promise his daughter away if he would keep his
+life and his crown? Must he not swear to send
+the Princess to Kungah&auml;lla next summer to meet
+King Olaf there?</p>
+
+<p>In this way the whole people helped to further
+Ingegerd's love. But no one helped Astrid to the
+attainment of her happiness; no one asked her
+about her love. And yet it lived&mdash;it lived like the
+child of the poor fisherman's widow, in want and
+need; but all the same it grew, happily and hopefully.
+It grew and thrived, for in Astrid's soul
+there were, as at the sea, fresh air and light and
+breezy waves.</p>
+
+<h4>II</h4>
+
+<p>In the rich city of Kungah&auml;lla, far away at the
+border, was the old castle of the kings. It was
+surrounded by green ramparts. Huge stones
+stood as sentinels outside the gates, and in the
+courtyard grew an oak large enough to shelter
+under its branches all the King's henchmen.</p>
+
+<p>The whole space inside the ramparts was covered
+with long, low wooden houses. They were
+so old that grass grew on the ridges of the roofs.
+The beams in the walls were made from the thickest
+trees of the forest, silver-white with age.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning of the summer Olaf Haraldsson
+came to Kungah&auml;lla, and he gathered together
+in the castle everything necessary for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+celebration of his marriage. For several weeks
+peasants came crowding up the long street, bringing
+gifts: butter in tubs, cheese in sacks, hops
+and salt, roots and flour.</p>
+
+<p>After the gifts had been brought to the castle,
+there was a continual procession of wedding
+guests through the street. There were great men
+and women on side-saddles, with a numerous
+retinue of servants and serfs. Then came hosts
+of players and singers, and the reciters of the
+Sagas. Merchants came all the way from Venderland
+and Gardarike, to tempt the King with
+bridal gifts.</p>
+
+<p>When these processions for two whole weeks
+had filled the town with noise and bustle they
+only awaited the last procession, the bride's.</p>
+
+<p>But the bridal procession was long in coming.
+Every day they expected that she would come
+ashore at the King's Landing-Stage, and from
+there, headed by drum and fife, and followed by
+merry swains and serious priests, proceed up the
+street to the King's Castle. But the bride's procession
+came not.</p>
+
+<p>When the bride was so long in coming, everybody
+looked at King Olaf to see if he were uneasy.
+But the King always showed an undisturbed face.</p>
+
+<p>'If it be the will of God,' the King said, 'that I
+shall possess this fair woman, she will assuredly
+come.'</p>
+
+<p>And the King waited, whilst the grass fell for
+the scythe, and the cornflowers blossomed in the
+rye. The King still waited when the flax was
+pulled up, and the hops ripened on the poles. He
+was still waiting, when the bramble blackened on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+the mountain-side, and the <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Possibly hip">nip</span> reddened on the
+naked branch of the <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Possibly rosebush">hawthorn</span>.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Hjalte had spent the whole summer at Kungah&auml;lla
+waiting for the marriage. No one awaited
+the arrival of the Princess more eagerly than he
+did. He assuredly awaited her with greater longing
+and anxiety than even King Olaf himself.</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte no longer felt at his ease with the warriors
+in the King's Hall. But lower down the
+river there was a landing-stage where the women
+of Kungah&auml;lla were wont to assemble to see the
+last of their husbands and sons, when they sailed
+for distant lands. Here they were also in the
+habit of gathering during the summer, to watch
+for the vessels coming up the river, and to weep
+over those who had departed. To that bridge
+Hjalte wended his way every day. He liked best
+to be amongst those who longed and sorrowed.</p>
+
+<p>Never had any of the women who sat waiting
+at Weeping Bridge gazed down the river with
+more anxious look than did Hjalte the Bard. No
+one looked more eagerly at every approaching
+sail. Sometimes Hjalte stole away to the Marie
+Church. He never prayed for anything for himself.
+He only came to remind the Saints about
+this marriage, which must come to pass, which
+God Himself had willed.</p>
+
+<p>Most of all Hjalte liked to speak with King Olaf
+Haraldsson alone. It was his greatest happiness
+to sit and tell him of every word that had fallen
+from the lips of the King's daughter. He described
+her every feature.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf,' he said to him, 'pray to God
+that she may come to thee. Every day I see
+thee warring against ancient heathendom which
+hides like an owl in the darkness of the forest,
+and in the mountain-clefts. But the falcon, King
+Olaf, will never be able to overcome the owl.
+Only a dove can do that, only a dove.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bard asked the King whether it was not
+his desire to vanquish all his enemies. Was it
+not his intention to be alone master in the land?
+But in that he would never succeed. He would
+never succeed until he had won the crown which
+Hjalte had chosen for him, a crown so resplendent
+with brightness and glory that everyone must
+bow before him who owned it.</p>
+
+<p>And last of all he asked the King if he were
+desirous of gaining the mastery over himself.
+But he would never succeed in overcoming the
+wilfulness of his own heart if he did not win a
+shield which Hjalte had seen in the Ladies'
+Bower at the King's Castle at Upsala. It was
+a shield from which shone the purity of heaven.
+It was a shield which protected from all sin and
+the lusts of the flesh.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>But harvest came and they were still waiting
+for the Princess. One after the other the great
+men who had come to Kungah&auml;lla for the marriage
+festivities were obliged to depart. The last
+to take his leave was old Hjalte the Bard. It
+was with a heavy heart he set sail, but he was
+obliged to return to his home in distant Iceland
+before Christmas came.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Old Hjalte had not gone further than the rocky
+islands outside the mouth of the northern river
+before he met a galley. He immediately ordered
+his men to stop rowing. At the first glance he
+recognised the dragon-headed ship belonging to
+Princess Ingegerd. Without hesitation Hjalte
+told his men to row him to the galley. He gave
+up his place at the rudder to another, and placed
+himself with joyous face at the prow of the boat.</p>
+
+<p>'It will make me happy to behold the fair
+maiden once more,' the Bard said. 'It gladdens
+my heart that her gentle face will be the last I
+shall see before sailing for Iceland.'</p>
+
+<p>All the wrinkles had disappeared from Hjalte's
+face when he went on board the dragon-ship.
+He greeted the brave lads who plied the oars
+as friendlily as if they were his comrades, and
+he handed a golden ring to the maiden, who,
+with much deference, conducted him to the
+women's tent in the stern of the ship. Hjalte's
+hand trembled when he lifted the hangings that
+covered the entrance to the tent. He thought
+this was the most beautiful moment of his life.</p>
+
+<p>'Never have I fought for a greater cause,' he
+said. 'Never have I longed so eagerly for anything
+as this marriage.'</p>
+
+<p>But when Hjalte entered the tent, he drew
+back a step in great consternation. His face expressed
+the utmost confusion. He saw a tall,
+beautiful woman. She advanced to meet him with
+outstretched hand. But the woman was not Ingegerd.</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte's eyes looked searchingly round the
+narrow tent to find the Princess. He certainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+saw that the woman who stood before him was
+a King's daughter. Only the daughter of a King
+could look at him with such a proud glance, and
+greet him with such dignity. And she wore the
+band of royalty on her forehead, and was attired
+like a Queen. But why was she not Ingegerd?
+Hjalte angrily asked the strange woman:</p>
+
+<p>'Who art thou?'</p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou not know me, Hjalte? I am the
+King's daughter, to whom thou hast spoken
+about Olaf Haraldsson.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have spoken with a King's daughter about
+Olaf Haraldsson, but her name was Ingegerd.'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingegerd is also my name.'</p>
+
+<p>'Thy name can be what thou likest, but thou
+art not the Princess. What is the meaning of
+all this? Will the Svea-King deceive King
+Olaf?'</p>
+
+<p>'He will not by any means deceive him. He
+sends him his daughter as he has promised.'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte was not far from drawing his sword
+to slay the strange woman. He had his hand
+already on the hilt, but he bethought himself it
+was not befitting a warrior to take the life of a
+woman. But he would not waste more words
+over this impostor. He turned round to go.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger with gentle voice called him
+back.</p>
+
+<p>'Where art thou going, Hjalte? Dost thou
+intend to go to Kungah&auml;lla to report this to Olaf
+Haraldsson?'</p>
+
+<p>'That is my intention,' answered Hjalte, without
+looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>'Why, then, dost thou leave me, Hjalte? Why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+dost thou not remain with me? I, too, am going
+to Kungah&auml;lla.'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte now turned round and looked at her.</p>
+
+<p>'Hast thou, then, no pity for an old man?'
+he said. 'I tell thee that my whole mind is set
+upon this marriage. Let me hear the full
+measure of my misfortune. Is Princess Ingegerd
+not coming?'</p>
+
+<p>Then the Princess gave over fooling Hjalte.</p>
+
+<p>'Come into my tent and sit down,' she said,
+'and I will tell thee all that thou wouldest know.
+I see it is of no use to hide the truth from
+thee.'</p>
+
+<p>Then she began to tell him everything:</p>
+
+<p>'The summer was already drawing to a close.
+The blackcock's lively young ones had already
+strong feathers in their cloven tails and firmness
+in their rounded wings; they had already begun
+to flutter about amongst the close branches of
+the pine-forest with quick, noisy strokes.</p>
+
+<p>'It happened one morning that the Svea-King
+came riding across the plain; he was returning
+from a successful chase. There hung from the
+pommel of his saddle a shining blue-black blackcock,
+a tough old fellow, with red eyebrows,
+as well as four of his half-grown young ones,
+which on account of their youth were still garbed
+in many-coloured hues. And the King was very
+proud; he thought it was not every man's luck
+to make such a bag with falcon and hawk in
+one morning.</p>
+
+<p>'But that morning Princess Ingegerd and her
+maidens stood at the gates of the castle waiting
+for the King. And amongst the maidens was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+one, Astrid by name; she was the daughter of
+the Svea-King just as much as Ingegerd,
+although her mother was not a free woman, and
+she was therefore treated as a bondmaiden. And
+this young maiden stood and showed her sister
+how the swallows gathered in the fields and chose
+the leaders for their long journey. She reminded
+her that the summer was soon over&mdash;the summer
+that should have witnessed the marriage of Ingegerd&mdash;and
+urged her to ask the King why she
+might not set out on her journey to King Olaf;
+for Astrid wished to accompany her sister on
+the journey. She thought that if she could but
+once see Olaf Haraldsson, she would have pleasure
+from it all her life.</p>
+
+<p>'But when the Svea-King saw the Princess, he
+rode up to her.</p>
+
+<p>'"Look, Ingegerd," he said, "here are five
+blackcocks hanging from my saddle. In one
+morning I have killed five blackcocks. Who
+dost thou think can boast of better luck? Have
+you ever heard of a King making a better capture?"</p>
+
+<p>'But then the Princess was angered that he
+who barred the way for her happiness should
+come so proudly and praise his own good luck.
+And to make an end of the uncertainty that had
+tormented her for so many weeks, she replied:</p>
+
+<p>'"Thou, father, hast with great honour killed
+five blackcocks, but I know of a King who in
+one morning captured five other Kings, and that
+was Olaf Haraldsson, the hero whom thou hast
+selected to be my husband."</p>
+
+<p>'Then the Svea-King sprang off his horse in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+great fury, and advanced towards the Princess
+with clenched hands.</p>
+
+<p>'"What troll hath bewitched thee?" he asked.
+"What herb hath poisoned thee? How hath thy
+mind been turned to this man?"</p>
+
+<p>'Ingegerd did not answer; she drew back,
+frightened. Then the King became quieter.</p>
+
+<p>'"Fair daughter," he said to her, "dost thou
+not know how dear thou art to me? How should
+I, then, give thee to one whom I cannot endure?
+I should like my best wishes to go with thee on
+thy journey. I should like to sit as guest in
+thy hall. I tell thee thou must turn thy mind
+to the Kings of other lands, for Norway's King
+shall never own thee."</p>
+
+<p>'At these words the Princess became so confused
+that she could find no other words than
+these with which to answer the King:</p>
+
+<p>'"I did not ask thee; it was the will of the
+people."</p>
+
+<p>'The King then asked her if she thought that
+the Svea-King was a slave, who could not dispose
+of his own offspring, or if there were a
+master over him who had the right to give away
+his daughters.</p>
+
+<p>'"Will the Svea-King be content to hear
+himself called a breaker of oaths?" asked the
+Princess.</p>
+
+<p>'Then the Svea-King laughed aloud.</p>
+
+<p>'"Do not let that trouble thee. No one shall
+call me that. Why dost thou question about
+this, thou who art a woman? There are still
+men in my Council; they will find a way out
+of it."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Then the King turned towards his henchmen
+who had been with him to the chase.</p>
+
+<p>'"My will is bound by this promise," he said
+to them. "How shall I be released from it?"</p>
+
+<p>'But none of the King's men answered a word;
+no one knew how to counsel him.</p>
+
+<p>'Then Oluf Sk&ouml;tkonung became very wrath;
+he became like a madman.</p>
+
+<p>'"So much for your wisdom," he shouted
+again and again to his men. "I will be free.
+Why do people laud your wisdom?"</p>
+
+<p>'Whilst the King raged and shouted, and no
+one knew how to answer him, the maiden Astrid
+stepped forward from amongst the other women
+and made a proposal.</p>
+
+<p>'Hjalte must really believe her when she told
+him that it was only because she found it so
+amusing that she could not help saying it, and
+not in the least because she thought it could
+really be done.</p>
+
+<p>'"Why dost thou not send me?" she had said.
+"I am also thy daughter. Why dost thou not
+send me to the Norwegian King?"</p>
+
+<p>'But when Ingegerd heard Astrid say these
+words, she grew pale.</p>
+
+<p>'"Be silent, and go thy way!" she said
+angrily. "Go thy way, thou tattler, thou deceitful,
+wicked thing, to propose such a shameful
+thing to my father!"</p>
+
+<p>'But the King would not allow Astrid to go.
+On the contrary! on the contrary! He stretched
+out his arms and drew her to his breast. He
+both laughed and cried, and was as wild with joy
+as a child.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'"Oh," he shouted, "what an idea! What
+a heathenish trick! Let us call Astrid Ingegerd,
+and entrap the King of Norway into marrying
+her. And afterwards when the rumour gets
+abroad that she is born of a bondwoman, many
+will rejoice in their hearts, and Olaf Haraldsson
+will be held in scorn and derision."</p>
+
+<p>'But then Ingegerd went up to the King, and
+prayed:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, father, father! do not do this thing.
+King Olaf is dear at heart to me. Surely thou
+wilt not grieve me by thus deceiving him."</p>
+
+<p>'And she added that she would patiently do
+the bidding of her royal father, and give up all
+thought of marriage with Olaf Haraldsson, if
+he would only promise not to do him this injury.</p>
+
+<p>'But the Svea-King would not listen to her
+prayers. He turned to Astrid and caressed her,
+just as if she were as beautiful as revenge itself.</p>
+
+<p>'"Thou shalt go! thou shalt go soon&mdash;to-morrow!"
+he said. "All thy dowry, thy clothes,
+my dear daughter, and thy retinue, can all be
+collected in great haste. The Norwegian King
+will not think of such things; he is too taken up
+with joy at the thought of possessing the high-born
+daughter of the Svea-King."</p>
+
+<p>'Then Ingegerd understood that she could
+hope for no mercy. And she went up to her
+sister, put her arm round her neck, and conducted
+her to the hall. Here she placed her in
+her own seat of honour, whilst she herself sat
+down on a low stool at her feet. And she said
+to Astrid that from henceforth she must sit there,
+in order to accustom herself to the place she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+should take as Queen. For Ingegerd did not
+wish that King Olaf should have any occasion to
+be ashamed of his Queen.</p>
+
+<p>'Then the Princess sent her maidens to the
+wardrobes and the pantries to fetch the dowry
+she had chosen for herself. And she gave everything
+to her sister, so that Astrid should not come
+to Norway's King as a poor bondwoman. She
+had also settled which of the serfs and maidens
+should accompany Astrid, and at last she made
+her a present of her own splendid galley.</p>
+
+<p>'"Thou shalt certainly have my galley," she
+said. "Thou knowest there are many good men
+at the oars. For it is my will that thou shalt come
+well dowered to Norway's King, so that he may
+feel honoured with his Queen."</p>
+
+<p>'And afterwards the Princess had sat a long
+time with her sister, and spoken with her about
+King Olaf. But she had spoken of him as one
+speaks of the Saints of God, and not of kings,
+and Astrid had not understood many of her
+words. But this much she did understand&mdash;that
+the King's daughter wished to give Astrid all
+the good thoughts that dwelt in her own heart,
+in order that King Olaf might not be so disappointed
+as her father wished. And then Astrid,
+who was not so bad as people thought
+her, forgot how often she had suffered for her
+sister's sake, and she wished that she had been
+able to say, "I will not go!" She had also
+spoken to her sister about this wish, and they had
+cried together, and for the first time felt like
+sisters.</p>
+
+<p>'But it was not Astrid's nature to allow herself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+to be weighed down by sorrow and scruples. By
+the time she was out at sea she had forgotten
+all her sorrow and fear. She travelled as a
+Princess, and was waited upon as a Princess.
+For the first time since her mother's death she
+was happy.'</p>
+
+<p>When the King's beautiful daughter had told
+Hjalte all this she was silent for a moment, and
+looked at him. Hjalte had sat immovable whilst
+she was speaking, but the King's daughter grew
+pale when she saw the pain his face betrayed.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me what thou thinkest, Hjalte,' she exclaimed.
+'Now, we are soon at Kungah&auml;lla.
+How shall I fare there? Will the King slay me?
+Will he brand me with red-hot irons, and send
+me back again? Tell me the truth, Hjalte.'</p>
+
+<p>But Hjalte did not answer. He sat and talked
+to himself without knowing it. Astrid heard
+him murmur that at Kungah&auml;lla no one knew
+Ingegerd, and that he himself had but little inclination
+to turn back.</p>
+
+<p>But now Hjalte's moody face fell upon Astrid,
+and he began to question her. She had wished,
+had she not, that she could have said 'No' to
+this journey. When she came to Kungah&auml;lla,
+the choice lay before her. What did she, then,
+mean to do! Would she tell King Olaf who she
+was?</p>
+
+<p>This question caused Astrid not a little
+embarrassment. She was silent for a long while,
+but then she began to beg Hjalte to go with her
+to Kungah&auml;lla and tell the King the truth. She
+told Hjalte that her maidens and the men on
+board her ship had been bound to silence.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'And what I shall do myself I do not know,'
+she said. 'How can I know that? I have heard
+all thou hast told Ingegerd about Olaf Haraldsson.'</p>
+
+<p>When Astrid said this she saw that Hjalte was
+again lost in thought. She heard him mutter to
+himself that he did not think she would confess
+how things were.</p>
+
+<p>'But I must all the same tell her what awaits
+her,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then Hjalte rose, and spoke to her with the
+utmost gravity.</p>
+
+<p>'Let me tell thee yet another story, Astrid,
+about King Olaf, which I have not told thee before:</p>
+
+<p>'It was at the time when King Olaf was a poor
+sea-king, when he only possessed a few good
+ships and some faithful warriors, but none of his
+forefathers' land. It was at the time when he
+fought with honour on distant seas, chastised
+vikings and protected merchants, and aided
+Christian princes with his sword.</p>
+
+<p>'The King had a dream that one night an angel
+of God descended to his ship, set all the sails, and
+steered for the north. And it seemed to the King
+that they had not sailed for a longer time than it
+takes the dawn to extinguish a star before they
+came to a steep and rocky shore, cut up by
+narrow fjords and bordered with milk-white
+breakers. But when they reached the shore the
+angel stretched out his hand, and spoke in his
+silvery voice. It rang through the wind, which
+whistled in the sails, and through the waves surging
+round the keel.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'"Thou, King Olaf," were the angel's words,
+"shalt possess this land for all time."</p>
+
+<p>'And when the angel had said this the dream
+was over.'</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte now tried to explain to Astrid that like
+as the dawn tempers the transition from dark
+night to sunny day, so God had not willed that
+King Olaf should at once understand that the
+dream foretold him of superhuman honour. The
+King had not understood that it was the will of
+God that he from a heavenly throne should reign
+forever and ever over Norway's land, that kings
+should reign and kings should pass away, but
+holy King Olaf should continue to rule his kingdom
+for ever.</p>
+
+<p>The King's humility did not let him see the
+heavenly message in its fulness of light, and he
+understood the words of the angel thus&mdash;that he
+and his seed should forever rule over the land
+the angel had shown him. And inasmuch as he
+thought he recognised in this land the kingdom
+of his forefathers, he steered his course for Norway,
+and, fortune helping him, he soon became
+King of that land.</p>
+
+<p>'And thus it is still, Astrid. Although everything
+indicates that in King Olaf dwells a
+heavenly strength, he himself is still in doubt,
+and thinks that he is only called to be an earthly
+King. He does not yet stretch forth his hand
+for the crown of the saints. But now the time
+cannot be far distant when he must fully realize
+his mission. It cannot be far distant.'</p>
+
+<p>And old Hjalte went on speaking, whilst the
+light of the seer shone in his soul and on his
+brow.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Is there any other woman but Ingegerd who
+would not be rejected by Olaf Haraldsson and
+driven from his side when he fully understands
+the words of the angel, that he shall be Norway's
+King for all time? Is there anyone who can,
+then, follow him in his holy walk except Ingegerd?'</p>
+
+<p>And again Hjalte turned to Astrid and asked
+with great severity:</p>
+
+<p>'Answer me now and tell me whether thou
+wilt speak the truth to King Olaf?'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid was now sore afraid. She answered
+humbly:</p>
+
+<p>'Why wilt thou not go with me to Kungah&auml;lla?
+Then I shall be compelled to tell
+everything. Canst thou not see, Hjalte, that I
+do not know myself what I shall do? If it were
+my intention to deceive the King, could I not
+promise thee all thou wishest? All that I needed
+was to persuade thee to go on thy way. But I
+am weak; I only asked thee to go with me.'</p>
+
+<p>But hardly had she said this before she saw
+Hjalte's face glow with fierce wrath.</p>
+
+<p>'Why should I help thee to escape the fate
+that awaits thee?' he asked.</p>
+
+<p>And then he said that he did not think he had
+any cause to show her mercy. He hated her for
+having sinned against her sister. The man that
+she would steal, thief as she was, belonged to
+Ingegerd. Even a hardened warrior like Hjalte
+must groan with pain when he thought of how
+Ingegerd had suffered. But Astrid had felt
+nothing. In the midst of all that young maiden's
+sorrow she had come with wicked and cruel cun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>ning,
+and had only sought her own happiness.
+Woe unto Astrid! woe unto her!</p>
+
+<p>Hjalte had lowered his voice; it became heavy
+and dull; it sounded to Astrid as if he were murmuring
+an incantation.</p>
+
+<p>'It is thou,' he said to her, 'who hast destroyed
+my most beautiful song.' For the most beautiful
+song Hjalte had made was the one in which
+he had joined the most pious of all women with
+the greatest of all men. 'But thou hast spoiled
+my song,' he said, 'and made a mockery of it;
+and I will punish thee, thou child of H&eacute;l. I will
+punish thee; as the Lord punisheth the tempter
+who brought sin into His world, I will punish
+thee. But do not ask me,' he continued, 'to protect
+thee against thine own self. I remember the
+Princess, and how she must suffer through the
+trick thou playest on King Olaf. For her sake
+thou shalt be punished, just as much as for mine.
+I will not go with thee to betray thee. That is
+my revenge, Astrid. I will not betray thee. Go
+thou to Kungah&auml;lla, Astrid; and if thou dost not
+speak of thine own accord, thou wilt become the
+King's bride. But then, thou serpent, punishment
+shall overtake thee! I know King Olaf,
+and I know thee. Thy life shall be such a burden
+that thou wilt wish for death every day that
+passes.'</p>
+
+<p>When Hjalte had said this he turned away
+from her and went his way.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid sat a long time silent, thinking of what
+she had heard. But then a smile came over her
+face. He forgot, did old Hjalte, that she had
+suffered many trials, that she had learnt to laugh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+at pain. But happiness, happiness, that she had
+never tried.</p>
+
+<p>And Astrid rose and went to the opening of
+the tent. She saw the angry Bard's ship. She
+thought that far, far away she could see Iceland,
+shrouded in mist, welcoming her much-travelled
+son with cold and darkness.</p>
+
+<h4>III</h4>
+
+<p>A sunny day late in the harvest, not a cloud
+in the sky; a day when one thinks the fair sun
+will give to the earth all the light she possesses!
+The fair sun is like a mother whose son is about
+to set out for a far-off land, and who, in the hour
+of the leave-taking, cannot take her eyes from
+the beloved.</p>
+
+<p>In the long valley where Kungah&auml;lla lies there
+is a row of small hills covered with beech-wood.
+And now at harvest-time the trees have garbed
+themselves in such splendid raiment that one's
+heart is gladdened. One would almost think
+that the trees were going a-wooing. It looks
+as if they had clothed themselves in gold and
+scarlet to win a rich bride by their splendour.</p>
+
+<p>The large island of Hisingen, on the other
+side of the river, had also adorned itself. But
+Hisingen is covered with golden-white birch-trees.
+At Hisingen the trees are clad in light
+colours, as if they are little maidens in bridal attire.</p>
+
+<p>But up the river, which comes rushing down
+towards the ocean as proudly and wildly as if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+the harvest rain had filled it with frothy wine,
+there passes the one ship after the other, rowing
+homewards. And when the ships approach
+Kungah&auml;lla they hoist new white sails, instead
+of the old ones of gray wadmal; and one cannot
+help thinking of old fairy-tales of kings' sons
+who go out seeking adventures clothed in rags,
+but who throw them off when they again enter
+the King's lofty hall.</p>
+
+<p>But all the people of Kungah&auml;lla have assembled
+at the landing-stages. Old and young
+are busy unloading goods from the ships. They
+fill the storehouses with salt and train-oil, with
+costly weapons, and many-coloured rugs. They
+haul large and small vessels on to land, they
+question the returned seamen about their voyage.
+But suddenly all work ceases, and every
+eye is turned towards the river.</p>
+
+<p>Right between the big merchant vessels a
+large galley is making its way, and people ask
+each other in astonishment who it can be that
+carries sails striped with purple and a golden
+device on the prow; they wonder what kind of
+ship it can be that comes flying over the waves
+like a bird. They praise the oarsmen, who
+handle the oars so evenly that they flash along
+the sides of the ship like an eagle's wings.</p>
+
+<p>'It must be the Swedish Princess who is coming,'
+they say. 'It must be the beautiful Princess
+Ingegerd, for whom Olaf Haraldsson has been
+waiting the whole summer and harvest.'</p>
+
+<p>And the women hasten down to the riverside
+to see the Princess when she rows past them on
+her way to the King's Landing-Stage. Men and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+boys run to the ships, or climb the roofs of the
+boathouses.</p>
+
+<p>When the women see the Princess standing
+in gorgeous apparel, they begin to shout to her,
+and to greet her with words of welcome; and
+every man who sees her radiant face tears his
+cap from his head and swings it high in the air.
+But on the King's Landing-Stage stands King
+Olaf himself, and when he sees the Princess his
+face beams with gladness, and his eyes light up
+with tender love.</p>
+
+<p>And as it is now so late in the year that all
+the flowers are faded, the young maidens pluck
+the golden-red autumnal leaves from the trees
+and strew them on the bridge and in the street;
+and they hasten to deck their houses with the
+bright berries of the mountain-ash and the dark-red
+leaves of the poplar.</p>
+
+<p>The Princess, who stands high on the ship,
+sees the people waving and greeting her in welcome.
+She sees the golden-red leaves over which
+she shall walk, and foremost on the landing-stage
+she sees the King awaiting her with smiles. And
+the Princess forgets everything she would have
+said and confessed. She forgets that she is not
+Ingegerd, she forgets everything except the one
+thing, that she is to be the wife of Olaf Haraldsson.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>One Sunday Olaf Haraldsson was seated at
+table, and his beautiful Queen sat by his side.
+He was talking eagerly with her, resting his
+elbow on the table, and turning towards her, so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+that he could see her face. But when Astrid
+spoke the King lowered his eyes in order not to
+think of anything but her lovely voice, and when
+she had been speaking for a long time he began
+to cut the table with his knife without thinking
+of what he was doing. All King Olaf's men
+knew that he would not have done this if he had
+remembered that it was Sunday; but they had
+far too great a respect for King Olaf to venture
+to remind him that he was committing a sin.</p>
+
+<p>The longer Astrid talked, the more uneasy became
+his henchmen. The Queen saw that they
+exchanged troubled glances with each other, but
+she did not understand what was the matter.</p>
+
+<p>All had finished eating, and the food had been
+removed, but King Olaf still sat and talked with
+Astrid and cut the top of the table. A whole
+little heap of chips lay in front of him. Then at
+last his friend Bj&ouml;rn, the son of Ogur from
+Sel&ouml;, spoke.</p>
+
+<p>'What day is it to-morrow, Eilif?' he asked,
+turning to one of the torch-bearers.</p>
+
+<p>'To-morrow is Monday,' answered Eilif in a
+loud and clear voice.</p>
+
+<p>Then the King lifted his head and looked up
+at Eilif.</p>
+
+<p>'Dost thou say that to-morrow is Monday?'
+he asked thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>Without saying another word, the King gathered
+up all the chips he had cut off the table into
+his hand, went to the fireplace, seized a burning
+coal, and laid it on the chips, which soon caught
+fire. The King stood quite still and let them
+burn to ashes in his hand. Then all the hench<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>men
+rejoiced, but the young Queen grew pale as
+death.</p>
+
+<p>'What sentence will he pronounce over me
+when he one day finds out my sin,' she thought,
+'he who punishes himself so hardly for so slight
+an offence?'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Agge from Gardarike lay sick on board his
+galley in Kungah&auml;lla harbour. He was lying in
+the narrow hold awaiting death. He had been
+suffering for a long time from pains in his foot,
+and now there was an open sore, and in the
+course of the last few hours it had begun to turn
+black.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou needest not die, Agge,' said Lodulf
+from Kungh&auml;lla, who had come on board to see
+his sick friend. 'Dost thou not know that King
+Olaf is here in the town, and that God, on account
+of his piety and holiness, has given him
+power to heal the sick? Send a message to him
+and ask him to come and lay his hand upon thee,
+and thou wilt recover.'</p>
+
+<p>'No, I cannot ask help from him,' answered
+Agge. 'Olaf Haraldsson hates me because I
+have slain his foster-brother, Reor the White.
+If he knew that my ship lay in the harbour, he
+would send his men to kill me.'</p>
+
+<p>But when Lodulf had left Agge and gone into
+the town, he met the young Queen, who had
+been in the forest gathering nuts.</p>
+
+<p>'Queen,' Lodulf cried to her, 'say this to
+King Olaf: "Agge from Gardarike, who has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+slain thy foster-brother, lies at the point of death
+on his ship in the harbour."'</p>
+
+<p>The young Queen hastened home and went
+immediately up to King Olaf, who stood in the
+courtyard smoothing the mane of his horse.</p>
+
+<p>'Rejoice, King Olaf!' she said. 'Agge from
+Gardarike, who slew thy foster-brother, lies sick
+on his ship in the harbour and is near death.'</p>
+
+<p>Olaf Haraldsson at once led his horse into the
+stable; then he went out without sword or
+helmet. He went quickly down one of the narrow
+lanes between the houses until he reached
+the harbour. There he found the ship which
+belonged to Agge. The King was at the side
+of the sick man before Agge's men thought of
+stopping him.</p>
+
+<p>'Agge,' said King Olaf, 'many a time I have
+pursued thee on the sea, and thou hast always
+escaped me. Now thou hast been struck down
+with sickness here in my city. This is a sign to
+me that God hath given thy life into my hands.'</p>
+
+<p>Agge made no answer. He was utterly feeble,
+and death was very near. Olaf Haraldsson laid
+his hands upon his breast and prayed to God.</p>
+
+<p>'Give me the life of this mine enemy,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>But the Queen, who had seen the King hasten
+down to the harbour without helmet and sword,
+went into the hall, fetched his weapons and called
+for some of his men. Then she hurried after
+him down to the ship. But when she stood outside
+the narrow hold, she heard King Olaf praying
+for the sick man.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid looked in and saw the King and Agge
+without betraying her presence. She saw that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+whilst the King's hands rested upon the forehead
+and breast of the dying man, the deathly pallor
+vanished from his face; he began to breathe
+lightly and quietly; he ceased moaning, and at
+last he fell into a sound sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid went softly back to the King's Castle.
+She dragged the King's sword after her along
+the road. Her face was paler than the dying
+man's had been. Her breathing was heavy, like
+that of a dying person.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was the morning of All Saints' Day, and
+King Olaf was ready to go to Mass. He came
+out of the King's Hall and went across the courtyard
+towards the gateway. Several of the King's
+henchmen stood in the courtyard to accompany
+him to Mass. When the King came towards
+them, they drew up in two rows, and the King
+passed between them.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid stood in the narrow corridor outside
+the Women's Room and looked down at the
+King. He wore a broad golden band round his
+head, and was attired in a long mantle of red
+velvet. He went very quietly, and there was a
+holy peace over his face. Astrid was terrified
+to see how much he resembled the Saints and
+Kings that were carved in wood over the altar
+in the Marie Church.</p>
+
+<p>At the gateway stood a man in a broad-brimmed
+hat, and wearing a big mantle. When
+the King approached him he threw off his
+mantle, lifted a drawn sword, which he had hidden
+under it, and rushed at the King. But when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+he was quite close to him, the mild and gentle
+glance of the King fell upon him, and he suddenly
+stopped. He let his sword fall to the
+ground, and fell on his knees.</p>
+
+<p>King Olaf stood still, and looked at the man
+with the same clear glance; the man tried to
+turn his eyes away from him, but he could not.
+At last he burst into tears and sobs.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, King Olaf! King Olaf!' he moaned.
+'Thine enemies sent me hither to slay thee; but
+when I saw thy saintly face my sword fell from
+my hand. Thine eyes, King Olaf, have felled
+me to the ground.'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid sank upon her knees where she stood.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh God, have mercy upon me, a sinner!' she
+said. 'Woe unto me, because by lying and deceit
+I have become the wife of this man.'</p>
+
+<h4>IV</h4>
+
+<p>On the evening of All Saints' Day the moon
+shone bright and clear. The King had gone the
+round of the castle, had looked into stables
+and barns to see that all was well; he had even
+been to the house where the serfs dwelt to ascertain
+if they were well looked after. When he
+went back to the King's Hall, he saw a woman
+with a black kerchief over her head stealing
+towards the gateway. He thought he knew her,
+and therefore followed her. She went out of
+the gateway, over the Market Place, and stole
+down the narrow lanes to the river.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Olaf Haraldsson went after her as quietly as
+he could. He saw her go on to one of the
+landing-stages, stand still, and look down into
+the water. She stretched out her arms towards
+heaven, and, with a deep sigh, she went so near
+the edge that the King saw she meant to spring
+into the river.</p>
+
+<p>The King approached her with the noiseless
+steps which a life full of danger had taught him.
+Twice the woman lifted her foot to make the
+spring, but she hesitated. Before she could make
+a new attempt, King Olaf had his arm round
+her waist and drew her back.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou unhappy one!' he said. 'Thou wouldest
+do that which God hath prohibited.'</p>
+
+<p>When the woman heard his voice she held her
+hands before her face as if to hide it. But King
+Olaf knew who she was. The rustle of her dress,
+the shape of her head, the golden rings on her
+arms had already told him that it was the Queen.
+The first moment Astrid had struggled to free
+herself, but she soon grew quiet, and tried to
+make the King believe that she had not intended
+to kill herself.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf, why dost thou secretly come behind
+a poor woman who hath gone down to the
+river to see how she is mirrored in the water?
+What must I think of thee?'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid's voice sounded composed and playful.
+The King stood silent.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou hast frightened me so that I nearly fell
+into the river,' Astrid said. 'Didst thou think,
+perhaps, that I would drown myself?'</p>
+
+<p>The King answered:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I know not what to believe; God will enlighten
+me.'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid laughed and kissed him.</p>
+
+<p>'What woman would take her life who is as
+happy as I am? Doth one take one's life in
+Paradise?'</p>
+
+<p>'I do not understand it,' said King Olaf, in
+his gentle manner. 'God will enlighten me. He
+will tell me if it be through any fault of mine that
+thou wouldest commit so great a sin.'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid went up to him and stroked his cheek.
+The reverence she felt for King Olaf had hitherto
+deterred her from showing him the full tenderness
+of her love. Now she threw her arms passionately
+around him and kissed him countless
+times. Then she began to speak to him in gentle,
+bird-like tones.</p>
+
+<p>'Wouldest thou know how truly my heart
+clings to thee?' she said.</p>
+
+<p>She made the King sit down on an overturned
+boat. She knelt down at his feet.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf,' she said, 'I will no longer be
+Queen. She who loves as greatly as I love thee
+cannot be a Queen. I wish thou wouldest go far
+into the forest, and let me be thy bondwoman.
+Then I should have leave to serve thee every
+day. Then I would prepare thy food, make thy
+bed, and watch over thy house whilst thou slept.
+None other should have leave to serve thee, except
+I. When thou returnest from the chase
+in the evening, I would go to meet thee, and
+kneel before thee on the road and say: "King
+Olaf, my life is thine." And thou wouldest laugh,
+and lower thy spear against my breast, and say:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+"Yes, thy life is mine. Thou hast neither father
+nor mother; thou art mine, and thy life is mine."'</p>
+
+<p>As Astrid said this, she drew, as if in play,
+King Olaf's sword out of its sheath. She laid
+the hilt in the King's hand, but the point she
+directed towards her own heart.</p>
+
+<p>'Say these words to me, King Olaf,' she said,
+'as if we were alone in the forest, and I were thy
+bondwoman. Say: "Thy life is mine."'</p>
+
+<p>'Thy life is God's,' said the King.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid laughed lightly.</p>
+
+<p>'My life is thine,' she repeated, in the tenderest
+voice, and the same moment King Olaf felt
+that she pressed the point of the sword against
+her breast.</p>
+
+<p>But the King held the sword with a firm hand,
+even when in play. He drew it to him before
+Astrid had time to do herself any harm. And he
+sprang up. For the first time in his life he
+trembled from fear. The Queen would die at his
+hand, and she had not been far from attaining
+her wish. At the same moment he had an inspiration,
+and he understood what was the cause
+of her despair.</p>
+
+<p>'She has committed a sin,' he thought. 'She
+has a sin upon her conscience.'</p>
+
+<p>He bent down over Astrid.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me in what manner thou hast sinned,'
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>Astrid had thrown herself down on the rough
+planks of the bridge, crying in utter despair.</p>
+
+<p>'No one free from guilt would weep like this,'
+thought the King. 'But how can the honourable
+daughter of the King have brought such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+heavy burden upon her?' he asked himself.
+'How can the noble Ingegerd have a crime upon
+her conscience?'</p>
+
+<p>'Ingegerd, tell me how thou hast sinned,' he
+asked again.</p>
+
+<p>But Astrid was sobbing so violently that she
+could not answer, but instead she drew off her
+golden arm and finger rings, and handed them
+to the King with averted face. The King
+thought how unlike this was to the gentle King's
+daughter of whom Hjalte had spoken.</p>
+
+<p>'Is this Hjalte's Ingegerd that lies sobbing at
+my feet?' he thought.</p>
+
+<p>He bent down and seized Astrid by the
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>'Who are thou? who art thou?' he said, shaking
+her arm. 'I see that thou canst not be Ingegerd.
+Who art thou?'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid was still sobbing so violently that she
+could not speak. But in order to give the King
+the answer he asked for, she let down her long
+hair, twisted a lock of it round her arms, and held
+them towards the King, and sat thus bowed and
+with drooping head. The King thought:</p>
+
+<p>'She wishes me to understand that she belongs
+to those who wear chains. She confesses that
+she is a bondwoman.'</p>
+
+<p>A thought again struck the King; he now
+understood everything.</p>
+
+<p>'Has not the Svea-King a daughter who is
+the child of a bondwoman?' he asked suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>He received no answer to this question either,
+but he heard Astrid shudder as if from cold.
+King Olaf asked still one more question.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Thou whom I have made my wife,' he said,
+'hast thou so low a mind that thou wouldest
+allow thyself to be used as a means of spoiling
+a man's honour? Is thy mind so mean that thou
+rejoicest when his enemies laugh at his discomfiture?'</p>
+
+<p>Astrid could hear from the King's voice how
+bitterly he suffered under the insult that had
+been offered him. She forgot her own sufferings,
+and wept no more.</p>
+
+<p>'Take my life,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>A great temptation came upon King Olaf.</p>
+
+<p>'Slay this wicked bondwoman,' the old Adam
+said within him. 'Show the Svea-King what it
+costs to make a fool of the King of Norway.'</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Olaf Haraldsson felt no love
+for Astrid. He hated her for having been the
+means of his humiliation. He knew everybody
+would think it right when he returned evil for
+evil, and if he did not avenge this insult, he
+would be held in derision by the Bards, and his
+enemies would no longer fear him. He had but
+one wish: to slay Astrid, to take her life. His
+anger was so violent that it craved for blood.
+If a fool had dared to put his fool's cap upon
+his head, would he not have torn it off, torn it
+to pieces, thrown it on the ground, trampled
+upon it? If he now laid Astrid a bloody corpse
+upon her ship, and sent her back to her father,
+people would say of King Olaf that he was a
+worthy descendant of Harald Haarfager.</p>
+
+<p>But King Olaf still held his sword in his
+hand, and under his fingers he felt the hilt, upon
+which he had once had inscribed: 'Blessed are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+the peacemakers,' 'Blessed are the meek,'
+'Blessed are the merciful.' And every time he,
+in this hour of anguish, grasped his sword firmly
+in order to slay Astrid, he felt these words under
+his hand. He thought he could feel every letter.
+He remembered the day when he had first heard
+these words.</p>
+
+<p>'This I will write in letters of gold on the hilt
+of my sword,' he had said, 'so that the words
+may burn in my hand every time I would swing
+my sword in fury, or for an unjust cause.'</p>
+
+<p>He felt that the hilt of the sword now burnt in
+his hand. King Olaf said aloud to himself:</p>
+
+<p>'Formerly thou wert the slave of many lusts;
+now thou hast but one master, and that is God.'</p>
+
+<p>With these words he put back the sword into
+its sheath, and began to walk to and fro on the
+bridge. Astrid remained lying in the same position.
+King Olaf saw that she crouched in fear
+of death every time he went past her.</p>
+
+<p>'I will not slay thee,' he said; but his voice
+sounded hard from hatred.</p>
+
+<p>King Olaf continued for awhile to walk backwards
+and forwards on the bridge; then he went
+up to Astrid, and asked her in the same hard
+voice what her real name was, and that she was
+able to answer him. He looked at this woman
+whom he had so highly treasured, and who now
+lay at his feet like a wounded deer&mdash;he looked
+down upon her as a dead man's soul looks with
+pity at the poor body which was once its dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, thou my soul,' said King Olaf, 'it was
+there thou dwelt in love, and now thou art as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+homeless as a beggar.' He drew nearer to
+Astrid, and spoke as if she were no longer living
+or could hear what he said. 'It was told me
+that there was a King's daughter whose heart
+was so pure and holy that she endued with peace
+all who came near her. They told me of her
+gentleness, that he who saw her felt as safe as a
+helpless child does with its mother, and when
+the beautiful woman who now lies here came
+to me, I thought that she was Ingegerd, and she
+became exceeding dear to me. She was so
+beautiful and glad, and she made my own heavy
+thoughts light. And did she sometimes act
+otherwise than I expected the proud Ingegerd
+to do, she was too dear to me to doubt her; she
+stole into my heart with her joyousness and
+beauty.'</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a time, and thought how
+dear Astrid had been to him and how happiness
+had with her come to his house.</p>
+
+<p>'I could forgive her,' he said aloud. 'I could
+again make her my Queen, I could in love take
+her in my arms; but I <em>dare</em> not, for my soul
+would still be homeless. Ah, thou fair woman,'
+he said, 'why dost lying dwell within thee? With
+thee there is no security, no rest.'</p>
+
+<p>The King went on bemoaning himself, but
+now Astrid stood up.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf, do not speak thus to me,' she
+said; 'I will rather die. Understand, I am in
+earnest.'</p>
+
+<p>Then she tried to say a few words to excuse
+herself. She told him that she had gone to
+Kungah&auml;lla not with the intention of deceiving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+him, but in order to be a Princess for a few
+weeks, to be waited upon like a Queen, to sail
+on the sea. But she had intended to confess who
+she was as soon as she came to Kungah&auml;lla.
+There she expected to find Hjalte and the other
+great men who knew Ingegerd. She had never
+thought of deceiving him when she came, but
+an evil spirit had sent all those away who knew
+Ingegerd, and then the temptation had come
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>'When I saw thee, King Olaf,' she said, 'I
+forgot everything to become thine, and I thought
+I would gladly suffer death at thine hand had I
+but for one day been thy wife.'</p>
+
+<p>King Olaf answered her:</p>
+
+<p>'I see that what was deadly earnest to me was
+but a pastime to thee. Never hast thou thought
+upon what it was to come and say to a man: "I
+am she whom thou most fervently desirest; I am
+that high-born maiden whom it is the greatest
+honour to win." And then thou art not that
+woman; thou art but a lying bondwoman.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have loved thee from the first moment I
+heard thy name,' Astrid said softly.</p>
+
+<p>The King clenched his hand in anger against
+her.</p>
+
+<p>'Know, Astrid, that I have longed for Ingegerd
+as no man has ever longed for woman. I
+would have clung to her as the soul of the dead
+clings to the angel bearing him upwards. I
+thought she was so pure that she could have
+helped me to lead a sinless life.'</p>
+
+<p>And he broke out into wild longings, and said
+that he longed for the power of the holy ones of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+God, but that he was too weak and sinful to attain
+to perfection.</p>
+
+<p>'But the King's daughter could have helped
+me,' he said; 'she the saintly and gentle one
+would have helped me. Oh, my God,' he said,
+'whichever way I turn I see sinners, wherever
+I go I meet those who would entice me to sin.
+Why didst Thou not send me the King's daughter,
+who had not a single evil thought in her heart?
+Her gentle eye would have found the right path
+for my foot. Whenever I strayed from it her
+gentle hand would have led me back.'</p>
+
+<p>A feeling of utter helplessness and the weariness
+of despair fell upon Olaf Haraldsson.</p>
+
+<p>'It was this upon which I had set my hopes,'
+he said&mdash;'to have a good woman at my side, not
+to wander alone amongst wickedness and sin forever.
+Now I feel that I must succumb; I am
+unable to fight any longer. Have I not asked
+God,' he exclaimed, 'what place I shall have
+before His face? To what hast Thou chosen me,
+Thou Lord of souls? Is it appointed unto me
+to become the equal of apostles and martyrs?
+But now, Astrid, I need ask no longer; God hath
+not been willing to give me that woman who
+should have assisted me in my wandering. Now
+I know that I shall never win the crown of the
+Saints.'</p>
+
+<p>The King was silent in inconsolable despair;
+then Astrid drew nearer to him.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf,' she said, 'what thou now sayest
+both Hjalte and Ingegerd have told me long ago,
+but I would not believe that thou wert more than
+a good and brave knight and noble King. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+only now that I have lived under thy roof that
+my soul has begun to fear thee. I have felt that
+it was worse than death to appear before thee
+with a lie upon my lips. Never have I been so
+terrified,' Astrid continued, 'as when I understood
+that thou wast a Saint. When I saw thee
+burn the chips in thine hand, when I saw sickness
+flee at thy bidding, and the sword fall out of
+thine enemy's hand when he met thee, I was
+terrified unto death when I saw that thou wast a
+Saint, and I resolved to die before thou knewest
+that I had deceived thee.'</p>
+
+<p>King Olaf did not answer. Astrid looked up
+at him; she saw that his eyes were turned
+towards heaven. She did not know if he had
+heard her.</p>
+
+<p>'Ah,' she said, 'this moment have I feared
+every day and every hour since I came hither.
+I would have died rather than live through it.'</p>
+
+<p>Olaf Haraldsson was still silent.</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf,' she said, 'I would gladly give my
+life for thee; I would gladly throw myself into
+the gray river so that thou shouldst not live with
+a lying woman at thy side. The more I saw of
+thy holiness the better I understood that I must
+go from thee. A Saint of God cannot have a
+lying bondwoman at his side.'</p>
+
+<p>The King was still silent, but now Astrid raised
+her eyes to his face; then she cried out, terror-stricken:</p>
+
+<p>'King Olaf, thy face shines.'</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Astrid spoke, God had shown King
+Olaf a vision. He saw all the stars of heaven
+leave their appointed places, and fly like swarm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>ing
+bees about the universe. But suddenly they
+all gathered above his head and formed a radiant
+crown.</p>
+
+<p>'Astrid,' said he, with trembling voice, 'God
+hath spoken to me. It is true what thou sayest.
+I shall become a Saint of God.'</p>
+
+<p>His voice trembled from emotion, and his face
+shone in the night. But when Astrid saw the
+light that surrounded his head, she arose. For
+her the last hope had faded.</p>
+
+<p>'Now I will go,' she said. 'Now thou knowest
+whom thou art. Thou canst never more bear
+me at thy side. But think gently of me. Without
+joy or happiness have I lived all my life. In
+rags have I gone; blows have I endured. Forgive
+me when I am gone. My love has done thee
+no harm.'</p>
+
+<p>When Astrid in silent despair crossed over the
+bridge, Olaf Haraldsson awoke from his ecstasy.
+He hastened after her.</p>
+
+<p>'Why wilt thou go?' he said. 'Why wilt
+thou go?'</p>
+
+<p>'<em>Must</em> I not go from thee when thou art a
+Saint?' she whispered scarcely audibly.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou shalt not go. Now thou canst remain,'
+said King Olaf. 'Before, I was a lowly man and
+must fear all sin; a poor earthly King was I,
+too poor to bestow on thee my grace; but now
+all the glory of Heaven has been given to me. Art
+thou weak? I am the Lord's knight. Dost thou
+fall? I can lift thee up. God hath chosen me,
+Astrid. Thou canst not harm me, but I can help
+thee. Ah! what am I saying? In this hour God
+hath so wholly and fully shed the riches of His<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+love in my heart that I cannot even see thou hast
+done wrong.'</p>
+
+<p>Gently and tenderly he lifted up the trembling
+form, and whilst lovingly supporting her, who
+was still sobbing and who could hardly stand
+upright, he and Astrid went back to the King's
+Castle.</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p>
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Old Agnete">III. <a name="Old_Agnete" id="Old_Agnete"><span class="dec_italic">Old</span> <span class="smcap">Agnete</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">III</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">Old</span> <span class="smcap">Agnete</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">Old</span> <span class="smcap">Agnete</span></p>
+
+<p>An old woman went up the mountain-path
+with short, tripping steps. She was little
+and thin. Her face was pale and wizened,
+but neither hard nor furrowed. She wore a long
+cloak and a quilled cap. She had a Prayer-Book
+in her hand and a sprig of lavender in her handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>She lived in a hut far up the high mountain
+where no trees could grow. It was lying quite
+close to the edge of a broad glacier, which sent
+its river of ice from the snow-clad mountain peak
+into the depths of the valley. There she lived
+quite alone. All those who had belonged to her
+were dead.</p>
+
+<p>It was Sunday, and she had been to church.
+But whatever might be the cause, her going there
+had not made her happy, but sorrowful. The
+clergyman had spoken about death and the
+doomed, and that had affected her. She had suddenly
+begun to think of how she had heard in
+her childhood that many of the doomed were
+tormented in the region of eternal cold on the
+mountain right above her dwelling. She could
+remember many tales about these wanderers of
+the glaciers&mdash;these indefatigable shadows which
+were hunted from place to place by the icy
+mountain winds.</p>
+
+<p>All at once she felt a great terror of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+mountain, and thought that her hut was dreadfully
+high up. Supposing those who moved
+about invisibly there wandered down the glaciers!
+And she who was quite alone! The word
+'alone' gave to her thoughts a still sadder turn.
+She again felt the full burden of that sorrow
+which never left her. She thought how hard it
+was to be so far away from human beings.</p>
+
+<p>'Old Agnete,' she said aloud to herself, as she
+had got into the habit of doing in the lonely
+waste, 'you sit in your hut and spin, and spin.
+You work and toil all the hours of the day so
+as not to perish from hunger. But is there anyone
+to whom you give any pleasure by being
+alive? Is there anyone, old Agnete? If any of
+your own were living&mdash;&mdash;Yes, then, perhaps,
+if you lived nearer the village, you might be of
+some use to somebody. Poor as you are, you
+could neither take dog nor cat home to you,
+but you could probably now and then give a
+beggar shelter. You ought not to live so far
+away from the highroad, old Agnete. If you
+could only once in a while give a thirsty wayfarer
+a drink, then you would know that it was of
+some use your being alive.'</p>
+
+<p>She sighed, and said to herself that not even
+the peasant women who gave her flax to spin
+would mourn her death. She had certainly
+striven to do her work honestly and well, but no
+doubt there were many who could have done it
+better. She began to cry bitterly, when the
+thought struck her that his reverence, who had
+seen her sitting in the same place in church for so
+many, many years, would perhaps think it a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+matter of perfect indifference whether she was
+dead or not.</p>
+
+<p>'It is as if I were dead,' she said. 'No one
+asks after me. I would just as well lie down
+and die. I am already frozen to death from cold
+and loneliness. I am frozen to the core of the
+heart, I am indeed. Ah me! ah me!' she said,
+now she had been set a-thinking; 'if there were
+only someone who really needed me, there might
+still be a little warmth left in old Agnete. But
+I cannot knit stockings for the mountain goats,
+or make the beds for the marmots, can I? I
+tell Thee,' she said, stretching our her hands
+towards heaven, 'something Thou must give me
+to do, or I shall lay me down and die.'</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment a tall, stern monk came
+towards her. He walked by her side because he
+saw that she was sorrowful, and she told him
+about her troubles. She said that her heart was
+nearly frozen to death, and that she would become
+like one of the wanderers on the glacier
+if God did not give her something to live for.</p>
+
+<p>'God will assuredly do that,' said the monk.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you not see that God is powerless here?'
+old Agnete said. 'Here there is nothing but
+an empty, barren waste.'</p>
+
+<p>They went higher and higher towards the snow
+mountains. The moss spread itself softly over
+the stones; the Alpine herbs, with their velvety
+leaves, grew along the pathway; the mountain,
+with its rifts and precipices, its glaciers and snow-drifts,
+towered above them, weighing them down.
+Then the monk discovered old Agnete's hut,
+right below the glacier.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Oh,' he said, 'is it there you live? Then you
+are not alone there; you have company enough.
+Only look!'</p>
+
+<p>The monk put his thumb and first finger together,
+held them before old Agnete's left eye,
+and bade her look through them towards the
+mountain. But old Agnete shuddered and closed
+her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'If there is anything to see up there, then I
+will not look on any account,' she said. 'The
+Lord preserve us! it is bad enough without that.'</p>
+
+<p>'Good-bye, then,' said the monk; 'it is not
+certain that you will be permitted to see such a
+thing a second time.'</p>
+
+<p>Old Agnete grew curious; she opened her
+eyes and looked towards the glacier. At first
+she saw nothing remarkable, but soon she began
+to discern things moving about. What she had
+taken to be mist and vapour, or bluish-white
+shadows on the ice, were multitudes of doomed
+souls, tormented in the eternal cold.</p>
+
+<p>Poor old Agnete trembled like an aspen leaf.
+Everything was just as she had heard it described
+in days gone by. The dead wandered about there
+in endless anguish and pain. Most of them were
+shrouded in something long and white, but all
+had their faces and their hands bared.</p>
+
+<p>They could not be counted, there was such a
+multitude. The longer she looked, the more
+there appeared. Some walked proud and erect,
+others seemed to dance over the glacier; but she
+saw that they all cut their feet on the sharp and
+jagged edges of the ice.</p>
+
+<p>It was just as she had been told. She saw how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+they constantly huddled close together, as if to
+warm themselves, but immediately drew back
+again, terrified by the deathly cold which emanated
+from their bodies.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if the cold of the mountain came
+from them, as if it were they who prevented the
+snow from melting and made the mist so piercingly
+cold.</p>
+
+<p>They were not all moving; some stood in icy
+stoniness, and it looked as if they had been standing
+thus for years, for ice and snow had gathered
+around them so that only the upper portion of
+their bodies could be seen.</p>
+
+<p>The longer the little old woman gazed the
+quieter she grew. Fear left her, and she was only
+filled with sorrow for all these tormented beings.
+There was no abatement in their pain, no rest for
+their torn feet, hurrying over ice sharp as edged
+steel. And how cold they were! how they shivered!
+how their teeth chattered from cold!
+Those who were petrified and those who could
+move, all suffered alike from the snarling, biting,
+unbearable cold.</p>
+
+<p>There were many young men and women; but
+there was no youth in their faces, blue with cold.
+It looked as if they were playing, but all joy was
+dead. They shivered, and were huddled up like
+old people.</p>
+
+<p>But those who made the deepest impression on
+her were those frozen fast in the hard glacier,
+and those who were hanging from the mountain-side
+like great icicles.</p>
+
+<p>Then the monk removed his hand, and old
+Agnete saw only the barren, empty glaciers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+Here and there were ice-mounds, but they did
+not surround any petrified ghosts. The blue
+light on the glacier did not proceed from frozen
+bodies; the wind chased the snowflakes before
+it, but not any ghosts.</p>
+
+<p>Still old Agnete was certain that she had really
+seen all this, and she asked the monk:</p>
+
+<p>'Is it permitted to do anything for these poor
+doomed ones?'</p>
+
+<p>He answered:</p>
+
+<p>'When has God forbidden Love to do good
+or Mercy to solace?'</p>
+
+<p>Then the monk went his way, and old Agnete
+went to her hut and thought it all over. The
+whole evening she pondered how she could help
+the doomed who were wandering on the glaciers.
+For the first time in many years she had been
+too busy to think of her loneliness.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning she again went down to the
+village. She smiled, and was well content. Old
+age was no longer so heavy a burden. 'The
+dead,' she said to herself, 'do not care so much
+about red cheeks and light steps. They only
+want one to think of them with a little warmth.
+But young people do not trouble to do that. Oh
+no, oh no. How should the dead protect themselves
+from the terrible coldness of death did not
+old people open their hearts to them?</p>
+
+<p>When she came to the village shop she bought
+a large package of candles, and from a peasant
+she ordered a great load of firewood; but in
+order to pay for it she had to take in twice as
+much spinning as usual.</p>
+
+<p>Towards evening, when she got home again,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+she said many prayers, and tried to keep up her
+courage by singing hymns. But her courage
+sank more and more. All the same, she did what
+she had made up her mind to do.</p>
+
+<p>She moved her bed into the inner room of her
+hut. In the front room she made a big fire and
+lighted it. In the window she placed two candles,
+and left the outer door wide open. Then
+she went to bed.</p>
+
+<p>She lay in the darkness and listened.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, there certainly was a step. It was as if
+someone had come gliding down the glacier. It
+came heavily, moaning. It crept round the hut
+as if it dared not come in. Close to the wall it
+stood and shivered.</p>
+
+<p>Old Agnete could not bear it any longer. She
+sprang out of bed, went into the outer room and
+closed the door. It was too much; flesh and
+blood could not stand it.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the hut she heard deep sighs and dragging
+steps, as of sore, wounded feet. They
+dragged themselves away further and further up
+the icy glacier. Now and again she also heard
+sobs; but soon everything was quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Then old Agnete was beside herself with anxiety.
+'You are a coward, you silly old thing,'
+she said. 'Both the fire and the lights, which
+cost so much, are burning out. Shall it all have
+been done in vain because you are such a miserable
+coward?' And when she had said this
+she got out of bed again, crying from fear, with
+chattering teeth, and shivering all over; but into
+the other room she went, and the door she
+opened.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Again she lay and waited. Now she was no
+longer frightened that they should come. She
+was only afraid lest she had scared them away,
+and that they dared not come back.</p>
+
+<p>And as she lay there in the darkness she began
+to call just as she used to do in her young days
+when she was tending the sheep.</p>
+
+<p>'My little white lambs, my lambs in the
+mountains, come, come! Come down from rift
+and precipice, my little white lambs!'</p>
+
+<p>Then it seemed as if a cold wind from the
+mountain came rushing into the room. She
+heard neither step nor sob, only gusts of wind
+that came rushing along the walls of the hut into
+the room. And it sounded as if someone were
+continually saying:</p>
+
+<p>'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't
+frighten her! don't frighten her!'</p>
+
+<p>She had a feeling as if the outside room was
+so overcrowded that they were being crushed
+against the walls, and that the walls were giving
+way. Sometimes it seemed as if they would lift
+the roof in order to gain more room. But the
+whole time there were whispers:</p>
+
+<p>'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't
+frighten her!'</p>
+
+<p>Then old Agnete felt happy and peaceful. She
+folded her hands and fell asleep. In the morning
+it seemed as if the whole had been a dream.
+Everything looked as usual in the outer room;
+the fire had burnt out, and so had the candles.
+There was not a vestige of tallow left in the
+candlesticks.</p>
+
+<p>As long as old Agnete lived she continued to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+do this. She spun and worked so that she could
+keep her fire burning every night. And she was
+happy because someone needed her.</p>
+
+<p>Then one Sunday she was not in her usual seat
+in the church. Two peasants went up to her hut
+to see if there was anything the matter. She was
+already dead, and they carried her body down
+to the village to bury it.</p>
+
+<p>When, the following Sunday, her funeral took
+place, just before Mass, there were but few who
+followed, neither did one see grief on any face.
+But suddenly, just as the coffin was being lowered
+into the grave, a tall, stern monk came into
+the churchyard, and he stood still and pointed
+to the snow-clad mountains. Then they saw the
+whole mountain-ridge shining in a red light as
+if lighted with joy, and round it wound a procession
+of small yellow flames, looking like
+burning candles. And these flames numbered
+as many as the candles which old Agnete had
+burned for the doomed. Then people said:
+'Praise the Lord! She whom no one mourns
+here below has all the same found friends in the
+solitude <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Punctuation added">above.</span>'</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="The Fisherman's Ring">IV. <a name="The_Fishermans_Ring" id="The_Fishermans_Ring"><span class="dec_italic">The Fisherman's</span> <span class="smcap">Ring</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">IV</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The Fisherman's</span> <span class="smcap">Ring</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The Fisherman's</span> <span class="smcap">Ring</span></p>
+
+<p>During the reign of the Doge Gradenigos
+there lived in Venice an old fisherman,
+Cecco by name. He had been an
+unusually strong man, and was still very strong
+for his age, but lately he had given up work and
+left it to his two sons to provide for him. He was
+very proud of his sons, and he loved them&mdash;ah,
+signor, how he loved them!</p>
+
+<p>Fate had so ordered it that their bringing up
+had been almost entirely left to him. Their
+mother had died early, and so Cecco had to take
+care of them. He had looked after their clothes
+and cooked their food; he had sat in the boat
+with needle and cotton and mended and darned.
+He had not cared in the least that people had
+laughed at him on that account. He had also,
+quite alone, taught them all it was necessary for
+them to know. He had made a couple of able
+fishermen of them, and taught them to honour
+God and San Marco.</p>
+
+<p>'Always remember,' he said to them, 'that
+Venice will never be able to stand in her own
+strength. Look at her! Has she not been built
+on the waves? Look at the low islands close to
+land, where the sea plays amongst the seaweed.
+You would not venture to tread upon them, and
+yet it is upon such foundation that the whole
+city rests. And do you not know that the north
+wind has strength enough to throw both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+churches and palaces into the sea? Do you not
+know that we have such powerful enemies, that
+all the princes in Christendom cannot vanquish
+them? Therefore you must always pray to San
+Marco, for in his strong hands rests the chains
+which hold Venice suspended over the depths of
+the sea.'</p>
+
+<p>And in the evening, when the moon shed its
+light over Venice, greenish-blue from the sea-mist;
+when they quietly glided up the Canale
+Grande and the gondolas they met were full of
+singers; when the palaces shone in their white
+splendour, and thousands of lights mirrored
+themselves in the dark waters&mdash;then he always
+reminded them that they must thank San Marco
+for life and happiness.</p>
+
+<p>But oh, signor! he did not forget him in the
+daytime either. When they returned from fishing
+and glided over the water of the lagoons,
+light-blue and golden; when the city lay before
+them, swimming on the waves; when the great
+ships passed in and out of the harbour, and the
+palace of the Doges shone like a huge jewel-casket,
+holding all the world's treasure&mdash;then he
+never forgot to tell them that all these things
+were the gift of San Marco, and that they would
+all vanish if a single Venetian were ungrateful
+enough to give up believing in and adoring him.</p>
+
+<p>Then, one day, the sons went out fishing on
+the open sea, outside Lido. They were in company
+with several others, had a splendid vessel,
+and intended being away several days. The
+weather was fine, and they hoped for a goodly
+haul.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They left the Rialto, the large island where the
+city proper lies, one early morning, and as they
+passed through the lagoons they saw all the
+islands which, like fortifications, protect Venice
+against the sea, appear through the mist of the
+morning. There were La Gindecca and San
+Giorgio on the right, and San Michele, Muracco
+and San Lazzaro on the left. Then island followed
+upon island in a large circle, right on to
+the long Lido lying straight before them, and
+forming, as it were, the clasp of this string of
+pearls. And beyond Lido was the wide, infinite
+sea.</p>
+
+<p>When they were well at sea, some of them got
+into a small boat and rowed out to set their nets.
+It was still fine weather, although the waves were
+higher here than inside the islands. None of
+them, however, dreamt of any danger. They had
+a good boat and were experienced men. But
+soon those left on the vessel saw that the sea and
+the sky suddenly grew darker in the north. They
+understood that a storm was coming on, and they
+at once shouted to their comrades, but they were
+already too far away to hear them.</p>
+
+<p>The wind first reached the small boat. When
+the fishermen suddenly saw the waves rise around
+them, as herds of cattle on a large plain arise
+in the morning, one of the men in the boat stood
+up and beckoned to his comrades, but the same
+moment he fell backwards into the sea. Immediately
+afterwards a wave came which raised the
+boat on her bows, and one could see how the
+men, as it were, were shaken from off their seats
+and flung into the sea. It only lasted a moment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+and everything had disappeared. Then the boat
+again appeared, keel upwards. The men in the
+vessel tried to reach the spot, but could not tack
+against the wind.</p>
+
+<p>It was a terrific storm which came rushing
+over the sea, and soon the fishermen in the vessel
+had their work set to save themselves. They succeeded
+in getting home safely, however, and
+brought with them the news of the disaster. It
+was Cecco's two sons and three others who had
+perished.</p>
+
+<p>Ah me! how strangely things come about!
+The same morning Cecco had gone down to
+the Rialto to the fish-market. He went about
+amongst the stands and strutted about like a fine
+gentleman because he had no need to work.
+He even invited a couple of old Lido fishermen
+to an asteri and stood them a beaker of wine.
+He grew very important as he sat there and
+bragged and boasted about his sons. His spirits
+rose high, and he took out the zecchine&mdash;the
+one the Doge had given him when he had saved a
+child from drowning in Canale Grande. He was
+very proud of this large gold coin, carried it always
+about him, and showed it to people whenever
+there was an opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a man entered the asteri and began
+to tell about the disaster, without noticing that
+Cecco was sitting there. But he had not been
+speaking long before Cecco threw himself over
+him and seized him by the throat.</p>
+
+<p>'You do not dare to tell me that they are
+dead!' he shrieked&mdash;'not my sons!'</p>
+
+<p>The man succeeded in getting away from him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+but Cecco for a long time went on as if he were
+out of his mind. People heard him shout and
+groan; they crowded into the asteri&mdash;as many
+as it could hold&mdash;and stood round him in a circle
+as if he were a juggler.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco sat on the floor and moaned. He hit
+the hard stone floor with his fist, and said over
+and over again:</p>
+
+<p>'It is San Marco, San Marco, San Marco!'</p>
+
+<p>'Cecco, you have taken leave of your senses
+from grief,' they said to him.</p>
+
+<p>'I knew it would happen on the open sea,'
+Cecco said; 'outside Lido and Malamocco,
+there, I knew it would happen. There San
+Marco would take them. He bore them a
+grudge. I have feared it, boy. Yes,' he said,
+without hearing what they said to quiet him,
+'they once laughed at him, once when we were
+lying outside Lido. He has not forgotten it; he
+will not stand being laughed at.'</p>
+
+<p>He looked with confused glances at the bystanders,
+as if to seek help.</p>
+
+<p>'Look here, Beppo from Malamocca,' he said,
+stretching out his hand towards a big fisherman,
+'don't you believe it was San Marco?'</p>
+
+<p>'Don't imagine any such thing, Cecco.'</p>
+
+<p>'Now you shall hear, Beppo, how it happened.
+You see, we were lying out at sea, and to while
+away the time I told them how San Marco had
+come to Venice. The evangelist San Marco
+was first buried in a beautiful cathedral at Alexandria
+in Egypt. But the town got into the
+possession of unbelievers, and one day the
+Khalifa ordered that they should build him a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+magnificent palace at Alexandria, and take some
+columns from the Christian churches for its
+decoration. But just at that time there were
+two Venetian merchants at Alexandria who had
+ten heavily-laden vessels lying in the harbour.
+When these men entered the church where San
+Marco was buried and heard the command of the
+Khalifa, they said to the sorrowful priests:
+"The precious body which you have in your
+church may be desecrated by the Saracens. Give
+it to us; we will honour it, for San Marco was
+the first to preach on the Lagoon, and the Doge
+will reward you." And the priests gave their
+consent, and in order that the Christians of Alexandria
+should not object, the body of another
+holy man was placed in the Evangelist's coffin.
+But to prevent the Saracens from getting any
+news of the removal of the body, it was placed
+at the bottom of a large chest, and above it were
+packed hams and smoked bacon, which the
+Saracens could not endure. So when the Custom-house
+officers opened the lid of the chest,
+they at once hurried away. The two merchants,
+however, brought San Marco safely to Venice;
+you know, Beppo, that this is what they say.'</p>
+
+<p>'I do, Cecco.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes; but just listen now,' and Cecco half
+arose, and in his fear spoke in a low voice.
+'Something terrible now happened. When I told
+the boys that the holy man had been hidden
+underneath the bacon, they burst out laughing.
+I tried to hush them, but they only laughed the
+louder. Giacomo was lying on his stomach in
+the bows, and Pietro sat with his legs dangling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+outside the boat, and they both laughed so that
+it could be heard far out over the sea.'</p>
+
+<p>'But, Cecco, surely two children may be allowed
+to laugh.'</p>
+
+<p>'But don't you understand that is where they
+have perished to-day&mdash;on the very spot? Or can
+you understand why they should have lost their
+lives on that spot?'</p>
+
+<p>Now they all began to talk to him and comfort
+him. It was his grief which made him lose
+his senses. This was not like San Marco. He
+would not revenge himself upon two children.
+Was it not natural that when a boat was caught
+in a storm this would happen on the open sea
+and not in the harbour?</p>
+
+<p>Surely his sons had not lived in enmity with
+San Marco. They had heard them shout, '<em><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Eviva
+San Marco!</span></em>' as eagerly as all the others, and had
+he not protected them to this very day. He had
+never, during the years that had passed, shown
+any sign of being angry with them.</p>
+
+<p>'But, Cecco,' they said, 'you will bring misfortune
+upon us with your talk about San Marco.
+You, who are an old man and a wise man, should
+know better than to raise his anger against the
+Venetians. What are we without him?'</p>
+
+<p>Cecco sat and looked at them bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>'Then you don't believe it?'</p>
+
+<p>'No one in his senses would believe such a
+thing.'</p>
+
+<p>It looked as if they had succeeded in quieting
+him.</p>
+
+<p>'I will also try not to believe it,' he said. He
+rose and walked towards the door. 'It would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+too cruel, would it not?' he said. 'They were
+too handsome and too brave for anyone to hate
+them; I will not believe it.'</p>
+
+<p>He went home, and in the narrow street outside
+his door he met an old woman, one of his
+neighbours.</p>
+
+<p>'They are reading a Mass in the cathedral for
+the souls of the dead,' she said to Cecco, and
+hurried away. She was afraid of him; he looked
+so strange.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco took his boat and made his way through
+the small canals down to Riva degli Schiavoni.
+There was a wide view from there; he looked
+towards Lido and the sea. Yes, it was a hard
+wind, but not a storm by any means; there
+were hardly any waves. And his sons had perished
+in weather like this! It was inconceivable.</p>
+
+<p>He fastened his boat, and went across the
+Piazetta and the Market Place into San Marco.
+There were many people in the church, and they
+were all kneeling and praying in great fear; for
+it is much more terrible for the Venetians, you
+know, than any other people when there is a
+disaster at sea. They do not get their living
+from vineyards or fields, but they are all, everyone
+of them, dependent on the sea. Whenever
+the sea rose against any one of them they were
+all afraid, and hurried to San Marco to pray to
+him for protection.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Cecco entered the cathedral he
+stopped. He thought of how he had brought
+his little sons there, and taught them to pray to
+San Marco. 'It is he who carries us over the
+sea, who opens the gates of Byzance for us and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+gives us the supremacy over the islands of the
+East,' he said to them. Out of gratitude for all
+this the Venetians had built San Marco the most
+beautiful temple in the world, and no vessel ever
+returned from a foreign port without bringing a
+gift for San Marco.</p>
+
+<p>Then they had admired the red marble walls
+of the cathedral and the golden mosaic ceiling.
+It was as if no misfortune could befall a city that
+had such a sanctuary for her patron Saint.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco quickly knelt down and began to pray,
+the one <em>Paternoster</em> after the other. It came
+back, he felt. He would send it away by prayers.
+He would not believe anything bad about
+San Marco.</p>
+
+<p>But it had been no storm at all. And so much
+was certain, that even if the Saint had not sent
+the storm, he had, in any case, not done anything
+to help Cecco's sons, but had allowed them
+to perish as if by accident. When this thought
+came upon him he began to pray; but the
+thought would not leave him.</p>
+
+<p>And to think that San Marco had a treasury
+in this cathedral full of all the glories of fairyland!
+To think that he had himself prayed to him all
+his life, and had never rowed past the Piazetta
+without going into the cathedral to invoke him!</p>
+
+<p>Surely it was not by a mere accident that his
+sons had to-day perished on the sea! Oh, it
+was miserable for the Venetians to have no one
+better to depend upon! Just fancy a Saint who
+revenged himself upon two children&mdash;a patron
+Saint who could not protect against a gust of
+wind!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He stood up, and he shrugged his shoulders,
+and disparagingly waved his hand when he
+looked towards the tomb of the Saint in the
+chancel.</p>
+
+<p>A verger was going about with a large chased
+silver-gilt dish, collecting gifts for San Marco.
+He went from the one person to the other, and
+also came to Cecco.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco drew back as if it were the Evil One himself
+who handed him the plate. Did San Marco
+ask for gifts from him? Did he think he deserved
+gifts from him?</p>
+
+<p>All at once he seized the large golden zecchine
+he had in his belt, and flung it into the plate with
+such violence that the ring of it could be heard
+all over the church. It disturbed those who were
+praying, and made them turn round. And all
+who saw Cecco's face were terrified; he looked as
+if he were possessed of evil spirits.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco immediately left the church, and at first
+felt it as a great relief that he had been revenged
+upon the Saint. He had treated him as one treats
+a usurer who demands more than he is entitled to.
+'Take this too,' one says, and throws his last gold
+piece in the fellow's face so that the blood runs
+down over his eyes. But the usurer does not
+strike again&mdash;simply stoops and picks up the zecchine.
+So, too, had San Marco done. He had accepted
+Cecco's zecchine, having first robbed him
+of his sons. Cecco had made him accept a gift
+which had been tendered with such bitter hatred.
+Would an honourable man have put up with such
+treatment? But San Marco was a coward&mdash;both
+cowardly and revengeful. But he was not likely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+to revenge himself upon Cecco. He was, no
+doubt, pleased and thankful he had got the
+zecchine. He simply accepted it and pretended
+that it had been given as piously as could be.</p>
+
+<p>When Cecco stood at the entrance, two vergers
+quickly passed him.</p>
+
+<p>'It rises&mdash;it rises terribly!' the one said.</p>
+
+<p>'What rises?' asked Cecco.</p>
+
+<p>'The water in the crypt. It has risen a foot in
+the last two or three minutes.'</p>
+
+<p>When Cecco went down the steps, he saw a
+small pool of water on the Market Place close to
+the bottom step. It was sea-water, which had
+splashed up from the Piazetta. He was surprised
+that the sea had risen so high, and he hurried
+down to the Riva, where his boat lay. Everything
+was as he had left it, only the water had
+risen considerably. It came rolling in broad
+waves through the five sea-gates; but the wind
+was not very strong. At the Riva there were already
+pools of sea-water, and the canals rose so
+that the doors in the houses facing the water had
+to be closed. The sky was all gray like the sea.</p>
+
+<p>It never struck Cecco that it might grow into
+a serious storm. He would not believe any such
+thing. San Marco had allowed his sons to perish
+without cause. He felt sure this was no real
+storm. He would just like to see if it would be a
+storm, and he sat down beside his boat and
+waited.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly rifts appeared in the dull-gray
+clouds which covered the sky. The clouds were
+torn asunder and flung aside, and large storm-clouds
+came rushing, black like warships, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+from them scourging rain and hail fell upon the
+city. And something like quite a new sea came
+surging in from Lido. Ah, signor! they were
+not the swan-necked waves you have seen out
+there, the waves that bend their transparent necks
+and hasten towards the shore, and which, when
+they are pitilessly repulsed, float away again with
+their white foam-hair dispersed over the surface
+of the sea. These were dark waves, chasing each
+other in furious rage, and over their tops the bitter
+froth of the sea was whipped into mist.</p>
+
+<p>The wind was now so strong that the seagulls
+could no longer continue their quiet flight, but,
+shrieking, were thrust from their course. Cecco
+soon saw them with much trouble making their
+way towards the sea, so as not to be caught by
+the storm and flung against the walls. Hundreds
+of pigeons on San Marco's square flew up, beating
+their wings, so that it sounded like a new
+storm, and hid themselves away in all the nooks
+and corners of the church roof.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not the birds alone that were frightened
+by the storm. A couple of gondolas had already
+got loose, and were thrown against the
+shore, and were nearly shattered. And now all
+the gondoliers came rushing to pull their boats
+into the boathouses, or place them in shelter in
+the small canals.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors on the ships lying in the harbour
+worked with the anchor-chains to make the vessels
+fast, in order to prevent them drifting on to
+the shore. They took down the clothes hanging
+up to dry, pulled their long caps well over
+their foreheads, and began to collect all the loose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+articles lying about in order to bring them below
+deck. Outside Canale Grande a whole fishing-fleet
+came hurrying home. All the people from
+Lido and Malamocco who had sold their goods
+at the Rialto were rushing homewards, before the
+storm grew too violent.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco laughed when he saw the fishermen
+bending over their oars and straining themselves
+as if they were fleeing from death itself. Could
+they not see that it was only a gust of wind?
+They could very well have remained and given
+the Venetian women time to buy all their cattle,
+fish, and crabs.</p>
+
+<p>He was certainly not going to pull his boat into
+shelter, although the storm was now violent
+enough for any ordinary man to have taken notice
+of it. The floating bridges were lifted up high
+and cast on to the shore, whilst the washerwomen
+hurried home shrieking. The broad-brimmed
+hats of the signors were blown off into the canals,
+from whence the street-boys fished them out with
+great glee. Sails were torn from the masts, and
+fluttered in the air with a cracking sound; children
+were knocked down by the strong wind; and
+the clothes hanging on the lines in the narrow
+streets were torn to rags and carried far away.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco laughed at the storm&mdash;a storm which
+drove the birds away, and played all sorts of
+pranks in the street, like a boy. But, all the same,
+he pulled his boat under one of the arches of the
+bridge. One could really not allow what that
+wind might take it into its head to do.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening Cecco thought that it would
+have been fun to have been out at sea. It would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+have been splendid sailing with such a fresh
+wind. But on shore it was unpleasant. Chimneys
+were blown down; the roofs of the boathouses
+were lifted right off; it rained tiles from the
+houses into the canals; the wind shook the doors
+and the window-shutters, rushed in under the
+open loggias of the palaces and tore off the decorations.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco held out bravely, but he did not go home
+to bed. He could not take the boat home with
+him, so it was better to remain and look after it.
+But when anyone went by and said that it was
+terrible weather he would not admit it. He had
+experienced very different weather in his young
+days.</p>
+
+<p>'Storm!' he said to himself&mdash;'call this a
+storm? And they think, perhaps, that it began
+the same moment I threw the zecchine to San
+Marco. As if he can command a real storm!'</p>
+
+<p>When night came the wind and the sea grew
+still more violent, so that Venice trembled in her
+foundations. Doge Gradenigo and the Gentlemen
+of the High Council went in the darkness of
+the night to San Marco to pray for the city.
+Torch-bearers went before them, and the flames
+were spread out by the wind, so that they lay flat,
+like pennants. The wind tore the Doge's heavy
+brocade gown, so that two men were obliged to
+hold it.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco thought this was the most remarkable
+thing he had ever seen&mdash;Doge Gradenigo going
+himself to the cathedral on account of this bit of
+a wind! What would those people have done if
+there had been a real storm?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The waves beat incessantly against the bulwarks.
+In the darkness of the night it was as if
+white-headed wresters sprang up from the deep,
+and with teeth and claws clung fast to the piles to
+tear them loose from the shore. Cecco fancied
+he could hear their angry snorts when they were
+hurled back again. But he shuddered when he
+heard them come again and again, and tear in the
+bulwarks.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to him that the storm was far more
+terrible in the night. He heard shouts in the air,
+and that was not the wind. Sometimes black
+clouds came drifting like a whole row of heavy
+galleys, and it seemed as if they advanced to make
+an assault on the city. Then he heard distinctly
+someone speaking in one of the riven clouds over
+his head.</p>
+
+<p>'Things look bad for Venice now,' it said from
+the one cloud. 'Soon our brothers the evil spirits
+will come and overthrow the city.'</p>
+
+<p>'I am afraid San Marco will not allow it to
+happen,' came as a response from the other cloud.</p>
+
+<p>'San Marco has been knocked down by a
+Venetian, so he lies powerless, and cannot help
+anyone,' said the first.</p>
+
+<p>The storm carried the words down to old Cecco,
+and from that moment he was on his knees, praying
+San Marco for grace and forgiveness. For
+the evil spirits had spoken the truth. It did indeed
+look bad for Venice. The fair Queen of the
+Isles was near destruction. A Venetian had
+mocked San Marco, and therefore Venice was in
+danger of being carried away by the sea. There
+would be no more moonlight sails or her sea and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+in her canals, and no more barcaroles would be
+heard from her black gondolas. The sea would
+wash over the golden-haired signoras, over the
+proud palaces, over San Marco, resplendent with
+gold.</p>
+
+<p>If there was no one to protect these islands,
+they were doomed to destruction. Before San
+Marco came to Venice it had often happened that
+large portions of them had been washed away by
+the waves.</p>
+
+<p>At early dawn San Marco's Church bells began
+to ring. People crept to the church, their clothes
+being nearly torn off them.</p>
+
+<p>The storm went on increasing. The priests had
+resolved to go out and adjure the storm and the
+sea. The main doors of the cathedral were
+opened, and the long procession streamed out of
+the church. Foremost the cross was carried, then
+came the choir-boys with wax candles, and last in
+the procession were carried the banner of San
+Marco and the Sacred Host.</p>
+
+<p>But the storm did not allow itself to be cowed;
+on the contrary, it was as if it wished for nothing
+better to play with. It upset the choir-boys, blew
+out the wax candles, and flung the baldachin,
+which was carried over the Host, on to the top of
+the Doge's palace. It was with the utmost trouble
+that they saved San Marco's banner, with the
+winged lion, from being carried away.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco saw all this, and stole down to his boat
+moaning loudly. The whole day he lay near the
+shore, often wet by the waves and in danger of
+being washed into the sea. The whole day he
+was praying incessantly to God and San Marco.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+He felt that the fate of the whole city depended
+upon his prayers.</p>
+
+<p>There were not many people about that day,
+but some few went moaning along the Riva. All
+spoke about the immeasurable damage the storm
+had wrought. One could see the houses tumbling
+down on the Murano. It was as if the whole
+island were under water. And also on the Rialto
+one or two houses had fallen.</p>
+
+<p>The storm continued the whole day with unabated
+violence. In the evening a large multitude
+of people assembled at the Market Place and
+the Piazetta, although these were nearly covered
+with water. People dared not remain in their
+houses, which shook in their very foundations.
+And the cries of those who feared disaster mingled
+with the lamentations of those whom it had
+already overtaken. Whole dwellings were under
+water; children were drowned in their cradles.
+The old and the sick had been swept with the
+overturned houses into the waves.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco was still lying and praying to San Marco.
+Oh, how could the crime of a poor fisherman be
+taken in such earnest? Surely it was not his fault
+that the saint was so powerless! He would let
+the demons take him and his boat; he deserved
+no better fate. But not the whole city!&mdash;oh,
+God in heaven, not the whole city!</p>
+
+<p>'My sons!' Cecco said to San Marco. 'What
+do I care about my sons when Venice is at stake!
+I would willingly give a son for each tile in danger
+of being blown into the canal if I could keep them
+in their place at that price. Oh, San Marco, each
+little stone of Venice is worth as much as a
+promising son.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At times he saw terrible things. There was a
+large galley which had torn itself from its moorings
+and now came drifting towards the shore.
+It went straight against the bulwark, and struck
+it with the ram's head in her bows, just as if it had
+been an enemy's ship. It gave blow after blow,
+and the attack was so violent that the vessel immediately
+sprang a leak. The water rushed in,
+the leak grew larger, and the proud ship went to
+pieces. But the whole time one could see the
+captain and two or three of the crew, who would
+not leave the vessel, cling to the deck and meet
+death without attempting to escape it.</p>
+
+<p>The second night came, and Cecco's prayers
+continued to knock at the gate of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>'Let me alone suffer!' he cried. 'San Marco, it
+is more than a man can bear, thus to drag others
+with him to destruction. Only send thy lion and
+kill me; I shall not attempt to escape. Everything
+that thou wilt have me give up for the city,
+that will I willingly sacrifice.'</p>
+
+<p>Just as he had uttered these words he looked
+towards the Piazetta, and he thought he could
+no longer see San Marco's lion on the granite
+pillar. Had San Marco permitted his lion to be
+overthrown? old Cecco cried. He was nearly
+giving up Venice.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst he was lying there he saw visions and
+heard voices all the time. The demons talked and
+moved to and fro. He heard them wheeze like
+wild beasts every time they made their assaults on
+the bulwarks. He did not mind them much; it
+was worse about Venice.</p>
+
+<p>Then he heard in the air above him the beating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+of strong wings; this was surely San Marco's
+lion flying overhead. It moved backwards and
+forwards in the air; he saw and yet he did not
+see it. Then it seemed to him as if it descended
+on Riva degli Schiavoni, where he was lying, and
+prowled about there. He was on the point of
+jumping into the sea from fear, but he remained
+sitting where he was. It was no doubt he whom
+the lion sought. If that could only save Venice,
+then he was quite willing to let San Marco avenge
+himself upon him.</p>
+
+<p>Then the lion came crawling along the ground
+like a cat. He saw it making ready to spring. He
+noticed that it beat its wings and screwed its large
+carbuncle eyes together till they were only small
+fiery slits.</p>
+
+<p>Then old Cecco certainly did think of creeping
+down to his boat and hiding himself under the
+arch of the bridge, but he pulled himself together
+and remained where he was. The same moment
+a tall, imposing figure stood by his side.</p>
+
+<p>'Good-evening, Cecco,' said the man; 'take
+your boat and row me across to San Giorgio Maggiore.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, signor,' immediately replied the old fisherman.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if he had awakened from a dream.
+The lion had disappeared, and the man must be
+somebody who knew him, although Cecco could
+not quite remember where he had seen him
+before. He was glad to have company. The
+terrible heaviness and anguish that had been over
+him since he had revolted against the Saint suddenly
+vanished. As to rowing across to San<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+Giorgio, he did not for a moment think that it
+could be done.</p>
+
+<p>'I don't believe we can even get the boat out,'
+he said to himself.</p>
+
+<p>But there was something about the man at his
+side that made him feel he must do all he possibly
+could to serve him; and he did succeed in getting
+out the boat. He helped the stranger into the
+boat and took the oars.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco could not help laughing to himself.</p>
+
+<p>'What are you thinking about? Don't go out
+further in any case,' he said. 'Have you ever seen
+the like of these waves? Do tell him that it is
+not within the power of man.'</p>
+
+<p>But he felt as if he could not tell the stranger
+that it was impossible. He was sitting there as
+quietly as if he were sailing to the Lido on a
+summer's eve. And Cecco began to row to San
+Giorgio Maggiore.</p>
+
+<p>It was a terrible row. Time after time the
+waves washed over them.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, stop him!' Cecco said under his breath;
+'do stop the man who goes to sea in such
+weather! Otherwise he is a sensible old fisherman.
+Do stop him!'</p>
+
+<p>Now the boat was up a steep mountain, and
+then it went down into a valley. The foam
+splashed down on Cecco from the waves that
+rushed past him like runaway horses, but in spite
+of everything he approached San Giorgio.</p>
+
+<p>'For whom are you doing all this, risking boat
+and life?' he said. 'You don't even know
+whether he can pay you. He does not look like
+a fine gentleman. He is no better dressed than
+you are.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But he only said this to keep up his courage,
+and not to be ashamed of his tractability. He
+was simply compelled to do everything the man
+in the boat wanted.</p>
+
+<p>'But in any case not right to San Giorgio, you
+foolhardy old man,' he said. 'The wind is even
+worse there than at the Rialto.'</p>
+
+<p>But he went there, nevertheless, and made the
+boat fast whilst the stranger went on shore. He
+thought the wisest thing he could do would be
+to slip away and leave his boat, but he did not
+do it. He would rather die than deceive the
+stranger. He saw the latter go into the Church
+of San Giorgio. Soon afterwards he returned,
+accompanied by a knight in full armour.</p>
+
+<p>'Row us now to San Nicolo in Lido,' said the
+stranger.</p>
+
+<p>'Ay, ay,' Cecco thought; 'why not to Lido?'
+They had already, in constant anguish and
+death, rowed to San Giorgio; why should they
+not set out for Lido?</p>
+
+<p>And Cecco was shocked at himself that he
+obeyed the stranger even unto death, for he now
+actually steered for the Lido.</p>
+
+<p>Being now three in the boat, it was still
+heavier work. He had no idea how he should
+be able to do it. 'You might have lived many
+years yet,' he said sorrowfully to himself. But
+the strange thing was that he was not sorrowful,
+all the same. He was so glad that he could have
+laughed aloud. And then he was proud that he
+could make headway. 'He knows how to use
+his oars, does old Cecco,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>They laid-to at Lido, and the two strangers
+went on shore. They walked towards San Nicolo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+in Lido, and soon returned accompanied by an
+old Bishop, with robe and stole, crosier in hand,
+and mitre on head.</p>
+
+<p>'Now row out to the open sea,' said the first
+stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cecco shuddered. Should he row out to
+the sea, where his sons perished? Now he had
+not a single cheerful word to say to himself. He
+did not think so much of the storm, but of the
+terror it was to have to go out to the graves
+of his sons. If he rowed out there, he felt that he
+gave the stranger more than his life.</p>
+
+<p>The three men sat silently in the boat as if
+they were on watch. Cecco saw them bend forward
+and gaze into the night. They had reached
+the gate of the sea at Lido, and the great storm-ridden
+sea lay before them.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco sobbed within himself. He thought of
+two dead bodies rolling about in these waves.
+He gazed into the water for two familiar faces.
+But onward the boat went. Cecco did not
+give in.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly the three men rose up in the
+boat; and Cecco fell upon his knees, although
+he still went on holding the oars. A big ship
+steered straight against them.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco could not quite tell whether it was a
+ship or only drifting mist. The sails were large,
+spread out, as it were, towards the four corners
+of heaven; and the hull was gigantic, but it
+looked as if it were built of the lightest sea-mist.
+He thought he saw men on board and heard
+shouting; but the crew were like deep darkness,
+and the shouting was like the roar of the storm.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>However it was, it was far too terrible to see
+the ship steer straight upon them, and Cecco
+closed his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But the three men in the boat must have
+averted the collision, for the boat was not upset.
+When Cecco looked up the ship had fled out
+to sea, and loud wailings pierced the night.</p>
+
+<p>He rose, trembling to row further. He felt so
+tired that he could hardly hold the oars. But
+now there was no longer any danger. The storm
+had gone down, and the waves speedily laid themselves
+to rest.</p>
+
+<p>'Now row us back to Venice,' said the stranger
+to the fisherman.</p>
+
+<p>Cecco rowed the boat to Lido, where the
+Bishop went on shore, and to San Giorgio, where
+the knight left them. The first powerful stranger
+went with him all the way to the Rialto.</p>
+
+<p>When they had landed at Riva degli Schiavoni
+he said to the fisherman:</p>
+
+<p>'When it is daylight thou shalt go to the Doge
+and tell him what thou hast seen this night. Tell
+him that San Marco and San Giorgio and San
+Nicolo have to-night fought the evil spirits that
+would destroy Venice, and have put them to
+flight.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, signor,' the fisherman answered, 'I will
+tell everything. But how shall I speak so that
+the Doge will believe me?'</p>
+
+<p>Then San Marco handed him a ring with a
+precious stone possessed of a wonderful lustre.</p>
+
+<p>'Show this to the Doge,' he said, 'then he will
+understand that it brings a message from me.
+He knows my ring, which is kept in San Marco's
+treasury in the cathedral.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The fisherman took the ring, and kissed it
+reverently.</p>
+
+<p>'Further, thou shalt tell the Doge,' said the
+holy man, 'that this is a sign that I shall never
+forsake Venice. Even when the last Doge has
+left Palazzo Ducali I will live and preserve Venice.
+Even if Venice lose her islands in the East
+and the supremacy of the sea, and no Doge ever
+again sets out on the Bucintoro, even then I will
+preserve the city beautiful and resplendent. It
+shall always be rich and beloved, always be
+lauded and its praises sung, always a place of joy
+for men to live in. Say this, Cecco, and the Doge
+will not forsake thee in thine old age.'</p>
+
+<p>Then he disappeared; and soon the sun rose
+above the gate of the sea at Torcello. With its
+first beautiful rays it shed a rosy light over the
+white city and over the sea that shone in many
+colours. A red glow lay over San Giorgio and
+San Marco, and over the whole shore, studded
+with palaces. And in the lovely morning radiant
+Venetian ladies came out on to the loggias and
+greeted with smiles the rising day.</p>
+
+<p>Venice was once again the beautiful goddess,
+rising from the sea in her shell of rose-coloured
+pearl. Beautiful as never before, she combed her
+golden hair, and threw the purple robe around
+her, to begin one of her happiest days. For a
+transport of bliss filled her when the old fisherman
+brought San Marco's ring to the Doge, and she
+heard how the Saint, now, and until the end of
+time, would hold his protecting hand over her.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Santa Caterina of Siena">V. <a name="Santa_Caterina_of_Siena" id="Santa_Caterina_of_Siena"><em><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span></em> <span class="smcap">Caterina</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">Siena</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">V</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic" lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span> <span class="smcap">Caterina</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">Siena</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic" lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span> <span class="smcap">Caterina</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">Siena</span></p>
+
+<p>At <span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Santa</span> Caterina's house in Siena, on a
+day towards the end of April, in the week
+when her f&ecirc;te is being celebrated, people
+come to the old house in the Street of the Dyers,
+to the house with the pretty loggia and with the
+many small chambers, which have now been converted
+into chapels and sanctuaries, bringing
+bouquets of white lilies; and the rooms are fragrant
+with incense and violets.</p>
+
+<p>Walking through these rooms, one cannot
+help thinking that it is just as if she were dead
+yesterday, as if all those who go in and out of
+her home to-day had seen and known her.</p>
+
+<p>But, on the other hand, no one could really
+think that she had died recently, for then there
+would be more grief and tears, and not only a
+quiet sense of loss. It is more as if a beloved
+daughter had been recently married, and had
+left the parental home.</p>
+
+<p>Look only at the nearest houses. The old
+walls are still decorated as if for a f&ecirc;te. And in
+her own home garlands of flowers are still hanging
+beneath the portico and loggia, green leaves
+are strewn on the staircase and the doorstep, and
+large bouquets of flowers fill the rooms with their
+scent.</p>
+
+<p>She cannot possibly have been dead five hundred
+years. It looks much more as if she had
+celebrated her marriage, and had gone away to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+a country from which she would not return for
+many years, perhaps never. Are not the houses
+decorated with nothing but red table-cloths, red
+trappings, and red silken banners, and are there
+not stuck red-paper roses in the dark garlands
+of oak-leaves? and the hangings over the doors
+and the windows, are they not red with golden
+fringes? Can one imagine anything more
+cheerful?</p>
+
+<p>And notice how the old women go about in
+the house and examine her small belongings. It
+is as if they had seen her wear that very veil and
+that very shirt of hair. They inspect the room in
+which she lived, and point to the bedstead and
+the packets of letters, and they tell how at first
+she could not at all learn to write, but that it
+came to her all at once without her having learnt
+it. And only look at her writing&mdash;how good and
+distinct! And then they point to the little bottle
+she used to carry at her belt, so as always to have
+a little medicine at hand in case she met a sick
+person, and they utter a blessing over the old
+lantern she held in her hand when she went and
+visited the sick in the long weary nights. It is
+just as if they would say: 'Dear me&mdash;dear me!
+that our little Caterina Benincasa should be
+gone, that she will never come any more and look
+after us old people!' And they kiss her picture,
+and take a flower from the bouquets to keep as
+a remembrance.</p>
+
+<p>It looks as if those who were left in the home
+had long ago prepared themselves for the separation,
+and tried to do everything possible to keep
+alive the memory of the one who had gone away.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+See, there they have painted her on the wall;
+there is the whole of her little history represented
+in every detail. There she is when she cut off her
+beautiful long hair so that no man could ever fall
+in love with her, for she would never marry. Oh
+dear&mdash;oh dear! how much ridicule and scoffing
+she had suffered on that account! It is dreadful
+to think how her mother tormented her and
+treated her like a servant, and made her sleep on
+the stone floor in the hall, and would not give
+her any food, all because of her being so obstinate
+about that hair. But what was she to do when
+they continually tried to get her married&mdash;she
+who would have no other bridegroom than
+Christ? And there she is when she was kneeling
+in prayer, and her father coming into the room
+without her knowing it saw a beautiful white
+dove hovering over her head whilst she was praying.
+And there she is on that Christmas Eve
+when she had gone secretly to the Madonna's
+altar in order the more fully to rejoice over the
+birth of the Son of God, and the beautiful Madonna
+leaned out of her picture and handed the
+Child to her that she might be allowed to hold
+it for a moment in her arms. Oh, what a joy it
+had been for her!</p>
+
+<p>Oh dear, no; it is not at all necessary to say that
+our little Caterina Benincasa is dead. One need
+only say that she has gone away with the Bridegroom.</p>
+
+<p>In her home one will never forget her pious
+ways and doings. All the poor of Siena come and
+knock at her door because they know that it is the
+marriage-day of the little virgin, and large piles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+of bread lie in readiness for them as if she were
+still there. They have their pockets and baskets
+filled; had she herself been there, she could not
+have sent them away more heavily laden. She
+who had gone away had left so great a want that
+one almost wonders the Bridegroom had the
+heart to take her away with him.</p>
+
+<p>In the small chapels which have been arranged
+in every corner of the house they read Mass the
+whole day, and they invoke the bride and sing
+hymns in her praise.</p>
+
+<p>'Holy Caterina,' they say, 'on this the day of
+thy death, which is thine heavenly wedding-day,
+pray for us!'</p>
+
+<p>'Holy Caterina, thou who hadst no other love
+but Christ, thou who in life wert His affianced
+bride, and who in death wast received by Him in
+Paradise, pray for us!'</p>
+
+<p>'Holy Caterina, thou radiant heavenly bride,
+thou most blessed of virgins, thou whom the
+mother of God exalted to her Son's side, thou
+who on this day wast carried by angels to the
+kingdom of glory, pray for us!'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It is strange how one comes to love her, how
+the home and the pictures and the love of the old
+and the poor seem to make her living, and one
+begins to wonder how she really was, whether she
+was only a saint, only a heavenly bride, and if it
+is true that she was unable to love any other than
+Christ. And then comes to one's mind an old
+story which warmed one's heart long ago, at first
+quite vague and without shape, but whilst one is
+sitting there under the loggia in the festively deco<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>rated
+home and watching the poor wander away
+with their full baskets, and hearing the subdued
+murmur from the chapels, the story becomes
+more and more distinct, and suddenly it is vivid
+and clear.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Nicola Tungo was a young nobleman of Perugia,
+who often came to Siena on account of the
+races. He soon found out how badly Siena was
+governed, and often said, both at the festive gatherings
+of the great and when he sat drinking in
+the inns, that Siena ought to rise against the Signoria
+and procure other rulers.</p>
+
+<p>The Signoria had not been in power for more
+than half a year; they did not feel particularly
+firm in their office, and did not like the Perugian
+stirring up the people. In order promptly to put
+a stop to it, they had him imprisoned, and after a
+short trial he was sentenced to death. He was
+placed in a cell in the Palazzo Publico whilst
+preparations were being made for his execution,
+which was to take place the next morning in the
+Market Place.</p>
+
+<p>At first he was strangely affected. To-morrow
+he would no more wear his green velvet doublet
+and his beautiful sword; he would no more walk
+down the street in his cap with the ostrich-feather
+and attract the glances of the young maidens, and
+he had a feeling of painful disappointment that he
+would never ride the new horse which he bought
+yesterday, and which he had only tried once.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he called the gaoler, and asked him
+to go to the gentlemen of the Signoria and tell
+them that he could not possibly allow himself to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+be killed; he had no time. He had far too much
+to do. Life could not do without him. His father
+was old, and he was the only son; it was through
+his descendants that the family should be continued.
+It was he who should give away his sisters
+in marriage, he who should build the new
+palace, he who should plant the new vineyard.</p>
+
+<p>He was a strong young man; he did not know
+what sickness was, had nothing but life in his
+veins. His hair was dark and his cheeks red. He
+could not realize that he should die.</p>
+
+<p>When he thought of their wanting to take him
+away from pleasure and dancing, and the carnival,
+and from the races next Sunday, and from the
+serenade he was going to sing to the beautiful
+<span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has Guilietta">Giulietta</span> Lombardi, he became furiously angry,
+and his wrath was roused against the councillors
+as though they were thieves and robbers. The
+scoundrels&mdash;the scoundrels that would take his
+life from him!</p>
+
+<p>But as time went on his longings grew deeper;
+he longed for air and water and heaven and earth.
+He felt he would not mind being a beggar by the
+wayside; he would gladly suffer sickness and
+hunger and cold if only he were allowed to live.</p>
+
+<p>He wished that everything might die with him,
+that nothing would be left when he was gone;
+that would have been a great consolation.</p>
+
+<p>But that people should go to the Market Place
+and buy and sell, and that the women would fetch
+water from the well, and that the children would
+run in the streets the next day and all days, and
+that he would not be there to see, that he could
+not bear. He envied not only those who could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+live in luxury and pleasure, and were happy; he
+envied quite as much the most miserable cripple.
+What he wanted was life, solely life.</p>
+
+<p>Then the priests and the monks came to see
+him. It made him almost happy, for now he had
+someone upon whom he could wreak his anger.
+He first allowed them to talk a little. It amused
+him to hear what they had to say to a man so
+deeply wronged as he was, but when they said
+that he ought to rejoice that he was permitted to
+leave this life and gain the bliss of heaven in
+the fulness of his youth, then he started up and
+poured forth his wrath upon them. He scoffed
+at God and the joys of heaven&mdash;he did not want
+them. He would have life, and the world, and
+its pomps and vanities. He regretted every day
+in which he had not revelled in earthly enjoyment;
+he regretted every temptation he had resisted.
+God need not trouble Himself in the least
+about him; he felt no longing for His heaven.</p>
+
+<p>The priests continued to speak; he seized one
+of them by the throat, and would have killed him
+had not the gaoler thrown himself between them.
+They now bound and gagged him, and then
+preached to him; but as soon as he was allowed
+to speak he raged as before. They talked to him
+for many hours, but they saw that it was of no
+avail.</p>
+
+<p>When they could think of nothing else to do,
+one of them suggested they should send for the
+young Caterina Benincasa, who had shown great
+power in subduing defiant spirits. When the
+Perugian heard the name he suddenly ceased his
+abuse. In truth, it pleased him. It was some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>thing
+quite different, having to do with a young,
+beautiful maiden.</p>
+
+<p>'By all means send for the maiden,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>He knew that she was the young daughter of a
+dyer, and that she went about alone and preached
+in the lanes and streets of the town. Some
+thought she was mad, others said that she had
+visions. For him she might, anyhow, be better
+company than these dirty monks, who made him
+completely beside himself.</p>
+
+<p>The monks then went their way, and he was
+alone. Shortly afterwards the door was again
+opened, but if she for whom they had sent had
+really entered the cell, she must have walked with
+very light footsteps, for he heard nothing. He
+lay on the floor just as he had thrown himself
+down in his great anger; now he was too tired to
+raise himself, or make a movement, or even to
+look up. His arms were tied together with ropes,
+which cut deep into his flesh.</p>
+
+<p>He now felt that someone began to loosen his
+bands; a warm hand touched his arm, and he
+looked up. Beside him lay a little figure in the
+white dress of the Dominicans, with head and
+neck so shrouded in a white veil that there was
+not more of her face to be seen than of that of a
+knight in helmet and closed visor.</p>
+
+<p>She did not look so meek by any means; she
+was evidently a little annoyed. He heard her
+murmur something about the gaolers who had
+tightened the bands. It did not appear as if she
+had come for any other purpose than these knots.
+She was only taken up with loosening them so
+that they did not hurt. At last she had to bite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+in them, and then she succeeded. She untied the
+cord with a light hand, and then took the little
+bottle which was suspended from her belt and
+poured a few drops upon the chafed skin.</p>
+
+<p>He lay the whole time and looked at her, but
+she did not meet his glance; it appeared as if she
+could think of nothing else but what she had between
+her hands. It was as if nothing were further
+from her thoughts than that she was there
+to prepare him for death. He felt so exhausted
+after his passion, and at the same time so quieted
+by her presence, that he only said:</p>
+
+<p>'I think I will sleep.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is a great shame that they have not given
+you any straw,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment she looked about undecided.
+Then she sat down upon the floor, and placed his
+head in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>'Are you better now?' she said.</p>
+
+<p>Never in his whole life had he felt such a rest.
+Yet sleep he could not, but he lay and looked up
+in her face, which was like wax, and transparent.
+Such eyes he had never seen before. They were
+always looking far, far away, gazing into another
+world, whilst she sat quite motionless, so as not
+to disturb his sleep.</p>
+
+<p>'You are not sleeping, Nicola Tungo,' she said,
+and looked uneasy.</p>
+
+<p>'I cannot sleep,' he replied, 'because I am wondering
+who you can be.'</p>
+
+<p>'I am a daughter of Luca Benincasa the dyer,
+and his wife Lapa,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>'I know that,' he said, 'and I also know that
+you go about and preach in the streets. And I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+know that you have attired yourself in the dress
+of a nun, and have taken the vows of chastity.
+But yet I don't know who you are.'</p>
+
+<p>She turned her head away a little. Then she
+said, whispering like one who confesses her first
+love:</p>
+
+<p>'I am the Bride of Christ.'</p>
+
+<p>He did not laugh. On the contrary, he felt
+quite a pang in his heart, as from jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, Christ!' he said, as if she had thrown herself
+away.</p>
+
+<p>She heard that his tone was contemptuous, but
+she thought he meant that she had spoken too
+presumptuously.</p>
+
+<p>'I do not understand it myself,' she said, 'but
+so it is.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it an imagination or a dream?' he said.</p>
+
+<p>She turned her face towards him. The blood
+rose red behind the transparent skin. He saw
+suddenly that she was fair as a flower, and she became
+dear to him. He moved his lips as if to
+speak, but at first no sound came.</p>
+
+<p>'How can you expect me to believe that?' he
+said defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it not enough for you that I am here in the
+prison with you?' she asked, raising her voice.
+'Is it any pleasure for a young girl like me to go
+to you and other evil-doers in their gloomy dungeons?
+Is it usual for a woman to stand and
+preach at the street corners as I do, and to be held
+in derision? Do I not require sleep as other people?
+And yet I must rise every night and go to
+the sick in the hospitals. Am I not timid as other
+women? And yet I must go to the high-born<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+gentlemen at their castles and reason with them,
+I must go to the plague-smitten, I must see all
+vice and sin. When have you seen another
+maiden do all this? But I am obliged to do it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Poor thing!' he said, and stroked her hand
+gently&mdash;'poor thing!'</p>
+
+<p>'For I am not braver, or wiser, or stronger
+than others,' she said. 'It is just as hard for me
+as for other maidens. You can see that. I have
+come here to speak with you about your soul, but
+I do not at all know what I shall say to you.'</p>
+
+<p>It was strange how reluctantly he would allow
+himself to be convinced.</p>
+
+<p>'You may be mistaken all the same,' he said.
+'How do you know that you can call yourself the
+Bride of Christ?'</p>
+
+<p>Her voice trembled, and it was as if she should
+tear out her heart when she replied:</p>
+
+<p>'It began when I was quite young; I was not
+more than six years old. It was one evening
+when I was walking with my brother in the
+meadow below the church of the Dominicans, and
+just as I looked up at the church I saw Christ sitting
+on a throne, surrounded by all His power and
+glory. He was attired in shining white garments
+like the Holy Father in Rome. His head was
+surrounded by all the splendour of Paradise, and
+around Him stood Pietro Paolo and the Evangelist
+Giovanni. And whilst I gazed upon Him my
+heart was filled with such a love and holy joy that
+I could hardly bear it. He lifted His hand and
+blessed me, and I sank down on the meadow, and
+was so overcome with bliss, that my brother had
+to take me in his arms and shake me. And ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+since that time, Nicola Tungo, I have loved Jesus
+as a bridegroom.'</p>
+
+<p>He again objected.</p>
+
+<p>'You were a child then. You had fallen asleep
+in the meadow and were dreaming.'</p>
+
+<p>'Dreaming?' she repeated. 'Have I been
+dreaming all the time I have seen Him? Was it
+a dream when He came to me in the church in the
+likeness of a beggar and asked for alms? Then I
+was wide awake, at any rate. And do you think
+that for the sake of a dream only I could have
+borne all the worries I have had to bear as a
+young girl because I would not marry?'</p>
+
+<p>Nicola went on contradicting her because he
+could not bear the thought that her heart was
+filled with love to another.</p>
+
+<p>'But even if you do love Christ, maiden, how
+do you know that He loves you?'</p>
+
+<p>She smiled her very happiest smile and clapped
+her hands like a child.</p>
+
+<p>'Now you shall hear,' she said. 'Now I will
+tell you the most important of all. It was the last
+night before Lent. It was after my parents and
+I had been reconciled, and I had obtained their
+permission to take the vow of chastity and wear
+the dress of a nun, although I continued to live in
+their house; and it was night, as I told you, the
+last night of the carnival, when everybody turns
+night into day. There were f&ecirc;tes in every street.
+On the walls of the big palaces hung balconies
+like cages, completely covered with silken hangings
+and banners, and filled with noble ladies. I
+saw all their beauty by the light of the red torches
+in their bronze-holders, the one row over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+other quite up to the roof; and in the gaily decorated
+streets there was a train of carriages, with
+golden towers, and all the gods and goddesses,
+and all the virtues and beauties went by in a long
+procession. And everywhere there was such a
+play of masks and so much merriment that I am
+sure that you, sir, have never taken part in anything
+more gay. And I took refuge in my chamber,
+but still I heard laughter from the street, and
+never before have I heard people laugh like that;
+it was so clear and bell-like that everyone was
+obliged to join in it. And they sang songs
+which, I suppose, were wicked, but they sounded
+so innocent, and caused such pleasure, that one's
+heart trembled. Then, in the middle of my prayers,
+I suddenly began to wonder why I was not
+out amongst them, and the thought fascinated
+and tempted me, as if I were dragged along by a
+runaway horse; but never before have I prayed
+so intensely to Christ to show me what was His
+will with me. Suddenly all the noise ceased, a
+great and wonderful silence surrounded me, and
+I saw a great meadow, where the Mother of God
+sat amongst the flowers, and on her lap lay the
+Child Jesus, playing with lilies. But I hurried
+thither in great joy, and knelt before the Child,
+and was at the same moment filled with peace and
+quietness, and then the Holy Child placed a ring
+on my finger, and said to me, "Know, Caterina,
+that to-day I celebrate My betrothal with thee,
+and bind thee to Me by the strongest faith."'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, Caterina!'</p>
+
+<p>The young Perugian had turned himself on the
+floor, so that he could bury his face in her lap. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+was as if he could not bear to see how radiant she
+was whilst she was speaking, and now her eyes
+became bright as stars. A shadow of pain passed
+over him. For whilst she spoke a great sorrow
+had sprung up in his heart. This little maiden,
+this little white maiden, he could never win. Her
+love belonged to another; it could never be his.
+It was of no use even to tell her that he loved her;
+but he suffered; his whole being groaned in
+love's agony. How could he bear to live without
+her? It almost became a consolation to remember
+that he was sentenced to death. It was not
+necessary for him to live and do without her.</p>
+
+<p>Then the little woman beside him sighed
+deeply, and came back from the joys of heaven in
+order to think of poor human beings.</p>
+
+<p>'I forgot to speak to you about your soul,' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Then, he thought: 'This burden, at any rate,
+I can lighten for her.'</p>
+
+<p>'Sister Caterina,' he said, 'I do not know how
+it is, but heavenly consolation has come to me.
+In God's name I will prepare for death. Now
+you may send for the priests and monks; now I
+will confess to them. But one thing you must
+promise me before you go: you must come to
+me to-morrow, when I shall die, and hold my
+head between your hands as you are doing now.'</p>
+
+<p>When he said this she burst into tears, from a
+great feeling of relief, and an unspeakable joy
+filled her.</p>
+
+<p>'How happy you must be, Nicola Tungo!' she
+said. 'You will be in Paradise before I am;' and
+she stroked his face gently.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He said again:</p>
+
+<p>'You will come to me to-morrow in the Market
+Place? Perhaps I shall otherwise be afraid; perhaps
+I cannot otherwise die with steadfastness.
+But when you are there I shall feel nothing but
+joy, and all fear will leave me.'</p>
+
+<p>'You do not seem to me any more as a poor
+mortal,' she said, 'but as a dweller of Paradise.
+You appear to me radiant with life, surrounded
+by incense. Bliss comes to me from you, who
+shall so soon meet my beloved Bridegroom. Be
+assured I shall come.'</p>
+
+<p>She then led him to confession and the Communion.
+He felt the whole time as if he were
+asleep. All the fear of death and the longing for
+life had passed away from him. He longed for
+the morning, when he should see her again; he
+thought only of her, and of the love with which
+she had inspired him. Death seemed to him now
+but a slight thing compared with the pain of the
+thought that she would never love him.</p>
+
+<p>The young maiden did not sleep much during
+the night, and early in the morning she went to
+the place of execution, to be there when he came.
+She invoked Jesu, Mother, Marie, and the Holy
+Caterina of Egypt, virgin and martyr, incessantly
+with prayers to save his soul. Incessantly she repeated:
+'I will that he shall be saved&mdash;I will, I
+will.' But she was afraid that her prayers were
+unavailing, for she did not feel any longer that
+ecstasy which had filled her the evening before;
+she only felt an infinite pity for him who should
+die. She was quite overcome with grief and sorrow.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Little by little the Market Place filled with
+people. The soldiers marched up, the executioner
+arrived, and much noise and talking went
+on around her; but she saw and heard nothing.
+She felt as if she were quite alone.</p>
+
+<p>When Nicola Tungo arrived, it was just the
+same with him. He had no thought for all the
+others, but saw only her. When he saw at the
+first glance that she was entirely overcome with
+sorrow, his face beamed, and he felt almost
+happy. He called loudly to her:</p>
+
+<p>'You have not slept much this night, maiden?'</p>
+
+<p>'No,' she said; 'I have watched in prayer for
+you; but now I am in despair, for my prayers
+have no power.'</p>
+
+<p>He knelt down before the block, and she knelt
+so that she could hold his head in her hands.</p>
+
+<p>'Now I am going to your Bridegroom,
+Caterina.'</p>
+
+<p>She sobbed more and more.</p>
+
+<p>'I can comfort you so badly,' she said.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her with a strange smile.</p>
+
+<p>'Your tears are my best comfort.'</p>
+
+<p>The executioner stood with his sword drawn,
+but she bade him with a movement stand on one
+side, for she would speak a few words with the
+doomed man.</p>
+
+<p>'Before you came,' she said, 'I laid my head
+down on the block to try if I could bear it; and
+then I felt that I was still afraid of death, that I do
+not love Jesus enough to be willing to die in this
+hour; and I do not wish you to die either, and my
+prayers have no power.'</p>
+
+<p>When he heard this he thought: 'Had I lived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+I should have won her'; and he was glad he
+should die before he had succeeded in drawing the
+radiant heavenly bride down to earth. But when
+he had laid his head in her hands, a great consolation
+came to them both.</p>
+
+<p>'Nicola Tungo,' she said, 'I see heaven open.
+The angels descend to receive your soul.'</p>
+
+<p>A wondering smile passed over his face. Could
+what he had done for her sake make him worthy
+of heaven? He lifted his eyes to see what she
+saw; the same moment the sword fell.</p>
+
+<p>But Caterina saw the angels descend lower and
+lower, saw them lift his soul, saw them carry it to
+heaven.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>All at once it seemed so natural that Caterina
+Benincasa has lived all these five hundred years.
+How could one forget that gentle little maiden,
+that great loving heart? Again and again they
+must sing in her praise, as they are now singing
+in the small chapels:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Pia Mater et humilis,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Natur&aelig; memor fragilis,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">In hujus vit&aelig; fluctibus</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nos rege tuis precibus.</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Quem vidi, quem amavi,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">In quem credidi, quem dilexi,</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i4"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ora pro nobis.</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ut digni efficiamur promessionibus Christi!</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Santa Caterina, ora pro nobis!</span>'<a name="FNanchor_B" id="FNanchor_B"></a><a href="#Footnote_B" class="fnanchor">[B]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_B" id="Footnote_B"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> Pious and gentle Mother, thou who knowest our weak
+nature, guide us by thy prayers through this life's vicissitudes.
+Thou, whom I saw and loved, in whom I believed and whom
+I adored, pray for us, that we may be worthy of Christ's
+promises. Holy Caterina, pray for us!</p></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p>
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="The Empress's Money-Chest">VI. <a name="Money-Chest" id="Money-Chest"><span class="dec_italic">The Empress's</span> <span class="smcap">Money-Chest</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">VI</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The Empress's</span> <span class="smcap">Money-Chest</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The Empress's</span> <span class="smcap">Money-Chest</span></p>
+
+<p>The Bishop had summoned Father Verneau
+to appear before him. It was on
+account of a somewhat unpleasant matter.
+Father Verneau had been sent to preach in the
+manufacturing districts around Charleroi, but he
+had arrived there in the midst of a strike, when
+the workmen were rather excited and unmanageable.
+He informed the Bishop that he had
+immediately on his arrival in the Black Country
+received a letter from one of the leaders of the
+men to the effect that they were quite willing to
+hear him preach, but if he ventured to mention
+the name of God either directly or indirectly,
+there would be a disturbance in the church.</p>
+
+<p>'And when I went up into the pulpit and saw
+the congregation to whom I should preach,' said
+the Father, 'I felt no doubt but that the threat
+would be carried out.'</p>
+
+<p>Father Verneau was a little dried-up monk.
+The Bishop looked down upon him as being of
+a lower order. Such an unshaven, not too clean
+monk, with the most insignificant face, was, of
+course, a coward. He was, probably, also afraid
+of the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>'I have been informed,' said the Bishop, 'that
+you carried out the workmen's wishes. But I
+need not point out&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'Monseigneur,' interrupted Father Verneau in
+all humility, 'I thought the Church, if possible,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+would avoid everything that might lead to a disturbance.'</p>
+
+<p>'But a Church that dare not mention the name
+of God&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'Has Monseigneur heard my sermon?'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop walked up and down the floor to
+calm himself.</p>
+
+<p>'You know it by heart, of course?' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'Of course, Monseigneur.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let me hear it, then, as it was delivered,
+Father Verneau, word for word, exactly as you
+preached it.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop sat down in his arm-chair. Father
+Verneau remained standing.</p>
+
+<p>'"Citizens and citizenesses," he began in the
+tone of a lecturer.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop started.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, that is how they will be addressed, Monseigneur.'</p>
+
+<p>'Never mind, Father Verneau, only proceed.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop shuddered slightly; these two
+words had suddenly shown him the whole situation.
+He saw before him this gathering of the
+children of the Black Country, to whom Father
+Verneau had preached. He saw many wild faces,
+many rags, much coarse merriment. He saw
+these people for whom nothing had been done.</p>
+
+<p>'"Citizens and citizenesses," began Father Verneau
+afresh, "there is in this country an Empress
+called Maria Theresa. She is an excellent ruler,
+the best and wisest Belgium has ever had. Other
+rulers, my fellow-citizens, other rulers have successors
+when they die, and lose all power over
+their people. Not so the great Empress Maria<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+Theresa. She may have lost the throne of Austria
+and Hungary; Brabant and Limburg may
+now be under other rulers, but not her good province
+of West Flanders. In West Flanders, where
+I have lived the last few years, no other ruler is
+known to this very day than Maria Theresa. We
+know King Leopold lives in Brussels, but that
+has nothing to do with us. It is Maria Theresa
+who still reigns here by the sea, more especially
+in the fishing villages. The nearer one gets to
+the sea, the mightier becomes her power. Neither
+the great Revolution, nor the Empire, nor the
+Dutch have had the power to overthrow her.
+How could they? They have done nothing for
+the children of the sea that can compare with
+what she has done. But what has she not done
+for the people on the dunes! What an invaluable
+treasure, my fellow-citizens, has she not bestowed
+upon them!</p>
+
+<p>'"About one hundred and fifty years ago, in
+the early part of her reign, she made a journey
+through Belgium. She visited Brussels and
+Bruges, she went to Liege and Louvain, and
+when she had at last seen enough of large cities
+and profusely ornamented town-halls, she went
+to the coast to see the sea and the dunes.</p>
+
+<p>'"It was not a very cheering sight for her. She
+saw the ocean, so vast and mighty that no man
+can fight against it. She saw the coast, helpless
+and unprotected. There lay the dunes, but the
+sea had washed over them before, and might do
+so again. There were also dams, but they had
+fallen down and were neglected.</p>
+
+<p>'"She saw harbours filled with sand; she saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+marshes overgrown with rushes and weeds; she
+saw, below the dunes, fishing-huts ravaged by the
+wind&mdash;huts looking as if they had been thrown
+there, a prey for the sea; she saw poor old
+churches that had been moved away from the
+sea, lying between quicksands and lyme-grass, in
+desolate wastes.</p>
+
+<p>'"The great Empress sat a whole day by the
+sea. She was told all about the floods and the
+towns that had been washed away; she was shown
+the spot where a whole district had sunk under
+the sea; she was rowed out to the place where
+an old church stood at the bottom of the sea; and
+she was told about all the people who had been
+drowned, and of all the cattle that had been lost,
+the last time the sea had overflowed the dunes.</p>
+
+<p>'"The whole day through the Empress sat
+thinking: 'How shall I help these poor people
+on the dunes? I cannot forbid the sea to rise and
+fall; I cannot forbid it to undermine the shore;
+nor can I stay the storm, or prevent it from upsetting
+the fishermen's boats; and still less can I
+lead the fish into their nets, or transform the lyme-grass
+into nutritious wheat. There is no monarch
+in the world so mighty that he can help these
+poor people in their need.'</p>
+
+<p>'"The next day it was Sunday, and the Empress
+heard Mass at Blankenberghe. All the people
+from Dunkirk to Sluis had come to see her.
+But before Mass the Empress went about and
+spoke with the people.</p>
+
+<p>'"The first person she addressed was the harbour-master
+from Nieuport. 'What news is there
+from your town?' asked the Empress. 'Noth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>ing
+new,' answered the harbour-master, 'except
+that Cornelis Aertsen's boat was upset in the
+storm yesterday; and we found him this morning
+riding on the keel.' 'It was a good thing his
+life was saved,' said the Empress. 'Well, I don't
+know,' said the harbour-master, 'for he was out
+of his mind when he came on shore.' 'Was it
+from fear?' asked the Empress. 'Yes,' said the
+harbour-master; 'it is because we in Nieuport
+have nothing to depend upon in the hour of need.
+Cornelis knew that his wife and his small children
+would starve to death if he perished; and
+it was this thought, I suppose, that drove him out
+of his mind.' 'Then that is what you need here
+on the dunes&mdash;something to depend upon?'
+'Yes, that is it,' said the harbour-master. 'The
+sea is uncertain, the harvest is uncertain, the fishing
+and the earnings are uncertain. Something
+to depend upon, that is what we need.'</p>
+
+<p>'"The Empress then went on, and the next
+she spoke to was the priest from Heyst. 'What
+news from Heyst?' said she to him. 'Nothing
+new,' he answered, 'except that Jacob van Ravesteyn
+has given up making ditches in the marshes,
+and dredging the harbour, and attending to the
+lighthouses, and all other useful work he had to
+do.' 'How is that?' said the Empress. 'He has
+inherited a sum of money,' said the priest; 'but
+it was less than he had expected.' 'But now he
+has something certain,' said the Empress. 'Yes,'
+said the priest; 'but now he has got the money
+he dare not venture to do anything great for fear
+it will not be sufficient.' 'It is something infinitely
+great, then, that is needed to help you at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+Heyst?' said the Empress. 'It is,' said the priest;
+'there is infinitely much to do. And nothing can
+be done until we know that we have something
+infinitely great to fall back upon.'</p>
+
+<p>'"The Empress then went on until she came
+to the master-pilot from Middelkerke, whom she
+began to question about the news from his town.
+'I do not know of anything new,' said the master-pilot,
+'but that Ian van der Meer has quarrelled
+with Luca Neerwinden.' 'Indeed!' said the Empress.
+'Yes, they have found the cod-bank they
+have both been looking for all their lives. They
+had heard about it from old people, and they had
+hunted for it all over the sea, and they have been
+the best of friends the whole time, but now they
+have found it they have fallen out.' 'Then it
+would have been better if they had never found
+it?' said the Empress. 'Yes,' answered the master-pilot,
+'it would indeed have been better.'
+'So, then, that which is to help you in Middelkerke,'
+said the Empress, 'must be hidden so well
+that no one can find it?' 'Just so,' said the
+master-pilot; 'well hidden it must be, for if anyone
+should find it, there would be nothing but
+quarrelling and strife over it, or else it would be
+all spent, and then it would be of no further use.'</p>
+
+<p>'"The Empress sighed, and felt she could do
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>'"She then went to Mass, and the whole time
+she knelt and prayed that power might be given
+her to help the people. And&mdash;you must excuse
+me, citizens&mdash;when the Mass was finished, it had
+become clear to her that it was better to do a little
+than to do nothing. When all the people had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+come out of the church, she stood on the steps in
+order to address them.</p>
+
+<p>'"No man or woman of West Flanders will
+ever forget how she looked. She was beautiful,
+like an Empress, and she was attired like an Empress.
+She wore her crown and her ermine mantle,
+and held the sceptre in her hand. Her hair
+was dressed high and powdered, and a string of
+large pearls was entwined amongst the curls. She
+wore a robe of red silk, which was entirely covered
+with Flemish lace, and red, high-heeled
+shoes, with large diamond buckles. That is how
+she appears, she who to this day still reigns over
+our West Flanders.</p>
+
+<p>'"She spoke to the people of the coast, and
+told them her will. She told them of how she
+had thought of every way in which to help them.
+She said that they knew she could not compel
+the sea to quietness or chain the storm, that she
+could not lead the fish-shoals to the coast, or
+transform the lyme-grass into wheat; but what
+a poor mortal could do for them, that should be
+done.</p>
+
+<p>'"They all knelt before her whilst she spoke.
+Never before had they felt such a gentle and
+motherly heart beat for them. The Empress
+spoke to them in such a manner about their hard
+and toilsome life that tears came into their eyes
+over her pity.</p>
+
+<p>'"But now the Empress said she had decided
+to leave with them her Imperial money-chest,
+with all the treasures which it contained. That
+should be her gift to all those who lived on the
+dunes. That was the only assistance she could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+render them, and she asked them to forgive her
+that it was so poor; and the Empress herself
+had tears in her eyes when she said this.</p>
+
+<p>'"She now asked them if they would promise
+and swear not to use any of the treasure until
+the need amongst them was so great that it could
+not become any greater. Next, if they would
+swear to leave it as an inheritance for their descendants,
+if they did not require it themselves.
+And, lastly, she asked every man singly to swear
+that he would not try to take possession of the
+treasure for his own use without having first
+asked the consent of all his fellow-fishermen.</p>
+
+<p>'"If they were willing to swear? That they all
+were. And they blessed the Empress and cried
+from gratitude. And she cried and told them that
+she knew that what they needed was a support
+that would never fail them, a treasure that could
+never be exhausted, and a happiness that was unattainable,
+but that she could not give them. She
+had never been so powerless as here on the dunes.</p>
+
+<p>'"My fellow-citizens, without her knowing it,
+solely by force of the royal wisdom with which
+this great Queen was endowed, the power was
+given her to attain far more than she had intended,
+and it is therefore one can say that to this
+day she reigns over West Flanders.</p>
+
+<p>'"What a happiness, is it not, to hear of all
+the blessings which have been spread over West
+Flanders by the Empress's gift! The people
+there have now something to depend upon which
+they needed so badly, and which we all need.
+However bad things may be, there is never any
+despair.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'"They have told me at the dunes what the
+Empress's money-chest is like. They say it is
+like the holy shrine of Saint Ursula at Bruges,
+only more beautiful. It is a copy of the cathedral
+at Vienna, and it is of pure gold; but on the sides
+the whole history of the Empress is depicted in
+the whitest alabaster. On the small side-towers
+are the four diamonds which the Empress took
+from the crown of the Sultan of Turkey, and in
+the gable are her initials inlaid with rubies. But
+when I ask them whether they have seen the
+money-chest, they reply that shipwrecked sailors
+when in peril always see it swimming before them
+on the waves as a sign that they shall not be in
+despair for their wives and children, should they
+be compelled to leave them. But they are the
+only ones who have seen the treasure, otherwise
+no one has been near enough to count it. And
+you know, citizens, that the Empress never told
+anyone how great it was. But if any of you doubt
+how much use it has been and is, then I will ask
+you to go to the dunes and see for yourself.
+There has been digging and building ever since
+that time, and the sea now lies cowed by bulwarks
+and dams, and no longer does harm. And there
+are green meadows inside the dunes, and there
+are flourishing towns and watering-places near
+the shore. But for every lighthouse that has been
+built, for every harbour that has been deepened,
+for every ship of which the keel has been laid, for
+every dam that has been raised, they have always
+thought: 'If our own money should not be sufficient,
+we shall receive help from our Gracious
+Empress Maria Theresa.' But this has been but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+a spur to them: their own money has always sufficed.</p>
+
+<p>'"You know, also, that the Empress did not
+say where the treasure was. Was not this well
+considered, citizens? There is one who has it in
+his keeping, but only, when all are agreed upon
+dividing it, will he who keeps the treasure come
+forward and reveal where it is. Therefore one
+is certain that neither now nor in the future will
+it be unfairly divided. It is the same for all.
+Everyone knows that the Empress thinks as much
+of him as of his neighbour. There can be no strife
+or envy amongst the people of the dunes as there
+is amongst other men, for they all share alike in
+the treasure."'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop interrupted Father Verneau.</p>
+
+<p>'That is enough,' he said. 'How did you continue?'</p>
+
+<p>'I said,' continued the monk, 'that it was very
+bad the good Empress had not also come to
+Charleroi. I pitied them because they did not own
+her money-chest. Considering the great things
+they had to accomplish, considering the sea which
+they had to tame, the quicksands which they had
+to bind, considering all this, I said to them surely
+there was nothing they needed so much.'</p>
+
+<p>'And then?' asked the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>'One or two cabbages, your Eminence, a little
+hissing; but then I was already out of the pulpit.
+That was all.'</p>
+
+<p>'They had understood that you had spoken to
+them about the providence of God?'</p>
+
+<p>The monk bowed.</p>
+
+<p>'They had understood that you would show<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+them that the power which they deride because
+they do not see it must be kept hidden? that it will
+be abused immediately it assumes a visible form?
+I congratulate you, Father Verneau.'</p>
+
+<p>The monk retired towards the door, bowing.
+The Bishop followed him, beaming benevolently.</p>
+
+<p>'But the money-chest&mdash;do they still believe in
+it at the dunes?'</p>
+
+<p>'As much as ever, Monseigneur.'</p>
+
+<p>'And the treasure&mdash;has there ever been a treasure?'</p>
+
+<p>'Monseigneur, I have sworn.'</p>
+
+<p>'But for me,' said the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>'It is the priest at Blankenberghe, who has it in
+his keeping. He allowed me to see it. It is an
+old wooden chest with iron mountings.'</p>
+
+<p>'And?'</p>
+
+<p>'And at the bottom lie twenty bright Maria
+Theresa gold pieces.'</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop smiled, but became grave at once.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it right to compare such a wooden chest
+with God's providence?'</p>
+
+<p>'All comparisons are incomplete, Monseigneur;
+all human thoughts are vain.'</p>
+
+<p>Father Verneau bowed once again, and quietly
+withdrew from the audience-room.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Peace of God">VII <a name="Peace" id="Peace"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Peace</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">God</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">VII</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Peace</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">God</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Peace</span> <span class="dec_italic">of</span> <span class="smcap">God</span></p>
+
+<p>Once upon a time there was an old farmhouse.
+It was Christmas-eve, the sky was
+heavy with snow, and the north wind was
+biting. It was just that time in the afternoon
+when everybody was busy finishing their work
+before they went to the bath-house to have their
+Christmas bath. There they had made such a
+fire that the flames went right up the chimney, and
+sparks and soot were whirled about by the wind,
+and fell down on the snow-decked roofs of the
+outhouses. And as the flames appeared above
+the chimney of the bath-house, and rose like a
+fiery pillar above the farm, everyone suddenly felt
+that Christmas was at hand. The girl that was
+scrubbing the entrance floor began to hum, although
+the water was freezing in the bucket
+beside her. The men in the wood-shed who were
+cutting Christmas logs began to cut two at a time,
+and swung their axes as merrily as if log-cutting
+were a mere pastime.</p>
+
+<p>An old woman came out of the pantry with a
+large pile of cakes in her arms. She went slowly
+across the yard into the large red-painted dwelling-house,
+and carried them carefully into the
+best room, and put them down on the long seat.
+Then she spread the tablecloth on the table, and
+arranged the cakes in heaps, a large and a small
+cake in each heap. She was a singularly ugly old
+woman, with reddish hair, heavy drooping eye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>lids,
+and with a peculiar strained look about the
+mouth and chin, as if the muscles were too short.
+But being Christmas-eve, there was such a joy
+and peace over her that one did not notice how
+ugly she was.</p>
+
+<p>But there was one person on the farm who was
+not happy, and that was the girl who was tying up
+the whisks made of birch twigs that were to be
+used for the baths. She sat near the fireplace, and
+had a whole armful of fine birch twigs lying beside
+her on the floor, but the withes with which she
+was to bind the twigs would not keep knotted.
+The best room had a narrow, low window, with
+small panes, and through them the light from the
+bath-house shone into the room, playing on the
+floor and gilding the birch twigs. But the higher
+the fire burned the more unhappy was the girl.
+She knew that the whisks would fall to pieces as
+soon as one touched them, and that she would
+never hear the last of it until the next Christmas
+fire was lighted.</p>
+
+<p>Just as she sat there bemoaning herself, the person
+of whom she was most afraid came into the
+room. It was her master, Ingmar Ingmarson.
+He was sure to have been to the bath-house to see
+if the stove was hot enough, and now he wanted
+to see how the whisks were getting on. He was
+old, was Ingmar Ingmarson, and he was fond of
+everything old, and just because people were beginning
+to leave off bathing in the bath-houses
+and being whipped with birch twigs, he made a
+great point of having it done on his farm, and
+having it done properly.</p>
+
+<p>Ingmar Ingmarson wore an old coat of sheep's-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>skin,
+skin trousers, and shoes smeared over with
+pitch. He was dirty and unshaven, slow in all his
+movements, and came in so softly that one might
+very well have mistaken him for a beggar. His
+features resembled his wife's features and his ugliness
+resembled his wife's ugliness, for they were
+relations, and from the time the girl first began to
+notice anything she had learned to feel a wholesome
+reverence for anybody who looked like that;
+for it was a great thing to belong to the old family
+of the Ingmars, which had always been the first
+in the village. But the highest to which a man
+could attain was to be Ingmar Ingmarson himself,
+and be the richest, the wisest, and the mightiest in
+the whole parish.</p>
+
+<p>Ingmar Ingmarson went up to the girl, took
+one of the whisks, and swung it in the air. It immediately
+fell to pieces; one of the twigs landed
+on the Christmas table, another on the big four-poster.</p>
+
+<p>'I say, my girl,' said old Ingmar, laughing, 'do
+you think one uses that kind of whisk when one
+takes a bath at the Ingmar's, or are you very
+tender, my girl?'</p>
+
+<p>When the girl saw that her master did not take
+it more seriously than that, she took heart, and
+answered that she could certainly make whisks
+that would not go to pieces if she could get proper
+withes to bind them with.</p>
+
+<p>'Then I suppose I must try to get some for
+you, my girl,' said old Ingmar, for he was in a real
+Christmas humour.</p>
+
+<p>He went out of the room, stepped over the girl
+who was scouring the floor, and remained stand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>ing
+on the doorstep, to see if there were anyone
+about whom he could send to the birch-wood for
+some withes. The farm hands were still busy cutting
+Yule logs; his son came out of the barn with
+the Christmas sheaf; his two sons-in-law were
+putting the carts into the shed so that the yard
+could be tidy for the Christmas festival. None of
+them had time to leave their work.</p>
+
+<p>The old man then quietly made up his mind to
+go himself. He went across the yard as if he were
+going into the cowshed, looked cautiously round
+to make sure no one noticed him, and stole along
+outside the barn where there was a fairly good
+road to the wood. The old man thought it was
+better not to let anyone know where he was going,
+for either his son or his sons-in-law might
+then have begged him to remain at home, and
+old people like to have their own way.</p>
+
+<p>He went down the road, across the fields,
+through the small pine-forest into the birch-wood.
+Here he left the road, and waded in the snow to
+find some young birches.</p>
+
+<p>About the same time the wind at last accomplished
+what it had been busy with the whole day:
+it tore the snow from the clouds, and now came
+rushing through the wood with a long train of
+snow after it.</p>
+
+<p>Ingmar Ingmarson had just stooped down and
+cut off a birch twig, when the wind came tearing
+along laden with snow. Just as the old man was
+getting up the wind blew a whole heap of snow in
+his face. His eyes were full of snow, and the wind
+whirled so violently around him that he was
+obliged to turn round once or twice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The whole misfortune, no doubt, arose from
+Ingmar Ingmarson being so old. In his young
+days a snowstorm would certainly not have made
+him dizzy. But now everything danced round
+him as if he had joined in a Christmas polka, and
+when he wanted to go home he went in the wrong
+direction. He went straight into the large pine-forest
+behind the birch-wood instead of going
+towards the fields.</p>
+
+<p>It soon grew dark, and the storm continued to
+howl and whirl around him amongst the young
+trees on the outskirts of the forest. The old man
+saw quite well that he was walking amongst fir-trees,
+but he did not understand that this was
+wrong, for there were also fir-trees on the other
+side of the birch-wood nearest the farm. But by-and-by
+he got so far into the forest that everything
+was quiet and still&mdash;one could not feel the
+storm, and the trees were high with thick stems&mdash;then
+he found out that he had mistaken the road,
+and would turn back.</p>
+
+<p>He became excited and upset at the thought
+that he <em>could</em> lose his way, and as he stood there in
+the midst of the pathless wood he was not sufficiently
+clear-headed to know in which direction to
+turn. He first went to the one side and then to the
+other. At last it occurred to him to retrace his
+way in his own footprints, but darkness came on,
+and he could no longer follow them. The trees
+around him grew higher and higher. Whichever
+way he went, it was evident to him that he got
+further and further into the forest.</p>
+
+<p>It was like witchcraft and sorcery, he thought,
+that he should be running about the woods like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+this all the evening and be too late for the bathing.
+He turned his cap and rebound his garter, but his
+head was no clearer. It had become quite dark,
+and he began to think that he would have to remain
+the whole night in the woods.</p>
+
+<p>He leant against a tree, stood still for a little,
+and tried to collect his thoughts. He knew this
+forest so well, and had walked in it so much, that
+he ought to know every single tree. As a boy he
+had gone there and tended sheep. He had gone
+there and laid snares for the birds. In his young
+days he had helped to fell trees there. He had
+seen old trees cut down and new ones grow up.
+At last he thought he had an idea where he was,
+and fancied if he went that and that way he must
+come upon the right road; but all the same, he
+only went deeper and deeper into the forest.</p>
+
+<p>Once he felt smooth, firm ground under his
+feet, and knew from that, that he had at last come
+to some road. He tried now to follow this, for a
+road, he thought, was bound to lead to some place
+or other; but then the road ended at an open
+space in the forest, and there the snowstorm had
+it all its own way; there was neither road nor
+path, only drifts and loose snow. Then the old
+man's courage failed him; he felt like some poor
+creature destined to die a lonely death in the
+wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>He began to grow tired of dragging himself
+through the snow, and time after time he sat down
+on a stone to rest; but as soon as he sat down
+he felt he was on the point of falling asleep, and
+he knew he would be frozen to death if he did fall
+asleep, therefore he tried to walk and walk; that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+was the only thing that could save him. But all
+at once he could not resist the inclination to sit
+down. He thought if he could only rest, it did
+not matter if it did cost him his life.</p>
+
+<p>It was so delightful to sit down that the thought
+of death did not in the least frighten him. He felt
+a kind of happiness at the thought that when he
+was dead the account of his whole life would be
+read aloud in the church. He thought of how
+beautifully the old Dean had spoken about his
+father, and how something equally beautiful
+would be sure to be said about him. The Dean
+would say that he had owned the oldest farm in
+the district, and he would speak about the honour
+it was to belong to such a distinguished family,
+and then something would be said about responsibility.
+Of course there was responsibility in the
+matter; that he had always known. One must
+endure to the very last when one was an Ingmar.</p>
+
+<p>The thought rushed through him that it was
+not befitting for him to be found frozen to death
+in the wild forest. He would not have that handed
+down to posterity; and he stood up again and
+began to walk. He had been sitting so long that
+masses of snow fell from his fur coat when he
+moved. But soon he sat down again and began
+to dream.</p>
+
+<p>The thought of death now came quite gently to
+him. He thought about the whole of the funeral
+and all the honour they would show his dead
+body. He could see the table laid for the great
+funeral feast in the large room on the first floor,
+the Dean and his wife in the seats of honour, the
+Justice of the Peace, with the white frill spread<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+over his narrow chest; the Major's wife in full
+dress, with a low silk bodice, and her neck covered
+with pearls and gold; he saw all the best
+rooms draped in white&mdash;white sheets before the
+windows, white over the furniture; branches of
+fir strewn the whole way from the entrance-hall to
+the church; house-cleaning and butchering,
+brewing and baking for a fortnight before the
+funeral; the corpse on a bier in the inmost room;
+smoke from the newly-lighted fires in the rooms;
+the whole house crowded with guests; singing
+over the body whilst the lid of the coffin was being
+screwed on; silver plates on the coffin; twenty
+loads of wood burned in a fortnight; the whole
+village busy cooking food to take to the funeral;
+all the tall hats newly ironed; all the corn-brandy
+from the autumn drunk up during the funeral
+feast; all the roads crowded with people as at fair-time.</p>
+
+<p>Again the old man started up. He had heard
+them sitting and talking about him during the
+feast.</p>
+
+<p>'But how did he manage to go and get frozen
+to death?' asked the Justice of the Peace. 'What
+could he have been doing in the large forest?'</p>
+
+<p>And the Captain would say that it was probably
+from Christmas ale and corn-brandy. And that
+roused him again. The Ingmars had never been
+drunkards. It should never be said of him that
+he was muddled in his last moments. And he began
+again to walk and walk; but he was so tired
+that he could scarcely stand on his legs. It was
+quite clear to him now that he had got far into
+the forest, for there were no paths anywhere, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+many large rocks, of which he knew there were
+none lower down. His foot caught between two
+stones, so that he had difficulty in getting it out,
+and he stood and moaned. He was quite done
+for.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he fell over a heap of fagots. He fell
+softly on to the snow and branches, so he was not
+hurt, but he did not take the trouble to get up
+again. He had no other desire in the world than
+to sleep. He pushed the fagots to one side and
+crept under them as if they were a rug; but when
+he pushed himself under the branches he felt that
+underneath there was something warm and soft.
+This must be a bear, he thought.</p>
+
+<p>He felt the animal move, and heard it sniff; but
+he lay still. The bear might eat him if it liked, he
+thought. He had not strength enough to move a
+single step to get out of its way.</p>
+
+<p>But it seemed as if the bear did not want to
+harm anyone who sought its protection on such a
+night as this. It moved a little further into its lair,
+as if to make room for its visitor, and directly
+afterwards it slept again with even, snorting
+breath.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the meantime there was but scanty Christmas
+joy in the old farm of the Ingmars. The
+whole of Christmas-eve they were looking for
+Ingmar Ingmarson. First they went all over the
+dwelling-house and all the outhouses. They
+searched high and low, from loft to cellar. Then
+they went to the neighbouring farms and inquired
+for Ingmar Ingmarson.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As they did not find him, his sons and his sons-in-law
+went into the fields and roads. They used
+the torches which should have lighted the way for
+people going to early service on Christmas morning
+in the search for him. The terrible snowstorm
+had hidden all traces, and the howling of the wind
+drowned the sound of their voices when they
+called and shouted. They were out and about
+until long after midnight, but then they saw that
+it was useless to continue the search, and that they
+must wait until daylight to find the old man.</p>
+
+<p>At the first pale streak of dawn everybody was
+up at Ingmar's farm, and the men stood about the
+yard ready to set out for the wood. But before
+they started the old housewife came and called
+them into the best room. She told them to sit
+down on the long benches; she herself sat down
+by the Christmas table with the Bible in front of
+her and began to read. She tried her best to find
+something suitable for the occasion, and chose
+the story of the man who was travelling from
+Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves.</p>
+
+<p>She read slowly and monotonously about the
+unfortunate man who was succoured by the good
+Samaritan. Her sons and sons-in-law, her
+daughters and daughters-in-law, sat around her
+on the benches. They all resembled her and each
+other, big and clumsy, with plain, old-fashioned
+faces, for they all belonged to the old race of the
+Ingmars. They had all reddish hair, freckled
+skin, and light-blue eyes with white eyelashes.
+They might be different enough from each other
+in some ways, but they had all a stern look about
+the mouth, dull eyes, and heavy movements, as if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+everything were a trouble to them. But one could
+see that they all, every one of them, belonged to
+the first people in the neighbourhood, and that
+they knew themselves to be better than other
+people.</p>
+
+<p>All the sons and daughters of the house of Ingmar
+sighed deeply during the reading of the Bible.
+They wondered if some good Samaritan had
+found the master of the house and taken care of
+him, for all the Ingmars felt as if they had lost part
+of their own soul when a misfortune happened to
+anyone belonging to the family.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman read and read, and came to the
+question: 'Who was neighbour unto him that fell
+amongst thieves?' But before she had read the
+answer the door opened and old Ingmar came
+into the room.</p>
+
+<p>'Mother, here is father,' said one of the daughters;
+and the answer, that the man's neighbour
+was he who had shown mercy unto him, was
+never read.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Later in the day the housewife sat again in the
+same place, and read her Bible. She was alone;
+the women had gone to church, and the men were
+bear-hunting in the forest. As soon as Ingmar
+Ingmarson had eaten and drunk, he took his sons
+with him and went out to the forest; for it is every
+man's duty to kill a bear wherever and whenever
+he comes across one. It does not do to spare a
+bear, for sooner or later it will get a taste for flesh,
+and then it will spare neither man nor beast.</p>
+
+<p>But after they were gone a great feeling of fear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+came over the old housewife, and she began to
+read her Bible. She read the lesson for the day,
+which was also the text for the Pastor's sermon;
+but she did not get further than this: 'Peace on
+earth, goodwill towards men.' She remained sitting
+and staring at these words with her dull eyes,
+now and again sighing deeply. She did not read
+any further, but she repeated time after time in
+her slow, drawling voice, 'Peace on earth, goodwill
+towards men.'</p>
+
+<p>The eldest son came into the room just as she
+was going to repeat the words afresh.</p>
+
+<p>'Mother!' he said softly.</p>
+
+<p>She heard him, but did not take her eyes from
+the book whilst she asked:</p>
+
+<p>'Are you not with the others in the forest?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' said he, still more softly, 'I have been
+there.'</p>
+
+<p>'Come to the table,' she said, 'so that I can see
+you.'</p>
+
+<p>He came nearer, but when she looked at him
+she saw that he was trembling. He had to press
+his hands hard against the edge of the table in
+order to keep them still.</p>
+
+<p>'Have you got the bear?' she asked again.</p>
+
+<p>He could not answer; he only shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman got up and did what she had
+not done since her son was a child. She went up
+to him, laid her hand on his arm, and drew him
+to the bench. She sat down beside him and took
+his hand in hers.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me now what has happened, my boy.'</p>
+
+<p>The young man recognised the caress which
+had comforted him in bygone days when he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+been in trouble and unhappy, and he was so overcome
+that he began to weep.</p>
+
+<p>'I suppose it is something about father?' she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>'It is worse than that,' the son sobbed.
+'Worse than that?'</p>
+
+<p>The young man cried more and more violently;
+he did not know how to control his voice. At last
+he lifted his rough hand, with the broad fingers,
+and pointed to what she had just read: 'Peace
+on earth.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it anything about that?' she asked.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' he answered.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it anything about the peace of Christmas?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>'You wished to do an evil deed this morning?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>'And God has punished us?'</p>
+
+<p>'God has punished us.'</p>
+
+<p>So at last she was told how it had happened.
+They had with some trouble found the lair of the
+bear, and when they had got near enough to see
+the heap of fagots, they stopped in order to load
+their guns. But before they were ready the bear
+rushed out of its lair straight against them. It
+went neither to the right nor to the left, but
+straight for old Ingmar Ingmarson, and struck
+him a blow on the top of the head that felled him
+to the ground as if he had been struck by lightning.
+It did not attack any of the others, but
+rushed past them into the forest.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the afternoon Ingmar Ingmarson's wife and
+son drove to the Dean's house to announce his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
+death. The son was spokesman, and the old
+housewife sat and listened with a face as immovable
+as a stone figure.</p>
+
+<p>The Dean sat in his easy-chair near his writing-table.
+He had entered the death in the register.
+He had done it rather slowly; he wanted time to
+consider what he should say to the widow and the
+son, for this was, indeed, an unusual case. The
+son had frankly told him how it had all happened,
+but the Dean was anxious to know how they
+themselves looked at it. They were peculiar people,
+the Ingmars.</p>
+
+<p>When the Dean had closed the book, the son
+said:</p>
+
+<p>'We wanted to tell you, sir, that we do not wish
+any account of father's life to be read in church.'</p>
+
+<p>The Dean pushed his spectacles over his forehead
+and looked searchingly at the old woman.
+She sat just as immovable as before. She only
+crumpled the handkerchief a little which she
+held in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>'We wish to have him buried on a week day,'
+continued the son.</p>
+
+<p>'Indeed!' said the Dean.</p>
+
+<p>He could hardly believe his own ears. Old
+Ingmar Ingmarson to be buried without anyone
+taking any notice of it! The congregation not to
+stand on railings and mounds in order to see the
+display when he was being carried to the grave!</p>
+
+<p>'There will not be any funeral feast. We have
+let the neighbours know that they need not think
+of preparing anything for the funeral.'</p>
+
+<p>'Indeed, indeed!' said the Dean again.</p>
+
+<p>He could think of nothing else to say. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+knew quite well what it meant for such people to
+forego the funeral feast. He had seen both widows
+and fatherless comforted by giving a splendid
+funeral feast.</p>
+
+<p>'There will be no funeral procession, only I and
+my brothers.'</p>
+
+<p>The Dean looked almost appealingly at the old
+woman. Could she really be a party to all this?
+He asked himself if it could be her wishes to which
+the son had given expression. She was sitting
+there and allowing herself to be robbed of what
+must be dearer to her than gold and silver.</p>
+
+<p>'We will not have the bells rung, or any silver
+plates on the coffin. Mother and I wish it to be
+done in this way, but we tell you all this, sir, in
+order to hear, sir, if you think we are wronging
+father.'</p>
+
+<p>Now the old woman spoke:</p>
+
+<p>'We should like to hear if your Reverence
+thinks we are doing father a wrong.'</p>
+
+<p>The Dean remained silent, and the old woman
+continued, more eagerly:</p>
+
+<p>'I must tell your Reverence that if my husband
+had sinned against the King or the authorities, or
+if I had been obliged to cut him down from the
+gallows, he should all the same have had an honourable
+funeral, as his father before him, for the
+Ingmars are not afraid of anyone, and they need
+not go out of their way for anybody. But at
+Christmas God has made peace between man and
+beast, and the poor beast kept God's commandment,
+whilst we broke it, and therefore we now
+suffer God's punishment; and it is not becoming
+for us to show any ostentatious display.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Dean rose and went up to the old woman.</p>
+
+<p>'What you say is right,' he said, 'and you shall
+follow the dictates of your own conscience.' And
+involuntarily he added, perhaps most to himself:
+'The Ingmars are a grand family.'</p>
+
+<p>The old woman straightened herself a little at
+these words. At that moment the Dean saw in
+her the symbol of her whole race. He understood
+what it was that had made these heavy, silent people,
+century after century, the leaders of the whole
+parish.</p>
+
+<p>'It behooves the Ingmars to set the people a
+good example,' she said. 'It behooves us to show
+that we humble ourselves before God.'</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Story from Halstan&auml;s">VIII <a name="Story" id="Story"><span class="dec_italic">A</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">from</span> <span class="smcap">Halstan&auml;s</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">VIII</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">A</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">from</span> <span class="smcap">Halstan&auml;s</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">A</span> <span class="smcap">Story</span> <span class="dec_italic">from</span> <span class="smcap">Halstan&auml;s</span></p>
+
+<p>In olden times there stood by the roadside an
+old country-house called Halstan&auml;s. It comprised
+a long row of red-painted houses,
+which were of low structure, and right behind
+them lay the forest. Close to the dwelling-house
+was a large wild cherry-tree, which showered its
+black fruit over the red-tiled roof. A bell under a
+small belfry hung over the gable of the stables.</p>
+
+<p>Just outside the kitchen-door was a dovecote,
+with a neat little trelliswork outside the holes.
+From the attic a cage for squirrels was hanging;
+it consisted of two small green houses and a
+large wheel, and in front of a big hedge of lilacs
+stood a long row of beehives covered with bark.</p>
+
+<p>There was a pond belonging to the farm, full of
+fat carp and slim water-snakes; there was also a
+kennel at the entrance; there were white gates at
+the end of the avenue, and at the garden walks,
+and in every place where they could possibly have
+a gate. There were big lofts with dark lumber-rooms,
+where old-fashioned uniforms and ladies'
+head-gear a hundred years old were stored away;
+there were large chests full of silk gowns and
+bridal finery; there were old pianos and violins,
+guitars and bassoons. In bureaus and cabinets
+were manuscript songs and old yellow letters; on
+the walls of the entrance-hall hung guns, pistols
+and hunting-bags; on the floor were rugs, in
+which patches of old silken gowns were woven<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+together with pieces of threadbare cotton curtains.
+There was a large porch, where the deadly nightshade
+summer after summer grew up a thin
+trelliswork; there were large, yellow front-doors,
+which were fastened with bolts and catches; the
+hall was strewn with sprigs of juniper, and the
+windows had small panes and heavy wooden
+shutters.</p>
+
+<p>One summer old Colonel Beerencreutz came on
+a visit to this house. It is supposed to have been
+the very year after he left Ekeby. At that time he
+had taken rooms at a farm at Svartsj&ouml;, and it was
+only on rare occasions that he went visiting. He
+still had his horse and gig, but he scarcely ever
+used them. He said that he had grown old in
+earnest now, and that home was the best place for
+old people.</p>
+
+<p>Beerencreutz was also loath to leave the work
+he had in hand. He was weaving rugs for his two
+rooms&mdash;large, many-coloured rugs in a rich and
+strangely-thought-out pattern. It took him an
+endless time, because he had his own way of weaving,
+for he used no loom, but stretched his wool
+from the one wall to the other right across the one
+room. He did this in order to see the whole rug
+at one time; but to cross the woof and afterwards
+bring the threads together to a firm web was no
+easy matter. And then there was the pattern,
+which he himself thought out, and the colours
+which should match. This took the Colonel more
+time than anyone would have imagined; for whilst
+Beerencreutz was busy getting the pattern right,
+and whilst he was working with warp and woof, he
+often sat and thought of God. Our Lord, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+thought, was likewise sitting at a loom, still
+larger, and with an even more peculiar pattern to
+weave. And he knew that there must be both
+light and dark shades in that weaving. But Beerencreutz
+would at times sit and think so long
+about this, until he fancied he saw before him his
+own life and the life of the people whom he had
+known, and with whom he had lived, forming a
+small portion of God's great weaving; and he
+seemed to see that piece so distinctly that he could
+discern both outlines and colouring. And if one
+asked Beerencreutz what the pattern in his work
+really meant, he would be obliged to confess that
+it was the life of himself and his friends which he
+wove into the rug as a faint imitation of what he
+thought he had seen represented on God's loom.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel, however, was accustomed to pay
+a little visit to some old friends every year just
+after midsummer. He had always liked best to
+travel through the country when the fields were
+still scented with clover, and blue and yellow flowers
+grew along the roadside in two long straight
+rows.</p>
+
+<p>This year the Colonel had hardly got to the
+great highroad before he met his old friend Ensign
+von &Ouml;rneclou. And the Ensign, who was
+travelling about all the year round, and who knew
+all the country houses in V&auml;rmland, gave him
+some good advice.</p>
+
+<p>'Go to Halstan&auml;s and call upon Ensign Vestblad,'
+he said to the Colonel. 'I can only tell you,
+old man, I don't know a house in the whole country
+where one fares better.'</p>
+
+<p>'What Vestblad are you speaking about?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+asked the Colonel. 'I suppose you don't mean
+the old Ensign whom the Major's wife showed
+the door?'</p>
+
+<p>'The very man,' said the Ensign. 'But Vestblad
+is not the same man he was. He has married
+a fine lady&mdash;a real stunning woman, Colonel&mdash;who
+has made a man of him. It was a wonderful
+piece of good luck for Vestblad that such a splendid
+girl should take a fancy to him. She was not
+exactly young any longer; but no more was he.
+You should go to Halstan&auml;s, Colonel, and see
+what wonders love can work.'</p>
+
+<p>And the Colonel went to Halstan&auml;s to see if
+&Ouml;rneclou spoke the truth. He had, as a matter
+of fact, now and then wondered what had become
+of Vestblad; in his young days he had kicked so
+recklessly over the traces that even the Major's
+wife at Ekeby could not put up with him. She
+had not been able to keep him at Ekeby more than
+a couple of years before she was obliged to turn
+him out. Vestblad had become such a heavy
+drinker that a Cavalier could hardly associate with
+him. And now &Ouml;rneclou declared that he owned
+a country house, and had made an excellent
+match.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel consequently went to Halstan&auml;s,
+and saw at the first glance that it was a real old
+country-seat. He had only to look at the avenue
+of birches with all the names cut on the fine old
+trees. Such birches he had only seen at good old
+country-houses. The Colonel drove slowly up to
+the house, and every moment his pleasure increased.
+He saw lime hedges of the proper kind,
+so close that one could walk on the top of them,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+and there were a couple of terraces with stone
+steps so old that they were half buried in the
+ground. When the Colonel drove past the pond,
+he saw indistinctly the dark carp in the yellowish
+water. The pigeons flew up from the road flapping
+their wings; the squirrel stopped its wheel;
+the watch-dog lay with its head on its paws, wagging
+its tail, and at the same time faintly growling.
+Close to the porch the Colonel saw an ant-hill,
+where the ants, unmolested, went to and fro&mdash;to
+and fro. He looked at the flower-beds inside
+the grass border. There they grew, all the old
+flowers: narcissus and pyrola, sempervivum and
+marigold; and on the bank grew small white
+daisies, which had been there so long that they
+now sowed themselves like weeds. Beerencreutz
+again said to himself that this was indeed a real
+old country-house, where both plants and animals
+and human beings throve as well as could be.</p>
+
+<p>When at last he drove up to the front-door he
+had as good a reception as he could wish for, and
+as soon as he had brushed the dust off him he was
+taken to the dining-room, and he was offered
+plenty of good old-fashioned food&mdash;the same old
+cakes for dessert that his mother used to give him
+when he came home from school; and any so
+good he had never tasted elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Beerencreutz looked with surprise at Ensign
+Vestblad. He went about quiet and content, with
+a long pipe in his mouth and a skull-cap on his
+head. He wore an old morning-coat, which he
+had difficulty in getting out of when it was time
+to dress for dinner. That was the only sign of the
+Bohemian left, as far as Beerencreutz could see.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+He went about and looked after his men, calculated
+their wages, saw how things were getting on
+in the fields and meadows, gathered a rose for his
+wife when he went through the garden, and he indulged
+no longer in either swearing or spitting.
+But what astonished the Colonel most of all was
+the discovery that old Ensign Vestblad kept his
+books. He took the Colonel into his office and
+showed him large books with red backs. And
+those he kept himself. He had lined them with
+red ink and black ink, written the headings with
+large letters, and put down everything, even to a
+stamp.</p>
+
+<p>But Ensign Vestblad's wife, who was a born
+lady, called Beerencreutz cousin, and they soon
+found out the relationship between them; and
+they talked all their relatives over. At last Beerencreutz
+became so intimate with Mrs. Vestblad
+that he consulted her about the rug he was weaving.</p>
+
+<p>It was a matter of course that the Colonel
+should stay the night. He was taken to the best
+spare room to the right of the hall and close to his
+host's bedroom, and his bed was a large four-poster,
+with heaps of eiderdowns.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel fell asleep as soon as he got into
+bed, but awoke later on in the night. He immediately
+got out of bed and went and opened the
+window-shutters. He had a view over the garden,
+and in the light summer night he could see all the
+gnarled old apple-trees, with their worm-eaten
+leaves, and with numerous props under the decayed
+branches. He saw the large wild apple-tree,
+which in the autumn would give barrels of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
+uneatable fruit; he saw the strawberries, which
+had just begun to ripen under their profusion of
+green leaves.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel stood and looked at it as if he
+could not afford to waste his time in sleeping.
+Outside his window at the peasant farm where he
+lived all he could see was a stony hill and a couple
+of juniper-bushes; and it was natural that a man
+like Beerencreutz should feel more at home
+amongst well-trimmed hedges and roses in
+bloom.</p>
+
+<p>When in the quiet stillness of the night one
+looks out upon a garden, one often has a feeling
+that it is not real and natural. It can be so still
+that one can almost fancy one's self in the theatre;
+one imagines that the trees are painted and the
+roses made of paper. And it was something like
+this the Colonel felt as he stood there. 'It cannot
+be possible,' he thought, 'that all this is real.
+It can only be a dream.' But then a few rose-leaves
+fell softly to the ground from the big rose-tree
+just outside his window, and then he realized
+that everything was genuine. Everything was
+real and genuine; both day and night the same
+peace and contentment everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>When he went and laid down again he left the
+window-shutters open. He lay in the high bed
+and looked time after time at the rose-tree; it is
+impossible to describe his pleasure in looking at
+it. He thought what a strange thing it was that
+such a man as Vestblad should have this flower of
+Paradise outside his window.</p>
+
+<p>The more the Colonel thought of Vestblad the
+more surprised he became that such a foal should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+end his days in such a stable. He was not good
+for much at the time he was turned away from
+Ekeby. Who would have thought he would have
+become a staid and well-to-do man?</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel lay and laughed to himself, and
+wondered whether Vestblad still remembered
+how he used to amuse himself in the olden days
+when he was living at Ekeby. On dark and
+stormy nights he used to rub himself over with
+phosphorus, mount a black horse, and ride over
+the hills to the ironworks, where the smiths and
+the workmen lived; and if anyone happened to
+look out of his window and saw a horseman shining
+with a bluish-white light tearing past, he
+hastened to bar and bolt everywhere, saying it
+was best to say one's prayers twice that night,
+for the devil was abroad.</p>
+
+<p>Oh yes, to frighten simple folks by such tricks
+was a favourite amusement in olden days; but
+Vestblad had carried his jokes further than anyone
+else the Colonel knew of.</p>
+
+<p>An old woman on the parish had died at Viksta,
+which belonged to Ekeby. Vestblad happened to
+hear about this. He also heard that the corpse
+had been taken from the house and placed in a
+barn. At night Vestblad put on his fiery array,
+mounted his black horse, and rode to the farmstead;
+and people there who were about had seen
+a fiery horseman ride up to the barn, where the
+corpse lay, ride three times round it and disappear
+through the door. They had also seen the horseman
+come out again, ride three times round the
+house and then disappear. But in the morning,
+when they went into the barn to see the corpse, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+was gone, and they thought the devil had been
+there and carried her off. This supposition had
+been enough for them. But a couple of weeks
+later they found the body, which had been thrown
+on to a hay-loft in the barn, and then there was a
+great outcry. They found out who the fiery
+horseman was, and the peasants were on the
+watch to give Vestblad a good hiding. But the
+Major's wife would not have him at her table or
+in her house any longer; she packed his knapsack
+and asked him to betake himself elsewhere. And
+Vestblad went out into the world and made his
+fortune.</p>
+
+<p>A strange feeling of uneasiness came over the
+Colonel as he lay in bed. He felt as if something
+were going to happen. He had hardly realized
+before what an ugly story it was. He had no
+doubt even laughed at it at the time. They had
+not been in the habit of taking much notice of
+what happened to a poor old pauper in those
+days; but, great God! how furious one would
+have been if anybody had done that to one's own
+mother!</p>
+
+<p>A suffocating feeling came over the Colonel;
+he breathed heavily. The thought of what Vestblad
+had done appeared so vile and hateful to him,
+it weighed him down like a nightmare. He was
+half afraid of seeing the dead woman, of seeing
+her appear from behind the bed. He felt as if she
+must be quite near. And from the four corners of
+the room the Colonel heard terrible words: 'God
+will not forgive it! God has never forgotten it!'</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel closed his eyes, but then he suddenly
+saw before him God's great loom, where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+the web was woven with the fates of men; and he
+thought he saw Ensign Vestblad's square, and it
+was dark on three sides; and he, who understood
+something about weaving and patterns, knew that
+the fourth side would also have to be covered with
+the dark shade. It could not be done in any other
+way, otherwise there would be a mistake in the
+weaving.</p>
+
+<p>A cold sweat broke out on his forehead; it
+seemed to him that he looked upon what was the
+hardest and the most immovable in all the world.
+He saw how the fate which a man has worked out
+in his past life will pursue him to the end. And to
+think there were actually people who thought they
+could escape it!</p>
+
+<p>Escape it! escape! All was noted and written
+down; the one colour and the one figure necessitated
+the other, and everything came about as it
+was bound to come about.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Colonel Beerencreutz sat up in bed;
+he would look at the flowers and the roses, and
+think that perhaps our Lord could forget after
+all. But at the moment Beerencreutz sat up in
+bed the bedroom door opened, and one of the
+farm-labourers&mdash;a stranger to him&mdash;put his head
+in and nodded to the Colonel.</p>
+
+<p>It was now so light that the Colonel saw the
+man quite distinctly. It was the most hideous
+face he had ever seen. He had small gray eyes
+like a pig, a flat nose, and a thin, bristly beard.
+One could not say that the man looked like an
+animal, for animals have nearly always good
+faces, but still, he had something of the animal
+about him. His lower jaw projected, his neck was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+thick, and his forehead was quite hidden by his
+rough, unkempt hair.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded three times to the Colonel, and
+every time his mouth opened with a broad grin;
+and he put out his hand, red with blood, and
+showed it triumphantly. Up to this moment the
+Colonel had sat up in bed as if paralyzed, but now
+he jumped up and was at the door in two steps.
+But when he reached the door, the fellow was
+gone and the door closed.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel was just on the point of raising the
+alarm, when it struck him that the door must be
+fastened on the inside, on his side, as he had himself
+locked it the night before; and on examining
+it, he found that it had not been unlocked.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel felt almost ashamed to think that
+in his old age he had begun to see ghosts. He
+went straight back to bed again.</p>
+
+<p>When the morning came, and he had breakfasted,
+the Colonel felt still more ashamed. He
+had excited himself to such an extent that he had
+trembled all over and perspired from fear. He
+said not a word about it. But later on in the
+day he and Vestblad went over the estate. As
+they passed a labourer who was cutting sods on a
+bank Beerencreutz recognised him again. It was
+the man he had seen in the night. He recognised
+feature for feature.</p>
+
+<p>'I would not keep that man a day longer in my
+service, my friend,' said Beerencreutz, when they
+had walked a short distance. And he told Vestblad
+what he had seen in the night. 'I tell you
+this simply to warn you, in order that you may
+dismiss the man.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Vestblad would not; he was just the man
+he would not dismiss. And when Beerencreutz
+pressed him more and more, he at last confessed
+that he would not do anything to the man, because
+he was the son of an old pauper woman who had
+died at Viksta close to Ekeby.</p>
+
+<p>'You no doubt remember the story?' he added.</p>
+
+<p>'If that's the case, I would rather go to the end
+of the world than live another day with that man
+about the place,' said Beerencreutz. An hour
+after he left, and was almost angry that his warning
+was not heeded. 'Some misfortune will happen
+before I come here again,' said the Colonel to
+Vestblad, as he took leave.</p>
+
+<p>Next year, at the same time, the Colonel was
+preparing for another visit to Halstan&auml;s. But before
+he got so far, he heard some sad news about
+his friends. As the clock struck one, a year after
+the very night he had slept there, Ensign Vestblad
+and his wife had been murdered in their bedroom
+by one of their labourers&mdash;a man with a neck like
+a bull, a flat nose, and eyes like a pig.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="Inscription on the Grave">IX. <a name="Inscription" id="Inscription"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Inscription</span> <span class="dec_italic">on the</span> <span class="smcap">Grave</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">IX</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Inscription</span> <span class="dec_italic">on the</span> <span class="smcap">Grave</span></p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Inscription</span> <span class="dec_italic">on the</span> <span class="smcap">Grave</span></p>
+
+<p>Nowadays no one ever takes any notice
+of the little cross standing in the corner
+of Svartsj&ouml; Churchyard. People on their
+way to and from church go past it without giving
+it a glance. This is not so very wonderful, because
+it is so low and small that clover and
+bluebells grow right up to the arms of the cross,
+and timothy-grass to the very top of it. Neither
+does anyone think of reading the inscription
+which stands on the cross. The white letters are
+almost entirely washed out by the rain, and it
+never occurs to anyone to try and decipher what
+is still left, and try to make it out. But so it has
+not always been. The little cross in its time has
+been the cause of much surprise and curiosity.
+There was a time when not a person put his foot
+inside Svartsj&ouml; Churchyard without going up to
+look at it. And when one of the old people from
+those days now happens to see it, a whole story
+comes back to him of people and events that have
+been long forgotten. He sees before him the
+whole of Svartsj&ouml; parish in the lethargic sleep of
+winter, covered by even white snow, quite a yard
+deep, so that it is impossible to discern road or
+pathway, or to know where one is going. It is
+almost as necessary to have a compass here as
+at sea. There is no difference between sea and
+shore. The roughest ground is as even as the
+field which in the autumn yielded such a harvest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+of oats. The charcoal-burner living near the
+great bogs might imagine himself possessed of as
+much cultivated land as the richest peasant.</p>
+
+<p>The roads have left their secure course between
+the gray fences, and are running at random
+across the meadows and along the river. Even
+on one's own farm one may lose one's way, and
+suddenly discover that on one's way to the well
+one has walked over the spirea-hedge and round
+the little rose-bed.</p>
+
+<p>But nowhere is it so impossible to find one's
+way as in the churchyard. In the first place, the
+stone wall which separates it from the pastor's
+field is entirely buried under the snow, so with
+that it is all one; and secondly, the churchyard
+itself is only a simple large, white plain, where
+not even the smallest unevenness in the snow-cover
+betrays the many small mounds and tufts
+of the garden of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>On most of the graves are iron crosses, from
+which hang small, thin hearts of tin, which the
+summer wind sets in motion. These little hearts
+are now all hidden under the snow, and cannot
+tinkle their sad songs of sorrow and longing.</p>
+
+<p>People who work in the towns have brought
+back with them to their dead wreaths with flowers
+of beads and leaves of painted tin; and these
+wreaths are so highly treasured that they are kept
+in small glass cases on the graves. But now all
+this is hidden and buried under the snow, and the
+grave that possesses such an ornament is in no
+way more remarkable than any of the other
+graves.</p>
+
+<p>One or two lilac bushes raise their heads above<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+the snow-cover, but their little stiff branches look
+so alike, that it is impossible to tell one from the
+other, and they are of no use whatever to anyone
+trying to find his way in the churchyard. Old
+women who are in the habit of going on Sundays
+to visit their graves can only get a little way down
+the main walk on account of the snow. There
+they stand, trying to make out where their own
+grave lies&mdash;is it near that bush, or that?&mdash;and
+they begin to long for the snow to melt. It is
+as if the one for whom they are sorrowing has
+gone so far away from them, now that they cannot
+see the spot where he lies.</p>
+
+<p>There are also a few large gravestones and
+crosses that are higher than the snow, but they
+are not many; and as these are also covered with
+snow, they cannot be distinguished either.</p>
+
+<p>There is only one pathway kept clear in the
+churchyard. It is the one leading from the entrance
+to the small mortuary. When anyone is
+to be buried the coffin is carried into the mortuary,
+and there the pastor reads the service and
+casts the earth upon the coffin. It is impossible
+to place the coffin in the ground as long as such
+a winter lasts. It must remain standing in the
+mortuary until God sees fit to thaw the earth,
+and the ground can be digged and made ready.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Just when the winter was at its hardest, and the
+churchyard quite inaccessible, a child died at
+Sander's, the ironmaster at Lerum ironworks.</p>
+
+<p>The ironworks at Lerum were large, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+Sander, the ironmaster, was a great man in that
+part of the country. He had recently had a family
+grave made in the churchyard&mdash;a splendid grave,
+the position of which one could not easily forget,
+although the snow had laid its <span class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original has thinck">thick</span> carpet over
+it. It was surrounded by heavy, hewn stones,
+with a massive chain between them, and in the
+middle of the grave stood a huge granite block,
+with their name inscribed upon it. There was
+only the one word 'Sander,' engraved in large
+letters, but it could be seen over the whole churchyard.
+But now that the child was dead, and was
+to be buried, the ironmaster said to his wife:</p>
+
+<p>'I will not allow this child to lie in my grave.'</p>
+
+<p>One can picture them both at that moment. It
+was in their dining-room at Lerum. The ironmaster
+was sitting at the breakfast-table alone,
+as was his wont. His wife, Ebba Sander, was sitting
+in a rocking-chair at the window, from where
+she had a wide view of the lake, with its small
+islands covered with birches.</p>
+
+<p>She had been weeping, but when her husband
+said this, her eyes became immediately dry. Her
+little figure seemed to shrink from fear, and she
+began to tremble.</p>
+
+<p>'What do you say? What are you saying?'
+she asked, and her voice sounded as if she were
+shivering from cold.</p>
+
+<p>'I object to it,' he said. 'My father and my
+mother lie there, and the name "Sander" stands
+on the stone. I will not allow that child to lie
+there.'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh,' she said, still trembling, 'is that what
+you have been thinking about? I always did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+think that some day you would have your revenge.'</p>
+
+<p>He threw down his serviette, rose from the
+table, and stood before her, broad and big. It
+was not his intention to assert his will with many
+words, but she could see, as he stood there, that
+nothing could make him change his mind. Stern,
+immovable, obstinate he was from top to toe.</p>
+
+<p>'I will not revenge myself,' he said, 'only I
+will not have it.'</p>
+
+<p>'You speak as if it were only a question of
+removing him from one bed to the other,' she
+said. 'He is dead. It does not matter to him
+where he lies, I suppose; but for me it is ruin,
+you know.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have also thought of that,' he said, 'but I
+cannot.'</p>
+
+<p>When two people have been married, and have
+lived together for some years, they do not require
+many words to understand one another. She
+knew it would be quite useless to try and move
+him.</p>
+
+<p>'Why did you forgive me, then?' she said,
+wringing her hands. 'Why did you let me stay
+with you as your wife and promise to forgive
+me?'</p>
+
+<p>He knew that he would not do her any harm.
+It was not his fault that he had now reached the
+limit of his forbearance.</p>
+
+<p>'Say to people what you like,' he said; 'I
+shall not say anything. You can say, if you like,
+that there is water in the vault, or that there is
+only room for father and mother and you and
+me.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'And you imagine that they will believe that!'</p>
+
+<p>'Well, you must manage that as best you can.'</p>
+
+<p>He was not angry; she knew that he was not.
+It was only as he said: on that point he could not
+give way.</p>
+
+<p>She went further into the room, put her hands
+at the back of her head, and sat gazing out of the
+window without saying anything. The terrible
+thing is that so much happens to one in life over
+which one has no control, and, above all, that
+something may spring up within one's self over
+which one is entirely powerless. Some years ago,
+when she was already a staid married woman,
+love came to her; and what a love&mdash;so violent that
+it was quite impossible for her to resist.</p>
+
+<p>Was not the feeling which now mastered her
+husband&mdash;was not that, after all, a desire to be
+revenged?</p>
+
+<p>He had never been angry with her. He forgave
+her at once when she came and confessed
+her sin.</p>
+
+<p>'You have been out of your senses,' he said,
+and allowed her to remain with him at Lerum as
+if nothing had happened.</p>
+
+<p>But although it is easy enough to say one forgives,
+it may be hard to do so, especially for one
+whose mind is slow and heavy, who ponders over
+but never forgets or gives vent to his feelings.
+Whatever he may say, and however much he may
+have made up his mind, something is always left
+within his heart which gnaws and longs to be satisfied
+with someone else's suffering. She had
+always had a strange feeling that it would have
+been better for her if he had been so enraged that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+he had struck her. Then, perhaps, things could
+have come right between them. All these years
+he had been morose and irritable, and she had become
+frightened. She was like a horse between
+the traces. She knew that behind her was one
+who held a whip over her, even if he did not use
+it; and now he had used it. He had not been
+able to refrain any longer. And now it was all
+over with her.</p>
+
+<p>Those who were about her said they had never
+seen such sorrow as hers. She seemed to be petrified.
+The whole time before the funeral it was
+as if there were no real life in her. One could not
+tell if she heard what was said to her, if she had
+any idea who was speaking to her. She did not
+eat; it was as if she felt no hunger. She went
+out in the bitterest cold; she did not feel it. But
+it was not grief that petrified her&mdash;it was fear.</p>
+
+<p>It never struck her for a moment to stay at
+home on the day of the funeral. She must go to
+the churchyard, she must walk in the funeral procession&mdash;must
+go there, feeling that all who were
+present expected that the body would be laid in
+the family vault of the Sanders. She thought
+she would sink into the ground at all the surprise
+and scorn which would rise up against her when
+the grave-digger, who headed the procession, led
+the way to an out-of-the-way grave. An outburst
+of astonishment would be heard from everybody,
+although it was a funeral procession:
+'Why is the child not going to be buried in the
+Sanders' family vault?' Thoughts would go back
+to the vague rumours which were once circulated
+about her. 'There must have been something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+in them, after all,' people will whisper to each
+other. And before the mourners left the churchyard
+she would be condemned and lost. The only
+thing for her to do was to be present herself. She
+would go there with a quiet face, as if everything
+was as it ought to be. Then, perhaps, they might
+believe what she said to explain the matter.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>Her husband went with her to the church; he
+had looked after everything, invited people, ordered
+the coffin, and arranged who should be the
+bearers. He was kind and good now that he had
+got his own way.</p>
+
+<p>It was on a Sunday. The service was over, and
+the mourners had assembled outside the porch,
+where the coffin was standing. The bearers had
+placed the white bands over their shoulders; all
+people of any position had joined in the procession,
+as did also many of the congregation. She
+had a feeling as if they had all gathered together
+in order to accompany a criminal to the scaffold.</p>
+
+<p>How they would all look at her when they came
+back from the funeral! She was there to prepare
+them for what was to happen, but she had not
+been able to utter a single word. She felt quite
+unable to speak quietly and sensibly. There was
+only one thing she wanted: to scream and moan
+so violently and loudly that it could be heard all
+over the churchyard; and she had to bite her lips
+so as not to cry out.</p>
+
+<p>The bells commenced to ring in the tower, and
+the procession began to move. Now all these
+people would find it out without the slightest
+preparation. Oh, why had she not spoken in
+time? She had to restrain herself to the utmost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+from shouting out and telling them that they must
+not go to the grave with the dead child. Those
+who are dead are dead and gone. Why should
+her whole life be spoiled for the sake of this dead
+child? They could put him in the earth, where
+they liked, only not in the churchyard. She had
+a confused idea that she would frighten them
+away from the churchyard; it was risky to go
+there; it was plague-smitten; there were marks
+of a wolf in the snow; she would frighten them
+as one frightens children.</p>
+
+<p>She did not know where they had digged the
+child's grave. She would know soon enough, she
+thought; and when the procession entered the
+churchyard, she glanced around the snow-covered
+ground to see where there was a new
+grave; but she saw neither path nor grave&mdash;nothing
+but the white snow. And the procession
+advanced towards the small mortuary. As many
+as possibly could pressed into the building and
+saw the earth cast on to the coffin. There was no
+question whatever about this or that grave. No
+one found out that the little one which was now
+laid to rest was never to be taken to the family
+vault.</p>
+
+<p>Had she but thought of that, had she not forgotten
+everything else in her fear and terror, then
+she need not have been afraid, not for a single
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>'In the spring,' she thought, 'when the coffin
+has to be placed in the ground, there will probably
+be no one there except the grave-digger; everybody
+will think that the child is lying in the
+Sanders' vault.' And she felt that she was saved.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She sank down sobbing violently. People
+looked at her with sympathy. 'How terribly she
+felt it!' they said. But she herself knew that she
+cried like one who has escaped from a mortal
+danger.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two after the funeral she was sitting
+in the twilight in her accustomed place in the
+dining-room, and as it grew darker she caught
+herself waiting and longing. She sat and listened
+for the child; that was the time when he always
+used to come in and play with her. Why did
+he not come that day? Then she started. 'Oh,
+he is dead, he is dead!'</p>
+
+<p>The next day she sat again in the twilight, and
+longed for him, and day by day this longing grew.
+It grew as the light does in the springtime, until
+at last it filled all the hours both of day and night.</p>
+
+<p>It almost goes without saying that a child like
+hers was more loved after death than whilst it
+was living. While it was living its mother had
+thought of nothing but regaining the trust and
+the love of her husband. And for him the child
+could never be a source of happiness. It was necessary
+to keep it away from him as much as
+possible; and the child had often felt he was in
+the way.</p>
+
+<p>She, who had failed in and neglected her duty,
+would show her husband that she was worth
+something after all. She was always about in the
+kitchen and in the weaving-room. Where could
+there be any room, then, for the little boy?</p>
+
+<p>But now, afterwards, she remembered how his
+eyes could beg and beseech. In the evening he
+liked so much to have her sitting at his bedside<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>.
+He said he was afraid to lie in the dark; but now
+it struck her that that had probably only been
+an excuse to get her to stay with him. She remembered
+how he lay and tried not to fall asleep.
+Now she knew that he kept himself awake in
+order that he might lie a little longer and feel his
+hand in hers. He had been a shrewd little fellow,
+young as he was. He had exerted all his little
+brain to find out how he could get a little share
+of her love. It is incomprehensible that children
+can love so deeply. She never understood it
+whilst he was alive.</p>
+
+<p>It was really first now that she had begun to
+love the child. It was first now that she was
+really impressed by his beauty. She would sit
+and dream of his big, strange eyes. He had never
+been robust and ruddy like most children, but
+delicate and slender. But how sweet he had been!
+He seemed to her now as something wonderfully
+beautiful&mdash;more and more beautiful for every day
+that went. Children were indeed the best of all
+in this world. To think that there were little
+beings stretching out their hands to everybody,
+and thinking good of all; that never ask if a face
+be plain or pretty, but are equally willing to kiss
+either, loving equally old and young, rich and
+poor. And yet they were real little people.</p>
+
+<p>For every day that went she was drawn nearer
+and nearer to the child. She wished that the
+child had been still alive; but, on the other hand,
+she was not sure that in that case she would have
+been drawn so near to it. At times she was quite
+in despair at the thought that she had not done
+more for the child whilst he was alive. That was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+probably why he had been taken from her, she
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not often that she sorrowed like this.
+Earlier in life she had always been afraid lest some
+great sorrow should overtake her, but now it
+seemed to her that sorrow was not what she had
+then thought it to be. Sorrow was only to live
+over and over again through something which
+was no more. Sorrow in her case was to become
+familiar with her child's whole being, and to seek
+to understand him. And that sorrow had made
+her life so rich.</p>
+
+<p>What she was most afraid of now was that time
+would take him from her and wipe out the memory
+of him. She had no picture of him; perhaps
+his features little by little would fade for her. She
+sat every day and tried to think how he looked.
+'Do I see him exactly as he was?' she said.</p>
+
+<p>Week by week, as the winter wore away, she
+began to long for the time when he would be
+taken from the mortuary and buried in the
+ground, so that she could go to his grave and
+speak with him. He should lie towards the west,
+that was the most beautiful, and she would deck
+the grave with roses. There should also be a
+hedge round the grave, and a seat where she could
+sit often and often. People would perhaps wonder
+at it; but they were not to know that her
+child did not lie in the family grave; and they
+were sure to think it strange that she placed flowers
+on an unknown grave and sat there for hours.
+What could she say to explain it?</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes she thought that she could, perhaps,
+do it in this way: First she would go to the big<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+grave and place a large bouquet of flowers on
+it, and remain sitting there for some time, and
+afterwards she would steal away to the little
+grave; and he would be sure to be content with
+the little flower she would secretly give him. But
+even if he were satisfied with the one little flower,
+could she be? Could she really come quite near
+to him in this way? Would he not notice that
+she was ashamed of him? Would he not understand
+what a disgrace his birth had been to her?
+No, she would have to protect him from that. He
+must only think that the joy of having possessed
+him weighed against all the rest.</p>
+
+<p>At last the winter was giving way. One could
+see the spring was coming. The snow-cover began
+to melt, and the earth to peep out. It would
+still be a week or two before the ground was
+thawed, but it would not be long now before the
+dead could be taken away from the mortuary.
+And she longed&mdash;she longed so exceedingly
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>Could she still picture to herself how he
+looked? She tried every day; but it was easier
+when it was winter. Now, when the spring was
+coming, it seemed as if he faded away from her.
+She was filled with despair. If she were only soon
+able to sit by his grave and be near to him
+again, then she would be able to see him again,
+to love him. Would he never be laid in his little
+grave? She must be able to see him again, see
+him through her whole life; she had no one else
+to love.</p>
+
+<p>At last all her fears and scruples vanished before
+this great longing. She loved, she loved;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+she could not live without the dead! She knew
+now that she could not consider anybody or anything
+but him&mdash;him alone. And when the spring
+came in earnest, when mounds and graves once
+again appeared all over the churchyard, when the
+little hearts of the iron crosses again began to
+tinkle in the wind, and the beaded wreaths to
+sparkle in their glass cases, and when the earth
+at last was ready to receive the little coffin, she
+had ready a black cross to place on his grave.
+On the cross from arm to arm was written in plain
+white letters,</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+'HERE RESTS MY CHILD,'<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>and underneath, on the stem of the cross, stood
+her name.</p>
+
+<p>She did not mind that the whole world would
+know how she had sinned. Other things were
+of no consequence to her; all she thought about
+was that she would now be able to pray at the
+grave of her child.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="story_title_page">
+<h2 title="The Brothers">X. <a name="Brothers" id="Brothers"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Brothers</span></a></h2>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">From a Swedish</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Homestead</span></p>
+<p class="story_no">X</p>
+<p><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Brothers</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="story_head"><span class="dec_italic">The</span> <span class="smcap">Brothers</span></p>
+
+<p>It is very possible that I am mistaken, but it
+seems to me that an astonishing number of
+people die this year. I have a feeling that
+I cannot go down the street without meeting a
+hearse. One cannot help thinking about all those
+who are carried to the churchyard. I always feel
+as if it were so sad for the dead who have to be
+buried in towns. I can hear how they moan in
+their coffins. Some complain that they have not
+had plumes on the hearse; some count up the
+wreaths, and are not satisfied; and then there are
+some who have only been followed by two or
+three carriages, and who are hurt by it.</p>
+
+<p>The dead ought never to know and experience
+such things; but people in towns do not at all
+understand how they ought to honour those who
+have entered into eternal rest.</p>
+
+<p>When I really think over it I do not know any
+place where they understand it better than at
+home in Svartsj&ouml;. If you die in the parish of
+Svartsj&ouml; you know you will have a coffin like that
+of everyone else&mdash;an honest black coffin which is
+like the coffins in which the country judge and
+the local magistrate were buried a year or two
+ago. For the same joiner makes all the coffins,
+and he has only one pattern; the one is made
+neither better nor worse than the other. And you
+know also, for you have seen it so many times,
+that you will be carried to the church on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+waggon which has been painted black for the
+occasion. You need not trouble yourself at all
+about any plumes. And you know that the whole
+village will follow you to the church, and that
+they will drive as slowly and as solemnly for you
+as for a landed proprietor.</p>
+
+<p>But you will have no occasion to feel annoyed
+because you have not enough wreaths, for they
+do not place a single flower on the coffin; it shall
+stand out black and shining, and nothing must
+cover it; and it is not necessary for you to think
+whether you will have a sufficiently large number
+of people to follow you, for those who live in your
+town will be sure to follow you, every one. Nor
+will you be obliged to lie and listen if there is
+lamenting and weeping around your coffin. They
+never weep over the dead when they stand on the
+church hill outside Svartsj&ouml; Church. No, they
+weep as little over a strong young fellow who falls
+a prey to death just as he is beginning to provide
+for his old people as they will for you. You will
+be placed on a couple of black trestles outside the
+door of the parish room, and a whole crowd of
+people will gradually gather round you, and all
+the women will have handkerchiefs in their hands.
+But no one will cry; all the handkerchiefs will
+be kept tightly rolled up; not one will be applied
+to the eyes. You need not speculate as to whether
+people will shed as many tears over you as they
+would over others. They would cry if it were the
+proper thing, but it is not the proper thing.</p>
+
+<p>You can understand that if there were much
+sorrowing over one grave, it would not look well
+for those over whom no one sorrowed. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
+know what they were about at Svartsj&ouml;. They do
+as it has been the custom to do there for many
+hundred years. But whilst you stand there, on
+the church hill, you are a great and important
+personage, although you receive neither flowers
+nor tears. No one comes to church without asking
+who you are, and then they go quietly up to
+you and stand and gaze at you; and it never
+occurs to anyone to wound the dead by pitying
+him. No one says anything but that it is well for
+him that it is all over.</p>
+
+<p>It is not at all as it is in a town, where you can
+be buried any day. At Svartsj&ouml; you must be
+buried on a Sunday, so that you can have the
+whole parish around you. There you will have
+standing near your coffin both the girl with whom
+you danced at the last midsummer night's festival
+and the man with whom you exchanged horses
+at the last fair. You will have the schoolmaster
+who took so much trouble with you when you
+were a little lad, and who had forgotten you,
+although you remembered him so well; and you
+will have the old Member of Parliament who
+never before thought it worth his while to bow
+to you. This is not as in a town, where people
+hardly turn round when you are carried past.
+When they bring the long bands and place them
+under the coffin, there is not one who does not
+watch the proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>You cannot imagine what a churchwarden we
+have at Svartsj&ouml;. He is an old soldier, and he
+looks like a Field-Marshal. He has short white
+hair and twisted moustaches, and a pointed imperial;
+he is slim and tall and straight, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+light and firm step. On Sundays he wears a well-brushed
+frock-coat of fine cloth. He really looks
+a very fine old gentleman, and it is he who walks
+at the head of the procession. Then comes the
+verger. Not that the verger is to be compared
+with the churchwarden. It is more than probable
+that his Sunday hat is too large and old-fashioned;
+as likely as not he is awkward&mdash;but
+when is a verger not awkward?</p>
+
+<p>Then you come next in your coffin, with the
+six bearers, and then follow the clergyman and
+the clerk and the Town Council and the whole
+parish. All the congregation will follow you to
+the churchyard, you may be sure of that. But
+I will tell you something: All those who follow
+you look so small and poor. They are not fine
+town's-people, you know&mdash;only plain, simple
+Svartsj&ouml; folk. There is only one who is great
+and important, and that is you in your coffin&mdash;you
+who are dead.</p>
+
+<p>The others the next day will have to resume
+their heavy and toilsome work. They will have
+to live in poor old cottages and wear old, patched
+clothes; the others will always be plagued and
+worried, and dragged down and humbled by
+poverty.</p>
+
+<p>Those who follow you to your grave become
+far more sad by looking at the living than by
+thinking of you who are dead. You need not
+look any more at the velvet collar of your coat
+to see if it is not getting worn at the edges; you
+need not make a special fold of your silk handkerchief
+to hide that it is beginning to fray; you
+will never more be compelled to ask the village<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>
+shopkeeper to let you have goods on credit; you
+will not find out that your strength is failing; you
+will not have to wait for the day when you must
+go on the parish.</p>
+
+<p>While they are following you to the grave
+everyone will be thinking that it is best to be
+dead&mdash;better to soar heavenwards, carried on the
+white clouds of the morning&mdash;than to be always
+experiencing life's manifold troubles. When they
+come to the wall of the churchyard, where the
+grave has been made, the bands are exchanged
+for strong ropes, and people get on to the loose
+earth and lower you down. And when this has
+been done the clerk advances to the grave and
+begins to sing: 'I walk towards death.'</p>
+
+<p>He sings the hymn quite alone; neither the
+clergyman nor any of the congregation help him.
+But the clerk must sing; however keen the north
+wind and however glaring the sun which shines
+straight in his face, sing he does.</p>
+
+<p>The clerk, however, is getting old now, and
+he has not much voice left; he is quite aware that
+it does not sound as well now as formerly when
+he sang people into their graves; but he does it
+all the same&mdash;it is part of his duty. For the day,
+you understand, when his voice quite fails him, so
+that he cannot sing any more, he must resign
+his office, and this means downright poverty for
+him. Therefore the whole gathering stands in
+apprehension while the old clerk sings, wondering
+whether his voice will last through the whole
+verse. But no one joins him, not a single person,
+for that would not do; it is not the custom. People
+never sing at a grave at Svartsj&ouml;. People do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+not sing in the church either, except the first
+hymn on Christmas Day morning.</p>
+
+<p>Still, if one listened very attentively, one could
+hear that the clerk does not sing alone. There
+really is another voice, but it sounds so exactly
+the same that the two voices blend as if they were
+only one. The other who sings is a little old man
+in a long, coarse gray coat. He is still older than
+the clerk, but he gives out all the voice he has to
+help him. And the voice, as I have told you, is
+exactly the same kind as the clerk's; they are so
+alike one cannot help wondering at it.</p>
+
+<p>But when one looks closer, the little gray old
+man is also exactly like the clerk; he has the same
+nose and chin and mouth, only somewhat older,
+and, as it were, more hardly dealt with in life.
+And then one understands that the little gray man
+is the clerk's brother; and then one knows why
+he helps him. For, you see, things have never
+gone well with him in this world, and he has
+always had bad luck; and once he was made a
+bankrupt, and brought the clerk into his misfortunes.
+He knows that it is his fault that his
+brother has always had to struggle. And the
+clerk, you know, has tried to help him on to his
+legs again, but with no avail, for he has not been
+one of those one can help. He has always been
+unfortunate; and then, he has had no strength
+of purpose.</p>
+
+<p>But the clerk has been the shining light in the
+family; and for the other it has been a case of
+receiving and receiving, and he has never been
+able to make any return at all. Great God! even
+to talk of making any return&mdash;he who is so poor!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
+You should only see the little hut in the forest
+where he lives. He knows that he has always
+been dull and sad, only a burden&mdash;only a burden
+for his brother and for others. But now of late
+he has become a great man; now he is able to
+give some return. And that he does. Now he
+helps his brother, the clerk, who has been the sunshine
+and life and joy for him all his days. Now
+he helps him to sing, so that he may keep his
+office.</p>
+
+<p>He does not go to church, for he thinks that
+everyone looks at him because he has no black
+Sunday clothes; but every Sunday he goes up
+to the church to see whether there is a coffin on
+the black trestles outside the parish room; and
+if there is one he goes to the grave, in spite of his
+old gray coat, and helps his brother with his pitiful
+old voice.</p>
+
+<p>The little old man knows very well how badly
+he sings; he places himself behind the others,
+and does not push forward to the grave. But
+sing he does; it would not matter so much if the
+clerk's voice should fail on one or other note, his
+brother is there and helps him.</p>
+
+<p>At the churchyard no one laughs at the singing;
+but when people go home and have thrown
+off their devoutness, then they speak about the
+service, and then they laugh at the clerk's singing&mdash;laugh
+both at his and his brother's. The clerk
+does not mind it, it is the same to him; but his
+brother thinks about it and suffers from it; he
+dreads the Sunday the whole week, but still he
+comes punctually to the churchyard and does his
+duty. But you in your coffin, you do not think so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span>
+badly of the singing. You think that it is good
+music. Is it not true that one would like to be
+buried in Svartsj&ouml;, if only for the sake of that
+singing?</p>
+
+<p>It says in the hymn that life is but a walk
+towards death, and when the two old men sing
+this&mdash;the two who have suffered for each other
+during their whole life&mdash;then one understands
+better than ever before how wearisome it is to
+live, and one is so entirely satisfied with being
+dead.</p>
+
+<p>And then the singing stops, and the clergyman
+throws earth on the coffin and says a prayer over
+you. Then the two old voices sing: 'I walk
+towards heaven.' And they do not sing this verse
+any better than the former; their voices grow
+more feeble and querulous the longer they sing.
+But for you a great and wide expanse opens, and
+you soar upwards with tremulous joy, and everything
+earthly fades and disappears.</p>
+
+<p>But still the last which you hear of things
+earthly tells of faithfulness and love. And in the
+midst of your trembling flight the poor song will
+awake memories of all the faithfulness and love
+you have met with here below, and this will bear
+you upwards. This will fill you with radiance and
+make you beautiful as an angel.</p>
+
+<p class="center">THE END.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <img src="images/logo.jpg" alt="Printer&apos;s logo" title="Printer&apos;s logo" width="97" height="93" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS<br />
+GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<div class="transnote">
+<h2>Transcriber's Note:</h2>
+
+<p>Hyphenation is inconsistent, for example sheepskin, sheep-skin and
+sheep's-skin all occur. These have been left as printed.</p>
+
+<p>On <a href="#Page_184" title="">page 184</a> "... and the nip reddened on the naked branch of the
+hawthorn" has been left as printed, however the original Swedish talks
+of <span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">nyponet</span> and <span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">t&ouml;rnbuskens</span> (rosehip and thornbush), rather than nip and
+hawthorn.</p>
+
+<p>Changes that have been made are:</p>
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#Page_4" title="">Page 4</a>: from "then I feel that I must speak" to "then I feel that I must speak.".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_55" title="">Page 55</a>: from "the newly-buried birl" to "the newly-buried girl".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_94" title="">Page 94</a>: from "the everlasting unrest that tormened him" to "the everlasting unrest that tormented him".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_124" title="">Page 124</a>: from "why had be been unhappy?" to "why had he been unhappy?".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_229" title="">Page 229</a>: from "found friends in the solitude above" to "found friends in the solitude above.".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_264" title="">Page 264</a>: from "Guilietta Lombardi" to "Giulietta Lombardi".</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_328" title="">Page 328</a>: from "the snow had laid its thinck carpet" to "the snow had laid its thick carpet".</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerlöf
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerlöf
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: From a Swedish Homestead
+
+Author: Selma Lagerlöf
+
+Translator: Jessie Brochner
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2014 [EBook #44630]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FROM A SWEDISH HOMESTEAD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Fay Dunn, sp1nd and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note. In this ASCII text version:
+
+ text in italics is marked with underscores, e.g. _italics_
+ text in small capitals is shown in upper-case.
+
+ [:A] represents A umlaut
+ [:O] represents O umlaut
+ [:a] represents a umlaut
+ [ae] represents ae ligature
+ ['e] represents e accute
+ [^e] represents e circumflex
+ [:o] represents o umlaut
+ [:u] represents u umlaut
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+
+
+
+ _From a SWEDISH_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ _By_
+
+ SELMA LAGERL[:O]F
+
+ _Translated by_
+
+ JESSIE BROCHNER
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ 1916
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1901, by_
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+_A_ LIST _of the_ STORIES
+
+
+ _Page_
+
+ _The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE 1
+
+ _Queens at_ KUNGAH[:A]LLA 135
+
+ _On the_ SITE _of the Great_ KUNGAH[:A]LLA 135
+
+ _The Forest_ QUEEN 141
+
+ SIGRID STORR[:A]DE 157
+
+ ASTRID 172
+
+ _Old_ AGNETE 219
+
+ _The Fisherman's_ RING 231
+
+ _Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA 257
+
+ _The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST 277
+
+ _The_ PEACE _of_ GOD 291
+
+ _A_ STORY _from_ HALSTAN[:A]S 309
+
+ _The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE 323
+
+ _The_ BROTHERS 339
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ I
+
+ _The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+_The_ STORY _of a_ COUNTRY HOUSE
+
+
+I
+
+It was a beautiful autumn day towards the end of the thirties. There was
+in Upsala at that time a high, yellow, two-storied house, which stood
+quite alone in a little meadow on the outskirts of the town. It was a
+rather desolate and dismal-looking house, but was rendered less so by
+the Virginia-creepers which grew there in profusion, and which had crept
+so high up the yellow wall on the sunny side of the house that they
+completely surrounded the three windows on the upper story.
+
+At one of these windows a student was sitting, drinking his morning
+coffee. He was a tall, handsome fellow, of distinguished appearance. His
+hair was brushed back from his forehead; it curled prettily, and a lock
+was continually falling into his eyes. He wore a loose, comfortable
+suit, but looked rather smart all the same.
+
+His room was well furnished. There was a good sofa and comfortable
+chairs, a large writing-table, a capital bookcase, but hardly any books.
+
+Before he had finished his coffee another student entered the room. The
+new-comer was a totally different-looking man. He was a short,
+broad-shouldered fellow, squarely built and strong, ugly, with a large
+head, thin hair, and coarse complexion.
+
+'Hede,' he said, 'I have come to have a serious talk with you.'
+
+'Has anything unpleasant happened to you?'
+
+'Oh no, not to me,' the other answered; 'it is really you it concerns.'
+He sat silent for a while, and looked down. 'It is so awfully unpleasant
+having to tell you.'
+
+'Leave it alone, then,' suggested Hede.
+
+He felt inclined to laugh at his friend's solemnity.
+
+'I can't leave it alone any longer,' said his visitor. 'I ought to have
+spoken to you long ago, but it is hardly my place. You understand? I
+can't help thinking you will say to yourself: "There's Gustaf Alin, son
+of one of our cottagers, thinks himself such a great man now that he can
+order me about."'
+
+'My dear fellow,' Hede said, 'don't imagine I think anything of the
+kind. My father's father was a peasant's son.'
+
+'Yes, but no one thinks of that now,' Alin answered. He sat there,
+looking awkward and stupid, resuming every moment more and more of his
+peasant manners, as if that could help him out of his difficulty. 'When
+I think of the difference there is between your family and mine, I feel
+as if I ought to keep quiet; but when I remember that it was your father
+who, by his help in days gone by, enabled me to study, then I feel that
+I must speak.'
+
+Hede looked at him with a pleasant smile.
+
+'You had better speak out and have done with it,' he said.
+
+'The thing is,' Alin said, 'I have heard people say that you don't do
+any work. They say you have hardly opened a book during the four terms
+you have been at the University. They say you don't do anything but play
+on the violin the whole day; and that I can quite believe, for you never
+wanted to do anything else when you were at school in Falu, although
+there you were obliged to work.'
+
+Hede straightened himself a little in his chair. Alin grew more and more
+uncomfortable, but he continued with stubborn resolution:
+
+'I suppose you think that anyone owning an estate like Munkhyttan ought
+to be able to do as he likes--work if he likes, or leave it alone. If he
+takes his exam., good; if he does not take his exam., what does it
+matter? for in any case you will never be anything but a landed
+proprietor and iron-master. You will live at Munkhyttan all your life. I
+understand quite well that is what you must think.'
+
+Hede was silent, and Alin seemed to see him surrounded by the same wall
+of distinction which in Alin's eyes had always surrounded his father,
+the Squire, and his mother.
+
+'But, you see, Munkhyttan is no longer what it used to be when there was
+iron in the mine,' he continued cautiously. 'The Squire knew that very
+well, and that was why it was arranged before his death that you should
+study. Your poor mother knows it, too, and the whole parish knows it.
+The only one who does not know anything is you, Hede.'
+
+'Don't you think I know,' Hede said a little irritably, 'that the
+iron-mine cannot be worked any longer?'
+
+'Oh yes,' Alin said, 'I dare say you know that much, but you don't know
+that it is all up with the property. Think the matter over, and you will
+understand that one cannot live from farming alone at Vesterdalarne. I
+cannot understand why your mother has kept it a secret from you. But, of
+course, she has the sole control of the estate, so she need not ask your
+advice about anything. Everybody at home knows that she is hard up. They
+say she drives about borrowing money. I suppose she did not want to
+disturb you with her troubles, but thought that she could keep matters
+going until you had taken your degree. She will not sell the estate
+before you have finished, and made yourself a new home.'
+
+Hede rose, and walked once or twice up and down the floor. Then he
+stopped opposite Alin.
+
+'But what on earth are you driving at, Alin? Do you want to make me
+believe that we are not rich?'
+
+'I know quite well that, until lately, you have been considered rich
+people at home,' Alin said. 'But you can understand that things must
+come to an end when it is a case of always spending and never earning
+anything. It was a different thing when you had the mine.'
+
+Hede sat down again.
+
+'My mother would surely have told me if there were anything the matter,'
+he said. 'I am grateful to you, Alin; but you have allowed yourself to
+be frightened by some silly stories.'
+
+'I thought that you did not know anything,' Alin continued obstinately.
+'At Munkhyttan your mother saves and works in order to get the money to
+keep you at Upsala, and to make it cheerful and pleasant for you when
+you are at home in the vacations. And in the meantime you are here doing
+nothing, because you don't know there is trouble coming. I could not
+stand any longer seeing you deceiving each other. Her ladyship thought
+you were studying, and you thought she was rich. I could not let you
+destroy your prospects without saying anything.'
+
+Hede sat quietly for a moment, and meditated. Then he rose and gave Alin
+his hand with rather a sad smile.
+
+'You understand that I feel you are speaking the truth, even if I _will_
+not believe you? Thanks.'
+
+Alin joyfully shook his hand.
+
+'You must know, Hede, that if you will only work no harm is done. With
+your brains, you can take your degree in three or four years.'
+
+Hede straightened himself.
+
+'Do not be uneasy, Alin,' he said; 'I am going to work hard now.'
+
+Alin rose and went towards the door, but hesitated. Before he reached it
+he turned round.
+
+'There was something else I wanted,' he said. He again became
+embarrassed. 'I want you to lend me your violin until you have commenced
+reading in earnest.'
+
+'Lend you my violin?'
+
+'Yes; pack it up in a silk handkerchief, and put it in the case, and let
+me take it with me, or otherwise you will read to no purpose. You will
+begin to play as soon as I am out of the room. You are so accustomed to
+it now you cannot resist if you have it here. One cannot get over that
+kind of thing unless someone helps one; it gets the mastery over one.'
+
+Hede appeared unwilling.
+
+'This is madness, you know,' he said.
+
+'No, Hede, it is not. You know you have inherited it from the Squire. It
+runs in your blood. Ever since you have been your own master here in
+Upsala you have done nothing else but play. You live here in the
+outskirts of the town simply not to disturb anyone by your playing. You
+cannot help yourself in this matter. Let me have the violin.'
+
+'Well,' said Hede, 'before I could not help playing, but now Munkhyttan
+is at stake; I am more fond of my home than of my violin.'
+
+But Alin was determined, and continued to ask for the violin.
+
+'What is the good of it?' Hede said. 'If I want to play, I need not go
+many steps to borrow another violin.'
+
+'I know that,' Alin replied, 'but I don't think it would be so bad with
+another violin. It is your old Italian violin which is the greatest
+danger for you. And besides, I would suggest your locking yourself in
+for the first few days--only until you have got fairly started.'
+
+He begged and begged, but Hede resisted; he would not stand anything so
+unreasonable as being a prisoner in his own room.
+
+Alin grew crimson.
+
+'I must have the violin with me,' he said, 'or it is no use at all.' He
+spoke eagerly and excitedly. 'I had not intended to say anything about
+it, but I know that it concerns more than Munkhyttan. I saw a young girl
+at the Promotion Ball in the spring who, people said, was engaged to
+you. I don't dance, you know, but I liked to watch her when she was
+dancing, looking radiant like one of the lilies of the field. And when I
+heard that she was engaged to you, I felt sorry for her.'
+
+'Why?'
+
+'Because I knew that you would never succeed if you continued as you had
+begun. And then I swore that she should not have to spend her whole life
+waiting for one who never came. She should not sit and wither whilst
+waiting for you. I did not want to meet her in a few years with
+sharpened features and deep wrinkles round her mouth----'
+
+He stopped suddenly; Hede's glance had rested so searchingly upon him.
+
+But Gunnar Hede had already understood that Alin was in love with his
+_fianc['e]e_. It moved him deeply that Alin under these circumstances
+tried to save him, and, influenced by this feeling, he yielded and gave
+him the violin.
+
+When Alin had gone, Hede read desperately for a whole hour, but then he
+threw away his book.
+
+It was not of much good his reading. It would be three or four years
+before he could be finished, and who could guarantee that the estate
+would not be sold in the meantime?
+
+He felt almost with terror how deeply he loved the old home. It was like
+witchery. Every room, every tree, stood clearly before him. He felt he
+could not part with any of it if he were to be happy. And he was to sit
+quietly with his books whilst all this was about to pass away from him.
+
+He became more and more restless; he felt the blood beating in his
+temples as if in a fever. And then he grew quite beside himself because
+he could not take his violin and play himself calm again.
+
+'My God!' he said, 'Alin will drive me mad. First to tell me all this,
+and then to take away my violin! A man like I must feel the bow between
+his fingers in sorrow and in joy. I must do something; I must get money,
+but I have not an idea in my head. I cannot think without my violin.'
+
+He could not endure the feeling of being locked in. He was so angry with
+Alin, who had thought of this absurd plan, that he was afraid he might
+strike him the next time he came.
+
+Of course he would have played, if he had had the violin, for that was
+just what he needed. His blood rushed so wildly, that he was nearly
+going out of his mind.
+
+Just as Hede was longing most for his violin a wandering musician began
+to play outside. It was an old blind man. He played out of tune and
+without expression, but Hede was so overcome by hearing a violin just at
+this moment that he listened with tears in his eyes and with his hands
+folded.
+
+The next moment he flung open the window and climbed to the ground by
+the help of the creepers. He had no compunction at leaving his work. He
+thought the violin had simply come to comfort him in his misfortune.
+
+Hede had probably never before begged so humbly for anything as he did
+now, when he asked the old blind man to lend him his violin. He stood
+the whole time with his cap in his hand, although the old man was blind.
+
+The musician did not seem to understand what he wanted. He turned to the
+young girl who was leading him. Hede bowed to the poor girl and repeated
+his request. She looked at him, as if she must have eyes for them both.
+The glance from her big eyes was so steady that Hede thought he could
+feel where it struck him. It began with his collar, and it noticed that
+the frills of his shirt were well starched, then it saw that his coat
+was brushed, next that his boots were polished.
+
+Hede had never before been subjected to such close scrutiny. He saw
+clearly that he would not pass muster before those eyes.
+
+But it was not so, all the same. The young girl had a strange way of
+smiling. Her face was so serious, that one had the impression when she
+smiled that it was the first and only time she had ever looked happy;
+and now one of these rare smiles passed over her lips. She took the
+violin from the old man and handed it to Hede.
+
+'Play the waltz from "Freisch[:u]tz," then,' she said.
+
+Hede thought it was strange that he should have to play a waltz just at
+that moment, but, as a matter of fact, it was all the same to him what
+he played, if he could only have a bow in his hand. That was all he
+wanted. The violin at once began to comfort him; it spoke to him in
+faint, cracked tones.
+
+'I am only a poor man's violin,' it said; 'but such as I am, I am a
+comfort and help to a poor blind man. I am the light and the colour and
+the brightness in his life. It is I who must comfort him in his poverty
+and old age and blindness.'
+
+Hede felt that the terrible depression that had cowed his hopes began to
+give way.
+
+'You are young and strong,' the violin said to him. 'You can fight and
+strive; you can hold fast that which tries to escape you. Why are you
+downcast and without courage?'
+
+Hede had played with lowered eyes; now he threw back his head and looked
+at those who stood around him. There was quite a crowd of children and
+people from the street, who had come into the yard to listen to the
+music. It appeared, however, that they had not come solely for the sake
+of the music. The blind man and his companion were not the only ones in
+the troupe.
+
+Opposite Hede stood a figure in tights and spangles, and with bare arms
+crossed over his chest. He looked old and worn, but Hede could not help
+thinking that he looked a devil of a fellow with his high chest and long
+moustaches. And beside him stood his wife, little and fat, and not so
+very young either, but beaming with joy over her spangles and flowing
+gauze skirts.
+
+During the first bars of the music they stood still and counted, then a
+gracious smile passed over their faces, and they took each other's hands
+and began to dance on a small carpet. And Hede saw that during all the
+equilibristic tricks they now performed the woman stood almost still,
+whilst her husband did all the work. He sprang over her, and twirled
+round her, and vaulted over her. The woman scarcely did anything else
+but kiss her hand to the spectators.
+
+But Hede did not really take much notice of them. His bow began to fly
+over the strings. It told him that there was happiness in fighting and
+overcoming. It almost deemed him happy because everything was at stake
+for him. Hede stood there, playing courage and hope into himself, and
+did not think of the old tight-rope dancers.
+
+But suddenly he saw that they grew restless. They no longer smiled; they
+left off kissing their hands to the spectators; the acrobat made
+mistakes, and his wife began to sway to and fro in waltz time.
+
+Hede played more and more eagerly. He left off 'Freisch[:u]tz' and rushed
+into an old 'Nixie Polka,' one which generally sent all the people mad
+when played at the peasant festivals.
+
+The old tight-rope dancers quite lost their heads. They stood in
+breathless astonishment, and at last they could resist no longer. They
+sprang into each other's arms, and then they began to dance a waltz in
+the middle of the carpet.
+
+How they danced! dear me, how they danced! They took small, tripping
+steps, and whirled round in a small circle; they hardly went outside the
+carpet, and their faces beamed with joy and delight. There was the
+happiness of youth and the rapture of love over these two old people.
+
+The whole crowd was jubilant at seeing them dance. The serious little
+companion of the blind man smiled all over her face, and Hede grew much
+excited.
+
+Just fancy what an effect his violin could have! It made people quite
+forget themselves. It was a great power to have at his disposal. Any
+moment he liked he could take possession of his kingdom. Only a couple
+of years' study abroad with a great master, and he could go all over the
+world, and by his playing earn riches and honour and fame.
+
+It seemed to Hede that these acrobats must have come to tell him this.
+That was the road he should follow; it lay before him clear and smooth.
+He said to himself: 'I will--I _will_ become a musician! I _must_ be
+one! This is better than studying. I can charm my fellow-men with my
+violin; I can become rich.'
+
+Hede stopped playing. The acrobats at once came up and complimented him.
+The man said his name was Blomgren. That was his real name; he had other
+names when he performed. He and his wife were old circus people. Mrs.
+Blomgren in former days had been called Miss Viola, and had performed on
+horseback; and although they had now left the circus, they were still
+true artists--artists body and soul. That he had probably already
+noticed; that was why they could not resist his violin.
+
+Hede walked about with the acrobats for a couple of hours. He could not
+part with the violin, and the old artists' enthusiasm for their
+profession appealed to him. He was simply testing himself. 'I want to
+find out whether there is the proper stuff for an artist in me. I want
+to see if I can call forth enthusiasm. I want to see whether I can make
+children and idlers follow me from house to house.'
+
+On their way from house to house Mr. Blomgren threw an old threadbare
+mantle around him, and Mrs. Blomgren enveloped herself in a brown cloak.
+Thus arrayed, they walked at Hede's side and talked.
+
+Mr. Blomgren would not speak of all the honour he and Mrs. Blomgren had
+received during the time they had performed in a real circus; but the
+_directeur_ had given Mrs. Blomgren her dismissal under the pretence
+that she was getting too stout. Mr. Blomgren had not been dismissed: he
+had himself resigned his position. Surely no one could think that Mr.
+Blomgren would remain with a _directeur_ who had dismissed his wife!
+
+Mrs. Blomgren loved her art, and for her sake Mr. Blomgren had made up
+his mind to live as a free artist, so that she could still continue to
+perform. During the winter, when it was too cold to give performances in
+the street, they performed in a tent. They had a very comprehensive
+repertoire. They gave pantomimes, and were jugglers and conjurers.
+
+The circus had cast them off, but Art had not, said Mr. Blomgren. They
+served Art always. It was well worth being faithful to Art, even unto
+death. Always artists--always. That was Mr. Blomgren's opinion, and it
+was also Mrs. Blomgren's.
+
+Hede walked quietly and listened. His thoughts flew restlessly from plan
+to plan. Sometimes events happen which become like symbols, like signs,
+which one must obey. There must be some meaning in what had now happened
+to him. If he could only understand it rightly, it might help him
+towards arriving at a wise resolution.
+
+Mr. Blomgren asked the student to notice the young girl who was leading
+the blind man. Had he ever before seen such eyes? Did he not think that
+such eyes must mean something? Could one have those eyes without being
+intended for something great?
+
+Hede turned round and looked at the little pale girl. Yes, she had eyes
+like stars, set in a sad and rather thin face.
+
+'Our Lord knows always what He is about,' said Mrs. Blomgren; 'and I
+also believe that He has some reason for letting such an artist as Mr.
+Blomgren perform in the street. But what was He thinking about when He
+gave that girl those eyes and that smile?'
+
+'I will tell you something,' said Mr. Blomgren; 'she has not the
+slightest talent for Art. And with those eyes!'
+
+Hede had a suspicion that they were not talking to him, but simply for
+the benefit of the young girl. She was walking just behind them, and
+could hear every word.
+
+'She is not more than thirteen years old, and not by any means too old
+to learn something; but, impossible--impossible, without the slightest
+talent! If one does not want to waste one's time, sir, teach her to sew,
+but not to stand on her head. Her smile makes people quite mad about
+her,' Mr. Blomgren continued. 'Simply on account of her smile she has
+had many offers from families wishful to adopt her. She could grow up in
+a well-to-do home if she would only leave her grandfather. But what does
+she want with a smile that makes people mad about her, when she will
+never appear either on horseback or on a trapeze?'
+
+'We know other artists,' said Mrs. Blomgren, 'who pick up children in
+the street and train them for the profession when they cannot perform
+any longer themselves. There is more than one who has been lucky enough
+to create a star and obtain immense salaries for her. But Mr. Blomgren
+and I have never thought of the money; we have only thought of some day
+seeing Ingrid flying through a hoop whilst the whole circus resounded
+with applause. For us it would have been as if we were beginning life
+over again.'
+
+'Why do we keep her grandfather?' said Mr. Blomgren. 'Is he an artist
+fit for us? We could, no doubt, have got a previous member of a
+Hofkapell if we had wished. But we love that child; we cannot do without
+her; we keep the old man for her sake.'
+
+'Is it not naughty of her that she will not allow us to make an artist
+of her?' they said.
+
+Hede turned round. The little girl's face wore an expression of
+suffering and patience. He could see that she knew that anyone who could
+not dance on the tight-rope was a stupid and contemptible person.
+
+At the same moment they came to another house, but before they began
+their performance Hede sat down on an overturned wheelbarrow and began
+to preach. He defended the poor little girl. He reproached Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren for wishing to hand her over to the great, cruel public, who
+would love and applaud her for a time, but when she grew old and worn
+out, they would let her trudge along the streets in rain and cold. No;
+he or she was artist enough, who made a fellow-being happy. Ingrid
+should only have eyes and smiles for one, should keep them for one only;
+and this one should never leave her, but give her a safe home as long as
+he lived.
+
+Tears came into Hede's eyes whilst he spoke. He spoke more to himself
+than to the others. He felt it suddenly as something terrible to be
+thrust out into the world, to be severed from the quiet home-life. He
+saw that the great, star-like eyes of the girl began to sparkle. It
+seemed as if she had understood every single word. It seemed as if she
+again felt the right to live.
+
+But Mr. Blomgren and his wife had become very serious. They pressed
+Hede's hand and promised him that they would never again try and
+persuade the little girl to become an artist. She should be allowed to
+lead the life she wished. He had touched them. They were
+artists--artists body and soul; they understood what he meant when he
+spoke of love and faithfulness.
+
+Then Hede parted from them and went home. He no longer tried to find any
+secret meaning in his adventure. After all, it had meant nothing more
+than that he should save this poor sorrowful child from always grieving
+over her incapacity.
+
+
+II
+
+Munkhyttan, the home of Gunnar Hede, was situated in a poor parish in
+the forests of Vesterdalarne. It was a large, thinly-populated parish,
+with which Nature had dealt very stingily. There were stony,
+forest-covered hills, and many small lakes. The people could not
+possibly have earned a livelihood there had they not had the right to
+travel about the country as pedlars. But to make up for it, the whole of
+this poor district was full of old tales of how poor peasant lads and
+lassies had gone into the world with a pack of goods on their backs, to
+return in gilded coaches, with the boxes under the seats filled with
+money.
+
+One of the very best stories was about Hede's grandfather. He was the
+son of a poor musician, and had grown up with his violin in his hand,
+and when he was seventeen years old he had gone out into the world with
+his pack on his back. But wherever he went his violin had helped him in
+his business. He had by turns gathered people together by his music and
+sold them silk handkerchiefs, combs, and pins. All his trading had been
+brought about with music and merriment, and things had gone so well with
+him that he had at last been able to buy Munkhyttan, with its mine and
+ironworks, from the poverty-stricken Baron who then owned the property.
+Then he became the Squire, and the pretty daughter of the Baron became
+his wife.
+
+From that time the old family, as they were always called, had thought
+of nothing else but beautifying the place. They removed the main
+building on to the beautiful island which lay on the edge of a small
+lake, round which lay their fields and their mines. The upper story had
+been added in their time, for they wanted to have plenty of room for
+their numerous guests; and they had also added the two large flights of
+steps outside. They had planted ornamental trees all over the
+fir-covered island. They had made small winding pathways in the stony
+soil, and on the most beautiful spots they had built small pavilions,
+hanging like large birds'-nests over the lake. The beautiful French
+roses that grew on the terrace, the Dutch furniture, the Italian violin,
+had all been brought to the house by them. And it was they who had built
+the wall protecting the orchard from the north wind, and the
+conservatory.
+
+The old family were merry, kind-hearted, old-fashioned people. The
+Squire's wife certainly liked to be a little aristocratic; but that was
+not at all in the old Squire's line. In the midst of all the luxury
+which surrounded him he never forgot what he had been, and in the room
+where he transacted his business, and where people came and went, the
+pack and the red-painted, home-made violin were hung right above the old
+man's desk.
+
+Even after his death the pack and the violin remained in the same place.
+And every time the old man's son and grandson saw them their hearts
+swelled with gratitude. It was these two poor implements that had
+created Munkhyttan, and Munkhyttan was the best thing in the world.
+
+Whatever the reason might be--and it was probably because it seemed
+natural to the place that one lived a good, genial life there, free from
+trouble--Hede's family clung to the place with greater love than was
+good for it. And more especially Gunnar Hede was so strongly attached to
+it that people said that it was incorrect to say of him that he owned an
+estate. On the contrary, it was an old estate in Vesterdalarne that
+owned Gunnar Hede.
+
+If he had not made himself a slave of an old rambling manor-house and
+some acres of land and forest, and some stunted apple-trees, he would
+probably have continued his studies, or, better still, gone abroad to
+study music, which, after all, was no doubt his proper vocation in this
+world. But when he returned from Upsala, and it became clear to him that
+they really would have to sell the estate if he could not soon earn a
+lot of money, he decided upon giving up all his other plans, and made up
+his mind to go out into the world as a pedlar, as his grandfather before
+him had done.
+
+His mother and his _fianc['e]e_ besought him rather to sell the place than
+to sacrifice himself for it in this manner, but he was not to be moved.
+He put on peasant's attire, bought goods, and began to travel about the
+country as a pedlar. He thought that if he only traded a couple of years
+he could earn enough to pay the debt and save the estate.
+
+And as far as the latter was concerned he was successful enough. But he
+brought upon himself a terrible misfortune.
+
+When he had walked about with his pack for a year or so he thought that
+he would try and earn a large sum of money at one stroke. He went far
+north and bought a large flock of goats, about a couple of hundred. And
+he and a comrade intended to drive them down to a large fair in
+Vermland, where goats cost twice as much as in the north. If he
+succeeded in selling all his goats, he would do a very good business.
+
+It was in the beginning of November, and there had not yet been any
+snow, when Hede and his comrade set out with their goats. The first day
+everything went well with them, but the second day, when they came to
+the great Fifty-Mile Forest, it began to snow. Much snow fell, and it
+stormed and blew severely. It was not long before it became difficult
+for the animals to make their way through the snow. Goats are certainly
+both plucky and hardy animals, and the herd struggled on for a
+considerable time; but the snow-storm lasted two days and two nights,
+and it was terribly cold.
+
+Hede did all he could to save the animals, but after the snow began to
+fall he could get them neither food nor water. And when they had worked
+their way through deep snow for a whole day they became very footsore.
+Their feet hurt them, and they would not go any longer. The first goat
+that threw itself down by the roadside and would not get up again and
+follow the herd Hede lifted on to his shoulder so as not to leave it
+behind. But when another and again another lay down he could not carry
+them. There was nothing to do but to look the other way and go on.
+
+Do you know what the Fifty-Mile Forest is like? Not a farmhouse, not a
+cottage, mile after mile, only forest; tall-stemmed fir-trees, with bark
+as hard as wood, and high branches; no young trees with soft bark and
+soft twigs that the animals could eat. If there had been no snow, they
+could have got through the forest in a couple of days; now they could
+not get through it at all. All the goats were left there, and the men
+too nearly perished. They did not meet a single human being the whole
+time. No one helped them.
+
+Hede tried to throw the snow to one side so that the goats could eat the
+moss; but the snow fell so thickly, and the moss was frozen fast to the
+ground. And how could he get food for two hundred animals in this way?
+
+He bore it bravely until the goats began to moan. The first day they
+were a lively, rather noisy herd. He had had hard work to make them all
+keep together, and prevent them from butting each other to death. But
+when they seemed to understand that they could not be saved their
+nature changed, and they completely lost their courage. They all began
+to bleat and moan, not faintly and peevishly, as goats usually do, but
+loudly, louder and louder as the danger increased. And when Hede heard
+their cries he felt quite desperate.
+
+They were in the midst of the wild, desolate forest; there was no help
+whatever obtainable. Goat after goat dropped down by the roadside. The
+snow gathered round them and covered them. When Hede looked back at this
+row of drifts by the wayside, each hiding the body of an animal, of
+which one could still see the projecting horns and the hoofs, then his
+brain began to give way.
+
+He rushed at the animals, which allowed themselves to be covered by the
+snow, swung his whip over them, and hit them. It was the only way to
+save them, but they did not stir. He took them by the horns and dragged
+them along. They allowed themselves to be dragged, but they did not move
+a foot themselves. When he let go his hold of their horns, they licked
+his hands, as if beseeching him to help them. As soon as he went up to
+them they licked his hands.
+
+All this had such a strong effect upon Hede that he felt he was on the
+point of going out of his mind.
+
+It is not certain, however, that things would have gone so badly with
+him had he not, after it was all over in the forest, gone to see one
+whom he loved dearly. It was not his mother, but his sweetheart. He
+thought himself that he had gone there because he ought to tell her at
+once that he had lost so much money that he would not be able to marry
+for many years. But no doubt he went to see her solely to hear her say
+that she loved him quite as much in spite of his misfortunes. He thought
+that she could drive away the memory of the Fifty-Mile Forest.
+
+She could, perhaps, have done this, but she would not. She was already
+displeased because Hede went about with a pack and looked like a
+peasant; she thought that for that reason alone it was difficult to love
+him as much as before. Now, when he told her that he must still go on
+doing this for many years, she said that she could no longer wait for
+him. This last blow was too much for Hede; his mind gave way.
+
+He did not grow quite mad, however; he retained so much of his senses
+that he could attend to his business. He even did better than others,
+for it amused people to make fun of him; he was always welcome at the
+peasants' houses. People plagued and teased him, but that was in a way
+good for him, as he was so anxious to become rich. And in the course of
+a few years he had earned enough to pay all his debts, and he could have
+lived free from worry on his estate. But this he did not understand; he
+went about half-witted and silly from farm to farm, and he had no longer
+any idea to what class of people he really belonged.
+
+
+III
+
+Raglanda was the name of a parish in the north of East Vermland, near
+the borders of Dalarne, where the Dean had a large house, but the pastor
+only a small and poor one. But poor as they were at the small parsonage,
+they had been charitable enough to adopt a poor girl. She was a little
+girl, Ingrid by name, and she had come to the parsonage when she was
+thirteen years old.
+
+The pastor had accidentally seen her at a fair, where she sat crying
+outside the tent of some acrobats. He had stopped and asked her why she
+was crying, and she had told him that her blind grandfather was dead,
+and that she had no relatives left. She now travelled with a couple of
+acrobats, and they were good to her, but she cried because she was so
+stupid that she could never learn to dance on the tight-rope and help to
+earn any money.
+
+There was a sorrowful grace over the child which touched the pastor's
+heart. He said at once to himself that he could not allow such a little
+creature to go to the bad amongst these wandering tramps. He went into
+the tent, where he saw Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren, and offered to take the
+child home with him. The old acrobats began to weep, and said that
+although the girl was entirely unfitted for the profession, they would
+so very much like to keep her; but at the same time they thought she
+would be happier in a real home with people who lived in the same place
+all the year round, and therefore they were willing to give her up to
+the pastor if he would only promise them that she should be like one of
+his own children.
+
+This he had promised, and from that time the young girl had lived at the
+parsonage. She was a quiet, gentle child, full of love and tender care
+for those around her. At first her adopted parents loved her very
+dearly, but as she grew older she developed a strong inclination to lose
+herself in dreams and fancies. She lived in a world of visions, and in
+the middle of the day she could let her work fall and be lost in dreams.
+But the pastor's wife, who was a clever and hard-working woman, did not
+approve of this. She found fault with the young girl for being lazy and
+slow, and tormented her by her severity so that she became timid and
+unhappy.
+
+When she had completed her nineteenth year, she fell dangerously ill.
+They did not quite know what was the matter with her, for this happened
+long ago, when there was no doctor at Raglanda, but the girl was very
+ill. They soon saw she was so ill that she could not live.
+
+She herself did nothing but pray to God that He would take her away from
+this world. She would so like to die, she said.
+
+Then it seemed as if our Lord would try whether she was in earnest. One
+night she felt that she grew stiff and cold all over her body, and a
+heavy lethargy fell upon her. 'I think this must be death,' she said to
+herself.
+
+But the strange thing was that she did not quite lose consciousness. She
+knew that she lay as if she were dead, knew that they wrapped her in
+her shroud and laid her in her coffin, but she felt no fear of being
+buried, although she was still alive. She had but the one thought that
+she was happy because she was about to die and leave this troublesome
+life.
+
+The only thing she was uneasy about was lest they should discover that
+she was not really dead and would not bury her. Life must have been very
+bitter to her, inasmuch as she felt no fear of death whatever.
+
+But no one discovered that she was living. She was conveyed to the
+church, carried to the churchyard, and lowered into the grave.
+
+The grave, however, was not filled in; she had been buried before the
+service on Sunday morning, as was the custom at Raglanda. The mourners
+had gone into church after the funeral, and the coffin was left in the
+open grave; but as soon as the service was over they would come back,
+and help the grave-digger to fill in the grave.
+
+The young girl knew everything that happened, but felt no fear. She had
+not been able to make the slightest movement to show that she was alive,
+even if she had wanted to; but even if she had been able to move, she
+would not have done so; the whole time she was happy because she was as
+good as dead.
+
+But, on the other hand, one could hardly say that she was alive. She had
+neither the use of her mind nor of her senses. It was only that part of
+the soul which dreams dreams during the night that was still living
+within her.
+
+She could not even think enough to realize how terrible it would be for
+her to awake when the grave was filled in. She had no more power over
+her mind than has one who dreams.
+
+'I should like to know,' she thought, 'if there is anything in the whole
+wide world that could make me wish to live.'
+
+As soon as that thought rushed through her it seemed to her as if the
+lid of the coffin, and the handkerchief which had been placed over her
+face, became transparent, and she saw before her riches and beautiful
+raiment, and lovely gardens with delicious fruits.
+
+'No, I do not care for any of these things,' she said, and she closed
+her eyes for their glories.
+
+When she again looked up they had disappeared, but instead she saw quite
+distinctly a little angel of God sitting on the edge of the grave.
+
+'Good-morning, thou little angel of God,' she said to him.
+
+'Good-morning, Ingrid,' the angel said. 'Whilst thou art lying here
+doing nothing, I would like to speak a little with thee about days gone
+by.'
+
+Ingrid heard distinctly every word the angel said; but his voice was not
+like anything she had ever heard before. It was more like a stringed
+instrument; it was not like singing, but like the tones of a violin or
+the clang of a harp.
+
+'Ingrid,' the angel said, 'dost thou remember, whilst thy grandfather
+was still living, that thou once met a young student, who went with
+thee from house to house playing the whole day on thy grandfather's
+violin?'
+
+The girl's face was lighted by a smile.
+
+'Dost thou think I have forgotten this?' she said. 'Ever since that time
+no day has passed when I have not thought of him.'
+
+'And no night when thou hast not dreamt of him?'
+
+'No, not a night when I have not dreamt of him.'
+
+'And thou wilt die, although thou rememberest him so well,' said the
+angel. 'Then thou wilt never be able to see him again.'
+
+When he said this it was as if the dead girl felt all the happiness of
+love, but even that could not tempt her.
+
+'No, no,' she said; 'I am afraid to live; I would rather die.'
+
+Then the angel waved his hand, and Ingrid saw before her a wide waste of
+desert. There were no trees, and the desert was barren and dry and hot,
+and extended in all directions without any limits. In the sand there
+lay, here and there, objects which at the first glance looked like
+pieces of rock, but when she examined them more closely, she saw they
+were the immense living animals of fairy tales, with huge claws and
+great jaws, with sharp teeth; they lay in the sand, watching for prey.
+And between these terrible animals the student came walking along. He
+went quite fearlessly, without suspecting that the figures around him
+were living.
+
+'But warn him! do warn him!' Ingrid said to the angel in unspeakable
+fear. 'Tell him that they are living, and that he must take care.'
+
+'I am not allowed to speak to him,' said the angel with his clear voice;
+'thou must thyself warn him.'
+
+The apparently dead girl felt with horror that she lay powerless, and
+could not rush to save the student. She made one futile effort after the
+other to raise herself, but the impotence of death bound her. But then
+at last, at last, she felt her heart begin to beat, the blood rushed
+through her veins, the stiffness of death was loosened in her body. She
+arose and hastened towards him.
+
+
+IV
+
+It is quite certain the sun loves the open places outside the small
+village churches. Has no one ever noticed that one never sees so much
+sunshine as during the morning service outside a small, whitewashed
+church? Nowhere else does one see such radiant streams of light, nowhere
+else is the air so devoutly quiet. The sun simply keeps watch that no
+one remains on the church hill gossiping. It wants them all to sit
+quietly in church and listen to the sermon--that is why it sends such a
+wealth of sunny rays on to the ground outside the church wall.
+
+Perhaps one must not take it for granted that the sun keeps watch
+outside the small churches every Sunday; but so much is certain, that
+the morning Ingrid had been placed in the grave in the churchyard at
+Raglanda, it spread a burning heat over the open space outside the
+church. Even the flint stones looked as if they might take fire as they
+lay and sparkled in the wheel-ruts. The short, down-trodden grass
+curled, so that it looked like dry moss, whilst the yellow dandelions
+which grew amongst the grass spread themselves out on their long stems,
+so that they became as large as asters.
+
+A man from Dalarne came wandering along the road--one of those men who
+go about selling knives and scissors. He was clad in a long, white
+sheep-skin coat, and on his back he had a large black leather pack. He
+had been walking with this burden for several hours without finding it
+too hot, but when he had left the highroad, and came to the open place
+outside the church, he stopped and took off his hat in order to dry the
+perspiration from his forehead.
+
+As the man stood there bare-headed, he looked both handsome and clever.
+His forehead was high and white, with a deep wrinkle between the
+eyebrows; the mouth was well formed, with thin lips. His hair was parted
+in the middle; it was cut short at the back, but hung over his ears, and
+was inclined to curl. He was tall, and strongly, but not coarsely,
+built; in every respect well proportioned. But what was wrong about him
+was his glance, which was unsteady, and the pupils of his eyes rolled
+restlessly, and were drawn far into the sockets, as if to hide
+themselves. There was something drawn about the mouth, something dull
+and heavy, which did not seem to belong to the face.
+
+He could not be quite right, either, or he would not have dragged that
+heavy pack about on a Sunday. If he had been quite in his senses, he
+would have known that it was of no use, as he could not sell anything in
+any case. None of the other men from Dalarne who walked about from
+village to village bent their backs under this burden on a Sunday, but
+they went to the house of God free and erect as other men.
+
+But this poor fellow probably did not know it was a holy day until he
+stood in the sunshine outside the church and heard the singing. He was
+sensible enough at once to understand that he could not do any business,
+and then his brain began to work as to how he should spend the day.
+
+He stood for a long time and stared in front of him. When everything
+went its usual course, he had no difficulty in managing. He was not so
+bad but that he could go from farm to farm all through the week and
+attend to his business, but he never could get accustomed to the
+Sunday--that always came upon him as a great, unexpected trouble.
+
+His eyes became quite fixed, and the muscles of his forehead swelled.
+
+The first thought that took shape in his brain was that he should go
+into the church and listen to the singing, but he would not accept this
+suggestion. He was very fond of singing, but he dared not go into the
+church. He was not afraid of human beings, but in some churches there
+were such quaint, uncanny pictures, which represented creatures of which
+he would rather not think.
+
+At last his brain worked round to the thought that, as this was a
+church, there would probably also be a churchyard, and when he could
+take refuge in a churchyard all was well. One could not offer him
+anything better. If on his wanderings he saw a churchyard, he always
+went in and sat there awhile, even if it were in the middle of a
+workaday week.
+
+Now that he wanted to go to the churchyard a new difficulty suddenly
+arose. The burial-place at Raglanda does not lie quite near the church,
+which is built on a hill, but on the other side of the road; and he
+could not get to the entrance of the churchyard without passing along
+the road where the horses of the church-goers were standing tied up.
+
+All the horses stood with their heads deep in bundles of hay and
+nosebags, chewing. There was no question of their being able to do the
+man any harm, but he had his own ideas as to the danger of going past
+such a long row of animals.
+
+Two or three times he made an attempt, but his courage failed him, so
+that he was obliged to turn back. He was not afraid that the horses
+would bite or kick. It was quite enough for him that they were so near
+that they could see him. It was quite enough that they could shake their
+bridles and scrape the earth with their hoofs.
+
+At last a moment came when all the horses were looking down, and seemed
+to be eating for a wager. Then he began to make his way between them. He
+held his sheepskin cloak tightly around him so that it should not flap
+and betray him, and he went on tiptoe as lightly as he could. When a
+horse raised its eyelid and looked at him, he at once stopped and
+curtsied. He wanted to be polite in this great danger, but surely
+animals were amenable to reason, and could understand that he could not
+bow when he had a pack full of hardware upon his back; he could only
+curtsy.
+
+He sighed deeply, for in this world it was a sad and troublesome thing
+to be so afraid of all four-footed animals as he was. He was really not
+afraid of any other animals than goats, and he would not have been at
+all afraid of horses and dogs and cats had he only been quite sure that
+they were not a kind of transformed goats. But he never was quite sure
+of that, so as a matter of fact it was just as bad for him as if he had
+been afraid of all kinds of four-footed animals.
+
+It was no use his thinking of how strong he was, and that these small
+peasant horses never did any harm to anyone: he who has become possessed
+of such fears cannot reason with himself. Fear is a heavy burden, and it
+is hard for him who must always carry it.
+
+It was strange that he managed to get past all the horses. The last few
+steps he took in two long jumps, and when he got into the churchyard he
+closed the gate after him, and began to threaten the horses with his
+clenched fist.
+
+'You wretched, miserable, accursed goats!'
+
+He did that to all animals. He could not help calling them goats, and
+that was very stupid of him, for it had procured him a name which he did
+not like. Everyone who met him called him the 'Goat.' But he would not
+own to this name. He wanted to be called by his proper name, but
+apparently no one knew his real name in that district.
+
+He stood a little while at the gate, rejoicing at having escaped from
+the horses, but he soon went further into the churchyard. At every cross
+and every stone he stopped and curtsied, but this was not from fear:
+this was simply from joy at seeing these dear old friends. All at once
+he began to look quite gentle and mild. They were exactly the same
+crosses and stones he had so often seen before. They looked just as
+usual. How well he knew them again! He must say 'Good-morning' to them.
+
+How nice it was in the churchyard! There were no animals about there,
+and there were no people to make fun of him. It was best there, when it
+was quite quiet as now; but even if there were people, they did not
+disturb him. He certainly knew many pretty meadows and woods which he
+liked still better, but there he was never left in peace. They could not
+by any means compare with the churchyard. And the churchyard was better
+than the forest, for in the forest the loneliness was so great that he
+was frightened by it. Here it was quiet, as in the depths of the
+forest; but he was not without company. Here people were sleeping under
+every stone and every mound; just the company he wanted in order not to
+feel lonely and strange.
+
+He went straight to the open grave. He went there partly because there
+were some shady trees, and partly because he wanted company. He thought,
+perhaps, that the dead who had so recently been laid in the grave might
+be a better protection against his loneliness than those who had passed
+away long ago.
+
+He bent his knees, with his back to the great mound of earth at the edge
+of the grave, and succeeded in pushing the pack upwards, so that it
+stood firmly on the mound, and he then loosened the heavy straps that
+fastened it. It was a great day--a holiday. He also took off his coat.
+He sat down on the grass with a feeling of great pleasure, so close to
+the grave that his long legs, with the stockings tied under the knee,
+and the heavy laced shoes dangled over the edge of the grave.
+
+For a while he sat still, with his eyes steadily fixed upon the coffin.
+When one was possessed by such fear as he was, one could not be too
+careful. But the coffin did not move in the least; it was impossible to
+suspect it of containing any snare.
+
+He was no sooner certain of this than he put his hand into a side-pocket
+of the pack and took out a violin and bow, and at the same time he
+nodded to the dead in the grave. As he was so quiet he should hear
+something pretty.
+
+This was something very unusual for him. There were not many who were
+allowed to hear him play. No one was ever allowed to hear him play at
+the farms, where they set the dogs at him and called him the 'Goat'; but
+sometimes he would play in a house where they spoke softly, and went
+about quietly, and did not ask him if he wanted to buy any goat-skins.
+At such places he took out his violin and treated them to some music;
+and this was a great favour--the greatest he could bestow upon anybody.
+
+As he sat there and played at the edge of the grave it did not sound
+amiss; he did not play a wrong note, and he played so softly and gently
+that it could hardly be heard at the next grave. The strange thing about
+it was that it was not the man who could play, but it was his violin
+that could remember some small melodies. They came forth from the violin
+as soon as he let the bow glide over it. It might not, perhaps, have
+meant so much to others, but for him, who could not remember a single
+tune, it was the most precious gift of all to possess such a violin that
+could play by itself.
+
+Whilst he played he sat with a beaming smile on his face. It was the
+violin that spoke and spoke; he only listened. Was it not strange that
+one heard all these beautiful things as soon as one let the bow glide
+over the strings? The violin did that. It knew how it ought to be, and
+the Dalar man only sat and listened. Melodies grew out of that violin as
+grass grows out of the earth. No one could understand how it happened.
+Our Lord had ordered it so.
+
+The Dalar man intended to remain sitting there the whole day, and let
+the dear tunes grow out of the violin like small white and many-coloured
+flowers. He would play a whole meadowful of flowers, play a whole long
+valleyful, a whole wide plain.
+
+But she who lay in the coffin distinctly heard the violin, and upon her
+it had a strange effect. The tones had made her dream, and what she had
+seen in her dreams caused her such emotion that her heart began to beat,
+her blood to flow, and she awoke.
+
+But all she had lived through while she lay there, apparently dead, the
+thoughts she had had, and also her last dream--everything vanished in
+the same moment she awoke to consciousness. She did not even know that
+she was lying in her coffin, but thought she was still lying ill at home
+in her bed. She only thought it strange that she was still alive. A
+little while ago, before she fell asleep, she had been in the pangs of
+death. Surely, all must have been over with her long ago. She had taken
+leave of her adopted parents, and of her brothers and sisters, and of
+the servants. The Dean had been there himself to administer the last
+Communion, for her adopted father did not think he could bear to give it
+to her himself. For several days she had put away all earthly thoughts
+from her mind. It was incomprehensible that she was not dead.
+
+She wondered why it was so dark in the room where she lay. There had
+been a light all the other nights during her illness. And then they had
+let the blankets fall off the bed. She was lying there getting as cold
+as ice. She raised herself a little to pull the blankets over her. In
+doing so she knocked her head against the lid of the coffin, and fell
+back with a little scream of pain. She had knocked herself rather
+severely, and immediately became unconscious again. She lay as
+motionless as before, and it seemed as if life had again left her.
+
+The Dalar man, who had heard both the knock and the cry, immediately
+laid down his violin and sat listening; but there was nothing more to be
+heard--nothing whatever. He began again to look at the coffin as
+attentively as before. He sat nodding his head, as if he would say 'Yes'
+to what he was himself thinking about, namely, that nothing in this
+world was to be depended upon. Here he had had the best and most silent
+of comrades, but had he not also been disappointed in him?
+
+He sat and looked at the coffin, as if trying to see right through it.
+At last, when it continued quite still, he took his violin again and
+began to play. But the violin would not play any longer. However gently
+and tenderly he drew his bow, there came forth no melody. This was so
+sad that he was nearly crying. He had intended to sit still and listen
+to his violin the whole day, and now it would not play any more.
+
+He could quite understand the reason. The violin was uneasy and afraid
+of what had moved in the coffin. It had forgotten all its melodies, and
+thought only of what it could be that had knocked at the coffin-lid.
+That is how it is one forgets everything when one is afraid. He saw
+that he would have to quiet the violin if he wanted to hear more.
+
+He had felt so happy, more so than for many years. If there was really
+anything bad in the coffin, would it not be better to let it out? Then
+the violin would be glad, and beautiful flowers would again grow out of
+it.
+
+He quickly opened his big pack, and began to rummage amongst his knives
+and saws and hammers until he found a screw-driver. In another moment he
+was down in the grave on his knees and unscrewing the coffin-lid. He
+took out one screw after the other, until at last he could raise the lid
+against the side of the grave; at the same moment the handkerchief fell
+from off the face of the apparently dead girl. As soon as the fresh air
+reached Ingrid, she opened her eyes. Now she saw that it was light. They
+must have removed her. Now she was lying in a yellow chamber with a
+green ceiling, and a large chandelier was hanging from the ceiling. The
+chamber was small, but the bed was still smaller. Why had she the
+sensation of her arms and legs being tied? Was it because she should lie
+still in the little narrow bed? It was strange that they had placed a
+hymn-book under her chin; they only did that with corpses. Between her
+fingers she had a little bouquet. Her adopted mother had cut a few
+sprigs from her flowering myrtle, and laid them in her hands. Ingrid was
+very much surprised. What had come to her adopted mother? She saw that
+they had given her a pillow with broad lace, and a fine hem-stitched
+sheet. She was very glad of that; she liked to have things nice. Still,
+she would rather have had a warm blanket over her. It could surely not
+be good for a sick person to lie without a blanket. Ingrid was nearly
+putting her hands to her eyes and beginning to cry, she was so bitterly
+cold. At the same moment she felt something hard and cold against her
+cheek. She could not help smiling. It was the old, red wooden horse, the
+old three-legged Camilla, that lay beside her on the pillow. Her little
+brother, who could never sleep at night without having it with him in
+his bed, had put it in her bed. It was very sweet of her little brother.
+Ingrid felt still more inclined to cry when she understood that her
+little brother had wanted to comfort her with his wooden horse.
+
+But she did not get so far as crying. The truth all at once flashed upon
+her. Her little brother had given her the wooden horse, and her mother
+had given her her white myrtle flowers, and the hymn-book had been
+placed under her chin, because they had thought she was dead.
+
+Ingrid took hold of the sides of the coffin with both hands and raised
+herself. The little narrow bed was a coffin, and the little narrow
+chamber was a grave. It was all very difficult to understand. She could
+not understand that this concerned her, that it was she who had been
+swathed like a corpse and placed in the grave. She must be lying all the
+same in her bed, and be seeing or dreaming all this. She would soon find
+out that this was no reality, but that everything was as usual.
+
+All at once she found the explanation of the whole thing--'I often have
+such strange dreams. This is only a vision'--and she sighed, relieved
+and happy. She laid herself down in her coffin again; she was so sure
+that it was her own bed, for that was not very wide either.
+
+All this time the Dalar man stood in the grave, quite close to the foot
+of the coffin. He only stood a few feet from her, but she had not seen
+him; that was probably because he had tried to hide himself in the
+corner of the grave as soon as the dead in the coffin had opened her
+eyes and begun to move. She could, perhaps, have seen him, although he
+held the coffin-lid before him as a screen, had there not been something
+like a white mist before her eyes so that she could only see things
+quite near her distinctly. Ingrid could not even see that there were
+earthen walls around her. She had taken the sun to be a large
+chandelier, and the shady lime-trees for a roof. The poor Dalar man
+stood and waited for the thing that moved in the coffin to go away. It
+did not strike him that it would not go unrequested. Had it not knocked
+because it wanted to get out? He stood for a long time with his head
+behind the coffin-lid and waited, that it should go. He peeped over the
+lid when he thought that now it must have gone. But it had not moved; it
+remained lying on its bed of shavings.
+
+He could not put up with it any longer; he must really make an end of
+it. It was a long time since his violin had spoken so prettily as
+to-day, he longed to sit again quietly with it. Ingrid, who had nearly
+fallen asleep again, suddenly heard herself addressed in the sing-song
+Dalar dialect:
+
+'Now, I think it is time you got up.'
+
+As soon as he had said this he hid his head. He shook so much over his
+boldness that he nearly let the lid fall.
+
+But the white mist which had been before Ingrid's eyes disappeared
+completely when she heard a human being speaking. She saw a man standing
+in the corner, at the foot of the coffin, holding a coffin-lid before
+him. She saw at once that she could not lie down again and think it was
+a vision. Surely he was a reality, which she must try and make out. It
+certainly looked as if the coffin were a coffin, and the grave a grave,
+and that she herself a few minutes ago was nothing but a swathed and
+buried corpse. For the first time she was terror-stricken at what had
+happened to her. To think that she could really have been dead that
+moment! She could have been a hideous corpse, food for worms. She had
+been placed in the coffin for them to throw earth upon her; she was
+worth no more than a piece of turf; she had been thrown aside
+altogether. The worms were welcome to eat her; no one would mind about
+that.
+
+Ingrid needed so badly to have a fellow-creature near her in her great
+terror. She had recognized the Goat directly he put up his head. He was
+an old acquaintance from the parsonage; she was not in the least afraid
+of him. She wanted him to come close to her. She did not mind in the
+least that he was an idiot. He was, at any rate, a living being. She
+wanted him to come so near to her that she could feel she belonged to
+the living and not to the dead.
+
+'Oh, for God's sake, come close to me!' she said, with tears in her
+voice.
+
+She raised herself in the coffin and stretched out her arms to him.
+
+But the Dalar man only thought of himself. If she were so anxious to
+have him near her, he resolved to make his own terms.
+
+'Yes,' he said, 'if you will go away.'
+
+Ingrid at once tried to comply with his request, but she was so tightly
+swathed in the sheet that she found it difficult to get up.
+
+'You must come and help me,' she said.
+
+She said this, partly because she was obliged to do it, and partly
+because she was afraid that she had not quite escaped death. She must be
+near someone living.
+
+He actually went near her, squeezing himself between the coffin and the
+side of the grave. He bent over her, lifted her out of the coffin, and
+put her down on the grass at the side of the open grave.
+
+Ingrid could not help it. She threw her arms round his neck, laid her
+head on his shoulder and sobbed. Afterwards she could not understand how
+she had been able to do this, and that she was not afraid of him. It was
+partly from joy that he was a human being--a living human being--and
+partly from gratitude, because he had saved her.
+
+What would have become of her if it had not been for him? It was he who
+had raised the coffin-lid, who had brought her back to life. She
+certainly did not know how it had all happened, but it was surely he who
+had opened the coffin. What would have happened to her if he had not
+done this? She would have awakened to find herself imprisoned in the
+black coffin. She would have knocked and shouted; but who would have
+heard her six feet below the ground? Ingrid dared not think of it; she
+was entirely absorbed with gratitude because she had been saved. She
+must have someone she could thank. She must lay her head on someone's
+breast and cry from gratitude.
+
+The most extraordinary thing, almost, that happened that day was, that
+the Dalar man did not repulse her. But it was not quite clear to him
+that she was alive. He thought she was dead, and he knew it was not
+advisable to offend anyone dead. But as soon as he could manage, he
+freed himself from her and went down into the grave again. He placed the
+lid carefully on the coffin, put in the screws and fastened it as
+before. Then he thought the coffin would be quite still, and the violin
+would regain its peace and its melodies.
+
+In the meantime Ingrid sat on the grass and tried to collect her
+thoughts. She looked towards the church and discovered the horses and
+the carriages on the hillside. Then she began to realize everything. It
+was Sunday; they had placed her in the grave in the morning, and now
+they were in church.
+
+A great fear now seized Ingrid. The service would, perhaps, soon be
+over, and then all the people would come out and see her. And she had
+nothing on but a sheet! She was almost naked. Fancy, if all these people
+came and saw her in this state! They would never forget the sight. And
+she would be ashamed of it all her life.
+
+Where should she get some clothes? For a moment she thought of throwing
+the Dalar man's fur coat round her, but she did not think that that
+would make her any more like other people.
+
+She turned quickly to the crazy man, who was still working at the
+coffin-lid.
+
+'Oh,' she said, 'will you let me creep into your pack?'
+
+In a moment she stood by the great leather pack, which contained goods
+enough to fill a whole market-stall, and began to open it.
+
+'You must come and help me.'
+
+She did not ask in vain. When the Dalar man saw her touching his wares
+he came up at once.
+
+'Are you touching my pack?' he asked threateningly.
+
+Ingrid did not notice that he spoke angrily; she considered him to be
+her best friend all the time.
+
+'Oh, dear good man,' she said, 'help me to hide, so that people will not
+see me. Put your wares somewhere or other, and let me creep into the
+pack, and carry me home. Oh, do do it! I live at the Parsonage, and it
+is only a little way from here. You know where it is.'
+
+The man stood and looked at her with stupid eyes. She did not know
+whether he had understood a word of what she said. She repeated it, but
+he made no sign of obeying her. She began again to take the things out
+of the pack. Then he stamped on the ground and tore the pack from her.
+
+However should Ingrid be able to make him do what she wanted?
+
+On the grass beside her lay a violin and a bow. She took them up
+mechanically--she did not know herself why. She had probably been so
+much in the company of people playing the violin that she could not bear
+to see an instrument lying on the ground.
+
+As soon as she touched the violin he let go the pack, and tore the
+violin from her. He was evidently quite beside himself when anyone
+touched his violin. He looked quite malicious.
+
+What in the world could she do to get away before people came out of
+church?
+
+She began to promise him all sorts of things, just as one promises
+children when one wants them to be good.
+
+'I will ask father to buy a whole dozen of scythes from you. I will lock
+up all the dogs when you come to the Parsonage. I will ask mother to
+give you a good meal.'
+
+But there was no sign of his giving way. She bethought herself of the
+violin, and said in her despair:
+
+'If you will carry me to the Parsonage, I will play for you.'
+
+At last a smile flashed across his face. That was evidently what he
+wanted.
+
+'I will play for you the whole afternoon; I will play for you as long as
+you like.'
+
+'Will you teach the violin new melodies?' he asked.
+
+'Of course I will.'
+
+But Ingrid now became both surprised and unhappy, for he took hold of
+the pack and pulled it towards him. He dragged it over the graves, and
+the sweet-williams and southernwood that grew on them were crushed under
+it as if it were a roller. He dragged it to a heap of branches and
+wizened leaves and old wreaths lying near the wall round the churchyard.
+There he took all the things out of the pack, and hid them well under
+the heap. When it was empty he returned to Ingrid.
+
+'Now you can get in,' he said.
+
+Ingrid stepped into the pack, and crouched down on the wooden bottom.
+The man fastened all the straps as carefully as when he went about with
+his usual wares, bent down so that he nearly went on his knees, put his
+arms through the braces, buckled a couple of straps across his chest,
+and stood up. When he had gone a few steps he began to laugh. His pack
+was so light that he could have danced with it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was only about a mile from the church to the Parsonage. The Dalar man
+could walk it in twenty minutes. Ingrid's only wish was that he would
+walk so quickly that she could get home before the people came back from
+church. She could not bear the idea of so many people seeing her. She
+would like to get home when only her mother and the maid-servants were
+there.
+
+Ingrid had taken with her the little bouquet of flowers from her adopted
+mother's myrtle. She was so pleased with it that she kissed it over and
+over again. It made her think more kindly of her adopted mother than she
+had ever done before. But in any case she would, of course, think kindly
+of her now. One who has come straight from the grave must think kindly
+and gently of everything living and moving on the face of the earth.
+
+She could now understand so well that the Pastor's wife was bound to
+love her own children more than her adopted daughter. And when they were
+so poor at the Parsonage that they could not afford to keep a nursemaid,
+she could see now that it was quite natural that she should look after
+her little brothers and sisters. And when her brothers and sisters were
+not good to her, it was because they had become accustomed to think of
+her as their nurse. It was not so easy for them to remember that she had
+come to the Parsonage to be their sister.
+
+And, after all, it all came from their being poor. When father some day
+got another living, and became Dean, or even Rector, everything would
+surely come right. Then they would love her again, as they did when she
+first came to them. The good old times would be sure to come back again.
+Ingrid kissed her flowers. It had not been mother's intention, perhaps,
+to be hard; it was only worry that had made her so strange and unkind.
+
+But now it would not matter how unkind they were to her. In the future
+nothing could hurt her, for now she would always be glad, simply because
+she was alive. And if things should ever be really bad again, she would
+only think of mother's myrtle and her little brother's horse.
+
+It was happiness enough to know that she was being carried along the
+road alive. This morning no one had thought that she would ever again go
+over these roads and hills. And the fragrant clover and the little birds
+singing and the beautiful shady trees, which had all been a source of
+joy for the living, had not even existed for her. But she had not much
+time for reflection, for in twenty minutes the Dalar man had reached the
+Parsonage.
+
+No one was at home but the Pastor's wife and the maid-servants, just as
+Ingrid had wished. The Pastor's wife had been busy the whole morning
+cooking for the funeral feast. She soon expected the guests, and
+everything was nearly ready. She had just been into the bedroom to put
+on her black dress. She glanced down the road to the church, but there
+were still no carriages to be seen. So she went once again into the
+kitchen to taste the food.
+
+She was quite satisfied, for everything was as it ought to be, and one
+cannot help being glad for that, even if one is in mourning. There was
+only one maid in the kitchen, and that was the one the Pastor's wife had
+brought with her from her old home, so she felt she could speak to her
+in confidence.
+
+'I must confess, Lisa,' she said, 'I think anyone would be pleased with
+having such a funeral.'
+
+'If she could only look down and see all the fuss you make of her,' Lisa
+said, 'she would be pleased.'
+
+'Ah!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I don't think she would ever be pleased
+with me.'
+
+'She is dead now,' said the girl, 'and I am not the one to say anything
+against one who is hardly yet under the ground.'
+
+'I have had to bear many a hard word from my husband for her sake,' said
+the mistress.
+
+The Pastor's wife felt she wanted to speak with someone about the dead
+girl. Her conscience had pricked her a little on her account, and this
+was why she had arranged such a grand funeral feast. She thought her
+conscience might leave her alone now she had had so much trouble over
+the funeral, but it did not do so by any means. Her husband also
+reproached himself, and said that the young girl had not been treated
+like one of their own children, and that they had promised she should be
+when they adopted her; and he said it would have been better if they had
+never taken her, when they could not help letting her see that they
+loved their own children more. And now the Pastor's wife felt she must
+talk to someone about the young girl, to hear whether people thought she
+had treated her badly.
+
+She saw that Lisa began to stir the pan violently, as if she had
+difficulty in controlling her anger. She was a clever girl, who
+thoroughly understood how to get into her mistress's good books.
+
+'I must say,' Lisa began, 'that when one has a mother who always looks
+after one, and takes care that one is neat and clean, one might at
+least try to obey and please her. And when one is allowed to live in a
+good Parsonage, and to be educated respectably, one ought at least to
+give some return for it, and not always go idling about and dreaming. I
+should like to know what would have happened if you had not taken the
+poor thing in. I suppose she would have been running about with those
+acrobats, and have died in the streets, like any other poor wretch.'
+
+A man from Dalarne came across the yard; he had his pack on his back,
+although it was Sunday. He came very quietly through the open
+kitchen-door, and curtsied when he entered, but no one took any notice
+of him. Both the mistress and the maid saw him, but as they knew him,
+they did not think it necessary to interrupt their conversation.
+
+The Pastor's wife was anxious to continue it; she felt she was about to
+hear what she needed to ease her conscience.
+
+'It is perhaps as well she is gone,' she said.
+
+'Yes, ma'am,' the servant said eagerly; 'and I am sure the Pastor thinks
+just the same. In any case he soon will. And the mistress will see that
+now there will be more peace in the house, and I am sure the master
+needs it.'
+
+'Oh!' said the Pastor's wife, 'I was obliged to be careful. There were
+always so many clothes to be got for her, that it was quite dreadful. He
+was so afraid that she should not get as much as the others that she
+sometimes even had more. And it cost so much, now that she was grown
+up.'
+
+'I suppose, ma'am, Greta will get her muslin dress?'
+
+'Yes; either Greta will have it, or I shall use it myself.'
+
+'She does not leave much behind her, poor thing!'
+
+'No one expects her to leave anything,' said her adopted mother. 'I
+should be quite content if I could remember ever having had a kind word
+from her.'
+
+This is only the kind of thing one says when one has a bad conscience,
+and wants to excuse one's self. Her adopted mother did not really mean
+what she said.
+
+The Dalar man behaved exactly as he always did when he came to sell his
+wares. He stood for a little while looking round the kitchen; then he
+slowly pushed the pack on to a table, and unfastened the braces and the
+straps; then he looked round to see if there were any cats or dogs
+about. He then straightened his back, and began to unfasten the two
+leather flaps, which were fastened with numerous buckles and knots.
+
+'He need not trouble about opening his pack to-day,' Lisa said; 'it is
+Sunday, and he knows quite well we don't buy anything on Sundays.'
+
+She, however, took no notice of the crazy fellow, who continued to
+unfasten his straps. She turned round to her mistress. This was a good
+opportunity for insinuating herself.
+
+'I don't even know whether she was good to the children. I have often
+heard them cry in the nursery.'
+
+'I suppose it was the same with them as it was with their mother,' said
+the Pastor's wife; 'but now, of course, they cry because she is dead.'
+
+'They don't understand what is best for them,' said the servant; 'but
+the mistress can be certain that before a month is gone there will be no
+one to cry over her.'
+
+At the same moment they both turned round from the kitchen range, and
+looked towards the table, where the Dalar man stood opening his big
+pack. They had heard a strange noise, something like a sigh or a sob.
+The man was just opening the inside lid, and out of the pack rose the
+newly-buried girl, exactly the same as when they laid her in the coffin.
+
+And yet she did not look quite the same. She looked almost more dead now
+than when she was laid in her coffin. Then she had nearly the same
+colour as when she was alive; now her face was ashy-gray, there was a
+bluish-black shadow round her mouth, and her eyes lay deep in her head.
+She said nothing, but her face expressed the greatest despair, and she
+held out beseechingly, and as if to avert their anger, the bouquet of
+myrtle which she had received from her adopted mother.
+
+This sight was more than flesh and blood could stand. Her mother fell
+fainting to the ground; the maid stood still for a moment, gazing at the
+mother and daughter, covered her eyes with her hands, and rushed into
+her own room and locked the door.
+
+'It is not me she has come for; this does not concern me.'
+
+But Ingrid turned round to the Dalar man.
+
+'Put me in your pack again, and take me away. Do you hear? Take me away.
+Take me back to where you found me.'
+
+The Dalar man happened to look through the window. A long row of carts
+and carriages was coming up the avenue and into the yard. Ah, indeed!
+then he was not going to stay. He did not like that at all.
+
+Ingrid crouched down at the bottom of the pack. She said not another
+word, but only sobbed. The flaps and the lids were fastened, and she was
+again lifted on to his back and carried away. Those who were coming to
+the funeral feast laughed at the Goat, who hastened away, curtsying and
+curtsying to every horse he met.
+
+
+V
+
+Anna Stina was an old woman who lived in the depths of the forest. She
+gave a helping hand at the Parsonage now and then, and always managed
+opportunely to come down the hillside when they were baking or washing.
+She was a nice, clever old woman, and she and Ingrid were good friends.
+As soon as the young girl was able to collect her thoughts, she made up
+her mind to take refuge with her.
+
+'Listen,' she said to the Dalar man. 'When you get onto the highroad,
+turn into the forest; then go straight on until you come to a gate;
+there you must turn to the left; then you must go straight on until you
+come to the large gravel-pit. From there you can see a house: take me
+there, and I will play to you.'
+
+The short and harsh manner in which she gave her orders jarred upon her
+ears, but she was obliged to speak in this way in order to be obeyed; it
+was the only chance she had. What right had she to order another person
+about--she who had not even the right to be alive?
+
+After all this she would never again be able to feel as if she had any
+right to live. This was the most dreadful part of all that had happened
+to her: that she could have lived in the Parsonage for six years, and
+not even been able to make herself so much loved that they wished to
+keep her alive. And those whom no one loves have no right to live. She
+could not exactly say how she knew it was so, but it was as clear as
+daylight. She knew it from the feeling that the same moment she heard
+that they did not care about her an iron hand seemed to have crushed her
+heart as if to make it stop. Yes, it was life itself that had been
+closed for her. And the same moment she had come back from death, and
+felt the delight of being alive burn brightly and strongly within her,
+just at that moment the one thing that gave her the right of existing
+had been torn from her.
+
+This was worse than sentence of death. It was much more cruel than an
+ordinary sentence of death. She knew what it was like. It was like
+felling a tree--not in the usual manner, when the trunk is cut through,
+but by cutting its roots and leaving it standing in the ground to die by
+itself. There the tree stands, and cannot understand why it no longer
+gets nourishment and support. It struggles and strives to live, but the
+leaves get smaller and smaller, it sends forth no fresh shoots, the bark
+falls off, and it must die, because it is severed from the spring of
+life. Thus it is it must die.
+
+At last the Dalar man put down his pack on the stone step outside a
+little house in the midst of the wild forest. The door was locked, but
+as soon as Ingrid had got out of the pack she took the key from under
+the doorstep, opened the door, and walked in.
+
+Ingrid knew the house thoroughly and all it contained. It was not the
+first time she had come there for comfort; it was not the first time she
+had come and told old Anna Stina that she could not bear living at home
+any longer--that her adopted mother was so hard to her that she would
+not go back to the Parsonage. But every time she came the old woman had
+talked her over and quieted her. She had made her some terrible coffee
+from roasted peas and chicory, without a single coffee-bean in it, but
+which had all the same given her new courage, and in the end she had
+made her laugh at everything, and encouraged her so much, that she had
+simply danced down the hillside on her way home.
+
+Even if Anna Stina had been at home, and had made some of her terrible
+coffee, it would probably not have helped Ingrid this time. But the old
+woman was down at the Parsonage to the funeral feast, for the Pastor's
+wife had not forgotten to invite any of those of whom Ingrid had been
+fond. That, too, was probably the result of an uneasy conscience.
+
+But in Anna's room everything was as usual. And when Ingrid saw the
+sofa with the wooden seat, and the clean, scoured table, and the cat,
+and the coffee-kettle, although she did not feel comforted or cheered,
+she felt that here was a place where she could give vent to her sorrow.
+It was a relief that here she need not think of anything but crying and
+moaning.
+
+She went straight to the settle, threw herself on the wooden seat, and
+lay there crying, she did not know for how long.
+
+The Dalar man sat outside on the stone step; he did not want to go into
+the house on account of the cat. He expected that Ingrid would come out
+and play to him. He had taken the violin out long ago. As it was such a
+long time before she came, he began to play himself. He played softly
+and gently, as was his wont. It was barely possible for the young girl
+to hear him playing.
+
+Ingrid had one fit of shivering after the other. This was how she had
+been before she fell ill. She would no doubt be ill again. It was also
+best that the fever should come and put an end to her in earnest.
+
+When she heard the violin, she rose and looked round with bewildered
+glance. Who was that playing? Was that her student? Had he come at last?
+It soon struck her, however, that it was the Dalar man, and she lay down
+again with a sigh. She could not follow what he was playing. But as soon
+as she closed her eyes the violin assumed the student's voice. She also
+heard what he said; he spoke with her adopted mother and defended her.
+He spoke just as nicely as he had done to Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren. Ingrid
+needed love so much, he said. That was what she had missed. That was
+why she had not always attended to her work, but allowed dreams to fill
+her mind. But no one knew how she could work and slave for those who
+loved her. For their sake she could bear sorrow and sickness, and
+contempt and poverty; for them she would be as strong as a giant, and as
+patient as a slave.
+
+Ingrid heard him distinctly and she became quiet. Yes, it was true. If
+only her adopted mother had loved her, she would have seen what Ingrid
+was worth. But as she did not love her, Ingrid was paralyzed in her
+efforts. Yes, so it had been.
+
+Now the fever had left her, she only lay and listened to what the
+student said. She slept a little now and then; time after time she
+thought she was lying in her grave, and then it was always the student
+who came and took her out of the coffin. She lay and disputed with him.
+
+'When I am dreaming it is you who come,' she said.
+
+'It is always I who come to you, Ingrid,' he said. 'I thought you knew
+that. I take you out of the grave; I carry you on my shoulders; I play
+you to sleep. It is always I.'
+
+What disturbed and awoke her was the thought that she had to get up and
+play for the Dalar man. Several times she rose up to do it, but could
+not. As soon as she fell back upon the settle she began to dream. She
+sat crouching in the pack and the student carried her through the
+forest. It was always he.
+
+'But it was not you,' she said to him.
+
+'Of course it was I,' he said, smiling at her contradicting him. 'You
+have been thinking about me every day for all these years; so you can
+understand I could not help saving you when you were in such great
+danger.'
+
+Of course she saw the force of his argument; and then she began to
+realize that he was right, and that it was he. But this was such
+infinite bliss that she again awoke. Love seemed to fill her whole
+being. It could not have been more real had she seen and spoken with her
+beloved.
+
+'Why does he never come in real life?' she said, half aloud. 'Why does
+he only come in my dreams?'
+
+She did not dare to move, for then love would fly away. It was as if a
+timid bird had settled on her shoulder, and she was afraid of
+frightening it away. If she moved, the bird would fly away, and sorrow
+would overcome her.
+
+When at last she really awoke, it was twilight. She must have slept the
+whole afternoon and evening. At that time of the year it was not dark
+until after ten o'clock. The violin had ceased playing, and the Dalar
+man had probably gone away.
+
+Anna Stina had not yet come back. She would probably be away the whole
+night. It did not matter to Ingrid; all she wanted was to lie down again
+and sleep. She was afraid of all the sorrow and despair that would
+overwhelm her as soon as she awoke. But then she got something new to
+think about. Who could have closed the door? who had spread Anna Stina's
+great shawl over her? and who had placed a piece of dry bread beside her
+on the seat? Had he, the Goat, done all this for her? For a moment she
+thought she saw dream and reality standing side by side, trying which
+could best console her. And the dream stood joyous and smiling,
+showering over her all the bliss of love to comfort her. But life, poor,
+hard, and bitter though it was, also brought its kindly little mite to
+show that it did not mean to be so hard upon her as perhaps she thought.
+
+
+VI
+
+Ingrid and Anna Stina were walking through the dark forest. They had
+been walking for four days, and had slept three nights in the S[:a]ter
+huts. Ingrid was weak and weary; her face was transparently pale; her
+eyes were sunken, and shone feverishly. Old Anna Stina now and then
+secretly cast an anxious look at her, and prayed to God that He would
+sustain her so that she might not die by the wayside. Now and then the
+old woman could not help looking behind her with uneasiness. She had an
+uncomfortable feeling that the old man with his scythe came stealthily
+after them through the forest to reclaim the young girl who, both by the
+word of God and the casting of earth upon her, had been consecrated to
+him.
+
+Old Anna Stina was little and broad, with a large, square face, which
+was so intelligent that it was almost good-looking. She was not
+superstitious--she lived quite alone in the midst of the forest without
+being afraid either of witches or evil spirits--but as she walked there
+by the side of Ingrid she felt as distinctly as if someone had told her
+that she was walking beside a being who did not belong to this world.
+She had had that sensation ever since she had found Ingrid lying in her
+house that Monday morning.
+
+Anna Stina had not returned home on the Sunday evening, for down at the
+Parsonage the Pastor's wife had been taken very ill, and Anna Stina, who
+was accustomed to nurse sick people, had stayed to sit up with her. The
+whole night she had heard the Pastor's wife raving about Ingrid's having
+appeared to her; but that the old woman had not believed. And when she
+returned home the next day and found Ingrid, the old woman would at once
+have gone down to the Parsonage again to tell them that it was not a
+ghost they had seen; but when she had suggested this to Ingrid, it had
+affected her so much that she dared not do it. It was as if the little
+life which burnt in her would be extinguished, just as the flame of a
+candle is put out by too strong a draught. She could have died as easily
+as a little bird in its cage. Death was prowling around her. There was
+nothing to be done but to nurse her very tenderly and deal very gently
+with her if her life was to be preserved.
+
+The old woman hardly knew what to think of Ingrid. Perhaps she was a
+ghost; there seemed to be so little life in her. She quite gave up
+trying to talk her to reason. There was nothing else for it but giving
+in to her wishes that no one should hear anything about her being alive.
+And then the old woman tried to arrange everything as wisely as
+possible. She had a sister who was housekeeper on a large estate in
+Dalarne, and she made up her mind to take Ingrid to her, and persuade
+her sister, Stafva, to give the girl a situation at the Manor House.
+Ingrid would have to be content with being simply a servant. There was
+nothing else for it.
+
+They were now on their way to the Manor House. Anna Stina knew the
+country so well that they were not obliged to go by the highroad, but
+could follow the lonely forest paths. But they had also undergone much
+hardship. Their shoes were worn and in pieces, their skirts soiled and
+frayed at the bottom, and a branch had torn a long rent in Ingrid's
+sleeve.
+
+On the evening of the fourth day they came to a hill from which they
+could look down into a deep valley. In the valley was a lake, and near
+the edge of the lake was a high, rocky island, upon which stood a large
+white building. When Anna Stina saw the house, she said it was called
+Munkhyttan, and that it was there her sister lived.
+
+They made themselves as tidy as they could on the hillside. They
+arranged the handkerchiefs which they wore on their heads, dried their
+shoes with moss, and washed themselves in a forest stream, and Anna
+Stina tried to make a fold in Ingrid's sleeve so that the rent could not
+be seen.
+
+The old woman sighed when she looked at Ingrid, and quite lost courage.
+It was not only that she looked so strange in the clothes she had
+borrowed from Anna Stina, and which did not at all fit her, but her
+sister Stafva would never take her into her service, she looked so
+wretched and pitiful. It was like engaging a breath of wind. The girl
+could be of no more use than a sick butterfly.
+
+As soon as they were ready, they went down the hill to the lake. It was
+only a short distance. Then they came to the land belonging to the Manor
+House.
+
+Was that a country house?
+
+There were large neglected fields, upon which the forest encroached more
+and more. There was a bridge leading on to the island, so shaky that
+they hardly thought it would keep together until they were safely over.
+There was an avenue leading from the bridge to the main building,
+covered with grass, like a meadow, and a tree which had been blown down
+had been left lying across the road.
+
+The island was pretty enough, so pretty that a castle might very well
+have been built there. But nothing but weeds grew in the garden, and in
+the large park the trees were choking each other, and black snakes
+glided over the green, wet walks.
+
+Anna Stina felt uneasy when she saw how neglected everything was, and
+went along mumbling to herself: 'What does all this mean? Is Stafva
+dead? How can she stand everything looking like this? Things were very
+different thirty years ago, when I was last here. What in the world can
+be the matter with Stafva?' She could not imagine that there could be
+such neglect in any place where Stafva lived.
+
+Ingrid walked behind her, slowly and reluctantly. The moment she put her
+foot on the bridge she felt that there were not two walking there, but
+three. Someone had come to meet her there, and had turned back to
+accompany her. Ingrid heard no footsteps, but he who accompanied them
+appeared indistinctly by her side. She could see there was someone.
+
+She became terribly afraid. She was just going to beg Anna Stina to turn
+back and tell her that everything seemed so strange here that she dare
+not go any further. But before she had time to say anything, the
+stranger came quite close to her, and she recognised him. Before, she
+only saw him indistinctly; now she saw him so clearly that she could see
+it was the student.
+
+It no longer seemed weird and ghost-like that he walked there. It was
+only strangely delightful that he came to receive her. It was as if it
+were he who had brought her there, and would, by coming to welcome her,
+show that it was.
+
+He walked with her over the bridge, through the avenue, quite up to the
+main building.
+
+She could not help turning her head every moment to the left. It was
+there she saw his face, quite close to her cheek. It was really not a
+face that she saw, only an unspeakably beautiful smile that drew
+tenderly near her. But if she turned her head quite round to see it
+properly, it was no longer there. No, there was nothing one could see
+distinctly. But as soon as she looked straight before her, it was there
+again, quite close to her.
+
+Her invisible companion did not speak to her, he only smiled. But that
+was enough for her. It was more than enough to show her that there was
+one in the world who kept near her with tender love.
+
+She felt his presence as something so real, that she firmly believed he
+protected her and watched over her. And before this happy consciousness
+vanished all the despair which her adopted mother's hard words had
+called forth.
+
+Ingrid felt herself again given back to life. She had the right to live,
+as there was one who loved her.
+
+And this was why she entered the kitchen at Munkhyttan with a faint
+blush on her cheeks, and with radiant eyes, fragile, weak, and
+transparent, but sweet as a newly-opened rose.
+
+She still went about as if in a dream, and did not know much about where
+she was; but what surprised her so much that it nearly awakened her was
+to see a new Anna Stina standing by the fireplace. She stood there,
+little and broad, with a large, square face, exactly like the other. But
+why was she so fine, with a white cap with strings tied in a large bow
+under her chin, and with a black bombazine dress? Ingrid's head was so
+confused, that it was some time before it occurred to her that this must
+be Miss Stafva.
+
+She felt that Anna Stina looked uneasily at her, and she tried to pull
+herself together and say 'Good-day.' But the only thing her mind could
+grasp was the thought that he had come to her.
+
+Inside the kitchen there was a small room, with blue-checked covering on
+the furniture. They were taken into that room, and Miss Stafva gave them
+coffee and something to eat.
+
+Anna Stina at once began to talk about their errand. She spoke for a
+long time; said that she knew her sister stood so high in her
+ladyship's favour that she left it to her to engage the servants. Miss
+Stafva said nothing, but she gave a look at Ingrid as much as to say
+that it would hardly have been left with her if she had chosen servants
+like her.
+
+Anna Stina praised Ingrid, and said she was a good girl. She had
+hitherto served in a parsonage, but now that she was grown up she wanted
+really to learn something, and that was why Anna Stina had brought her
+to one who could teach her more than any other person she knew.
+
+Miss Stafva did not reply to this remark either. But her glance plainly
+showed that she was surprised that anyone who had had a situation in a
+parsonage had no clothes of her own, but was obliged to borrow old Anna
+Stina's.
+
+Then old Anna Stina began to tell how she lived quite alone in the
+forest, deserted by all her relatives. And this young girl had come
+running up the hill many an evening and many an early morning to see
+her. She had therefore thought and hoped that she could now help her to
+get a good situation.
+
+Miss Stafva said it was a pity that they had gone such a long way to
+find a place. If she were a clever girl, she could surely get a
+situation in some good family in their own neighbourhood.
+
+Anna Stina could now clearly see that Ingrid's prospects were not good,
+and therefore she began in a more solemn vein:
+
+'Here you have lived, Stafva, and had a good, comfortable home all your
+life, and I have had to fight my way in great poverty. But I have never
+asked you for anything before to-day. And now you will send me away
+like a beggar, to whom one gives a meal and nothing more.'
+
+Miss Stafva smiled a little; then she said:
+
+'Sister Anna Stina, you are not telling me the truth. I, too, come from
+Raglanda, and I should like to know at what peasant's house in that
+parish grow such eyes and such a face.'
+
+And she pointed at Ingrid, and continued:
+
+'I can quite understand, Anna Stina, that you would like to help one who
+looks like that. But I do not understand how you can think that your
+sister Stafva has not more sense than to believe the stories you choose
+to tell her.'
+
+Anna Stina was so frightened that she could not say a word, but Ingrid
+made up her mind to confide in Miss Stafva, and began at once to tell
+her whole story in her soft, beautiful voice.
+
+And Ingrid had hardly told of how she had been lying in the grave, and
+that a Dalar man had come and saved her, before old Miss Stafva grew red
+and quickly bent down to hide it. It was only a second, but there must
+have been some cause for it, for from that moment she looked so kind.
+
+She soon began to ask full particulars about it; more especially she
+wanted to know about the crazy man, whether Ingrid had not been afraid
+of him. Oh no, he did no harm. He was not mad, Ingrid said; he could
+both buy and sell. He was only frightened of some things.
+
+Ingrid thought the hardest of all was to tell what she had heard her
+adopted mother say. But she told everything, although there were tears
+in her voice.
+
+Then Miss Stafva went up to her, drew back the handkerchief from her
+head, and looked into her eyes. Then she patted her lightly on the
+cheek.
+
+'Never mind that, little miss,' she said. 'There is no need for me to
+know about that. Now sister and Miss Ingrid must excuse me,' she said
+soon after, 'but I must take up her ladyship's coffee. I shall soon be
+down again, and you can tell me more.'
+
+When she returned, she said she had told her ladyship about the young
+girl who had lain in the grave, and now her mistress wanted to see her.
+
+They were taken upstairs, and shown into her ladyship's boudoir.
+
+Anna Stina remained standing at the door of the fine room. But Ingrid
+was not shy; she went straight up to the old lady and put out her hand.
+She had often been shy with others who looked much less aristocratic;
+but here, in this house, she did not feel embarrassed. She only felt so
+wonderfully happy that she had come there.
+
+'So it is you, my child, who have been buried,' said her ladyship,
+nodding friendlily to her. 'Do you mind telling me your story, my child?
+I sit here quite alone, and never hear anything, you know.'
+
+Then Ingrid began again to tell her story. But she had not got very far
+before she was interrupted. Her ladyship did exactly the same as Miss
+Stafva had done. She rose, pushed the handkerchief back from Ingrid's
+forehead and looked into her eyes.
+
+'Yes,' her ladyship said to herself, 'that I can understand. I can
+understand that he must obey those eyes.'
+
+For the first time in her life Ingrid was praised for her courage. Her
+ladyship thought she had been very brave to place herself in the hands
+of a crazy fellow.
+
+She _was_ afraid, she said, but she was still more afraid of people
+seeing her in that state. And he did no harm; he was almost quite right,
+and then he was so good.
+
+Her ladyship wanted to know his name, but Ingrid did not know it. She
+had never heard of any other name but the Goat. Her ladyship asked
+several times how he managed when he came to do business. Had she not
+laughed at him, and did she not think that he looked terrible--the Goat?
+It sounded so strange when her ladyship said 'the Goat.' There was so
+much bitterness in her voice when she said it, and yet she said it over
+and over again.
+
+No; Ingrid did not think so, and she never laughed at unfortunate
+people. The old lady looked more gentle than her words sounded.
+
+'It appears you know how to manage mad people, my child,' she said.
+'That is a great gift. Most people are afraid of such poor creatures.'
+She listened to all Ingrid had to say, and sat meditating. 'As you have
+not any home, my child,' she said, 'will you not stay here with me? You
+see, I am an old woman living here by myself, and you can keep me
+company, and I shall take care that you have everything you want. What
+do you say to it, my child? There will come a time, I suppose,'
+continued her ladyship, 'when we shall have to inform your parents that
+you are still living; but for the present everything shall remain as it
+is, so that you can have time to rest both body and mind. And you shall
+call me "Aunt"; but what shall I call you?'
+
+'Ingrid--Ingrid Berg.'
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship thoughtfully. 'I would rather have called
+you something else. As soon as you entered the room with those star-like
+eyes, I thought you ought to be called Mignon.'
+
+When it dawned upon the young girl that here she would really find a
+home, she felt more sure than ever that she had been brought here in
+some supernatural manner, and she whispered her thanks to her invisible
+protector before she thanked her ladyship, Miss Stafva, and Anna Stina.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ingrid slept in a four-poster, on luxurious featherbeds three feet high,
+and had hem-stitched sheets, and silken quilts embroidered with Swedish
+crowns and French lilies. The bed was so broad that she could lie as she
+liked either way, and so high that she must mount two steps to get into
+it. At the top sat a Cupid holding the brightly-coloured hangings, and
+on the posts sat other Cupids, which held them up in festoons.
+
+In the same room where the bed stood was an old curved chest of drawers
+inlaid with olive-wood, and from it Ingrid might take as much
+sweetly-scented linen as she liked. There was also a wardrobe containing
+many gay and pretty silk and muslin gowns that only hung there and
+waited until it pleased her to put them on.
+
+When she awoke in the morning there stood by her bedside a tray with a
+silver coffee-set and old Indian china. And every morning she set her
+small white teeth in fine white bread and delicious almond-cakes; every
+day she was dressed in a fine muslin gown with a lace fichu. Her hair
+was dressed high at the back, but round her forehead there was a row of
+little light curls.
+
+On the wall between the windows hung a mirror, with a narrow glass in a
+broad frame, where she could see herself, and nod to her picture, and
+ask:
+
+'Is it you? Is it really you? How have you come here?'
+
+In the daytime, when Ingrid had left the chamber with the four-poster,
+she sat in the drawing-room and embroidered or painted on silk, and when
+she was tired of that, she played a little on the guitar and sang, or
+talked with the old lady, who taught her French, and amused herself by
+training her to be a fine lady.
+
+But she had come to an enchanted castle--she could not get away from
+that idea. She had had that feeling the first moment, and it was always
+coming back again. No one arrived at the house, no one left it. In this
+big house only two or three rooms were kept in order; in the others no
+one ever went. No one walked in the garden, no one looked after it.
+There was only one man-servant, and an old man who cut the firewood. And
+Miss Stafva had only two servants, who helped her in the kitchen and in
+the dairy.
+
+But there was always dainty food on the table, and her ladyship and
+Ingrid were always waited upon and dressed like fine ladies of rank.
+
+If nothing thrived on the old estate, there was, at any rate, fertile
+soil for dreams, and even if they did not nurse and cultivate flowers
+there, Ingrid was not the one to neglect her dream-roses. They grew up
+around her whenever she was alone. It seemed to her then as if red
+dream-roses formed a canopy over her.
+
+Round the island where the trees bent low over the water, and sent long
+branches in between the reeds, and where shrubs and lofty trees grew
+luxuriantly, was a pathway where Ingrid often walked. It looked so
+strange to see so many letters carved on the trees, to see the old seats
+and summer-houses; to see the old tumble-down pavilions, which were so
+worm-eaten that she dared not go into them; to think that real people
+had walked here, that here they had lived, and longed, and loved, and
+that this had not always been an enchanted castle.
+
+Down here she felt even more the witchery of the place. Here the face
+with the smile came to her. Here she could thank him, the student,
+because he had brought her to a home where she was so happy, where they
+loved her, and made her forget how hardly others had treated her. If it
+had not been he who had arranged all this for her, she could not
+possibly have been allowed to remain here; it was quite impossible.
+
+She knew that it must be he. She had never before had such wild fancies.
+She had always been thinking of him, but she had never felt that he was
+so near her that he took care of her. The only thing she longed for was
+that he himself should come, for of course he would come some day. It
+was impossible that he should not come. In these avenues he had left
+behind part of his soul.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Summer went, and autumn; Christmas was drawing near.
+
+'Miss Ingrid,' said the old housekeeper one day, in a rather mysterious
+manner, 'I think I ought to tell you that the young master who owns
+Munkhyttan is coming home for Christmas. In any case, he generally
+comes,' she added, with a sigh.
+
+'And her ladyship, who has never even mentioned that she has a son,'
+said Ingrid.
+
+But she was not really surprised. She might just as well have answered
+that she had known it all along.
+
+'No one has spoken to you about him, Miss Ingrid,' said the housekeeper,
+'for her ladyship has forbidden us to speak about him.'
+
+And then Miss Stafva would not say any more.
+
+Neither did Ingrid want to ask any more. Now she was afraid of hearing
+something definite. She had raised her expectations so high that she was
+herself afraid they would fail. The truth might be well worth hearing,
+but it might also be bitter, and destroy all her beautiful dreams. But
+from that day he was with her night and day. She had hardly time to
+speak to others. She must always be with him.
+
+One day she saw that they had cleared the snow away from the avenue. She
+grew almost frightened. Was he coming now?
+
+The next day her ladyship sat from early morning in the window looking
+down the avenue. Ingrid had gone further into the room. She was so
+restless that she could not remain at the window.
+
+'Do you know whom I am expecting to-day, Ingrid?'
+
+The young girl nodded; she dared not depend upon her voice to answer.
+
+'Has Miss Stafva told you that my son is peculiar?'
+
+Ingrid shook her head.
+
+'He is very peculiar--he--I cannot speak about it. I cannot--you must
+see for yourself.'
+
+It sounded heartrending. Ingrid grew very uneasy. What was there with
+this house that made everything so strange? Was it something terrible
+that she did not know about? Was her ladyship not on good terms with her
+son? What was it, what was it?
+
+The one moment in an ecstasy of joy, the next in a fever of uncertainty,
+she was obliged to call forth the long row of visions in order again to
+feel that it must be he who came. She could not at all say why she so
+firmly believed that he must be the son just of this house. He might,
+for the matter of that, be quite another person. Oh, how hard it was
+that she had never heard his name!
+
+It was a long day. They sat waiting in silence until evening came.
+
+The man came driving a cartload of Christmas logs, and the horse
+remained in the yard whilst the wood was unloaded.
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship in a commanding and hasty tone, 'run down
+to Anders and tell him that he must be quick and get the horse into the
+stable. Quick--quick!'
+
+Ingrid ran down the stairs and on to the veranda; but when she came out
+she forgot to call to the man. Just behind the cart she saw a tall man
+in a sheepskin coat, and with a large pack on his back. It was not
+necessary for her to see him standing curtsying and curtsying to
+recognise him. But, but----She put her hand to her head and drew a deep
+breath. How would all these things ever become clear to her? Was it for
+that fellow's sake her ladyship had sent her down? And the man, why did
+he pull the horse away in such great haste? And why did he take off his
+cap and salute? What had that crazy man to do with the people of this
+house?
+
+All at once the truth flashed upon Ingrid so crushingly and
+overwhelmingly that she could have screamed. It was not her beloved who
+had watched over her; it was this crazy man. She had been allowed to
+remain here because she had spoken kindly of him, because his mother
+wanted to carry on the good work which he had commenced.
+
+The Goat--that was the young master.
+
+But to her no one came. No one had brought her here; no one had expected
+her. It was all dreams, fancies, illusions! Oh, how hard it was! If she
+had only never expected him!
+
+But at night, when Ingrid lay in the big bed with the brightly-coloured
+hangings, she dreamt over and over again that she saw the student come
+home. 'It was not you who came,' she said. 'Yes, of course it was I,'
+he replied. And in her dreams she believed him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One day, the week after Christmas, Ingrid sat at the window in the
+boudoir embroidering. Her ladyship sat on the sofa knitting, as she
+always did now. There was silence in the room.
+
+Young Hede had been at home for a week. During all that time Ingrid had
+never seen him. In his home, too, he lived like a peasant, slept in the
+men-servants' quarters, and had his meals in the kitchen. He never went
+to see his mother.
+
+Ingrid knew that both her ladyship and Miss Stafva expected that she
+should do something for Hede, that at the least she would try and
+persuade him to remain at home. And it grieved her that it was
+impossible for her to do what they wished. She was in despair about
+herself and about the utter weakness that had come over her since her
+expectations had been so shattered.
+
+To-day Miss Stafva had just come in to say that Hede was getting his
+pack ready to start. He was not even staying as long as he generally did
+at Christmas, she said with a reproachful look at Ingrid.
+
+Ingrid understood all they had expected from her, but she could do
+nothing. She sewed and sewed without saying anything.
+
+Miss Stafva went away, and there was again silence in the room. Ingrid
+quite forgot that she was not alone; a feeling of drowsiness suddenly
+came over her, whilst all her sad thoughts wove themselves into a
+strange fancy.
+
+She thought she was walking up and down the whole of the large house.
+She went through a number of rooms and salons; she saw them before her
+with gray covers over the furniture. The paintings and the chandeliers
+were covered with gauze, and on the floors was a layer of thick dust,
+which whirled about when she went through the rooms. But at last she
+came to a room where she had never been before; it was quite a small
+chamber, where both walls and ceiling were black. But when she came to
+look more closely at them, she saw that the chamber was neither painted
+black, nor covered with black material, but it was so dark on account of
+the walls and the ceiling being completely covered with bats. The whole
+room was nothing but a huge nest for bats. In one of the windows a pane
+was broken, so one could understand how the bats had got in in such
+incredible numbers that they covered the whole room. They hung there in
+their undisturbed winter sleep; not one moved when she entered. But she
+was seized by such terror at this sight that she began to shiver and
+shake all over. It was dreadful to see the quantity of bats she so
+distinctly saw hanging there. They all had black wings wrapped around
+them like cloaks; they all hung from the walls by a single long claw in
+undisturbable sleep. She saw it all so distinctly that she wondered if
+Miss Stafva knew that the bats had taken possession of a whole room. In
+her thoughts she then went to Miss Stafva and asked her whether she had
+been into that room and seen all the bats.
+
+'Of course I have seen them,' said Miss Stafva. 'It is their own room. I
+suppose you know, Miss Ingrid, that there is not a single old country
+house in all Sweden where they have not to give up a room to the bats?'
+
+'I have never heard that before,' Ingrid said.
+
+'When you have lived as long in the world as I have, Miss Ingrid, you
+will find out that I am speaking the truth,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+'I cannot understand that people will put up with such a thing,' Ingrid
+said.
+
+'We are obliged to,' said Miss Stafva. 'Those bats are Mistress Sorrow's
+birds, and she has commanded us to receive them.'
+
+Ingrid saw that Miss Stafva did not wish to say anything more about that
+matter, and she began to sew again; but she could not help speculating
+over who that Mistress Sorrow could be who had so much power here that
+she could compel Miss Stafva to give up a whole room to the bats.
+
+Just as she was thinking about all this, she saw a black sledge, drawn
+by black horses, pull up outside the veranda. She saw Miss Stafva come
+out and make a low curtsy. An old lady in a long black velvet cloak,
+with many small capes on the shoulders, alighted from the sledge. She
+was bent, and had difficulty in walking. She could hardly lift her feet
+sufficiently to walk up the steps.
+
+'Ingrid,' said her ladyship, looking up from her knitting, 'I think I
+heard Mistress Sorrow arrive. It must have been her jingle I heard. Have
+you noticed that she never has sledge-bells on her horses, but only
+quite a small jingle? But one can hear it--one can hear it! Go down
+into the hall, Ingrid, and bid Mistress Sorrow welcome.'
+
+When Ingrid came down into the front hall, Mistress Sorrow stood talking
+with Miss Stafva on the veranda. They did not notice her.
+
+Ingrid saw with surprise that the round-backed old lady had something
+hidden under all her capes which looked like crape; it was put well up
+and carefully hidden. Ingrid had to look very closely before she
+discovered that they were two large bat's wings which she tried to hide.
+The young girl grew still more curious and tried to see her face, but
+she stood and looked into the yard, so it was impossible. So much,
+however, Ingrid did see when she put out her hand to the
+housekeeper--that one of her fingers was much longer than the others,
+and at the end of it was a large, crooked claw.
+
+'I suppose everything is as usual here?' she said.
+
+'Yes, honoured Mistress Sorrow,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+'You have not planted any flowers, nor pruned any trees? You have not
+mended the bridge, nor weeded the avenue?'
+
+'No, honoured mistress.'
+
+'This is quite as it should be,' said the honoured mistress. 'I suppose
+you have not had the audacity to search for the vein of ore, or to cut
+down the forest which is encroaching on the fields?'
+
+'No, honoured mistress.'
+
+'Or to clean the wells?'
+
+'No, nor to clean the wells.'
+
+'This is a nice place,' said Mistress Sorrow; 'I always like being here.
+In a few years things will be in such a state that my birds can live all
+over the house. You are really very good to my birds, Miss Stafva.'
+
+At this praise the housekeeper made a deep curtsy.
+
+'How are things otherwise at the house?' said Mistress Sorrow. 'What
+sort of a Christmas have you had?'
+
+'We have kept Christmas as we always do,' said Miss Stafva. 'Her
+ladyship sits knitting in her room day after day, thinks of nothing but
+her son, and does not even know that it is a festival. Christmas Eve we
+allowed to pass like any other day--no presents and no candles.'
+
+'No Christmas tree, no Christmas fare?'
+
+'Nor any going to church; not so much as a candle in the windows on
+Christmas morning.'
+
+'Why should her ladyship honour God's Son when God will not heal her
+son?' said Mistress Sorrow.
+
+'No, why should she?'
+
+'He is at home at present, I suppose? Perhaps he is better now?'
+
+'No, he is no better. He is as much afraid of things as ever.'
+
+'Does he still behave like a peasant? Does he never go into the rooms?'
+
+'We cannot get him to go into the rooms; he is afraid of her ladyship,
+as the honoured mistress knows.'
+
+'He has his meals in the kitchen, and sleeps in the men-servants'
+room?'
+
+'Yes, he does.'
+
+'And you have no idea how to cure him?'
+
+'We know nothing, we understand nothing.'
+
+Mistress Sorrow was silent for a moment; when she spoke again there was
+a hard, sharp ring in her voice:
+
+'This is all right as far as it goes, Miss Stafva; but I am not quite
+satisfied with you, all the same.'
+
+The same moment she turned round and looked sharply at Ingrid.
+
+Ingrid shuddered. Mistress Sorrow had a little, wrinkled face, the under
+part of which was so doubled up that one could hardly see the lower jaw.
+She had teeth like a saw, and thick hair on the upper lip. Her eyebrows
+were one single tuft of hair, and her skin was quite brown.
+
+Ingrid thought Miss Stafva could not see what she saw: Mistress Sorrow
+was not a human being; she was only an animal.
+
+Mistress Sorrow opened her mouth and showed her glittering teeth when
+she looked at Ingrid.
+
+'When this girl came here,' she said to Miss Stafva, 'you thought she
+had been sent by God. You thought you could see from her eyes that she
+had been sent by Our Lord to save him. She knew how to manage mad
+people. Well, how has it worked?'
+
+'It has not worked at all. She has not done anything.'
+
+'No, I have seen to that,' said Mistress Sorrow. 'It was my doing that
+you did not tell her why she was allowed to stay here. Had she known
+that, she would not have indulged in such rosy dreams about seeing her
+beloved. If she had not had such expectations, she would not have had
+such a bitter disappointment. Had disappointment not paralyzed her, she
+could perhaps have done something for this mad fellow. But now she has
+not even been to see him. She hates him because he is not the one she
+expected him to be. That is my doing, Miss Stafva, my doing.'
+
+'Yes; the honoured mistress knows her business,' said Miss Stafva.
+
+Mistress Sorrow took her lace handkerchief and dried her red-rimmed
+eyes. It looked as if it were meant for an expression of joy.
+
+'You need not make yourself out to be any better than you are, Miss
+Stafva,' she said. 'I know you do not like my having taken that room for
+my birds. You do not like the thought of my having the whole house soon.
+I know that. You and your mistress had intended to cheat me. But it is
+all over now.'
+
+'Yes,' said Miss Stafva, 'the honoured mistress can be quite easy. It is
+all over. The young master is leaving to-day. He has packed up his pack,
+and then we always know he is about to leave. Everything her ladyship
+and I have been dreaming about the whole autumn is over. Nothing has
+been done. We thought she might at least have persuaded him to remain at
+home, but in spite of all we have done for her, she has not done
+anything for us.'
+
+'No, she has only been a poor help, I know that,' said Mistress Sorrow.
+'But, all the same, she must be sent away now. That was really what I
+wanted to see her ladyship about.'
+
+Mistress Sorrow began to drag herself up the steps on her tottering
+legs. At every step she raised her wings a little, as if they should
+help her. She would, no doubt, much rather have flown.
+
+Ingrid went behind her. She felt strangely attracted and fascinated. If
+Mistress Sorrow had been the most beautiful woman in the world, she
+could not have felt a greater inclination to follow her.
+
+When she went into the boudoir she saw Mistress Sorrow sitting on the
+sofa by the side of her ladyship, whispering confidentially with her, as
+if they were old friends.
+
+'You must be able to see that you cannot keep her with you,' said
+Mistress Sorrow impressively. 'You, who cannot bear to see a flower
+growing in your garden, can surely not stand having a young girl about
+in the house. It always brings a certain amount of brightness and life,
+and that would not suit you.'
+
+'No; that is just what I have been sitting and thinking about.'
+
+'Get her a situation as lady's companion somewhere or other, but don't
+keep her here.'
+
+She rose to say good-bye.
+
+'That was all I wanted to see you about,' she said. 'But how are you
+yourself?'
+
+'Knives and scissors cut my heart all day long,' said her ladyship. 'I
+only live in him as long as he is at home. It is worse than usual, much
+worse this time. I cannot bear it much longer.' . . .
+
+Ingrid started; it was her ladyship's bell that rang. She had been
+dreaming so vividly that she was quite surprised to see that her
+ladyship was alone, and that the black sledge was not waiting before the
+door.
+
+Her ladyship had rung for Miss Stafva, but she did not come. She asked
+Ingrid to go down to her room and call her.
+
+Ingrid went, but the little blue-checked room was empty. The young girl
+was going into the kitchen to ask for the housekeeper, but before she
+had time to open the door she heard Hede talking. She stopped outside;
+she could not persuade herself to go in and see him.
+
+She tried, however, to argue with herself. It was not his fault that he
+was not the one she had been expecting. She must try to do something for
+him; she must persuade him to remain at home. Before, she had not had
+such a feeling against him. He was not so very bad.
+
+She bent down and peeped through the keyhole. It was the same here as at
+other places. The servants tried to lead him on in order to amuse
+themselves by his strange talk. They asked him whom he was going to
+marry. Hede smiled; he liked to be asked about that kind of thing.
+
+'She is called Grave-Lily--don't you know that?' he said.
+
+The servant said she did not know that she had such a fine name.
+
+'But where does she live?'
+
+'Neither has she home nor has she farm,' Hede said. 'She lives in my
+pack.'
+
+The servant said that was a queer home, and asked about her parents.
+
+'Neither has she father nor has she mother,' Hede said. 'She is as fine
+as a flower; she has grown up in a garden.'
+
+He said all this with a certain amount of clearness, but when he wanted
+to describe how beautiful his sweetheart was he could not get on at all.
+He said a number of words, but they were strangely mixed together. One
+could not follow his thoughts, but evidently he himself derived much
+pleasure from what he said. He sat smiling and happy.
+
+Ingrid hurried away. She could not bear it any longer. She could not do
+anything for him. She was afraid of him. She disliked him. But she had
+not got further than the stairs before her conscience pricked her. Here
+she had received so much kindness, and she would not make any return.
+
+In order to master her dislike she tried in her own mind to think of
+Hede as a gentleman. She wondered how he had looked when he wore good
+clothes, and had his hair brushed back. She closed her eyes for a moment
+and thought. No, it was impossible, she could not imagine him as being
+any different from what he was. The same moment she saw the outlines of
+a beloved face by her side. It appeared at her left side wonderfully
+distinct. This time the face did not smile. The lips trembled as if in
+pain, and unspeakable suffering was written in sharp lines round the
+mouth.
+
+Ingrid stopped half-way up the stairs and looked at it. There it was,
+light and fleeting, as impossible to grasp and hold fast as a sun-spot
+reflected by the prism of a chandelier, but just as visible, just as
+real. She thought of her recent dream, but this was different--this was
+reality.
+
+When she had looked a little at the face, the lips began to move; they
+spoke, but she could not hear a sound. Then she tried to see what they
+said, tried to read the words from the lips, as deaf people do, and she
+succeeded.
+
+'Do not let me go,' the lips said; 'do not let me go.'
+
+And the anguish with which it was said! If a fellow-creature had been
+lying at her feet begging for life, it could not have affected her more.
+She was so overcome that she shook. It was more heart-rending than
+anything she had ever heard in her whole life. Never had she thought
+that anyone could beg in such fearful anguish. Again and again the lips
+begged, 'Do not let me go!' And for every time the anguish was greater.
+
+Ingrid did not understand it, but remained standing, filled with
+unspeakable pity. It seemed to her that more than life itself must be at
+stake for one who begged like this, that his very soul must be at stake.
+
+The lips did not move any more; they stood half open in dull despair.
+When they assumed this expression she uttered a cry and stumbled. She
+recognised the face of the crazy fellow as she had just seen it.
+
+'No, no, no!' she said. 'It cannot be so! It must not! it cannot! It is
+not possible that it is he!'
+
+The same moment the face vanished. She must have sat for a whole hour on
+the cold staircase, crying in helpless despair. But at last hope sprang
+up in her, strong and fair. She again took courage to raise her head.
+All that had happened seemed to show that she should save him. It was
+for that she had come here. She should have the great, great happiness
+of saving him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the little boudoir her ladyship was talking to Miss Stafva. It
+sounded so pitiful to hear her asking the housekeeper to persuade her
+son to remain a few days longer. Miss Stafva tried to appear hard and
+severe.
+
+'Of course, I can ask him,' she said; 'but your ladyship knows that no
+one can make him stay longer than he wants.'
+
+'We have money enough, you know. There is not the slightest necessity
+for him to go. Can you not tell him that?' said her ladyship.
+
+At the same moment Ingrid came in. The door opened noiselessly. She
+glided through the room with light, airy steps; her eyes were radiant,
+as if she beheld something beautiful afar off.
+
+When her ladyship saw her she frowned a little. She also felt an
+inclination to be cruel, to give pain.
+
+'Ingrid,' she said, 'come here; I must speak with you about your
+future.'
+
+The young girl had fetched her guitar and was about to leave the room.
+She turned round to her ladyship.
+
+'My future?' she said, putting her hand to her forehead. 'My future is
+already decided, you know,' she continued, with the smile of a martyr;
+and without saying any more she left the room.
+
+Her ladyship and Stafva looked in surprise at each other. They began to
+discuss where they should send the young girl. But when Miss Stafva came
+down to her room she found Ingrid sitting there, singing some little
+songs and playing on the guitar, and Hede sat opposite her, listening,
+his face all sunshine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ever since Ingrid had recognised the student in the poor crazy fellow,
+she had no other thought but that of trying to cure him; but this was a
+difficult task, and she had no idea whatever as to how she should set
+about it. To begin with, she only thought of how she could persuade him
+to remain at Munkhyttan; and this was easy enough. Only for the sake of
+hearing her play the violin or the guitar a little every day he would
+now sit patiently from morning till evening in Miss Stafva's room
+waiting for her.
+
+She thought it would be a great thing if she could get him to go into
+the other rooms, but that she could not. She tried keeping in her room,
+and said she would not play any more for him if he did not come to her.
+But after she had remained there two days, he began to pack up his pack
+to go away, and then she was obliged to give in.
+
+He showed great preference for her, and distinctly showed that he liked
+her better than others; but she did not make him less frightened. She
+begged him to leave off his sheepskin coat, and wear an ordinary coat.
+He consented at once, but the next day he had it on again. Then she hid
+it from him; but he then appeared in the man-servant's skin coat. So
+then they would rather let him keep his own. He was still as frightened
+as ever, and took great care no one came too near him. Even Ingrid was
+not allowed to sit quite close to him.
+
+One day she said to him that now he must promise her something: he must
+give over curtsying to the cat. She would not ask him to do anything so
+difficult as give up curtsying to horses and dogs, but surely he could
+not be afraid of a little cat.
+
+Yes, he said; the cat was a goat.
+
+'It can't be a goat,' she said; 'it has no horns, you know.'
+
+He was pleased to hear that. It seemed as if at last he had found
+something by which he could distinguish a goat from other animals.
+
+The next day he met Miss Stafva's cat.
+
+'That goat has no horns,' he said; and laughed quite proudly.
+
+He went past it, and sat down on the sofa to listen to Ingrid playing.
+But after he had sat a little while he grew restless, and he rose, went
+up to the cat, and curtsied.
+
+Ingrid was in despair. She took him by his arm and shook him. He ran
+straight out of the room, and did not appear until the next day.
+
+'Child, child,' said her ladyship, 'you do exactly as I did; you try the
+same as I did. It will end by your frightening him so that he dare not
+see you any more. It is better to leave him in peace. We are satisfied
+with things as they are if he will only remain at home.'
+
+There was nothing else for Ingrid to do but wring her hands in sorrow
+that such a fine, lovable fellow should be concealed in this crazy man.
+
+Ingrid thought again and again, had she really only come here to play
+her grandfather's tunes to him? Should they go on like that all through
+life? Would it never be otherwise?
+
+She also told him many stories, and in the midst of a story his face
+would lighten up, and he would say something wonderfully subtle and
+beautiful. A sane person would never have thought of anything like it.
+And no more was needed to make her courage rise, and then she began
+again with these endless experiments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was late one afternoon, and the moon was just about to rise. White
+snow lay on the ground, and bright gray ice covered the lake. The trees
+were blackish-brown, and the sky was a flaming red after the sunset.
+
+Ingrid was on her way to the lake to skate. She went along a narrow path
+where the snow was quite trodden down. Gunnar Hede went behind her.
+There was something cowed in his bearing that made one think of a dog
+following its master.
+
+Ingrid looked tired; there was no brightness in her eyes, and her
+complexion was gray.
+
+As she walked along she wondered whether the day, which was now so
+nearly over, was content with itself--if it were from joy it had
+lighted the great flaming red sunset far away in the west.
+
+She knew she could light no bonfire over this day, nor over any other
+day. In the whole month that had passed since she recognised Gunnar Hede
+she had gained nothing.
+
+And to-day a great fear had come upon her. It seemed to her as if she
+might perhaps lose her love over all this. She was nearly forgetting the
+student, only for thinking of the poor fellow. All that was bright and
+beautiful and youthful vanished from her love. Nothing was left but
+dull, heavy earnest.
+
+She was quite in despair as she walked towards the lake. She felt she
+did not know what ought to be done--felt that she must give it all up.
+Oh, God, to have him walking behind her apparently strong and hale, and
+yet so helplessly, incurably sick!
+
+They had reached the lake, and she was putting on her skates. She also
+wanted him to skate, and helped him to put on his skates; but he fell as
+soon as he got on to the ice. He scrambled to the bank and sat down on a
+stone, and she skated away from him.
+
+Just opposite the stone upon which Gunnar Hede was sitting was an islet
+overgrown with birches and poplars, and behind it the radiant evening
+sky, which was still flaming red. And the fine, light, leafless tops of
+the trees stood against the glorious sky with such beauty that it was
+impossible not to notice it.
+
+Is it not a fact that one always recognises a place by a single feature?
+One does not exactly know how even the most familiar spot looks from
+all sides. And Munkhyttan one always knew by the little islet. If one
+had not seen the place for many years, one would know it again by this
+islet, where the dark tree-tops were lifted towards the sunset.
+
+Hede sat quite still, and looked at the islet and at the branches of the
+trees and at the gray ice which surrounded it.
+
+This was the view he knew best of all; there was nothing on the whole
+estate he knew so well, for it was always this islet that attracted the
+eye. And soon he was sitting looking at the islet without thinking about
+it, just as one does with things one knows so well. He sat for a long
+time gazing. Nothing disturbed him, not a human being, not a gust of
+wind, no strange object. He could not see Ingrid; she had skated far
+away on the ice.
+
+A rest and peace fell upon Gunnar Hede such as one only feels in home
+surroundings. Security and peace came to him from the little islet; it
+quieted the everlasting unrest that tormented him.
+
+Hede always imagined he was amongst enemies, and always thought of
+defending himself. For many years he had not felt that peace which made
+it possible for him to forget himself. But now it came upon him.
+
+Whilst Gunnar Hede was sitting thus and not thinking of anything, he
+happened mechanically to make a movement as one may do when one finds
+one's self in accustomed circumstances. As he sat there with the shining
+ice before him and with skates on his feet, he got up and skated on to
+the lake, and he thought as little of what he was doing as one thinks of
+how one is holding fork or spoon when eating.
+
+He glided over the ice; it was glorious skating. He was a long way off
+the shore before he realized what he was doing.
+
+'Splendid ice!' he thought. 'I wonder why I did not come down earlier in
+the day. It is a good thing I was more here yesterday,' he said. 'I will
+really not waste a single day during the rest of my vacation.'
+
+No doubt it was because Gunnar Hede happened to do something he was in
+the habit of doing before he was ill that his old self awakened within
+him.
+
+Thoughts and associations connected with his former life began to force
+themselves upon his consciousness, and at the same time all the thoughts
+connected with his illness sank into oblivion.
+
+It had been his habit when skating to take a wide turn on the lake in
+order to see beyond a certain point. He did so now without thinking, but
+when he had turned the point he knew he had skated there to see if there
+was a light in his mother's window.
+
+'She thinks it is time I was coming home, but she must wait a little;
+the ice is too good.'
+
+But it was mostly vague sensations of pleasure over the exercise and the
+beautiful evening that were awakened within him. A moonlight evening
+like this was just the time for skating; he was so fond of this peaceful
+transition from day to night. It was still light, but the stillness of
+night was already there, the best both of day and of night.
+
+There was another skater on the ice; it was a young girl. He was not
+sure if he knew her, but he skated towards her to find out. No; it was
+no one he knew, but he could not help making a remark when he passed her
+about the splendid ice.
+
+The stranger was probably a young girl from the town. She was evidently
+not accustomed to be addressed in this unceremonious manner; she looked
+quite frightened when he spoke to her. He certainly was queerly dressed;
+he was dressed quite like a peasant.
+
+Well, he did not want to frighten her away. He turned off and skated
+further up the lake; the ice was big enough for them both.
+
+But Ingrid had nearly screamed with astonishment. He had come towards
+her skating elegantly, with his arms crossed, the brim of his hat turned
+up, and his hair thrown back, so that it did not fall over his ears.
+
+He had spoken with the voice of a gentleman, almost without the
+slightest Dalar accent. She did not stop to think about it. She skated
+quickly towards the shore. She came breathless into the kitchen. She did
+not know how to say it shortly and quickly enough.
+
+'Miss Stafva, the young master has come home!'
+
+The kitchen was empty; neither the housekeeper nor the servants were
+there. Nor was there anybody in the housekeeper's room. Ingrid rushed
+through the whole house, went into rooms where no one ever went. The
+whole time she cried out, 'Miss Stafva, Miss Stafva! the young master
+has come home!'
+
+She was quite beside herself, and went on calling out, even when she
+stood on the landing upstairs, surrounded by the servants, Miss Stafva,
+and her ladyship herself. She said it over and over again. She was too
+much excited to stop. They all understood what she meant. They stood
+there quite as much overcome as she was.
+
+Ingrid turned restlessly from the one to the other. She ought to give
+explanations and orders, but about what? That she could so lose her
+presence of mind! She looked wildly questioning at her ladyship.
+
+'What was it I wanted?'
+
+The old lady gave some orders in a low, trembling voice. She almost
+whispered.
+
+'Light the candles and make a fire in the young master's room. Lay out
+the young master's clothes.'
+
+It was neither the place nor the time for Miss Stafva to be important.
+But there was all the same a certain superior ring in her voice as she
+answered:
+
+'There is always a fire in the young master's room. The young master's
+clothes are always in readiness for him.'
+
+'Ingrid had better go up to her room,' said her ladyship.
+
+The young girl did just the opposite. She went into the drawing-room,
+placed herself at the window, sobbed and shook, but did not herself
+know that she was not still. She impatiently dried the tears from her
+eyes, so that she could see over the snowfield in front of the house. If
+only she did not cry, there was nothing she could miss seeing in the
+clear moonlight. At last he came.
+
+'There he is! there he is!' she cried to her ladyship. 'He walks
+quickly! he runs! Do come and see!'
+
+Her ladyship sat quite still before the fire. She did not move. She
+strained her ears to hear, just as much as the other strained her eyes
+to see. She asked Ingrid to be quiet, so that she could hear how he
+walked. Ah, yes, she would be quiet. Her ladyship should hear how he
+walked. She grasped the window-sill, as if that could help her.
+
+'You _shall_ be quiet,' she whispered, 'so that her ladyship can hear
+how he walks.'
+
+Her ladyship sat bending forward, listening with all her soul. Did she
+already hear his steps in the court-yard? She probably thought he would
+go towards the kitchen. Did she hear that it was the front steps that
+creaked? Did she hear that it was the door to the front hall that
+opened? Did she hear how quickly he came up the stairs, two or three
+steps at a time? Had his mother heard that? It was not the dragging step
+of a peasant, as it had been when he left the house.
+
+It was almost more than they could bear, to hear him coming towards the
+door of the drawing-room. Had he come in then, they would no doubt both
+have screamed. But he turned down the corridor to his own rooms.
+
+Her ladyship fell back in her chair, and her eyes closed. Ingrid thought
+her ladyship would have liked to die at that moment. Without opening her
+eyes, she put out her hand. Ingrid went softly up and took it; the old
+lady drew her towards her.
+
+'Mignon, Mignon,' she said; 'that was the right name after all. But,'
+she continued, 'we must not cry. We must not speak about it. Take a
+stool and come and sit down by the fire. We must be calm, my little
+friend. Let us speak about something else. We must be perfectly calm
+when he comes in.'
+
+Half an hour afterwards Hede came in; the tea was on the table, and the
+chandelier was lighted. He had dressed; every trace of the peasant had
+disappeared. Ingrid and her ladyship pressed each other's hands.
+
+They had been sitting trying to imagine how he would look when he came
+in. It was impossible to say what he might say or do, said her ladyship.
+One never had known what he might do. But in any case they would both be
+quite calm. A feeling of great happiness had come over her, and that had
+quieted her. She was resting, free from all sorrow, in the arms of
+angels carrying her upwards, upwards.
+
+But when Hede came in, there was no sign of confusion about him.
+
+'I have only come to tell you,' he said, 'that I have got such a
+headache, that I shall have to go to bed at once. I felt it already when
+I was on the ice.'
+
+Her ladyship made no reply. Everything was so simple; she had never
+thought it would be like that. It took her a few moments to realize that
+he did not know anything about his illness, that he was living somewhere
+in the past.
+
+'But perhaps I can first drink a cup of tea,' he said, looking a little
+surprised at their silence.
+
+Her ladyship went to the tea-tray. He looked at her.
+
+'Have you been crying, mother? You are so quiet.'
+
+'We have been sitting talking about a sad story, I and my young friend
+here,' said her ladyship, pointing to Ingrid.
+
+'I beg your pardon,' he said. 'I did not see you had visitors.'
+
+The young girl came forward towards the light, beautiful as one would be
+who knew that the gates of heaven the next moment would open before her.
+
+He bowed a little stiffly. He evidently did not know who she was. Her
+ladyship introduced them to each other. He looked curiously at Ingrid.
+
+'I think I saw Miss Berg on the ice,' he said.
+
+He knew nothing about her--had never spoken to her before.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A short, happy time followed. Gunnar Hede was certainly not quite
+himself; but those around him were happy in the belief that he soon
+would be. His memory was partly gone. He knew nothing about certain
+periods of his life; he could not play the violin; he had almost
+forgotten all he knew; and his power of thinking was weak; and he
+preferred neither to read nor to write. But still he was very much
+better. He was not frightened; he was fond of his mother; he had again
+assumed the manners and habits of a gentleman. One can easily understand
+that her ladyship and all her household were delighted.
+
+Hede was in the best of spirits--bright and joyous all day long. He
+never speculated over anything, put to one side everything he could not
+understand, never spoke about anything that necessitated mental
+exertion, but talked merrily and cheerfully. He was most happy when he
+was engaged in bodily exercise. He took Ingrid out with him sledging and
+skating. He did not talk much to her, but she was happy to be with him.
+He was kind to Ingrid, as he was to everyone else, but not in the least
+in love with her. He often wondered about his _fianc['e]e_--wondered why
+she never wrote. But after a short time that trouble, too, left him. He
+always put away from him anything that worried him.
+
+Ingrid thought that he would never get really well by doing like this.
+He must some time be made to think--to face his own thoughts, which he
+was afraid of doing now. But she dared not compel him to do this, and
+there was no one else who dared. If he began to care for her a little,
+perhaps she might dare. She thought all they now wanted, every one of
+them, was a little happiness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was just at that time that a little child died at the Parsonage at
+Raglanda where Ingrid had been brought up; and the grave-digger was
+about to dig the grave.
+
+The man dug the grave quite close to the spot where the previous summer
+he had dug the grave for Ingrid. And when he had got a few feet into the
+ground he happened to lay bare a corner of her coffin. The grave-digger
+could not help smiling a little to himself. Of course he had heard that
+the dead girl lying in this coffin had appeared. She was supposed to
+have unscrewed her coffin-lid on the very day of her funeral, risen from
+the grave, and appeared at the Parsonage. The Pastor's wife was not so
+much liked but that people in the parish rather enjoyed telling this
+story about her. The grave-digger thought that people should only know
+how securely the dead were lying in the ground, and how fast the
+coffin-lids. . . .
+
+He interrupted himself in the midst of this thought. On the corner of
+the coffin which was exposed the lid was not quite straight, and one of
+the screws was not quite fast. He did not say anything, he did not think
+anything, but stopped digging and whistled the whole reveille of the
+Vermland Regiment--for he was an old soldier. Then he thought he had
+better examine the thing properly. It would never do for a grave-digger
+to have thoughts about the dead which might come and trouble him during
+the dark autumn nights. He hastily removed some more earth. Then he
+began to hammer on the coffin with his shovel. The coffin answered quite
+distinctly that it was empty--empty.
+
+Half an hour after the grave-digger was at the Parsonage. There was no
+end to the questionings and surmises. So much they were all agreed
+upon--that the young girl had been in the Dalar man's pack. But what had
+become of her afterwards?
+
+Anna Stina stood at the oven in the Parsonage and looked after the
+baking, for of course there was baking to be done for the new funeral.
+She stood for a long time listening to all this talk without saying a
+word. All she took care of was that the cakes were not burnt. She put
+sheet-tins in and took sheet-tins out, and it was dangerous to approach
+her as she stood there with the long baker's shovel. But suddenly she
+took off her kitchen-apron, wiped the worst of the sweat and the soot
+from her face, and was talking with the Pastor in his study almost
+before she knew how it had come about.
+
+After this it was not so very wonderful that one day in March the
+Pastor's little red-painted sledge, ornamented with green tulips, and
+drawn by the Pastor's little red horse, pulled up at Munkhyttan. Ingrid
+was of course obliged to go back with the Pastor home to her mother. The
+Pastor had come to fetch her. He did not say much about their being glad
+that she was alive, but one could see how happy he was. He had never
+been able to forgive himself that they had not been more kind to their
+adopted daughter. And now he was radiant at the thought that he was
+allowed to make a new beginning and make everything good for her this
+time.
+
+They did not speak a word about the reason why she had run away. It was
+of no use bringing that up again so long after. But Ingrid understood
+that the Pastor's wife had had a hard time, and had suffered many pangs
+of conscience, and that they wanted to have her back again in order to
+be good to her. She felt that she was almost obliged to go back to the
+Parsonage to show that she had no ill-feeling against her adopted
+parents.
+
+They all thought it was the most natural thing that she should go to the
+Parsonage for a week or two. And why should she not? She could not make
+the excuse that they needed her at Munkhyttan. She could surely be away
+for some weeks without it doing Gunnar Hede any harm. She felt it was
+hard, but it was best she should go away, as they all thought it was the
+right thing.
+
+Perhaps she had hoped they would ask her not to go away. She took her
+seat in the sledge with the feeling that her ladyship or Miss Stafva
+would surely come and lift her out of it, and carry her into the house
+again. It was impossible to realize that she was actually driving down
+the avenue, that she was turning into the forest, and that Munkhyttan
+was disappearing behind her.
+
+But supposing it was from pure goodness that they let her go? They
+thought, perhaps, that youth, with its craving for pleasure, wanted to
+get away from the loneliness of Munkhyttan. They thought, perhaps, she
+was tired of being the keeper of a crazy man. She raised her hand, and
+was on the point of seizing the reins and turning the horse. Now that
+she was several miles from the house it struck her that that was why
+they had let her go. She would have liked so much to have gone back and
+asked them.
+
+In her utter loneliness she felt as if she were groping about in the
+wild forest. There was not a single human being who answered her or
+advised her. She received just as much answer from fir and pine, and
+squirrel and owl, as she did from any human being.
+
+It was really a matter of utter indifference to her how they treated her
+at the Parsonage. They were very kind to her, as far as she knew, but it
+really did not matter. If she had come to a palace full of everything
+one could most desire, that would likewise have been the same to her. No
+bed is soft enough to give rest unto one whose heart is full of longing.
+
+In the beginning she had asked them every day, as modestly as she could,
+if they would not let her go home, now that she had had the great
+happiness of seeing her mother and her brothers and sisters. But the
+roads were really too bad. She must stay with them until the frost had
+disappeared. It was not a matter of life and death, they supposed, to go
+back to that place.
+
+Ingrid could not understand why it annoyed people when she said she
+wanted to go back to Munkhyttan. But this seemed to be the case with her
+father and her mother and everybody else in the parish. One had no
+right, it appeared, to long for any other place in the world, when one
+was at Raglanda.
+
+She soon saw it was best not to speak about her going away. There were
+so many difficulties in the way whenever she spoke about it. It was not
+enough that the roads were still in the same bad condition; they
+surrounded her with walls and ramparts and moats. She would knit and
+weave, and plant out in the forcing-frames. And surely she would not go
+away until after the large birthday party at the Dean's? And she could
+not think of leaving till after Karin Landberg's wedding.
+
+There was nothing for her to do but to lift her hands in supplication to
+the spring, and beg it to make haste with its work, beg for sunshine and
+warmth, beg the gentle sun to do its very best for the great border
+forest, send small piercing rays between the fir-trees, and melt the
+snow beneath them. Dear, dear sun! It did not matter if the snow were
+not melted in the valley, if only the snow would vanish from the
+mountains, if only the forest paths became passable, if only the S[:a]ter
+girls were able to go to their huts, if only the bogs became dry, if
+only it became possible to go by the forest road, which was half the
+distance of the highroad.
+
+Ingrid knew one who would not wait for carriage, or ask for money to
+drive, if only the road through the forest became passable. She knew one
+who would leave the Parsonage some moonlight night, and who would do it
+without asking a single person's permission.
+
+She thought she had waited for the spring before. That everybody does.
+But now Ingrid knew that she had never before longed for it. Oh no, no!
+She had never before known what it was to long. Before she had waited
+for green leaves and anemones, and the song of the thrush and the
+cuckoo. But that was childishness--nothing more. They did not long for
+the spring who only thought of what was beautiful. One should take the
+first bit of earth that peeped through the snow, and kiss it. One should
+pluck the first coarse leaf of the nettle simply to burn into one that
+now the spring had come.
+
+Everybody was very good to her. But although they did not say anything,
+they seemed to think that she was always thinking of leaving them.
+
+'I can't understand why you want to go back to that place and look after
+that crazy fellow,' said Karin Landberg one day. It seemed as if she
+could read Ingrid's thoughts.
+
+'Oh, she has given up thinking of that now,' said the Pastor's wife,
+before the young girl had time to answer.
+
+When Karin was gone the Pastor's wife said:
+
+'People wonder that you want to leave us.'
+
+Ingrid was silent.
+
+'They say that when Hede began to improve perhaps you fell in love with
+him.'
+
+'Oh no! Not after he had begun to improve,' Ingrid said, feeling almost
+inclined to laugh.
+
+'In any case, he is not the sort of person one could marry,' said her
+adopted mother. 'Father and I have been speaking about it, and we think
+it is best that you should remain with us.'
+
+'It is very good of you that you want to keep me,' Ingrid said. And she
+was touched that now they wanted to be so kind to her.
+
+They did not believe her, however obedient she was. She could not
+understand what little bird it was that told them about her longing.
+Now her adopted mother had told her that she must not go back to
+Munkhyttan. But even then she could not leave the matter alone.
+
+'If they really wanted you,' she said, 'they would write for you.'
+
+Ingrid again felt inclined to laugh. That would be the strangest thing
+of all, should there be a letter from the enchanted castle. She would
+like to know if her adopted mother thought that the King of the Mountain
+wrote for the maiden who had been swallowed by the mountain to come back
+when she had gone to see her mother?
+
+But if her adopted mother had known how many messages she had received
+she would probably have been even more uneasy. There came messages to
+her in her dreams by nights, and there came messages to her in her
+visions by day. He let Ingrid know that he was in need of her. He was so
+ill--so ill!
+
+She knew that he was nearly going out of his mind again, and that she
+must go to him. If anyone had told her this, she would simply have
+answered that she knew it.
+
+The large star-like eyes looked further and further away. Those who saw
+that look would never believe that she meant to stay quietly and
+patiently at home.
+
+It is not very difficult either to see whether a person is content or
+full of longing. One only needs to see a little gleam of happiness in
+the eyes when he or she comes in from work and sits down by the fire.
+But in Ingrid's eyes there was no gleam of happiness, except when she
+saw the mountain stream come down through the forest, broad and strong.
+It was that that should prepare the way for her.
+
+It happened one day that Ingrid was sitting alone with Karin Landberg,
+and she began to tell her about her life at Munkhyttan. Karin was quite
+shocked. How could Ingrid stand such a life?
+
+Karin Landberg was to be married very soon. And she was now at that
+stage when she could speak of nothing but her lover. She knew nothing
+but what he had taught her, and she could do nothing without first
+consulting him.
+
+It occurred to her that Oluf had said something about Gunnar Hede which
+would help to frighten Ingrid if she had begun to like that crazy
+fellow. And then she began to tell her how mad he had really been. For
+Oluf had told her that when he was at the fair last autumn some
+gentlemen had said that they did not think the Goat was mad at all. He
+only pretended to be in order to attract customers. But Oluf had
+maintained that he was mad, and in order to prove it went to the market
+and bought a wretched little goat. And then it was plain enough to see
+that he was mad. Oluf had only put the goat in front of him on the
+counter where his knives and things lay, and he had run away and left
+both his pack and his wares, and they had all laughed so awfully when
+they saw how frightened he was. And it was impossible that Ingrid could
+care for anyone who had been so crazy.
+
+It was, no doubt, unwise of Karin Landberg that she did not look at
+Ingrid whilst she told this story. If she had seen how she frowned, she
+would perhaps have taken warning.
+
+'And you will marry anyone who could do such a thing!' Ingrid said. 'I
+think it would be better to marry the Goat himself.'
+
+This Ingrid said in downright earnest, and it seemed so strange to Karin
+that she, who was always so gentle, should have said anything so unkind,
+that it quite worried her. For several days she was quite unhappy,
+because she feared Oluf was not what she would like him to be. It simply
+embittered Karin's life until she made up her mind to tell Oluf
+everything; but he was so nice and good, that he quite reassured her.
+
+It is not an easy task to wait for the spring in Vermland. One can have
+sun and warmth in the evening, and the next morning find the ground
+white with snow. Gooseberry-bushes and lawns may be green, but the trees
+of the birch-forest are bare, and seem as if they will never spring out.
+
+At Whitsuntide there was spring in the air, but Ingrid's prayers had
+been of no avail. Not a single S[:a]ter girl had taken up her abode in the
+forest, not a fen was dry; it was impossible to go through the forest.
+
+On Whit-Sunday Ingrid and her adopted mother went to church. As it was
+such a great festival, they had driven to church. In olden days Ingrid
+had very much enjoyed driving up to the church in full gallop, whilst
+people along the roadside politely took off their hats, and those who
+were standing on the road rushed to the side as if they were quite
+frightened. But at the present moment she could not enjoy anything.
+'Longing takes the fragrance from the rose, and the light from the full
+moon,' says an old proverb.
+
+But Ingrid was glad for what she heard in church. It did her good to
+hear how the disciples were comforted in their longing. She was glad
+that Jesus thought of comforting those who longed so greatly for Him.
+
+Whilst Ingrid and the rest of the congregation were in church a tall
+Dalar man came walking down the road. He wore a sheepskin coat, and had
+a large pack on his back, like one who cannot tell winter from summer,
+or Sunday from any other day. He did not go into the church, but stole
+timidly past the horses that were tied to the railings, and went into
+the churchyard.
+
+He sat down on a grave and thought of all the dead who were still
+sleeping, and of one of the dead who had awakened to life again. He was
+still sitting there when the people left the church. Karin Landberg's
+Oluf was one of the first to leave the church, and when he happened to
+look across the churchyard he discovered the Dalar man. It is hard to
+say whether it was curiosity or some other motive that prompted him, but
+he went up to talk to him. He wanted to see if it were possible that he
+who was supposed to have been cured had become mad again.
+
+And it was possible. He told him at once that he sat there waiting for
+her who was called Grave-Lily. She was to come and play to him. She
+played so beautifully that the sun and the stars danced.
+
+Then Karin Landberg's Oluf told him that she for whom he was waiting was
+standing outside the church. If he stood up, he could see her. She
+would, no doubt, be glad to see him.
+
+The Pastor's wife and Ingrid were just getting into the carriage, when a
+tall Dalar man came running up to them. He came at a great pace in spite
+of all the horses he must curtsy to, and he beckoned eagerly to the
+young girl.
+
+As soon as Ingrid saw him she stood quite still. She could not have told
+whether she was most glad to see him again or most grieved that he had
+again gone out of his mind; she only forgot everything else in the
+world.
+
+Her eyes began to sparkle. In that moment she saw nothing of the poor
+wretched man. She only felt that she was once again near the beautiful
+soul of the man for whom she had longed so terribly.
+
+There were a great many people about, and they could not help looking at
+her. They could not take their eyes from her face. She did not move; she
+stood waiting for him. But those who saw how radiant she was with
+happiness must have thought that she was waiting for some great and
+noble man, instead of a poor, half-witted fellow.
+
+They said afterwards that it almost seemed as if there were some
+affinity between his soul and hers--some secret affinity which lay so
+deeply hidden beneath their consciousness that no human being could
+understand it.
+
+But when Hede was only a step or two from Ingrid her adopted mother took
+her resolutely round the waist and lifted her into the carriage. She
+would not have a scene between the two just outside the church, with so
+many people present. And as soon as they were in the carriage the man
+sent his horses off at full gallop.
+
+A wild, terrified cry was heard as they drove away. The Pastor's wife
+thanked God that she had got the young girl into the carriage.
+
+It was still early in the afternoon when a peasant came to the Parsonage
+to speak with the Pastor. He came to speak about the crazy Dalar man. He
+had now gone quite raving mad, and they had been obliged to bind him.
+What did the Pastor advise them to do? What should they do with him?
+
+The Pastor could give them no other advice but to take him home. He told
+the peasant who he was, and where he lived.
+
+Later on in the evening he told Ingrid everything. It was best to tell
+her the truth, and trust to her own common-sense.
+
+But when night came it became clear to her that she had not time to wait
+for the spring. The poor girl set out for Munkhyttan by the highroad.
+She would no doubt be able to get there by that road, although she knew
+that it was twice as long as the way through the forest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was Whit-Monday, late in the afternoon. Ingrid walked along the
+highroad. There was a wide expanse of country, with low mountains and
+small patches of birch forest between the fields. The mountain-ash and
+the bird-cherry were in bloom; the light, sticky leaves of the aspen
+were just out. The ditches were full of clear, rippling water which made
+the stones at the bottom glisten and sparkle.
+
+Ingrid walked sorrowfully along, thinking of him whose mind had again
+given way, wondering whether she could do anything for him, whether it
+was of any use that she had left her home in this manner.
+
+She was tired and hungry; her shoes had begun to go to pieces. Perhaps
+it would be better for her to turn back. She could never get to
+Munkhyttan.
+
+The further she walked, the more sorrowful she became. She could not
+help thinking that it could be of no use her coming now that he had gone
+quite out of his mind. There was no doubt it was too late now; it was
+quite hopeless to do anything for him.
+
+But as soon as she thought of turning back she saw Gunnar Hede's face
+close to her cheek, as she had so often seen it before. It gave her new
+courage; she felt as if he were calling for her. She again felt hopeful
+and confident of being able to help him.
+
+Just as Ingrid raised her head, looking a little less downcast, a queer
+little procession came towards her.
+
+There was a little horse, drawing a little cart; a fat woman sat in the
+cart, and a tall, thin man, with long, thin moustaches walked by the
+side of it.
+
+In the country, where no one understood anything about art, Mr. and
+Mrs. Blomgren always went in for looking like ordinary people. The
+little cart in which they travelled about was well covered over, and no
+one could suspect that it only contained fireworks and conjuring
+apparatus and marionettes.
+
+No one could suspect that the fat woman who sat on the top of the load,
+looking like a well-to-do shopkeeper's wife, was formerly Miss Viola,
+who once sprang through the air, or that the man who walked by her side,
+and looked like a pensioned soldier, was the same Mr. Blomgren who
+occasionally, to break the monotony of the journey, took it into his
+head to turn a somersault over the horse, and play the ventriloquist
+with thrushes and siskins that sang in the trees by the roadside, so
+that he made them quite mad.
+
+The horse was very small, and had formerly drawn a roundabout, and
+therefore it would never go unless it heard music. On that account Mrs.
+Blomgren generally sat playing the Jews'-harp, but as soon as they met
+anyone, she put it in her pocket, so that no one should discover they
+were artists, for whom country people have no respect whatever. Owing to
+this they did not travel very fast, but they were not in any hurry
+either.
+
+The blind man, who played the violin, had to walk some little distance
+behind the others in order not to betray the fact of his belonging to
+the company. The blind man was led by a little dog; he was not allowed
+to have a child to lead him, for that would always have reminded Mr.
+and Mrs. Blomgren of a little girl who was called Ingrid. That would
+have been too sad.
+
+And now they were all in the country on account of the spring. For
+however much money Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren were making in the towns, they
+felt they _must_ be in the country at that time of the year, for Mr. and
+Mrs. Blomgren were artists.
+
+They did not recognise Ingrid, and she went past them without taking any
+notice of them, for she was in a hurry; she was afraid of their
+detaining her. But directly afterwards she felt that it was heartless
+and unkind of her, and turned back.
+
+If Ingrid could have felt glad about anything, she would have been glad
+by seeing the old people's joy at meeting her. You may be sure they had
+plenty to talk about. The little horse turned its head time after time
+to see what was wrong with the roundabout.
+
+Strangely enough, it was Ingrid who talked the most. The two old people
+saw at once that she had been crying, and they were so concerned that
+she was obliged to tell them everything that had happened to her.
+
+But it was a relief to Ingrid to speak. The old people had their own way
+of taking things; they clapped their hands when she told them how she
+had got out of the grave and how she had frightened the Pastor's wife.
+They caressed her and praised her because she had run away from the
+Parsonage. For them nothing was dull or sad, but everything was bright
+and hopeful. They simply had no standard by which to measure reality,
+and therefore its hardness could not affect them. They compared
+everything they heard with the pieces from marionette theatres and
+pantomimes. Of course, one also put a little sorrow and misery into the
+pantomime, but that was only done to heighten the effect. And, of
+course, everything would end well. In the pantomimes it always ended
+well.
+
+There was something infectious in all this hopefulness. Ingrid knew they
+did not at all understand how great her trouble was, but it was cheering
+all the same to listen to them.
+
+But they were also of real help to Ingrid. They told her that they had
+had dinner a short time since at the inn at Tors[:a]ker, and just as they
+were getting up from the table some peasants came driving up with a man
+who was mad. Mrs. Blomgren could not bear to see mad people, and wanted
+to go away at once, and Mr. Blomgren had consented. But supposing it was
+Ingrid's madman! And they had hardly said the words before Ingrid said
+that it was very likely, and wanted to set off at once.
+
+Mr. Blomgren then asked his wife in his own ceremonious manner if they
+were not in the country solely on account of the spring, and if it were
+not just the same where they went. And old Mrs. Blomgren asked him
+equally ceremoniously in her turn if he thought she would leave her
+beloved Ingrid before she had reached the harbour of her happiness.
+
+Then the old roundabout horse was turned, and conversation grew more
+difficult, because they again had to play on the Jews'-harp. As soon as
+Mrs. Blomgren wished to say anything, she was obliged to hand the
+instrument to Mr. Blomgren, and when Mr. Blomgren wanted to speak, he
+gave it back again to his wife. And the little horse stood still every
+time the instrument passed from mouth to mouth.
+
+The whole time they did their best to comfort Ingrid. They related all
+the fairy tales they had seen represented at the dolls' theatre. They
+comforted her with the 'Enchanted Princess,' they comforted her with
+'Cinderella,' they comforted her with all the fairy tales under the sun.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren watched Ingrid when they saw that her eyes grew
+brighter. 'Artist's eyes,' they said, nodding contentedly to each other.
+'What did we say? Artist's eyes!'
+
+In some incomprehensible manner they had got the idea that Ingrid had
+become one of them, an artist. They thought she was playing a part in a
+drama. It was a triumph for them in their old age.
+
+On they went as fast as they could. The old couple were only afraid that
+the madman would not be at the inn any longer. But he was there, and the
+worst of it was, no one knew how to get him away.
+
+The two peasants from Raglanda who had brought him had taken him to one
+of the rooms and locked him in whilst they were waiting for fresh
+horses. When they left him his arms had been tied behind him, but he had
+somehow managed to free his hands from the cord, and when they came to
+fetch him he was free, and, beside himself with rage, had seized a
+chair, with which he threatened to strike anyone who approached him.
+They could do nothing but beat a hasty retreat and lock the door. The
+peasants now only waited for the landlord and his men to return and help
+them to bind him again.
+
+All the hope which Ingrid's old friends had reawakened within her was,
+however, not quenched. She quite saw that Gunnar Hede was worse than he
+had ever been before, but that was what she had expected. She still
+hoped. It was not their fairy tales, it was their great love that had
+given her new hope.
+
+She asked the men to let her go to the madman. She said she knew him,
+and he would not do her any harm; but the peasants said they were not
+mad. The man in the room would kill anybody who went in.
+
+Ingrid sat down to think. She thought how strange it was that she should
+meet Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren just to-day. Surely that meant something. She
+would never have met them if it had not been for some purpose. And
+Ingrid thought of how Hede had regained his senses the last time. Could
+she not again make him do something which would remind him of olden
+days, and drive away his mad thoughts? She thought and thought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Blomgren sat on a seat outside the inn, looking more
+unhappy than one would have thought was possible. They were not far from
+crying.
+
+Ingrid, their 'child,' came up to them with a smile--such a smile as
+only she could have--and stroked their old, wrinkled cheeks, and said
+it would please her so much if they would let her see a performance like
+those she used to see every day in the olden time. It would be such a
+comfort to her.
+
+At first they said no, for they were not at all in proper artist humour,
+but when she had expended a few smiles upon them they could not resist
+her. They went to their cart and unpacked their costumes.
+
+When they were ready they called for the blind man, and Ingrid selected
+the place where the performance was to be held. She would not let them
+perform in the yard, but took them into the garden belonging to the inn,
+for there was a garden belonging to this inn. It was mostly full of beds
+for vegetables which had not yet come up, but here and there was an
+apple-tree in bloom. And Ingrid said she would like them to perform
+under one of the apple-trees in bloom.
+
+Some lads and servant-girls came running when they heard the violin, so
+there was a small audience. But it was hard work for Mr. and Mrs.
+Blomgren to perform. Ingrid had asked too much of them; they were really
+much too sad.
+
+And it was very unfortunate that Ingrid had taken them out into the
+garden. She had evidently not remembered that the rooms in the inn faced
+this way. Mrs. Blomgren was very nearly running away when she heard a
+window in one of the rooms quickly opened. Supposing the madman had
+heard the music, and supposing he jumped out of the window and came to
+them?
+
+But Mrs. Blomgren was somewhat reassured when she saw who had opened
+the window. It was a young gentleman with a pleasant face. He was in
+shirt-sleeves, but otherwise very decently dressed. His eye was quiet,
+his lips smiled, and he stroked his hair back from his forehead with his
+hand.
+
+Mr. Blomgren was working, and was so taken up with the performance that
+he did not notice anything. Mrs. Blomgren, who had nothing else to do
+but kiss her hands in all directions, had time to observe everything.
+
+It was astonishing how radiant Ingrid suddenly looked. Her eyes shone as
+never before, and her face was so white that light seemed to come from
+it. And all this radiancy was directed towards the man in the window.
+
+He did not hesitate long. He stood up on the window-sill and jumped down
+to them, and he went up to the blind man and asked him to lend him his
+violin. Ingrid at once took the violin from the blind man and gave it to
+him.
+
+'Play the waltz from "Freisch[:u]tz,"' she said.
+
+Then the man began to play, and Ingrid smiled, but she looked so
+unearthly that Mrs. Blomgren almost thought that she would dissolve into
+a sunbeam, and fly away from them. But as soon as Mrs. Blomgren heard
+the man play she knew him again.
+
+'Is that how it is?' she said to herself. 'Is it he? That was why she
+wanted to see two old people perform.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gunnar Hede, who had been walking up and down his room in such a rage
+that he felt inclined to kill someone, had suddenly heard a blind man
+playing outside his window, and that had taken him back to an incident
+in his former life.
+
+He could not at first understand where his own violin was, but then he
+remembered that Alin had taken it away with him, and now the only thing
+left for him to do was to try and borrow the blind man's violin to play
+himself quiet again; he was so excited. And as soon as he had got the
+violin in his hand he began to play. It never occurred to him that he
+could not play. He had no idea that for several years he had only been
+able to play some poor little tunes.
+
+He thought all the time he was in Upsala, outside the house with the
+Virginia-creepers, and he expected the acrobats would begin to dance as
+they had done last time. He endeavoured to play with more life to make
+them do so, but his fingers were stiff and awkward; the bow would not
+properly obey them. He exerted himself so much that the perspiration
+stood on his forehead.
+
+At last, however, he got hold of the right tune--the same they had
+danced to the last time. He played it so enticingly, so temptingly, that
+it ought to have melted their hearts. But the old acrobats did not begin
+to dance. It was a long time since they had met the student at Upsala;
+they did not remember how enthusiastic they were then. They had no idea
+what he expected them to do.
+
+Gunnar Hede looked at Ingrid for an explanation why they did not dance.
+When he looked at her there was such an unearthly radiance in her eyes
+that in his astonishment he gave up playing. He stood a moment looking
+round the small crowd. They all looked at him with such strange, uneasy
+glances. It was impossible to play with people staring at him so. He
+simply went away from them. There were some apple-pears in bloom at the
+other end of the garden, so he went there.
+
+He saw now that nothing fitted in with the ideas he had just had that
+Alin had locked him in, and that he was at Upsala. The garden was too
+large, and the house was not covered with red creepers. No, it could not
+be Upsala. But he did not mind very much where he was. It seemed to him
+as if he had not played for centuries, and now he had got hold of a
+violin. Now he would play. He placed the violin against his cheek, and
+began. But again he was stopped by the stiffness in his fingers. He
+could only play the very simplest things.
+
+'I shall have to begin at the beginning,' he said.
+
+And he smiled and played a little minuet. It was the first thing he had
+learnt. His father had played it to him, and he had afterwards played it
+from ear. He saw all at once the whole scene before him, and he heard
+the words:
+
+'The little Prince should learn to dance, but he broke his little leg.'
+
+Then he tried to play several other small dances. They were some he had
+played as a school boy. They had asked him to play at the
+dancing-lessons at the young ladies' boarding-school. He could see the
+girls dance and swing about, and could hear the dancing-mistress beat
+the time with her foot.
+
+Then he grew bolder. He played first violin in one of Mozart's
+quartettes. When he learnt that, he was in the Sixth Form at the Latin
+school at Falun. Some old gentlemen had practised this quartette for a
+concert, but the first violin had been taken ill, and he was asked to
+take his part, young as he was. He remembered how proud he had been.
+
+Gunnar Hede only thought of getting his fingers into practice when he
+played these childish exercises. But he soon noticed that something
+strange was happening to him. He had a distinct sensation that in his
+brain there was some great darkness that hid his past. As soon as he
+tried to remember anything, it was as if he were trying to find
+something in a dark room; but when he played, some of the darkness
+vanished. Without his having thought of it, the darkness had vanished so
+much that he could now remember his childhood and school life.
+
+Then he made up his mind to let himself be led by the violin; perhaps it
+could drive away all the darkness. And so it did, for every piece he
+played the darkness vanished a little. The violin led him through the
+one year after the other, awoke in him memories of studies, friends and
+pleasures. The darkness stood like a wall before him, but when he
+advanced against it, armed with the violin, it vanished step by step.
+Now and then he looked round to see whether it closed again behind him.
+But behind him was bright day.
+
+The violin came to a series of duets for piano and violin. He only
+played a bar or two of each. But a large portion of the darkness
+vanished; he remembered his _fianc['e]e_ and his engagement. He would like
+to have dwelt a little over this, but there was still much darkness left
+to be played away. He had no time.
+
+He glided into a hymn. He had heard it once when he was unhappy. He
+remembered he was sitting in a village church when he heard it. But why
+had he been unhappy? Because he went about the country selling goods
+like a poor pedlar. It was a hard life. It was sad to think about it.
+
+The bow went over the strings like a whirlwind, and again cut through a
+large portion of the darkness. Now he saw the Fifty-Mile Forest, the
+snow-covered animals, the weird shapes, the drifts made of them. He
+remembered the journey to see his _fianc['e]e_, remembered that she had
+broken the engagement. All this became clear to him at one time.
+
+He really felt neither sorrow nor joy over anything he remembered. The
+most important thing was that he did remember. This of itself was an
+unspeakable pleasure. But all at once the bow stopped, as if of its own
+accord. It would not lead him any further. And yet there was more--much
+more--that he must remember. The darkness still stood like a solid wall
+before him.
+
+He compelled the bow to go on. And it played two quite common tunes, the
+poorest he had ever heard. How could his bow have learned such tunes?
+The darkness did not vanish in the least for these tunes. They really
+taught him nothing; but from them came a terror which he could not
+remember having ever felt before--an inconceivable, awful fear, the mad
+terror of a doomed soul.
+
+He stopped playing; he could not bear it. What was there in these
+tunes--what was there? The darkness did not vanish for them, and the
+awful thing was, that it seemed to him that when he did not advance
+against the darkness with the violin and drive it before him, it came
+gliding towards him to overwhelm him.
+
+He had been standing playing, with his eyes half closed; now he opened
+them and looked into the world of reality. He saw Ingrid, who had been
+standing listening to him the whole time. He asked her, not expecting an
+answer, but simply to keep back the darkness for a moment:
+
+'When did I last play this tune?'
+
+But Ingrid stood trembling. She had made up her mind, whatever happened,
+now he should hear the truth. Afraid she was, but at the same time full
+of courage, and quite decided as to what she meant to do. He should not
+again escape her, not be allowed to slip away from her. But in spite of
+her courage she did not dare to tell him straight out that these were
+the tunes he had played whilst he was out of his mind; she evaded the
+question.
+
+'That was what you used to play at Munkhyttan last winter,' she said.
+
+Hede felt as if he were surrounded by nothing but mysteries. Why did
+this young girl say '_du_' to him? She was not a peasant girl.[A] Her
+hair was dressed like other young ladies', on the top of the head and
+in small curls. Her dress was home-woven, but she wore a lace collar.
+She had small hands and a refined face. This face, with the large,
+dreamy eyes, could not belong to a peasant girl. Hede's memory could not
+tell him anything about her. Why did she, then, say '_du_' to him? How
+did she know that he had played these tunes at home?
+
+ [A] The peasants in the Dalar district used formerly to address
+ everybody by the pronoun _du_ (thou), even when speaking to the King;
+ this custom is now, however, not so general.--I.B.
+
+'What is your name?' he said. 'Who are you?'
+
+'I am Ingrid, whom you saw at Upsala many years ago, and whom you
+comforted because she could not learn to dance on the tight-rope.'
+
+This went back to the time he could partly remember. Now he did remember
+her.
+
+'How tall and pretty you have grown, Ingrid!' he said. 'And how fine you
+have become! What a beautiful brooch you have!'
+
+He had been looking at her brooch for some time. He thought he knew it;
+it was like a brooch of enamel and pearls his mother used to wear. The
+young girl answered at once.
+
+'Your mother gave it to me. You must have seen it before.'
+
+Gunnar Hede put down the violin and went up to Ingrid. He asked her
+almost violently:
+
+'How is it possible--how can you wear her brooch? How is it that I don't
+know anything about your knowing my mother?'
+
+Ingrid was frightened. She grew almost gray with terror. She knew
+already what the next question would be.
+
+'I know nothing, Ingrid. I don't know why I am here. I don't know why
+you are here. Why don't I know all this?'
+
+'Oh, don't ask me!'
+
+She went back a step or two, and stretched out her hands as if to
+protect herself.
+
+'Won't you tell me?'
+
+'Don't ask! don't ask!'
+
+He seized her roughly by the wrist to compel her to tell the truth.
+
+'Tell me! I am in my full senses! Why is there so much I can't
+remember?'
+
+She saw something wild and threatening in his eyes. She knew now that
+she would be obliged to tell him. But she felt as if it were impossible
+to tell a man that he had been mad. It was much more difficult than she
+had thought. It was impossible--impossible!
+
+'Tell me!' he repeated.
+
+But she could hear from his voice that he would not hear it. He was
+almost ready to kill her if she told him. Then she summoned up all her
+love, and looked straight into Gunnar Hede's eyes, and said:
+
+'You have not been quite right.'
+
+'Not for a long time?'
+
+'I don't quite know--not for three or four years.'
+
+'Have I been out of my mind?'
+
+'No, no! You have bought and sold and gone to the fairs.'
+
+'In what way have I been mad?'
+
+'You were frightened.'
+
+'Of whom was I frightened?'
+
+'Of animals.'
+
+'Of goats, perhaps?'
+
+'Yes, mostly of goats.'
+
+He had stood clutching her by the wrist the whole time. He now flung her
+hand away from him--simply flung it. He turned away from Ingrid in a
+rage, as if she had maliciously told him an infamous lie.
+
+But this feeling gave way for something else which excited him still
+more. He saw before his eyes, as distinctly as if it had been a picture,
+a tall Dalar man, weighed down by a huge pack. He was going into a
+peasant's house, but a wretched little dog came rushing at him. He
+stopped and curtsied and curtsied, and did not dare to go in until a man
+came out of the house, laughing, and drove the dog away.
+
+When he saw this he again felt that terrible fear. In this anguish the
+vision disappeared, but then he heard voices. They shouted and shrieked
+around him. They laughed. Derision was showered upon him. Worst and
+loudest were the shrill voices of children. One word, one name came over
+and over again: it was shouted, shrieked, whispered, wheezed into his
+ear--'The Goat! the Goat!' And that all meant him, Gunnar Hede. All that
+he had lived in. He felt in full consciousness the same unspeakable fear
+he had suffered whilst out of his mind. But now it was not fear for
+anything outside himself--now he was afraid of himself.
+
+'It was I! it was I!' he said, wringing his hands. The next moment he
+was kneeling against a low seat. He laid his head down and cried, cried:
+'It was I!' He moaned and sobbed. 'It was I!' How could he have courage
+to bear this thought--a madman, scorned and laughed at by all? 'Ah! let
+me go mad again!' he said, hitting the seat with his fist. 'This is more
+than a human being can bear.'
+
+He held his breath a moment. The darkness came towards him as the
+saviour he invoked. It came gliding towards him like a mist. A smile
+passed over his lips. He could feel the muscles of his face relax, feel
+that he again had the look of a madman. But that was better. The other
+he could not bear. To be pointed at, jeered at, scorned, mad! No, it was
+better to be so again and not to know it. Why should he come back to
+life? Everyone must loathe him. The first light, fleeting clouds of the
+great darkness began to enwrap him.
+
+Ingrid stood there, seeing and hearing all his anguish, not knowing but
+that all would soon be lost again. She saw clearly that madness was
+again about to seize him. She was so frightened, so frightened, all her
+courage had gone. But before he again lost his senses, and became so
+scared that he allowed no one to come near him, she would at least take
+leave of him and of all her happiness.
+
+Gunnar Hede felt that Ingrid came and knelt down beside him, laid her
+arm round his neck, put her cheek to his, and kissed him. She did not
+think herself too good to come near him, the madman, did not think
+herself too good to kiss him.
+
+There was a faint hissing in the darkness. The mist lifted, and it was
+as if serpents had raised their heads against him, and now wheezed with
+anger that they could not reach to sting him.
+
+'Do not be so unhappy,' Ingrid said. 'Do not be so unhappy. No one
+thinks of the past, if you will only get well.'
+
+'I want to be mad again,' he said. 'I cannot bear it. I cannot bear to
+think how I have been.'
+
+'Yes, you can,' said Ingrid.
+
+'No; that no one can forget,' he moaned. 'I was so dreadful! No one can
+love me.'
+
+'I love you,' she said.
+
+He looked up doubtfully.
+
+'You kissed me in order that I should not go out of my mind again. You
+pity me.'
+
+'I will kiss you again,' she said.
+
+'You say that now because you think I am in need of hearing it.'
+
+'Are you in need of hearing that someone loves you?'
+
+'If I am--if I am? Ah, child,' he said, and tore himself away from her,
+'how can I possibly bear it, when I know that everyone who sees me
+thinks: "That fellow has been mad; he has gone about curtsying for dogs
+and cats."'
+
+Then he began again. He lay crying with his face in his hands.
+
+'It is better to go out of one's mind again. I can hear them shouting
+after me, and I see myself, and the anguish, the anguish, the
+anguish----'
+
+But then Ingrid's patience came to an end.
+
+'Yes, that is right,' she cried; 'go out of your mind again. I call that
+manly to go mad in order to escape a little anguish.'
+
+She sat biting her lips, struggling with her tears, and as she could
+not get the words out quickly enough, she seized him by the shoulder and
+shook him. She was enraged and quite beside herself with anger because
+he would again escape her, because he did not struggle and fight.
+
+'What do you care about me? What do you care about your mother? You go
+mad, and then you will have peace.' She shook him again by the arm. 'To
+be saved from anguish, you say, but you don't care about one who has
+been waiting for you all her life. If you had any thought for anyone but
+yourself, you would fight against this and get well; but you have no
+thought for others. You can come so touchingly in visions and dreams and
+beg for help, but in reality you will not have any help. You imagine
+that your sufferings are greater than anyone else's, but there are
+others who have suffered more than you.'
+
+At last Gunnar Hede raised his eyes, and looked her straight in the
+face. She was anything but beautiful at this moment. Tears were
+streaming down her cheeks, and her lips trembled, whilst she tried to
+get out the words between her sobs. But in his eyes her emotion only
+made her more beautiful. A wonderful peace came over him, and a great
+and humble thankfulness. Something great and wonderful had come to him
+in his deepest humiliation. It must be a great love--a great love.
+
+He had sat bemoaning his wretchedness, and Love came and knocked at his
+door. He would not merely be tolerated when he came back to life;
+people would not only with difficulty refrain from laughing at him.
+
+There was one who loved him and longed for him. She spoke hardly to him,
+but he heard love trembling in every single word. He felt as if she were
+offering him thrones and kingdoms. She told him that whilst he had been
+out of his mind he had saved her life. He had awakened her from the
+dead, had helped her, protected her. But this was not enough for her;
+she would possess him altogether.
+
+When she kissed him he had felt a life-giving balm enter his sick soul,
+but he had hardly dared to think that it was love that made her. But he
+could not doubt her anger and her tears. He was beloved--he, poor
+wretched creature! he who had been held in derision by everybody! and
+before the great and humble bliss which now filled Gunnar Hede vanished
+the last darkness. It was drawn aside like a heavy curtain, and he saw
+plainly before him the region of terror through which he had wandered.
+But there, too, he had met Ingrid; there he had lifted her from the
+grave; there he had played for her at the hut in the forest; there she
+had striven to heal him.
+
+But only the memory of her came back: the feelings with which she had
+formerly inspired him now awoke. Love filled his whole being; he felt
+the same burning longing that he had felt in the churchyard at Raglanda
+when she was taken from him.
+
+In that region of terror, in that great desert, there had at any rate
+grown one flower that had comforted him with fragrance and beauty, and
+now he felt that love would dwell with him forever. The wild flower of
+the desert had been transplanted into the garden of life, and had taken
+root and grown and thriven, and when he felt this he knew he was saved;
+he knew that the darkness had found its master.
+
+Ingrid was silent. She was tired, as one is tired after hard work; but
+she was also content, for she felt she had carried out her work in the
+best possible manner. She knew she had conquered.
+
+At last Gunnar Hede broke the silence.
+
+'I promise you that I will not give in,' he said.
+
+'Thank you,' Ingrid answered.
+
+Nothing more was said.
+
+Gunnar Hede thought he would never be able to tell her how much he loved
+her. It could never be told in words, only shown every day and every
+hour of his life.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ II
+
+ _Queens at_ KUNGAH[:A]LLA
+
+
+
+
+_Queens at_ KUNGAH[:A]LLA
+
+_On the_ SITE _of the Great_ KUNGAH[:A]LLA
+
+
+Should a stranger who had heard about the old city of Kungah[:a]lla ever
+visit the site on the northern river where it once lay, he would
+assuredly be much surprised. He would ask himself whether churches and
+fortifications could melt away like snow, or if the earth had opened and
+swallowed them up. He stands on a spot where formerly there was a mighty
+city, and he cannot find a street or a landing-stage. He sees neither
+ruins nor traces of devastating fires; he only sees a country seat,
+surrounded by green trees and red outbuildings. He sees nothing but
+broad meadows and fields, where the plough does its work year after year
+without being hindered either by brick foundations or old pavements.
+
+He would probably first of all go down to the river. He would not expect
+to see anything of the great ships that went to the Baltic ports or to
+distant Spain, but he would in all likelihood think that he might find
+traces of the old ship-yards, of the large boat-houses and
+landing-stages. He presumes that he will find some of the old kilns
+where they used to refine salt; he will see the worn-out pavement on the
+main street that led to the harbour. He will inquire about the German
+pier and the Swedish pier; he would like to see the Weeping Bridge where
+the women of Kungah[:a]lla took leave of their husbands and sons when they
+went to distant lands, but when he comes down to the river's edge he
+sees nothing but a forest of waving reeds. He sees a road full of holes
+leading down to the ferry; he sees a couple of common barges and a
+little flat-bottomed ferryboat that is taking a peasant cart over to
+Hisingen, but no big ships come gliding up the river. He does not even
+see any dark hulls lying and rotting at the bottom of the river.
+
+As he does not find anything remarkable down at the harbour, he will
+probably begin to look for the celebrated Convent Hill. He expects to
+see traces of the palisading and ramparts which in olden days surrounded
+it. He is hoping to see the ruins of the high walls and the long
+cloisters. He says to himself that anyhow there must be ruins of that
+magnificent church where the cross was kept--that miracle-working cross
+which had been brought from Jerusalem. He thinks of the number of
+monuments covering the holy hills which rise over other ancient cities,
+and his heart begins to beat with glad expectation. But when he comes to
+the old Convent Hill which rises above the fields, he finds nothing but
+clusters of murmuring trees; he finds neither walls, nor towers, nor
+gables perforated with pointed arched windows. Garden seats and benches
+he will find under the shadow of the trees, but no cloisters decorated
+with pillars, no hewn gravestones.
+
+Well, if he has not found anything here, he will in any case try to
+find the old King's Hall. He thinks about the large halls from which
+Kungah[:a]lla is supposed to have derived its name. It might be that there
+was something left of the timber--a yard thick--that formed the walls,
+or of the deep cellars under the great hall where the Norwegian kings
+celebrated their banquets. He thinks of the smooth green courtyard of
+the King's Hall, where the kings used to ride their silver-shod
+chargers, and where the queens used to milk the golden-horned cows. He
+thinks of the lofty ladies' bower; of the brewing-room, with its large
+boilers; of the huge kitchen, where half an ox at a time was placed in
+the pot, and where a whole hog was roasted on the spit. He thinks of the
+serfs' house, of the falcon's cages, of the great pantries--house by
+house all round the courtyard, moss-grown with age, decorated with
+dragons' heads. Of such a number of buildings there must be some traces
+left, he thinks.
+
+But should he then inquire for the old King's Hall, he will be taken to
+a modern country-house, with glass veranda and conservatories. The
+King's seat has vanished, and with it all the drinking-horns, inlaid
+with silver, and the shields, covered with skin. One cannot even show
+him the well-kept courtyard, with its short, close grass, and with
+narrow paths of black earth. He sees strawberry-beds and hedges of
+rose-trees; he sees happy children and young girls dancing under apple
+and pear trees. But he does not see strong men wrestling, or knights
+playing at ball.
+
+Perhaps he asks about the great oak on the Market Place, beneath which
+the Kings sat in judgment, and where the twelve stones of judgment were
+set up. Or about the long street, which was said to be seven miles long!
+Or about the rich merchants' houses, separated by dark lanes, each
+having its own landing-stage and boathouse down by the river. Or about
+the Marie Church in the Market Place, where the seamen brought their
+offerings of small, full-rigged ships, and the sorrowful, small silver
+hearts.
+
+But there is nothing left to show him of all these things. Cows and
+sheep graze where the long street used to be. Rye and barley grow on the
+Market Place, and stables and barns stand where people used to flock
+round the tempting market-stalls.
+
+How can he help feeling disappointed? Is there not a single thing to be
+found, he says, not a single relic left? And he thinks perhaps that they
+have been deceiving him. The great Kungah[:a]lla can never have stood
+here, he says. It must have stood in some other place.
+
+Then they take him down to the riverside, and show him a roughly-hewn
+stone block, and they scrape away the silver-gray lichen, so that he can
+see there are some figures hewn in the stone. He will not be able to
+understand what they represent; they will be as incomprehensible to him
+as the spots in the moon. But they will assure him that they represent a
+ship and an elk, and that they were cut in the stone in the olden days
+to commemorate the foundation of the city.
+
+And should he still not be able to understand, they will tell him what
+is the meaning of the inscription on the stone.
+
+
+
+
+_The Forest_ QUEEN
+
+
+Marcus Antonius Poppius was a Roman merchant of high standing. He traded
+with distant lands; and from the harbour at Ostia he sent well-equipped
+triremas to Spain, to Britain, and even to the north coast of Germany.
+Fortune favoured him, and he amassed immense riches, which he hoped to
+leave as an inheritance to his only son. Unfortunately, this only son
+had not inherited his father's ability. This happens, unfortunately, all
+the world over. A rich man's only son. Need one say more? It is, and
+always will be, the same story.
+
+One would almost think that the gods give rich men these incorrigible
+idlers, these dull, pale, languid fools of sons, to show man what
+unutterable folly it is to amass riches. When will the eyes of mankind
+be opened? When will men listen to the warning voice of the gods?
+
+Young Silvius Antonius Poppius, at the age of twenty, had already tried
+all the pleasures of life. He was also fond of letting people see that
+he was tired of them; but in spite of that, one did not notice any
+diminution in the eagerness with which he sought them. On the contrary,
+he was quite in despair when a singularly persistent ill-luck began to
+pursue him, and to interfere with all his pleasures. His Numidian horses
+fell lame the day before the great chariot race of the year; his
+illicit love affairs were found out; his cleverest cook died from
+malaria. This was more than enough to crush a man whose strength had not
+been hardened by exertion and toil. Young Poppius felt so unhappy that
+he made up his mind to take his own life. He seemed to think that this
+was the only way in which he could cheat the God of Misfortune who
+pursued him and made his life a burden.
+
+One can understand that an unhappy creature commits suicide in order to
+escape the persecution of man; but only a fool like Silvius Antonius
+could think of adopting such means to flee from the gods. One recalls
+involuntarily the story of the man who, to escape from the lion, sprang
+right into its open jaws.
+
+Young Silvius was much too effeminate to choose a bloody death. Neither
+had he any inclination to die from a painful poison. After careful
+consideration, he resolved to die the gentle death of the waves.
+
+But when he went down to the Tiber to drown himself he could not make up
+his mind to give his body to the dirty, sluggish water of the river. For
+a long time he stood undecided, staring into the stream. Then he was
+seized by the magic charm which lies dreamily over a river. He felt that
+great, holy longing which fills these never-resting wanderers of nature;
+he would see the sea.
+
+'I will die in the clear blue sea, through which the sun's rays
+penetrate right to the bottom,' said Silvius Antonius. 'My body shall
+rest upon a couch of pink coral. The foamy waves which I set in motion
+when I sink into the deep shall be snow-white and fresh; they shall not
+be like the sooty froth which lies quivering at the river-side.'
+
+He immediately hurried home, had his horses harnessed and drove to
+Ostia. He knew that one of his father's ships was lying in the harbour
+ready to sail. Young Poppius drove his horses at a furious pace, and he
+succeeded in getting on board just as the anchor was being weighed. Of
+course he did not think it necessary to take any baggage with him. He
+did not even trouble to ask the skipper for what place the craft was
+bound. To the sea they were going, in any case--that was enough for him.
+
+Nor was it very long before the young suicide reached the goal of his
+desire. The trirema passed the mouth of the Tiber, and the Mediterranean
+lay before Silvius Antonius, its sparkling waves bathed in sun. Its
+beauty made Silvius Antonius believe in the poet's assertion that the
+swelling ocean is but a thin veil which covers the most beautiful world.
+He felt bound to believe that he who boldly makes his way through this
+cover will immediately reach the sea-god's palace of pearls. The young
+man congratulated himself that he had chosen this manner of death. And
+one could scarcely call it that; it was impossible to believe that this
+beautiful water could kill. It was only the shortest road to a land
+where pleasure is not a delusion, leaving nothing but distaste and
+loathing. He could only with difficulty suppress his eagerness. But the
+whole deck was full of sailors. Even Silvius could understand that if he
+now sprang into the sea the consequence would simply be that one of his
+father's sailors would quickly spring overboard and fish him out.
+
+As soon as the sails were set and the oarsmen were well in swing, the
+skipper came up to him and saluted him with the greatest politeness.
+
+'You intend, then, to go with me to Germany, my Silvius?' he said. 'You
+do me great honour.'
+
+Young Poppius suddenly remembered that this man used never to return
+from a voyage without bringing him some curious thing or other from the
+barbarous countries he had visited. Sometimes it was a couple of pieces
+of wood with which the savages made fire; sometimes it was the black
+horn of an ox, which they used as a drinking-vessel; sometimes a
+necklace of bear's teeth, which had been a great chief's mark of
+distinction.
+
+The good man beamed with joy at having his master's son on board his
+ship. He saw in it a new proof of the wisdom of old Poppius, in sending
+his son to distant lands, instead of letting him waste more time amongst
+the effeminate young Roman idlers.
+
+Young Poppius did not wish to undeceive him. He was afraid that if he
+disclosed his intention the skipper would at once turn back with him.
+
+'Verily, Galenus,' he said, 'I would gladly accompany you on this
+voyage, but I fear I must ask you to put me ashore at Baj[ae]. I made up
+my mind too late. I have neither clothes nor money.'
+
+But Galenus assured him that that need was soon remedied. Was he not
+upon his father's well-appointed vessel? He should not want for
+anything--neither warm fur tunic when the weather was cold, or light
+Syrian clothing of the kind that seamen wear when they cruise in fair
+weather in the friendly seas between the islands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Three months after their departure from Ostia, Galenus's trirema rowed
+in amongst a cluster of rocky islands. Neither the skipper nor any of
+his crew were quite clear as to where they really were, but they were
+glad to take shelter for a time from the storms that raged on the open
+sea.
+
+One could almost think that Silvius Antonius was right in his belief
+that some deity persecuted him. No one on the ship had ever before
+experienced such a voyage. The luckless sailors said to each other that
+they had not had fair weather for two days since they left Ostia. The
+one storm had followed upon the other. They had undergone the most
+terrible sufferings. They had suffered hunger and thirst, whilst they,
+day and night, exhausted and almost fainting from want of sleep, had had
+to manage sails and oars. The fact of the seamen being unable to trade
+had added to their despondency. How could they approach the coast and
+display their wares on the shore to effect an exchange in such weather?
+On the contrary, every time they saw the coast appear through the
+obstinate heavy mist that surrounded them, they had been compelled to
+put out to sea again for fear of the foam-decked rocks. One night, when
+they struck on a rock, they had been obliged to throw the half of their
+cargo into the sea. And as for the other half, they dared not think
+about it, as they feared it was completely spoiled by the breakers
+which had rolled over the ship.
+
+Certain it was that Silvius Antonius had proved himself not to be lucky
+at sea either. Silvius Antonius was still living; he had not drowned
+himself. It is difficult to say why he prolonged an existence which
+could not be of any more pleasure to him now than when he first made up
+his mind to cut it short. Perhaps he had hoped that the sea would have
+taken possession of him without he himself doing anything to bring it
+about. Perhaps his love for the sea had passed away during its bursts of
+anger; perhaps he had resolved to die in the opal-green perfumed water
+of his bath.
+
+But had Galenus and his men known why the young man had come on board,
+they would assuredly have bitterly complained that he had not carried
+out his intention, for they were all convinced that it was his presence
+which had called forth their misfortunes. Many a dark night Galenus had
+feared that the sailors would throw him into the sea. More than one of
+them related that in the terrible stormy nights he had seen dark hands
+stretching out of the water, grasping after the ship. And they did not
+think it was necessary to cast lots to find out who it was that these
+hands wanted to draw down into the deep. Both the skipper and the crew
+did Silvius Antonius the special honour to think that it was for his
+sake these storms rent the air and scourged the sea.
+
+If Silvius during this time had behaved like a man, if he had taken his
+share of their work and anxiety, then perhaps some of his companions
+might have had pity upon him as a being who had brought upon himself the
+wrath of the gods. But the young man had not understood how to win their
+sympathy. He had only thought of seeking shelter for himself from the
+wind, and of sending them to fetch furs and rugs from the stores for his
+protection from the cold.
+
+But for the moment all complaints over his presence had ceased. As soon
+as the storm had succeeded in driving the trirema into the quiet waters
+between the islands, its rage was spent. It behaved like a sheep-dog
+that becomes silent and keeps quiet as soon as it sees the sheep on the
+right way to the fold. The heavy clouds disappeared from the sky; the
+sun shone. For the first time during the voyage the sailors felt the
+joys of summer spreading over Nature.
+
+Upon these storm-beaten men the sunshine and the warmth had almost an
+intoxicating effect. Instead of longing for rest and sleep, they became
+as merry as happy children in the morning. They expected they would find
+a large continent behind all these rocks and boulders. They hoped to
+find people, and--who could tell?--on this foreign coast, which had
+probably never before been visited by a Roman ship, their wares would no
+doubt find a ready sale. In that case they might after all do some good
+business, and bring back with them skins of bear and elk, and large
+quantities of white wax and golden amber.
+
+Whilst the trirema slowly made its way between the rocks, which grew
+higher and higher and richer with verdure and trees, the crew made haste
+to decorate it so that it could attract the attention of the
+barbarians. The ship, which, even without any decoration, was a
+beautiful specimen of human handiwork, soon rivalled in splendour the
+most gorgeous bird. Recently tossed about by storms and ravaged by
+tempests, it now bore on its topmast a golden sceptre and sails striped
+with purple. In the bows a resplendent figure of Neptune was raised, and
+in the stern a tent of many-coloured silken carpets. And do not think
+the sailors neglected to hang the sides of the ship with rugs, the
+fringes of which trailed in the water, or to wind the long oars of the
+ship with golden ribbons. Neither did the crew of the ship wear the
+clothes they had worn during the voyage, and which the sea and the storm
+had done their best to destroy. They arrayed themselves in white
+garments, wound purple scarves round their waists, and placed glittering
+bands in their hair.
+
+Even Silvius Antonius roused himself from his apathy. It was as if he
+was glad of having at last found something to do which he thoroughly
+understood. He was shaved, had his hair trimmed, and his whole person
+rubbed over with fragrant scents. Then he put on a flowing robe, hung a
+mantle over his shoulders, and chose from the large casket of jewels
+which Galenus opened for him rings and bracelets, necklaces, and a
+golden belt. When he was ready he flung aside the purple curtains of the
+silken tent, and laid himself on a couch in the opening of the tent in
+order to be seen by the people on the shore.
+
+During these preparations the sea became narrower and narrower, and the
+sailors discovered that they were entering the mouth of a river. The
+water was fresh, and there was land on both sides. The trirema glided
+slowly onwards up the sparkling river. The weather was brilliant, and
+the whole of nature was gloriously peaceful. And how the magnificent
+merchantman enlivened the great solitude!
+
+On both sides of the river primeval forests, high and thick, met their
+view. Pine-trees grew right to the water's edge. The river in its
+eternal course had washed away the earth from the roots, and the hearts
+of the seamen were moved with solemn awe at the sight, not only of these
+venerable trees, but even more by that of the naked roots, which
+resembled the mighty limbs of a giant. 'Here,' they thought, 'man will
+never succeed in planting corn; here the ground will never be cleared
+for the building of a city, or even a farmstead. For miles round the
+earth is woven through with this network of roots, hard as steel. This
+alone is sufficient to make the dominion of the forest everlasting and
+unchangeable.'
+
+Along the river the trees grew so close, and their branches were so
+entangled, that they formed firm, impenetrable walls. These walls of
+prickly firs were so strong and high that no fortified city need wish
+for stronger defences. But here and there there was, all the same, an
+opening in this wall of firs. It was the paths the wild beasts had made
+on their way to the river to drink. Through these openings the strangers
+could obtain a glimpse of the interior of the forest. They had never
+seen anything like it. In sunless twilight there grew trees with trunks
+of greater circumference than the gate-towers on the walls of Rome.
+There was a multitude of trees, fighting with each other for light and
+air. Trees strove and struggled, trees were crippled and weighed down by
+other trees. Trees took root in the branches of other trees. Trees
+strove and fought as if they had been human beings.
+
+But if man or beast moved in this world of trees they must have other
+modes of making their way than those which the Romans knew, for from the
+ground right up to the top of the forest was a network of stiff bare
+branches. From these branches fluttered long tangles of gray lichen,
+transforming the trees into weird beings with hair and beard. And
+beneath them the ground was covered with rotten and rotting trunks, and
+one's feet would have sunk into the decayed wood as into melting snow.
+
+The forest sent forth a fragrance which had a drowsy effect upon the men
+on board the ship. It was the strong odour of resin and wild honey that
+blended with the sickly smell from the decayed wood, and from
+innumerable gigantic red and yellow mushrooms.
+
+There was no doubt something awe-inspiring in all this, but it was also
+elevating to see nature in all its power before man had yet interfered
+with its dominion. It was not long before one of the sailors began to
+sing a hymn to the God of the Forest, and involuntarily the whole crew
+joined in. They had quite given up all thought of meeting human beings
+in this forest-world. Their hearts were filled with pious thoughts;
+they thought of the forest god and his nymphs. They said to themselves
+that when Pan was driven from the woods of Hellas he must have taken
+refuge here in the far north. With pious songs they entered his kingdom.
+
+Every time there was a pause in the song they heard a gentle music from
+the forest. The tops of the fir-trees, vibrating in the noonday heat,
+sang and played. The sailors often discontinued their song in order to
+listen, if Pan was not playing upon his flute.
+
+The oarsmen rowed slower and slower. The sailors gazed searchingly into
+the golden-green and black-violet water flowing under the fir-trees.
+They peered between the tall reeds which quivered and rustled in the
+wash of the ship. They were in such a state of expectation that they
+started at the sight of the white water-lilies that shone in the dark
+water between the reeds.
+
+And again they sang the song, 'Pan, thou ruler of the forest!' They had
+given up all thoughts of trading. They felt that they stood at the
+entrance to the dwelling of the gods. All earthly cares had left them.
+Then, all of a sudden, at the outlet of one of the tracks, there stood
+an elk, a royal deer with broad forehead and a forest of antlers on its
+horns.
+
+There was a breathless silence on the trirema. They stemmed the oars to
+slacken speed. Silvius Antonius arose from his purple couch.
+
+All eyes were fixed upon the elk. They thought they could discern that
+it carried something on its back, but the darkness of the forest and
+the drooping branches made it impossible to see distinctly.
+
+The huge animal stood for a long time and scented the air, with its
+muzzle turned towards the trirema. At last it seemed to understand that
+there was no danger. It made a step towards the water. Behind the broad
+horns one could now discern more distinctly something light and white.
+They wondered if the elk carried on its back a harvest of wild roses.
+
+The crew gently plied their oars. The trirema drew nearer to the animal,
+which gradually moved towards the edge of the reeds.
+
+The elk strode slowly into the water, put down its feet carefully, so as
+not to be caught by the roots at the bottom. Behind the horns one could
+now distinctly see the face of a maiden, surrounded by fair hair. The
+elk carried on its back one of those nymphs whom they had been
+expectantly awaiting, and whom they felt sure would be found in this
+primeval world.
+
+A holy enthusiasm filled the men on the trirema. One of them, who hailed
+from Sicily, remembered a song which he had heard in his youth, when he
+played on the flowery plains around Syracuse. He began to sing softly:
+
+ 'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name,
+ Thou who in sheltered wood wanders, white like the moon.'
+
+And when the weather-beaten men understood the words, they tried to
+subdue the storm-like roar in their voices in order to sing:
+
+ 'Nymph, amongst flowers born, Arethusa by name.'
+
+They steered the ship nearer and nearer the reeds. They did not heed
+that it had already once or twice touched the bottom.
+
+But the young forest maiden sat and played hide-and-seek between the
+horns. One moment she hid herself, the next she peeped out. She did not
+stop the elk; she drove it further into the river.
+
+When the elk had gone some little distance, she stroked it to make it
+stop. Then she bent down and gathered two or three water-lilies. The men
+on the ship looked a little foolishly at each other. The nymph had,
+then, come solely for the purpose of plucking the white water-lilies
+that rocked on the waters of the river. She had not come for the sake of
+the Roman seamen.
+
+Then Silvius Antonius drew a ring from off his finger, sent up a shout
+that made the nymph look up, and threw her the ring. She stretched out
+her hand and caught it. Her eyes sparkled. She stretched out her hands
+for more. Silvius Antonius again threw a ring.
+
+Then she flung the water-lilies back into the river and drove the elk
+further into the water. Now and again she stopped, but then a ring came
+flying from Silvius Antonius, and enticed her further.
+
+All at once she overcame her hesitation. The colour rose in her cheeks.
+She came nearer to the ship without it being necessary to tempt her. The
+water was already up to the shoulders of the elk. She came right under
+the side of the vessel.
+
+The sailors hung over the gunwales to help the beautiful nymph, should
+she wish to go on board the trirema.
+
+But she saw only Silvius Antonius, as he stood there, decked with pearls
+and rings, and fair as the sunrise. And when the young Roman saw that
+the eyes of the nymph were fastened upon him, he leant over even further
+than the others. They cried to him that he should take care, lest he
+should lose his balance and fall into the sea. But this warning came too
+late. It is not known whether the nymph, with a quick movement, drew
+Silvius Antonius to her, or how it really happened, but before anyone
+thought of grasping him, he was overboard.
+
+All the same, there was no danger of Silvius Antonius drowning. The
+nymph stretched forth her lovely arms and caught him in them. He hardly
+touched the surface of the water. At the same moment her steed turned,
+rushed through the water, and disappeared in the forest. And loudly rang
+the laugh of the wild rider as she carried off Silvius Antonius.
+
+Galenus and his men stood for a moment horror-stricken. Then some of the
+men involuntarily threw off their clothes to swim to the shore; but
+Galenus stopped them.
+
+'Without doubt this is the will of the gods,' he said. 'Now we see the
+reason why they have brought Silvius Antonius Poppius through a thousand
+storms to this unknown land. Let us be glad that we have been an
+instrument in their hands; and let us not seek to hinder their will.'
+
+The seamen obediently took their oars and rowed down the river, softly
+singing to their even stroke the song of Arethusa's flight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When one has finished this story, surely the stranger must be able to
+understand the inscription on the old stone. He must be able to see both
+the elk with its many-antlered horns, and the trirema with its long
+oars. One does not expect that he shall be able to see Silvius Antonius
+Poppius and the beautiful queen of the primeval forest, for in order to
+see them he must have the eyes of the relaters of fairy-tales of bygone
+days. He will understand that the inscription hales from the young Roman
+himself, and that this also applies to the whole of the old story.
+Silvius Antonius has handed it down to his descendants word for word. He
+knew that it would gladden their hearts to know that they sprang from
+the world-famed Romans.
+
+But the stranger, of course, need not believe that any of Pan's nymphs
+have wandered here by the river's side. He understands quite well that a
+tribe of wild men have wandered about in the primeval forest, and that
+the rider of the elk was the daughter of the King who ruled over these
+people; and that the maiden who carried off Silvius Antonius would only
+rob him of his jewels, and that she did not at all think of Silvius
+Antonius himself, scarcely knew, perhaps, that he was a human being like
+herself. And the stranger can also understand that the name of Silvius
+Antonius would have been forgotten long ago in this country had he
+remained the fool he was. He will hear how misfortune and want roused
+the young Roman, so that from being the despised slave of the wild men
+he became their King. It was he who attacked the forest with fire and
+steel. He erected the first firmly-timbered house. He built vessels and
+planted corn. He laid the foundation of the power and glory of great
+Kungah[:a]lla.
+
+And when the stranger hears this, he looks around the country with a
+more contented glance than before. For even if the site of the city has
+been turned into fields and meadows, and even if the river no longer
+boasts of busy craft, still, this is the ground that has enabled him to
+breathe the air of the land of dreams, and shown him visions of bygone
+days.
+
+
+
+
+SIGRID STORR[:A]DE
+
+
+Once upon a time there was an exceedingly beautiful spring. It was the
+very spring that the Swedish Queen Sigrid Storr[:a]de summoned the
+Norwegian King Olaf Trygveson to meet her at Kungah[:a]lla in order to
+settle about their marriage.
+
+It was strange that King Olaf would marry Queen Sigrid; for although she
+was fair and well-gifted, she was a wicked heathen, whilst King Olaf was
+a Christian, who thought of nothing but building churches and compelling
+the people to be baptized. But maybe the King thought that God the
+Almighty would convert her.
+
+But it was even more strange that when Storr[:a]de had announced to King
+Olaf's messenger that she would set out for Kungah[:a]lla as soon as the
+sea was no longer ice-bound, spring should come almost immediately. Cold
+and snow disappeared at the time when winter is usually at its height.
+And when Storr[:a]de made known that she would begin to equip her ships,
+the ice vanished from the fjords, the meadows became green, and although
+it was yet a long time to Lady-day, the cattle could already be put out
+to grass.
+
+When the Queen rowed between the rocks of East Gothland into the Baltic,
+she heard the cuckoo's song, although it was so early in the year that
+one could scarcely expect to hear the lark.
+
+And great joy prevailed everywhere when Storr[:a]de proceeded on her way.
+All the trolls who had been obliged to flee from Norway during King
+Olaf's reign because they could not bear the sound of the church bells
+came on the rocks when they saw Storr[:a]de sailing past. They pulled up
+young birch-trees by the roots and waved them to the Queen, and then
+they went back to their rocky dwellings, where their wives were sitting,
+full of longing and anxiety, and said:
+
+'Woman, thou shalt not be cast down any longer. Storr[:a]de is now sailing
+to King Olaf. Now we shall soon return to Norway.'
+
+When the Queen sailed past Kullen, the Kulla troll came out of his cave,
+and he made the black mountain open, so that she saw the gold and silver
+veins which twisted through it, and it made the Queen happy to see his
+riches.
+
+When Storr[:a]de went past the Holland rivers, the Nixie came down from
+his waterfall, swam right out to the mouth of the river, and played upon
+his harp, so that the ship danced upon the waves.
+
+When she sailed past the Nidinge rocks, the mermen lay there and blew
+upon their seashell horns, and made the water splash in frothy pillars.
+And when the wind was against them, the most loathsome trolls came out
+of the deep to help Storr[:a]de's ship over the waves. Some lay at the
+stern and pushed, others took ropes of seaweed in their mouth and
+harnessed themselves before the ship like horses.
+
+The wild heathen, whom King Olaf would not allow to remain in the
+country on account of their great wickedness, came rowing towards the
+Queen's ship, with sails furled, and with their pole-axes raised as if
+for attack. But when they recognised the Queen, they allowed her to pass
+unhurt, and shouted after her:
+
+'We empty a beaker to thy wedding, Storr[:a]de.'
+
+All the heathen who lived along the coast laid firewood upon their stone
+altars, and sacrificed both sheep and goats to the old gods, in order
+that they should aid Storr[:a]de in her expedition to the Norwegian King.
+
+When the Queen sailed up the northern river, a mermaid swam alongside
+the ship, stretched her white arm out of the water, and gave her a large
+clear pearl.
+
+'Wear this, Storr[:a]de,' she said; 'then King Olaf will be so bewitched by
+thy beauty that he will never be able to forget thee.'
+
+When the Queen had sailed a short distance up the river, she heard such
+a roar and such a rushing noise that she expected to find a waterfall.
+The further she proceeded, the louder grew the noise. But when she rowed
+past the Golden Isle, and passed into a broad bay, she saw at the
+riverside the great Kungah[:a]lla.
+
+The town was so large, that as far as she could see up the river there
+was house after house, all imposing and well timbered, with many
+outhouses. Narrow lanes between the gray wooden walls led down to the
+river; there were large courtyards before the dwelling-houses,
+well-laid pathways went from each house down to its boathouse and
+landing-stage.
+
+Storr[:a]de commanded her men to row quite slowly. She herself stood on the
+poop of the ship and looked towards the shore.
+
+'Never before have I seen the like of this,' she said.
+
+She now understood that the roar she had heard was nothing but the noise
+of the work which went on at Kungah[:a]lla in the spring, when the ships
+were being made ready for their long cruises. She heard the smiths
+hammering with huge sledge-hammers, the baker's shovel clattered in the
+ovens; beams were hoisted on to heavy lighters with much crashing noise;
+young men planed oars and stripped the bark from the trees which were to
+be used for masts.
+
+She saw green courtyards, where handmaidens were twining ropes for the
+seafaring men, and where old men sat mending the gray wadmal sails. She
+saw the boat-builders tarring the new boats. Enormous nails were driven
+into strong oaken planks. The hulls of the ships were hauled out of the
+boathouses to be tightened; old ships were done up with freshly-painted
+dragon-heads; goods were stowed away; people took a hurried leave of
+each other; heavily-filled ships' chests were carried on board. Ships
+that were ready to sail left the shore. Storr[:a]de saw that the vessels
+rowing up the river were heavily laden with herrings and salt, but those
+making for the open sea were laden high up the masts with costly oak
+timber, hides, and skins.
+
+When the Queen saw all this she laughed with joy. She thought that she
+would willingly marry King Olaf in order to rule over such a city.
+Storr[:a]de rowed up to the King's Landing-Stage. There King Olaf stood
+ready to receive her, and when she advanced to meet him he thought that
+she was the fairest woman he had ever seen.
+
+They then proceeded to the King's Hall, and there was great harmony and
+friendship between them. When they went to table Storr[:a]de laughed and
+talked the whole time the Bishop was saying grace, and the King laughed
+and talked also, because he saw that it pleased Storr[:a]de. When the meal
+was finished, and they all folded their hands to listen to the Bishop's
+prayer, Storr[:a]de began to tell the King about her riches. She continued
+doing this as long as the prayer lasted, and the King listened to
+Storr[:a]de, and not to the Bishop.
+
+The King placed Storr[:a]de in the seat of honour, whilst he sat at her
+feet; and Storr[:a]de told him how she had caused two minor kings to be
+burnt to death for having had the presumption to woo her. The King was
+glad at hearing this, and thought that all minor kings who had the
+audacity to woo a woman like Storr[:a]de should share the same fate.
+
+When the bells rang for Evensong, the King rose to go to the Marie
+Church to pray, as was his wont. But then Storr[:a]de called for her bard,
+and he sang the lay of Brynhild Budles-dotter, who caused Sigurd
+Fofnersbane to be slain; and King Olaf did not go to church, but instead
+sat and looked into Storr[:a]de's radiant eyes, under the thick, black,
+arched eyebrows; and he understood that Storr[:a]de was Brynhild, and that
+she would kill him if ever he forsook her. He also thought that she was
+no doubt a woman who would be willing to burn on the pile with him. And
+whilst the priests were saying Mass and praying in the Marie Church at
+Kungah[:a]lla, King Olaf sat thinking that he would ride to Valhalla with
+Sigrid Storr[:a]de before him on the horse.
+
+That night the ferryman who conveyed people over the G[:o]ta River was
+busier than he had ever been before. Time after time he was called to
+the other side, but when he crossed over there was never anybody to be
+seen. But all the same he heard steps around him, and the boat was so
+full that it was nearly sinking. He rowed the whole night backwards and
+forwards, and did not know what it could all mean. But in the morning
+the whole shore was full of small footprints, and in the footprints the
+ferryman found small withered leaves, which on closer examination proved
+to be pure gold, and he understood they were the Brownies and Dwarfs who
+had fled from Norway when it became a Christian country, and who had now
+come back again. And the giant who lived in the Fortin mountain right to
+the east of Kungah[:a]lla threw one big stone after the other at the Marie
+Church the whole night through; and had not the giant been so strong
+that all the stones went too far and fell down at Hisingen, on the other
+side of the river, a great disaster would assuredly have happened.
+
+Every morning King Olaf was in the habit of going to Mass, but the day
+Storr[:a]de was at Kungah[:a]lla he thought he had not the time. As soon
+as he arose, he at once wanted to go down to the harbour, where her ship
+lay, in order to ask her if she would drink the wedding-cup with him
+before eventide.
+
+The Bishop had caused the bells to be rung the whole morning, and when
+the King left the King's Hall, and went across the Market Place, the
+church doors were thrown open, and beautiful singing was heard from
+within. But the King went on as if he had not heard anything. The Bishop
+ordered the bells to be stopped, the singing ceased, and the candles
+were extinguished.
+
+It all happened so suddenly that the King involuntarily stopped and
+looked towards the church, and it seemed to him that the church was more
+insignificant than he had ever before thought. It was smaller than the
+houses in the town; the peat roof hung heavily over its low walls
+without windows; the door was low, with a small projecting roof covered
+with fir-bark.
+
+Whilst the King stood thinking, a slender young woman came out of the
+dark church door. She wore a red robe and a blue mantle, and she bore in
+her arms a child with fair locks. Her dress was poor, and yet it seemed
+to the King that he had never before seen a more noble-looking woman.
+She was tall, dignified, and fair of face.
+
+The King saw with emotion that the young woman pressed the child close
+to her, and carried it with such care, that one could see it was the
+most precious thing she possessed in the world.
+
+As the woman stood in the doorway she turned her gentle face round and
+looked back, looked into the poor, dark little church with great longing
+in look and mien. When she again turned round towards the Market Place
+there were tears in her eyes. But just as she was about to step over the
+threshold into the Market Place her courage failed her. She leant
+against the doorposts and looked at the child with a troubled glance, as
+if to say:
+
+'Where in all the wide world shall we find a roof over our heads?'
+
+The King stood immovable, and looked at the homeless woman. What touched
+him the most was to see the child, who lay in her arms free from sorrow,
+stretch out his hand with a flower towards her, as if to win a smile
+from her. And then he saw she tried to drive away the sorrow from her
+face and smile at her son.
+
+'Who can that woman be?' thought the King. 'It seems to me that I have
+seen her before. She is undoubtedly a high-born woman who is in
+trouble.'
+
+However great a hurry the King was in to go to Storr[:a]de, he could not
+take his eyes away from the woman. It seemed to him that he had seen
+these tender eyes and this gentle face before, but where, he could not
+call to mind. The woman still stood in the church door, as if she could
+not tear herself away. Then the King went up to her and asked:
+
+'Why art thou so sorrowful?'
+
+'I am turned out of my home,' answered the woman, pointing to the little
+dark church.
+
+The King thought she meant that she had taken refuge in the church
+because she had no other place to go to. He again asked:
+
+'Who hath turned thee out?'
+
+She looked at him with an unutterably sorrowful glance.
+
+'Dost thou not know?' she asked.
+
+But then the King turned away from her. He had no time to stand guessing
+riddles, he thought. It appeared as if the woman meant that it was he
+who had turned her out. He did not understand what she could mean.
+
+The King went on quickly. He went down to the King's Landing-Stage,
+where Storr[:a]de's ship was lying. At the harbour the Queen's servants met
+the King. Their clothes were braided with gold, and they wore silver
+helmets on their heads.
+
+Storr[:a]de stood on her ship looking towards Kungah[:a]lla, rejoicing
+in its power and wealth. She looked at the city as if she already
+regarded herself as its Queen. But when the King saw Storr[:a]de, he
+thought at once of the gentle woman who, poor and sorrowful, had been
+turned out of the church.
+
+'What is this?' he thought. 'It seems to me as if she were fairer than
+Storr[:a]de.'
+
+When Storr[:a]de greeted him with smiles, he thought of the tears that
+sparkled in the eyes of the other woman. The face of the strange woman
+was so clear to King Olaf that he could not help comparing it, feature
+for feature, with Storr[:a]de's. And when he did that all Storr[:a]de's
+beauty vanished. He saw that Storr[:a]de's eyes were cruel and her mouth
+sensual. In each of her features he saw a sin. He could still see she
+was beautiful, but he no longer took pleasure in her countenance. He
+began to loathe her as if she were a beautiful poisonous snake.
+
+When the Queen saw the King come a victorious smile passed over her
+lips.
+
+'I did not expect thee so early, King Olaf,' she said. 'I thought thou
+wast at Mass.'
+
+The King felt an irresistible inclination to contradict Storr[:a]de, and do
+everything she did not want.
+
+'Mass has not yet begun,' he said. 'I have come to ask thee to go with
+me to the house of my God.'
+
+When the King said this he saw an angry look in Storr[:a]de's eyes, but she
+continued to smile.
+
+'Rather come to me on my ship,' she said, 'and I will show thee the
+presents I have brought for thee.'
+
+She took up a sword inlaid with gold, as if to tempt him; but the King
+thought all the time that he could see the other woman at her side, and
+it appeared to him that Storr[:a]de stood amongst her treasures like a foul
+dragon.
+
+'Answer me first,' said the King, 'if thou wilt go with me to church.'
+
+'What have I to do in thy church?' she asked mockingly.
+
+Then she saw that the King's brow darkened, and she perceived that he
+was not of the same mind as the day before. She immediately changed her
+manner, and became gentle and submissive.
+
+'Go thou to church as much as thou likest, even if I do not go. There
+shall be no discord between us on that account.'
+
+The Queen came down from the ship and went up to the King. She held in
+her hand a sword and a mantle trimmed with fur which she would give him.
+But in the same moment the King happened to look towards the harbour. At
+some distance he saw the other woman; her head was bowed, and she walked
+with weary steps, but she still bore the child in her arms.
+
+'What art thou looking so eagerly after, King Olaf?' Storr[:a]de asked.
+
+Then the other woman turned round and looked at the King, and as she
+looked at him it appeared to him as if a ring of golden light surrounded
+her head and that of the child, more beautiful than the crown of any
+King or Queen. Then she immediately turned round and walked again
+towards the town, and he saw her no more.
+
+'What art thou looking so eagerly after?' again asked Storr[:a]de.
+
+But when King Olaf now turned to the Queen she appeared to him old and
+ugly, and full of the world's sin and wickedness, and he was terrified
+at the thought that he might have fallen into her snares.
+
+He had taken off his glove to give her his hand; but he now took the
+glove and threw it in her face instead.
+
+'I will not own thee, foul woman and heathen dog that thou art!' he
+said.
+
+Then Storr[:a]de drew backwards. But she soon regained the command over
+herself, and answered:
+
+'That blow may prove thy destruction, King Olaf Trygveson.'
+
+And she was white as H['e]l when she turned away from him and went on board
+her ship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next night King Olaf had a strange dream. What he saw in his dream was
+not the earth, but the bottom of the sea. It was a grayish-green field,
+over which there were many fathoms of water. He saw fish swimming after
+their prey; he saw ships gliding past on the surface of the water, like
+dark clouds; and he saw the disc of the sun, dull as a pale moon.
+
+Then he saw the woman he had seen at the church-door wandering along the
+bottom of the sea. She had the same stooping gait and the same worn
+garments as when he first saw her, and her face was still sorrowful. But
+as she wandered along the bottom of the sea the water divided before
+her. He saw that it rose into pillars, as if in deep reverence, forming
+itself into arches, so that she walked in the most glorious temple.
+
+Suddenly the King saw that the water which surrounded the woman began to
+change colour. The pillars and the arches first became pale pink; but
+they soon assumed a darker colour. The whole sea around was also red, as
+if it had been changed into blood.
+
+At the bottom of the sea, where the woman walked, the King saw broken
+swords and arrows, and bows and spears in pieces. At first there were
+not many, but the longer she walked in the red water the more closely
+they were heaped together.
+
+The King saw with emotion that the woman went to one side in order not
+to tread upon a dead man who lay stretched upon the bed of green
+seaweed. The man, who had a deep cut in his head, wore a coat of mail,
+and had a sword in his hand. It seemed to the King that the woman closed
+her eyes so as not to see the dead man. She moved towards a fixed goal
+without hesitation or doubt. But he who dreamt could not turn his eyes
+away.
+
+He saw the bottom of the sea covered with wreckage. He saw heavy
+anchors, thick ropes twined about like snakes, ships with their sides
+riven asunder; golden dragon-heads from the bows of ships stared at him
+with red, threatening eyes.
+
+'I should like to know who has fought a battle here and left all this as
+a prey to destruction,' thought the dreamer.
+
+Everywhere he saw dead men. They were hanging on the ships' sides, or
+had sunk into the green seaweed. But he did not give himself time to
+look at them, for his eyes were obliged to follow the woman, who
+continued to walk onwards.
+
+At last the King saw her stop at the side of a dead man. He was clothed
+in a red mantle, had a bright helmet on his head, a shield on his arm,
+and a naked sword in his hand.
+
+The woman bent over him and whispered to him, as if awaking someone
+sleeping:
+
+'King Olaf! King Olaf!'
+
+Then he who was dreaming saw that the man at the bottom of the sea was
+himself. He could distinctly see that he was the dead man.
+
+As the dead did not move, the woman knelt by his side and whispered into
+his ear:
+
+'Now Storr[:a]de hath sent her fleet against thee and avenged herself. Dost
+thou repent what thou hast done, King Olaf?'
+
+And again she asked:
+
+'Now thou sufferest the bitterness of death because thou hast chosen me
+instead of Storr[:a]de. Dost thou repent? dost thou repent?'
+
+Then at last the dead opened his eyes, and the woman helped him to rise.
+He leant upon her shoulder, and she walked slowly away with him.
+
+Again King Olaf saw her wander and wander, through night and day, over
+sea and land. At last it seemed to him that they had gone further than
+the clouds and higher than the stars. Now they entered a garden, where
+the earth shone as light and the flowers were clear as dewdrops.
+
+The King saw that when the woman entered the garden she raised her head,
+and her step grew lighter. When they had gone a little further into the
+garden her garments began to shine. He saw that they became, as of
+themselves, bordered with golden braid, and coloured with the hues of
+the rainbow. He saw also that a halo surrounded her head that cast a
+light over her countenance.
+
+But the slain man who leant upon her shoulder raised his head, and
+asked:
+
+'Who art thou?'
+
+'Dost thou not know, King Olaf?' she answered; and an infinite majesty
+and glory encompassed her.
+
+But in the dream King Olaf was filled with a great joy because he had
+chosen to serve the gentle Queen of Heaven. It was a joy so great that
+he had never before felt the like of it, and it was so strong that it
+awoke him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When King Olaf awoke his face was bathed in tears, and he lay with his
+hands folded in prayer.
+
+
+
+
+ASTRID
+
+
+I
+
+In the midst of the low buildings forming the old Castle of the Kings at
+Upsala towered the Ladies' Bower. It was built on poles, like a
+dovecote. The staircase leading up to it was as steep as a ladder, and
+one entered it by a very low door. The walls inside were covered with
+runes, signifying love and longing; the sills of the small loopholes
+were worn by the maidens leaning on their elbows and looking down into
+the courtyard.
+
+Old Hjalte, the bard, had been a guest at the King's Castle for some
+time, and he went up every day to the Ladies' Bower to see Princess
+Ingegerd, and talk with her about Olaf Haraldsson, the King of Norway,
+and every time Hjalte came Ingegerd's bondwoman Astrid sat and listened
+to his words with as much pleasure as the Princess. And whilst Hjalte
+talked, both the maidens listened so eagerly that they let their hands
+fall in their laps and their work rest.
+
+Anyone seeing them would not think much spinning or weaving could be
+done in the Ladies' Bower. No one would have thought that they gathered
+all Hjalte's words as if they were silken threads, and that each of his
+listeners made from them her own picture of King Olaf. No one could
+know that in their thoughts they wove the Bard's words each into her own
+radiant picture.
+
+But so it was. And the Princess's picture was so beautiful that every
+time she saw it before her she felt as if she must fall on her knees and
+worship it. For she saw the King sitting on his throne, crowned and
+great; she saw a red, gold-embroidered mantle hanging from his shoulders
+to his feet. She saw no sword in his hand, but holy writings; and she
+also saw that his throne was supported by a chained troll. His face
+shone for her, white like wax, surrounded by long, soft locks, and his
+eyes beamed with piety and peace. Oh, she became nearly afraid when she
+saw the almost superhuman strength that shone from that pale face. She
+understood that King Olaf was not only a King, she saw that he was a
+saint, and the equal of the angels.
+
+But quite different was the picture which Astrid had made of the King.
+The fair-haired bondwoman, who had experienced both hunger and cold and
+suffered much hardship, but who all the same was the one who filled the
+Ladies' Bower with merriment and laughter, had in her mind an entirely
+different picture of the King. She could not help that every time she
+heard him spoken about she saw before her the wood-cutter's son who at
+eventide came out of the wood with the axe over his shoulder.
+
+'I can see thee--I can see thee so well,' Astrid said to the picture, as
+if it were a living being. 'Tall thou art not, but broad of shoulders
+and light and agile, and because thou hast walked about in the dark
+forest the whole long summer day thou takest the last few steps in one
+spring, and laughest when thou reachest the road. Then thy white teeth
+shine, and thy hair flies about, and that I love to see. I can see thee;
+thou hast a fair, ruddy face and freckles on thy nose, and thou hast
+blue eyes, which become dark and stern in the deep forest; but when thou
+comest so far that thou seest the valley and thy home, they become light
+and gentle. As soon as thou seest thine own hut down in the valley, thou
+raisest thy cap for a greeting, and then I see thy forehead. Is not that
+forehead befitting a King? Should not that broad forehead be able to
+wear both crown and helmet?'
+
+But however different these two pictures were, one thing is certain:
+just as much as the Princess loved the holy picture she had conjured
+forth, so did the poor bondwoman love the bold swain whom she saw coming
+from the depths of the forest to meet her.
+
+And had Hjalte the Bard been able to see these pictures he would have
+assuredly praised them both. He would assuredly have said that they both
+were like the King. For that is King Olaf's good fortune, he would have
+been sure to say, that he is a fresh and merry swain at the same time
+that he is God's holy warrior. For old Hjalte loved King Olaf, and
+although he had wandered from court to court he had never been able to
+find his equal.
+
+'Where can I find anyone to make me forget Olaf Haraldsson?' he was
+wont to say. 'Where shall I find a greater hero?'
+
+Hjalte the Bard was a rough old man and severe of countenance. Old as he
+was, his hair was still black, he was dark of complexion, and his eyes
+were keen, and his song had always tallied with his appearance. His
+tongue never uttered other words than those of strife; he had never made
+other lays than songs of war.
+
+Old Hjalte's heart had hitherto been like the stony waste outside the
+wood-cutter's hut; it had been like a rocky plain, where only poor ferns
+and dry mugworts could grow. But now Hjalte's roving life had brought
+him to the Court at Upsala, and he had seen the Princess Ingegerd. He
+had seen that she was the noblest of all the women he had met in his
+life--in truth, the Princess was just as much fairer than all other
+women as King Olaf was greater than all other men.
+
+Then the thought suddenly arose within Hjalte that he would try to
+awaken love between the Swedish Princess and the Norwegian King. He
+asked himself why she, who was the best amongst women, should not be
+able to love King Olaf, the most glorious amongst men? And after that
+thought had taken root in Hjalte's heart he gave up making his stern
+war-songs. He gave up trying to win praise and honour from the rough
+warriors at the Court of Upsala, and sat for many hours with the women
+in the Ladies' Bower, and one would never have thought that it was
+Hjalte who spoke. One would never have believed that he possessed such
+soft and fair and gentle words which he now used in speaking about King
+Olaf.
+
+No one would have known Hjalte again; he was entirely transformed ever
+since the thought of the marriage had arisen within him. When the
+beautiful thought took root in Hjalte's soul, it was as if a blushing
+rose, with soft and fragrant petals, had sprung up in the midst of a
+wilderness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One day Hjalte sat with the Princess in the Ladies' Bower. All the
+maidens were absent except Astrid. Hjalte thought that now he had spoken
+long enough about Olaf Haraldsson. He had said all the fair words he
+could about him, but had it been of any avail? What did the Princess
+think of the King? Then he began to lay snares for the Princess to find
+out what she thought of King Olaf.
+
+'I can see from a look or a blush,' he thought.
+
+But the Princess was a high-born lady; she knew how to conceal her
+thoughts. She neither blushed nor smiled, neither did her eyes betray
+her. She would not let Hjalte divine what she thought.
+
+When the Bard looked into her noble face he was ashamed of himself.
+
+'She is too good for anyone to take her by stealth,' he said; 'one must
+meet her in open warfare.' So Hjalte said straight out: 'Daughter of a
+King, if Olaf Haraldsson asked thee in marriage of thy father, what
+wouldst thou answer?'
+
+Then the young Princess's face lit up, as does the face of a man when he
+reaches the mountain-top and discovers the ocean. Without hesitation she
+replied at once:
+
+'If he be such a King and such a Christian as thou sayest, Hjalte, then
+I consider it would be a great happiness.'
+
+But scarcely had she said this before the light faded from her eyes. It
+was as if a cloud rose between her and the beautiful far-off vision.
+
+'Oh, Hjalte,' she said, 'thou forgettest one thing. King Olaf is our
+enemy. It is war and not wooing we may expect from him.'
+
+'Do not let that trouble thee,' said Hjalte. 'If thou only wilt, all is
+well. I know King Olaf's mind in this matter.'
+
+The Bard was so glad that he laughed when he said this; but the Princess
+grew more and more sorrowful.
+
+'No,' she said, 'neither upon me nor King Olaf does it depend, but upon
+my father, Oluf Sk[:o]tkonung, and you know that he hates Olaf Haraldsson,
+and cannot bear that anyone should even mention his name. Never will he
+let me leave my father's house with an enemy; never will he give his
+daughter to Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+When the Princess had said this, she laid aside all her pride and began
+to lament her fate.
+
+'Of what good is it that I have now learnt to know Olaf Haraldsson,' she
+said, 'that I dream of him every night, and long for him every day?
+Would it not have been better if thou hadst never come hither and told
+me about him?'
+
+When the Princess had spoken these words, her eyes filled with tears;
+but when Hjalte saw her tears, he lifted his hand fervent and eager.
+
+'God wills it,' he cried. 'Ye belong to one another. Strife must
+exchange its red mantle for the white robe of peace, that your happiness
+may give joy unto the earth.'
+
+When Hjalte had said this, the Princess bowed her head before God's holy
+name, and when she raised it, it was with a newly awakened hope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When old Hjalte stepped through the low door of the Ladies' Bower, and
+went down the narrow open corridor, Astrid followed him.
+
+'Hjalte,' she cried, 'why dost thou not ask me what I would answer if
+Olaf Haraldsson asked for my hand?'
+
+It was the first time Astrid had spoken to Hjalte; but Hjalte only cast
+a hurried glance at the fair bondwoman, whose golden hair curled on her
+temples and neck, who had the broadest bracelets and the heaviest
+ear-rings, whose dress was fastened with silken cords, and whose bodice
+was so embroidered with pearls that it was as stiff as armour, and went
+on without answering.
+
+'Why dost thou only ask Princess Ingegerd?' continued Astrid. 'Why dost
+thou not also ask me? Dost thou not know that I, too, am the Svea-King's
+daughter? Dost thou not know,' she continued, when Hjalte did not
+answer, 'that although my mother was a bondwoman, she was the bride of
+the King's youth? Dost thou not know that whilst she lived no one dared
+to remind her of her birth? Oh, Hjalte, dost thou not know that it was
+only after she was dead, when the King had taken to himself a Queen,
+that everyone remembered that she was a bondwoman? It was first after I
+had a stepmother that the King began to think I was not of free birth.
+But am I not a King's daughter, Hjalte, even if my father counts me for
+so little, that he has allowed me to fall into bondage? Am I not a
+King's daughter, even if my stepmother allowed me to go in rags, whilst
+my sister went in cloth of gold? Am I not a King's daughter, even if my
+stepmother has allowed me to tend the geese and taste the whip of the
+slave? And if I am a King's daughter, why dost thou not ask me whether I
+will wed Olaf Haraldsson? See, I have golden hair that shines round my
+head like the sun. See, I have sparkling eyes; I have roses in my
+cheeks. Why should not King Olaf woo me?'
+
+She followed Hjalte across the courtyard all the way to the King's Hall;
+but Hjalte took no more heed of her words than a warrior clad in armour
+heeds a boy throwing stones. He took no more notice of her words than if
+she had been a chattering magpie in the top of a tree.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No one must think that Hjalte contented himself with having won Ingegerd
+for his King. The next day the old Icelander summoned up his courage and
+spoke to Oluf Sk[:o]tkonung about Olaf Haraldsson. But he hardly had time
+to say a word; the King interrupted him as soon as he mentioned the name
+of his foe. Hjalte saw that the Princess was right. He thought he had
+never before seen such bitter hatred.
+
+'But that marriage will take place all the same,' said Hjalte. 'It is
+the will of God--the will of God.'
+
+And it really seemed as if Hjalte were right. Two or three days later a
+messenger came from King Olaf of Norway to make peace with the Swedes.
+Hjalte sought the messenger, and told him that peace between the two
+countries could be most firmly established by a marriage taking place
+between Princess Ingegerd and Olaf Haraldsson.
+
+The King's messenger hardly thought that old Hjalte was the man to
+incline a young maiden's heart to a stranger; but he thought, all the
+same, that the plan was a good one; and he promised Hjalte that he would
+lay the proposal of the marriage before King Oluf Sk[:o]tkonung at the
+great Winter Ting.
+
+Immediately afterwards Hjalte left Upsala. He went from farm to farm on
+the great plain; he went far into the forests; he went even to the
+borders of the sea. He never met either man or woman without speaking to
+them about Olaf Haraldsson and Princess Ingegerd. 'Hast thou ever heard
+of a greater man or of a fairer woman?' he said. 'It is assuredly the
+will of God that they shall wander through life together.'
+
+Hjalte came upon old Vikings, who wintered at the seashore, and who had
+formerly carried off women from every coast. He talked to them about the
+beautiful Princess until they sprang up and promised him, with their
+hand on the hilt of their sword, that they would do what they could to
+help her to happiness.
+
+Hjalte went to stubborn old peasants who had never listened to the
+prayers of their own daughters, but had given them in marriage as
+shrewdness, family honour, and advantage required, and he spoke to them
+so wisely about the peace between the two countries and the marriage
+that they swore they would rather deprive the King of his kingdom than
+that this marriage should not come to pass.
+
+But to the young women Hjalte spoke so many good words about Olaf
+Haraldsson that they vowed they would never look with kindly eyes at the
+swain who did not stand by the Norwegian King's messenger at the Ting
+and help to break down the King's opposition.
+
+Thus Hjalte went about talking to people until the Winter Ting should
+assemble, and all the people, along snow-covered roads, proceeded to the
+great Ting Hills at Upsala.
+
+When the Ting was opened, the eagerness of the people was so great that
+it seemed as if the stars would fall down from the sky were this
+marriage not decided upon. And although the King twice roughly said 'No'
+both to the peace and to the wooing, it was of no avail. It was of no
+avail that he would not hear the name of King Olaf mentioned. The people
+only shouted: 'We will not have war with Norway. We will that these two,
+who by all are accounted the greatest, shall wander through life
+together.'
+
+What could old Oluf Sk[:o]tkonung do when the people rose against him with
+threats, strong words, and clashing of shields? What was he to do when
+he saw nothing but swords lifted and angry men before him? Was he not
+compelled to promise his daughter away if he would keep his life and his
+crown? Must he not swear to send the Princess to Kungah[:a]lla next summer
+to meet King Olaf there?
+
+In this way the whole people helped to further Ingegerd's love. But no
+one helped Astrid to the attainment of her happiness; no one asked her
+about her love. And yet it lived--it lived like the child of the poor
+fisherman's widow, in want and need; but all the same it grew, happily
+and hopefully. It grew and thrived, for in Astrid's soul there were, as
+at the sea, fresh air and light and breezy waves.
+
+
+II
+
+In the rich city of Kungah[:a]lla, far away at the border, was the old
+castle of the kings. It was surrounded by green ramparts. Huge stones
+stood as sentinels outside the gates, and in the courtyard grew an oak
+large enough to shelter under its branches all the King's henchmen.
+
+The whole space inside the ramparts was covered with long, low wooden
+houses. They were so old that grass grew on the ridges of the roofs. The
+beams in the walls were made from the thickest trees of the forest,
+silver-white with age.
+
+In the beginning of the summer Olaf Haraldsson came to Kungah[:a]lla, and
+he gathered together in the castle everything necessary for the
+celebration of his marriage. For several weeks peasants came crowding up
+the long street, bringing gifts: butter in tubs, cheese in sacks, hops
+and salt, roots and flour.
+
+After the gifts had been brought to the castle, there was a continual
+procession of wedding guests through the street. There were great men
+and women on side-saddles, with a numerous retinue of servants and
+serfs. Then came hosts of players and singers, and the reciters of the
+Sagas. Merchants came all the way from Venderland and Gardarike, to
+tempt the King with bridal gifts.
+
+When these processions for two whole weeks had filled the town with
+noise and bustle they only awaited the last procession, the bride's.
+
+But the bridal procession was long in coming. Every day they expected
+that she would come ashore at the King's Landing-Stage, and from there,
+headed by drum and fife, and followed by merry swains and serious
+priests, proceed up the street to the King's Castle. But the bride's
+procession came not.
+
+When the bride was so long in coming, everybody looked at King Olaf to
+see if he were uneasy. But the King always showed an undisturbed face.
+
+'If it be the will of God,' the King said, 'that I shall possess this
+fair woman, she will assuredly come.'
+
+And the King waited, whilst the grass fell for the scythe, and the
+cornflowers blossomed in the rye. The King still waited when the flax
+was pulled up, and the hops ripened on the poles. He was still waiting,
+when the bramble blackened on the mountain-side, and the nip reddened
+on the naked branch of the hawthorn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hjalte had spent the whole summer at Kungah[:a]lla waiting for the
+marriage. No one awaited the arrival of the Princess more eagerly than
+he did. He assuredly awaited her with greater longing and anxiety than
+even King Olaf himself.
+
+Hjalte no longer felt at his ease with the warriors in the King's Hall.
+But lower down the river there was a landing-stage where the women of
+Kungah[:a]lla were wont to assemble to see the last of their husbands and
+sons, when they sailed for distant lands. Here they were also in the
+habit of gathering during the summer, to watch for the vessels coming up
+the river, and to weep over those who had departed. To that bridge
+Hjalte wended his way every day. He liked best to be amongst those who
+longed and sorrowed.
+
+Never had any of the women who sat waiting at Weeping Bridge gazed down
+the river with more anxious look than did Hjalte the Bard. No one looked
+more eagerly at every approaching sail. Sometimes Hjalte stole away to
+the Marie Church. He never prayed for anything for himself. He only came
+to remind the Saints about this marriage, which must come to pass, which
+God Himself had willed.
+
+Most of all Hjalte liked to speak with King Olaf Haraldsson alone. It
+was his greatest happiness to sit and tell him of every word that had
+fallen from the lips of the King's daughter. He described her every
+feature.
+
+'King Olaf,' he said to him, 'pray to God that she may come to thee.
+Every day I see thee warring against ancient heathendom which hides like
+an owl in the darkness of the forest, and in the mountain-clefts. But
+the falcon, King Olaf, will never be able to overcome the owl. Only a
+dove can do that, only a dove.'
+
+The Bard asked the King whether it was not his desire to vanquish all
+his enemies. Was it not his intention to be alone master in the land?
+But in that he would never succeed. He would never succeed until he had
+won the crown which Hjalte had chosen for him, a crown so resplendent
+with brightness and glory that everyone must bow before him who owned
+it.
+
+And last of all he asked the King if he were desirous of gaining the
+mastery over himself. But he would never succeed in overcoming the
+wilfulness of his own heart if he did not win a shield which Hjalte had
+seen in the Ladies' Bower at the King's Castle at Upsala. It was a
+shield from which shone the purity of heaven. It was a shield which
+protected from all sin and the lusts of the flesh.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But harvest came and they were still waiting for the Princess. One after
+the other the great men who had come to Kungah[:a]lla for the marriage
+festivities were obliged to depart. The last to take his leave was old
+Hjalte the Bard. It was with a heavy heart he set sail, but he was
+obliged to return to his home in distant Iceland before Christmas came.
+
+Old Hjalte had not gone further than the rocky islands outside the mouth
+of the northern river before he met a galley. He immediately ordered his
+men to stop rowing. At the first glance he recognised the dragon-headed
+ship belonging to Princess Ingegerd. Without hesitation Hjalte told his
+men to row him to the galley. He gave up his place at the rudder to
+another, and placed himself with joyous face at the prow of the boat.
+
+'It will make me happy to behold the fair maiden once more,' the Bard
+said. 'It gladdens my heart that her gentle face will be the last I
+shall see before sailing for Iceland.'
+
+All the wrinkles had disappeared from Hjalte's face when he went on
+board the dragon-ship. He greeted the brave lads who plied the oars as
+friendlily as if they were his comrades, and he handed a golden ring to
+the maiden, who, with much deference, conducted him to the women's tent
+in the stern of the ship. Hjalte's hand trembled when he lifted the
+hangings that covered the entrance to the tent. He thought this was the
+most beautiful moment of his life.
+
+'Never have I fought for a greater cause,' he said. 'Never have I longed
+so eagerly for anything as this marriage.'
+
+But when Hjalte entered the tent, he drew back a step in great
+consternation. His face expressed the utmost confusion. He saw a tall,
+beautiful woman. She advanced to meet him with outstretched hand. But
+the woman was not Ingegerd.
+
+Hjalte's eyes looked searchingly round the narrow tent to find the
+Princess. He certainly saw that the woman who stood before him was a
+King's daughter. Only the daughter of a King could look at him with such
+a proud glance, and greet him with such dignity. And she wore the band
+of royalty on her forehead, and was attired like a Queen. But why was
+she not Ingegerd? Hjalte angrily asked the strange woman:
+
+'Who art thou?'
+
+'Dost thou not know me, Hjalte? I am the King's daughter, to whom thou
+hast spoken about Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+'I have spoken with a King's daughter about Olaf Haraldsson, but her
+name was Ingegerd.'
+
+'Ingegerd is also my name.'
+
+'Thy name can be what thou likest, but thou art not the Princess. What
+is the meaning of all this? Will the Svea-King deceive King Olaf?'
+
+'He will not by any means deceive him. He sends him his daughter as he
+has promised.'
+
+Hjalte was not far from drawing his sword to slay the strange woman. He
+had his hand already on the hilt, but he bethought himself it was not
+befitting a warrior to take the life of a woman. But he would not waste
+more words over this impostor. He turned round to go.
+
+The stranger with gentle voice called him back.
+
+'Where art thou going, Hjalte? Dost thou intend to go to Kungah[:a]lla to
+report this to Olaf Haraldsson?'
+
+'That is my intention,' answered Hjalte, without looking at her.
+
+'Why, then, dost thou leave me, Hjalte? Why dost thou not remain with
+me? I, too, am going to Kungah[:a]lla.'
+
+Hjalte now turned round and looked at her.
+
+'Hast thou, then, no pity for an old man?' he said. 'I tell thee that my
+whole mind is set upon this marriage. Let me hear the full measure of my
+misfortune. Is Princess Ingegerd not coming?'
+
+Then the Princess gave over fooling Hjalte.
+
+'Come into my tent and sit down,' she said, 'and I will tell thee all
+that thou wouldest know. I see it is of no use to hide the truth from
+thee.'
+
+Then she began to tell him everything:
+
+'The summer was already drawing to a close. The blackcock's lively young
+ones had already strong feathers in their cloven tails and firmness in
+their rounded wings; they had already begun to flutter about amongst the
+close branches of the pine-forest with quick, noisy strokes.
+
+'It happened one morning that the Svea-King came riding across the
+plain; he was returning from a successful chase. There hung from the
+pommel of his saddle a shining blue-black blackcock, a tough old fellow,
+with red eyebrows, as well as four of his half-grown young ones, which
+on account of their youth were still garbed in many-coloured hues. And
+the King was very proud; he thought it was not every man's luck to make
+such a bag with falcon and hawk in one morning.
+
+'But that morning Princess Ingegerd and her maidens stood at the gates
+of the castle waiting for the King. And amongst the maidens was one,
+Astrid by name; she was the daughter of the Svea-King just as much as
+Ingegerd, although her mother was not a free woman, and she was
+therefore treated as a bondmaiden. And this young maiden stood and
+showed her sister how the swallows gathered in the fields and chose the
+leaders for their long journey. She reminded her that the summer was
+soon over--the summer that should have witnessed the marriage of
+Ingegerd--and urged her to ask the King why she might not set out on her
+journey to King Olaf; for Astrid wished to accompany her sister on the
+journey. She thought that if she could but once see Olaf Haraldsson, she
+would have pleasure from it all her life.
+
+'But when the Svea-King saw the Princess, he rode up to her.
+
+'"Look, Ingegerd," he said, "here are five blackcocks hanging from my
+saddle. In one morning I have killed five blackcocks. Who dost thou
+think can boast of better luck? Have you ever heard of a King making a
+better capture?"
+
+'But then the Princess was angered that he who barred the way for her
+happiness should come so proudly and praise his own good luck. And to
+make an end of the uncertainty that had tormented her for so many weeks,
+she replied:
+
+'"Thou, father, hast with great honour killed five blackcocks, but I
+know of a King who in one morning captured five other Kings, and that
+was Olaf Haraldsson, the hero whom thou hast selected to be my husband."
+
+'Then the Svea-King sprang off his horse in great fury, and advanced
+towards the Princess with clenched hands.
+
+'"What troll hath bewitched thee?" he asked. "What herb hath poisoned
+thee? How hath thy mind been turned to this man?"
+
+'Ingegerd did not answer; she drew back, frightened. Then the King
+became quieter.
+
+'"Fair daughter," he said to her, "dost thou not know how dear thou art
+to me? How should I, then, give thee to one whom I cannot endure? I
+should like my best wishes to go with thee on thy journey. I should like
+to sit as guest in thy hall. I tell thee thou must turn thy mind to the
+Kings of other lands, for Norway's King shall never own thee."
+
+'At these words the Princess became so confused that she could find no
+other words than these with which to answer the King:
+
+'"I did not ask thee; it was the will of the people."
+
+'The King then asked her if she thought that the Svea-King was a slave,
+who could not dispose of his own offspring, or if there were a master
+over him who had the right to give away his daughters.
+
+'"Will the Svea-King be content to hear himself called a breaker of
+oaths?" asked the Princess.
+
+'Then the Svea-King laughed aloud.
+
+'"Do not let that trouble thee. No one shall call me that. Why dost thou
+question about this, thou who art a woman? There are still men in my
+Council; they will find a way out of it."
+
+'Then the King turned towards his henchmen who had been with him to the
+chase.
+
+'"My will is bound by this promise," he said to them. "How shall I be
+released from it?"
+
+'But none of the King's men answered a word; no one knew how to counsel
+him.
+
+'Then Oluf Sk[:o]tkonung became very wrath; he became like a madman.
+
+'"So much for your wisdom," he shouted again and again to his men. "I
+will be free. Why do people laud your wisdom?"
+
+'Whilst the King raged and shouted, and no one knew how to answer him,
+the maiden Astrid stepped forward from amongst the other women and made
+a proposal.
+
+'Hjalte must really believe her when she told him that it was only
+because she found it so amusing that she could not help saying it, and
+not in the least because she thought it could really be done.
+
+'"Why dost thou not send me?" she had said. "I am also thy daughter. Why
+dost thou not send me to the Norwegian King?"
+
+'But when Ingegerd heard Astrid say these words, she grew pale.
+
+'"Be silent, and go thy way!" she said angrily. "Go thy way, thou
+tattler, thou deceitful, wicked thing, to propose such a shameful thing
+to my father!"
+
+'But the King would not allow Astrid to go. On the contrary! on the
+contrary! He stretched out his arms and drew her to his breast. He both
+laughed and cried, and was as wild with joy as a child.
+
+'"Oh," he shouted, "what an idea! What a heathenish trick! Let us call
+Astrid Ingegerd, and entrap the King of Norway into marrying her. And
+afterwards when the rumour gets abroad that she is born of a bondwoman,
+many will rejoice in their hearts, and Olaf Haraldsson will be held in
+scorn and derision."
+
+'But then Ingegerd went up to the King, and prayed:
+
+"Oh, father, father! do not do this thing. King Olaf is dear at heart to
+me. Surely thou wilt not grieve me by thus deceiving him."
+
+'And she added that she would patiently do the bidding of her royal
+father, and give up all thought of marriage with Olaf Haraldsson, if he
+would only promise not to do him this injury.
+
+'But the Svea-King would not listen to her prayers. He turned to Astrid
+and caressed her, just as if she were as beautiful as revenge itself.
+
+'"Thou shalt go! thou shalt go soon--to-morrow!" he said. "All thy
+dowry, thy clothes, my dear daughter, and thy retinue, can all be
+collected in great haste. The Norwegian King will not think of such
+things; he is too taken up with joy at the thought of possessing the
+high-born daughter of the Svea-King."
+
+'Then Ingegerd understood that she could hope for no mercy. And she went
+up to her sister, put her arm round her neck, and conducted her to the
+hall. Here she placed her in her own seat of honour, whilst she herself
+sat down on a low stool at her feet. And she said to Astrid that from
+henceforth she must sit there, in order to accustom herself to the place
+she should take as Queen. For Ingegerd did not wish that King Olaf
+should have any occasion to be ashamed of his Queen.
+
+'Then the Princess sent her maidens to the wardrobes and the pantries to
+fetch the dowry she had chosen for herself. And she gave everything to
+her sister, so that Astrid should not come to Norway's King as a poor
+bondwoman. She had also settled which of the serfs and maidens should
+accompany Astrid, and at last she made her a present of her own splendid
+galley.
+
+'"Thou shalt certainly have my galley," she said. "Thou knowest there
+are many good men at the oars. For it is my will that thou shalt come
+well dowered to Norway's King, so that he may feel honoured with his
+Queen."
+
+'And afterwards the Princess had sat a long time with her sister, and
+spoken with her about King Olaf. But she had spoken of him as one speaks
+of the Saints of God, and not of kings, and Astrid had not understood
+many of her words. But this much she did understand--that the King's
+daughter wished to give Astrid all the good thoughts that dwelt in her
+own heart, in order that King Olaf might not be so disappointed as her
+father wished. And then Astrid, who was not so bad as people thought
+her, forgot how often she had suffered for her sister's sake, and she
+wished that she had been able to say, "I will not go!" She had also
+spoken to her sister about this wish, and they had cried together, and
+for the first time felt like sisters.
+
+'But it was not Astrid's nature to allow herself to be weighed down by
+sorrow and scruples. By the time she was out at sea she had forgotten
+all her sorrow and fear. She travelled as a Princess, and was waited
+upon as a Princess. For the first time since her mother's death she was
+happy.'
+
+When the King's beautiful daughter had told Hjalte all this she was
+silent for a moment, and looked at him. Hjalte had sat immovable whilst
+she was speaking, but the King's daughter grew pale when she saw the
+pain his face betrayed.
+
+'Tell me what thou thinkest, Hjalte,' she exclaimed. 'Now, we are soon
+at Kungah[:a]lla. How shall I fare there? Will the King slay me? Will he
+brand me with red-hot irons, and send me back again? Tell me the truth,
+Hjalte.'
+
+But Hjalte did not answer. He sat and talked to himself without knowing
+it. Astrid heard him murmur that at Kungah[:a]lla no one knew Ingegerd, and
+that he himself had but little inclination to turn back.
+
+But now Hjalte's moody face fell upon Astrid, and he began to question
+her. She had wished, had she not, that she could have said 'No' to this
+journey. When she came to Kungah[:a]lla, the choice lay before her. What
+did she, then, mean to do! Would she tell King Olaf who she was?
+
+This question caused Astrid not a little embarrassment. She was silent
+for a long while, but then she began to beg Hjalte to go with her to
+Kungah[:a]lla and tell the King the truth. She told Hjalte that her maidens
+and the men on board her ship had been bound to silence.
+
+'And what I shall do myself I do not know,' she said. 'How can I know
+that? I have heard all thou hast told Ingegerd about Olaf Haraldsson.'
+
+When Astrid said this she saw that Hjalte was again lost in thought. She
+heard him mutter to himself that he did not think she would confess how
+things were.
+
+'But I must all the same tell her what awaits her,' he said.
+
+Then Hjalte rose, and spoke to her with the utmost gravity.
+
+'Let me tell thee yet another story, Astrid, about King Olaf, which I
+have not told thee before:
+
+'It was at the time when King Olaf was a poor sea-king, when he only
+possessed a few good ships and some faithful warriors, but none of his
+forefathers' land. It was at the time when he fought with honour on
+distant seas, chastised vikings and protected merchants, and aided
+Christian princes with his sword.
+
+'The King had a dream that one night an angel of God descended to his
+ship, set all the sails, and steered for the north. And it seemed to the
+King that they had not sailed for a longer time than it takes the dawn
+to extinguish a star before they came to a steep and rocky shore, cut up
+by narrow fjords and bordered with milk-white breakers. But when they
+reached the shore the angel stretched out his hand, and spoke in his
+silvery voice. It rang through the wind, which whistled in the sails,
+and through the waves surging round the keel.
+
+'"Thou, King Olaf," were the angel's words, "shalt possess this land for
+all time."
+
+'And when the angel had said this the dream was over.'
+
+Hjalte now tried to explain to Astrid that like as the dawn tempers the
+transition from dark night to sunny day, so God had not willed that King
+Olaf should at once understand that the dream foretold him of superhuman
+honour. The King had not understood that it was the will of God that he
+from a heavenly throne should reign forever and ever over Norway's land,
+that kings should reign and kings should pass away, but holy King Olaf
+should continue to rule his kingdom for ever.
+
+The King's humility did not let him see the heavenly message in its
+fulness of light, and he understood the words of the angel thus--that he
+and his seed should forever rule over the land the angel had shown him.
+And inasmuch as he thought he recognised in this land the kingdom of his
+forefathers, he steered his course for Norway, and, fortune helping him,
+he soon became King of that land.
+
+'And thus it is still, Astrid. Although everything indicates that in
+King Olaf dwells a heavenly strength, he himself is still in doubt, and
+thinks that he is only called to be an earthly King. He does not yet
+stretch forth his hand for the crown of the saints. But now the time
+cannot be far distant when he must fully realize his mission. It cannot
+be far distant.'
+
+And old Hjalte went on speaking, whilst the light of the seer shone in
+his soul and on his brow.
+
+'Is there any other woman but Ingegerd who would not be rejected by Olaf
+Haraldsson and driven from his side when he fully understands the words
+of the angel, that he shall be Norway's King for all time? Is there
+anyone who can, then, follow him in his holy walk except Ingegerd?'
+
+And again Hjalte turned to Astrid and asked with great severity:
+
+'Answer me now and tell me whether thou wilt speak the truth to King
+Olaf?'
+
+Astrid was now sore afraid. She answered humbly:
+
+'Why wilt thou not go with me to Kungah[:a]lla? Then I shall be compelled
+to tell everything. Canst thou not see, Hjalte, that I do not know
+myself what I shall do? If it were my intention to deceive the King,
+could I not promise thee all thou wishest? All that I needed was to
+persuade thee to go on thy way. But I am weak; I only asked thee to go
+with me.'
+
+But hardly had she said this before she saw Hjalte's face glow with
+fierce wrath.
+
+'Why should I help thee to escape the fate that awaits thee?' he asked.
+
+And then he said that he did not think he had any cause to show her
+mercy. He hated her for having sinned against her sister. The man that
+she would steal, thief as she was, belonged to Ingegerd. Even a hardened
+warrior like Hjalte must groan with pain when he thought of how Ingegerd
+had suffered. But Astrid had felt nothing. In the midst of all that
+young maiden's sorrow she had come with wicked and cruel cunning, and
+had only sought her own happiness. Woe unto Astrid! woe unto her!
+
+Hjalte had lowered his voice; it became heavy and dull; it sounded to
+Astrid as if he were murmuring an incantation.
+
+'It is thou,' he said to her, 'who hast destroyed my most beautiful
+song.' For the most beautiful song Hjalte had made was the one in which
+he had joined the most pious of all women with the greatest of all men.
+'But thou hast spoiled my song,' he said, 'and made a mockery of it; and
+I will punish thee, thou child of H['e]l. I will punish thee; as the Lord
+punisheth the tempter who brought sin into His world, I will punish
+thee. But do not ask me,' he continued, 'to protect thee against thine
+own self. I remember the Princess, and how she must suffer through the
+trick thou playest on King Olaf. For her sake thou shalt be punished,
+just as much as for mine. I will not go with thee to betray thee. That
+is my revenge, Astrid. I will not betray thee. Go thou to Kungah[:a]lla,
+Astrid; and if thou dost not speak of thine own accord, thou wilt become
+the King's bride. But then, thou serpent, punishment shall overtake
+thee! I know King Olaf, and I know thee. Thy life shall be such a burden
+that thou wilt wish for death every day that passes.'
+
+When Hjalte had said this he turned away from her and went his way.
+
+Astrid sat a long time silent, thinking of what she had heard. But then
+a smile came over her face. He forgot, did old Hjalte, that she had
+suffered many trials, that she had learnt to laugh at pain. But
+happiness, happiness, that she had never tried.
+
+And Astrid rose and went to the opening of the tent. She saw the angry
+Bard's ship. She thought that far, far away she could see Iceland,
+shrouded in mist, welcoming her much-travelled son with cold and
+darkness.
+
+
+III
+
+A sunny day late in the harvest, not a cloud in the sky; a day when one
+thinks the fair sun will give to the earth all the light she possesses!
+The fair sun is like a mother whose son is about to set out for a
+far-off land, and who, in the hour of the leave-taking, cannot take her
+eyes from the beloved.
+
+In the long valley where Kungah[:a]lla lies there is a row of small hills
+covered with beech-wood. And now at harvest-time the trees have garbed
+themselves in such splendid raiment that one's heart is gladdened. One
+would almost think that the trees were going a-wooing. It looks as if
+they had clothed themselves in gold and scarlet to win a rich bride by
+their splendour.
+
+The large island of Hisingen, on the other side of the river, had also
+adorned itself. But Hisingen is covered with golden-white birch-trees.
+At Hisingen the trees are clad in light colours, as if they are little
+maidens in bridal attire.
+
+But up the river, which comes rushing down towards the ocean as proudly
+and wildly as if the harvest rain had filled it with frothy wine, there
+passes the one ship after the other, rowing homewards. And when the
+ships approach Kungah[:a]lla they hoist new white sails, instead of the old
+ones of gray wadmal; and one cannot help thinking of old fairy-tales of
+kings' sons who go out seeking adventures clothed in rags, but who throw
+them off when they again enter the King's lofty hall.
+
+But all the people of Kungah[:a]lla have assembled at the landing-stages.
+Old and young are busy unloading goods from the ships. They fill the
+storehouses with salt and train-oil, with costly weapons, and
+many-coloured rugs. They haul large and small vessels on to land, they
+question the returned seamen about their voyage. But suddenly all work
+ceases, and every eye is turned towards the river.
+
+Right between the big merchant vessels a large galley is making its way,
+and people ask each other in astonishment who it can be that carries
+sails striped with purple and a golden device on the prow; they wonder
+what kind of ship it can be that comes flying over the waves like a
+bird. They praise the oarsmen, who handle the oars so evenly that they
+flash along the sides of the ship like an eagle's wings.
+
+'It must be the Swedish Princess who is coming,' they say. 'It must be
+the beautiful Princess Ingegerd, for whom Olaf Haraldsson has been
+waiting the whole summer and harvest.'
+
+And the women hasten down to the riverside to see the Princess when she
+rows past them on her way to the King's Landing-Stage. Men and boys run
+to the ships, or climb the roofs of the boathouses.
+
+When the women see the Princess standing in gorgeous apparel, they begin
+to shout to her, and to greet her with words of welcome; and every man
+who sees her radiant face tears his cap from his head and swings it high
+in the air. But on the King's Landing-Stage stands King Olaf himself,
+and when he sees the Princess his face beams with gladness, and his eyes
+light up with tender love.
+
+And as it is now so late in the year that all the flowers are faded, the
+young maidens pluck the golden-red autumnal leaves from the trees and
+strew them on the bridge and in the street; and they hasten to deck
+their houses with the bright berries of the mountain-ash and the
+dark-red leaves of the poplar.
+
+The Princess, who stands high on the ship, sees the people waving and
+greeting her in welcome. She sees the golden-red leaves over which she
+shall walk, and foremost on the landing-stage she sees the King awaiting
+her with smiles. And the Princess forgets everything she would have said
+and confessed. She forgets that she is not Ingegerd, she forgets
+everything except the one thing, that she is to be the wife of Olaf
+Haraldsson.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One Sunday Olaf Haraldsson was seated at table, and his beautiful Queen
+sat by his side. He was talking eagerly with her, resting his elbow on
+the table, and turning towards her, so that he could see her face. But
+when Astrid spoke the King lowered his eyes in order not to think of
+anything but her lovely voice, and when she had been speaking for a long
+time he began to cut the table with his knife without thinking of what
+he was doing. All King Olaf's men knew that he would not have done this
+if he had remembered that it was Sunday; but they had far too great a
+respect for King Olaf to venture to remind him that he was committing a
+sin.
+
+The longer Astrid talked, the more uneasy became his henchmen. The Queen
+saw that they exchanged troubled glances with each other, but she did
+not understand what was the matter.
+
+All had finished eating, and the food had been removed, but King Olaf
+still sat and talked with Astrid and cut the top of the table. A whole
+little heap of chips lay in front of him. Then at last his friend Bj[:o]rn,
+the son of Ogur from Sel[:o], spoke.
+
+'What day is it to-morrow, Eilif?' he asked, turning to one of the
+torch-bearers.
+
+'To-morrow is Monday,' answered Eilif in a loud and clear voice.
+
+Then the King lifted his head and looked up at Eilif.
+
+'Dost thou say that to-morrow is Monday?' he asked thoughtfully.
+
+Without saying another word, the King gathered up all the chips he had
+cut off the table into his hand, went to the fireplace, seized a burning
+coal, and laid it on the chips, which soon caught fire. The King stood
+quite still and let them burn to ashes in his hand. Then all the
+henchmen rejoiced, but the young Queen grew pale as death.
+
+'What sentence will he pronounce over me when he one day finds out my
+sin,' she thought, 'he who punishes himself so hardly for so slight an
+offence?'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Agge from Gardarike lay sick on board his galley in Kungah[:a]lla harbour.
+He was lying in the narrow hold awaiting death. He had been suffering
+for a long time from pains in his foot, and now there was an open sore,
+and in the course of the last few hours it had begun to turn black.
+
+'Thou needest not die, Agge,' said Lodulf from Kungh[:a]lla, who had come
+on board to see his sick friend. 'Dost thou not know that King Olaf is
+here in the town, and that God, on account of his piety and holiness,
+has given him power to heal the sick? Send a message to him and ask him
+to come and lay his hand upon thee, and thou wilt recover.'
+
+'No, I cannot ask help from him,' answered Agge. 'Olaf Haraldsson hates
+me because I have slain his foster-brother, Reor the White. If he knew
+that my ship lay in the harbour, he would send his men to kill me.'
+
+But when Lodulf had left Agge and gone into the town, he met the young
+Queen, who had been in the forest gathering nuts.
+
+'Queen,' Lodulf cried to her, 'say this to King Olaf: "Agge from
+Gardarike, who has slain thy foster-brother, lies at the point of death
+on his ship in the harbour."'
+
+The young Queen hastened home and went immediately up to King Olaf, who
+stood in the courtyard smoothing the mane of his horse.
+
+'Rejoice, King Olaf!' she said. 'Agge from Gardarike, who slew thy
+foster-brother, lies sick on his ship in the harbour and is near death.'
+
+Olaf Haraldsson at once led his horse into the stable; then he went out
+without sword or helmet. He went quickly down one of the narrow lanes
+between the houses until he reached the harbour. There he found the ship
+which belonged to Agge. The King was at the side of the sick man before
+Agge's men thought of stopping him.
+
+'Agge,' said King Olaf, 'many a time I have pursued thee on the sea, and
+thou hast always escaped me. Now thou hast been struck down with
+sickness here in my city. This is a sign to me that God hath given thy
+life into my hands.'
+
+Agge made no answer. He was utterly feeble, and death was very near.
+Olaf Haraldsson laid his hands upon his breast and prayed to God.
+
+'Give me the life of this mine enemy,' he said.
+
+But the Queen, who had seen the King hasten down to the harbour without
+helmet and sword, went into the hall, fetched his weapons and called for
+some of his men. Then she hurried after him down to the ship. But when
+she stood outside the narrow hold, she heard King Olaf praying for the
+sick man.
+
+Astrid looked in and saw the King and Agge without betraying her
+presence. She saw that whilst the King's hands rested upon the forehead
+and breast of the dying man, the deathly pallor vanished from his face;
+he began to breathe lightly and quietly; he ceased moaning, and at last
+he fell into a sound sleep.
+
+Astrid went softly back to the King's Castle. She dragged the King's
+sword after her along the road. Her face was paler than the dying man's
+had been. Her breathing was heavy, like that of a dying person.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was the morning of All Saints' Day, and King Olaf was ready to go to
+Mass. He came out of the King's Hall and went across the courtyard
+towards the gateway. Several of the King's henchmen stood in the
+courtyard to accompany him to Mass. When the King came towards them,
+they drew up in two rows, and the King passed between them.
+
+Astrid stood in the narrow corridor outside the Women's Room and looked
+down at the King. He wore a broad golden band round his head, and was
+attired in a long mantle of red velvet. He went very quietly, and there
+was a holy peace over his face. Astrid was terrified to see how much he
+resembled the Saints and Kings that were carved in wood over the altar
+in the Marie Church.
+
+At the gateway stood a man in a broad-brimmed hat, and wearing a big
+mantle. When the King approached him he threw off his mantle, lifted a
+drawn sword, which he had hidden under it, and rushed at the King. But
+when he was quite close to him, the mild and gentle glance of the King
+fell upon him, and he suddenly stopped. He let his sword fall to the
+ground, and fell on his knees.
+
+King Olaf stood still, and looked at the man with the same clear glance;
+the man tried to turn his eyes away from him, but he could not. At last
+he burst into tears and sobs.
+
+'Oh, King Olaf! King Olaf!' he moaned. 'Thine enemies sent me hither to
+slay thee; but when I saw thy saintly face my sword fell from my hand.
+Thine eyes, King Olaf, have felled me to the ground.'
+
+Astrid sank upon her knees where she stood.
+
+'Oh God, have mercy upon me, a sinner!' she said. 'Woe unto me, because
+by lying and deceit I have become the wife of this man.'
+
+
+IV
+
+On the evening of All Saints' Day the moon shone bright and clear. The
+King had gone the round of the castle, had looked into stables and barns
+to see that all was well; he had even been to the house where the serfs
+dwelt to ascertain if they were well looked after. When he went back to
+the King's Hall, he saw a woman with a black kerchief over her head
+stealing towards the gateway. He thought he knew her, and therefore
+followed her. She went out of the gateway, over the Market Place, and
+stole down the narrow lanes to the river.
+
+Olaf Haraldsson went after her as quietly as he could. He saw her go on
+to one of the landing-stages, stand still, and look down into the water.
+She stretched out her arms towards heaven, and, with a deep sigh, she
+went so near the edge that the King saw she meant to spring into the
+river.
+
+The King approached her with the noiseless steps which a life full of
+danger had taught him. Twice the woman lifted her foot to make the
+spring, but she hesitated. Before she could make a new attempt, King
+Olaf had his arm round her waist and drew her back.
+
+'Thou unhappy one!' he said. 'Thou wouldest do that which God hath
+prohibited.'
+
+When the woman heard his voice she held her hands before her face as if
+to hide it. But King Olaf knew who she was. The rustle of her dress, the
+shape of her head, the golden rings on her arms had already told him
+that it was the Queen. The first moment Astrid had struggled to free
+herself, but she soon grew quiet, and tried to make the King believe
+that she had not intended to kill herself.
+
+'King Olaf, why dost thou secretly come behind a poor woman who hath
+gone down to the river to see how she is mirrored in the water? What
+must I think of thee?'
+
+Astrid's voice sounded composed and playful. The King stood silent.
+
+'Thou hast frightened me so that I nearly fell into the river,' Astrid
+said. 'Didst thou think, perhaps, that I would drown myself?'
+
+The King answered:
+
+'I know not what to believe; God will enlighten me.'
+
+Astrid laughed and kissed him.
+
+'What woman would take her life who is as happy as I am? Doth one take
+one's life in Paradise?'
+
+'I do not understand it,' said King Olaf, in his gentle manner. 'God
+will enlighten me. He will tell me if it be through any fault of mine
+that thou wouldest commit so great a sin.'
+
+Astrid went up to him and stroked his cheek. The reverence she felt for
+King Olaf had hitherto deterred her from showing him the full tenderness
+of her love. Now she threw her arms passionately around him and kissed
+him countless times. Then she began to speak to him in gentle, bird-like
+tones.
+
+'Wouldest thou know how truly my heart clings to thee?' she said.
+
+She made the King sit down on an overturned boat. She knelt down at his
+feet.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'I will no longer be Queen. She who loves as
+greatly as I love thee cannot be a Queen. I wish thou wouldest go far
+into the forest, and let me be thy bondwoman. Then I should have leave
+to serve thee every day. Then I would prepare thy food, make thy bed,
+and watch over thy house whilst thou slept. None other should have leave
+to serve thee, except I. When thou returnest from the chase in the
+evening, I would go to meet thee, and kneel before thee on the road and
+say: "King Olaf, my life is thine." And thou wouldest laugh, and lower
+thy spear against my breast, and say: "Yes, thy life is mine. Thou hast
+neither father nor mother; thou art mine, and thy life is mine."'
+
+As Astrid said this, she drew, as if in play, King Olaf's sword out of
+its sheath. She laid the hilt in the King's hand, but the point she
+directed towards her own heart.
+
+'Say these words to me, King Olaf,' she said, 'as if we were alone in the
+forest, and I were thy bondwoman. Say: "Thy life is mine."'
+
+'Thy life is God's,' said the King.
+
+Astrid laughed lightly.
+
+'My life is thine,' she repeated, in the tenderest voice, and the same
+moment King Olaf felt that she pressed the point of the sword against
+her breast.
+
+But the King held the sword with a firm hand, even when in play. He drew
+it to him before Astrid had time to do herself any harm. And he sprang
+up. For the first time in his life he trembled from fear. The Queen
+would die at his hand, and she had not been far from attaining her wish.
+At the same moment he had an inspiration, and he understood what was the
+cause of her despair.
+
+'She has committed a sin,' he thought. 'She has a sin upon her
+conscience.'
+
+He bent down over Astrid.
+
+'Tell me in what manner thou hast sinned,' he said.
+
+Astrid had thrown herself down on the rough planks of the bridge, crying
+in utter despair.
+
+'No one free from guilt would weep like this,' thought the King. 'But
+how can the honourable daughter of the King have brought such a heavy
+burden upon her?' he asked himself. 'How can the noble Ingegerd have a
+crime upon her conscience?'
+
+'Ingegerd, tell me how thou hast sinned,' he asked again.
+
+But Astrid was sobbing so violently that she could not answer, but
+instead she drew off her golden arm and finger rings, and handed them to
+the King with averted face. The King thought how unlike this was to the
+gentle King's daughter of whom Hjalte had spoken.
+
+'Is this Hjalte's Ingegerd that lies sobbing at my feet?' he thought.
+
+He bent down and seized Astrid by the shoulder.
+
+'Who are thou? who art thou?' he said, shaking her arm. 'I see that thou
+canst not be Ingegerd. Who art thou?'
+
+Astrid was still sobbing so violently that she could not speak. But in
+order to give the King the answer he asked for, she let down her long
+hair, twisted a lock of it round her arms, and held them towards the
+King, and sat thus bowed and with drooping head. The King thought:
+
+'She wishes me to understand that she belongs to those who wear chains.
+She confesses that she is a bondwoman.'
+
+A thought again struck the King; he now understood everything.
+
+'Has not the Svea-King a daughter who is the child of a bondwoman?' he
+asked suddenly.
+
+He received no answer to this question either, but he heard Astrid
+shudder as if from cold. King Olaf asked still one more question.
+
+'Thou whom I have made my wife,' he said, 'hast thou so low a mind that
+thou wouldest allow thyself to be used as a means of spoiling a man's
+honour? Is thy mind so mean that thou rejoicest when his enemies laugh
+at his discomfiture?'
+
+Astrid could hear from the King's voice how bitterly he suffered under
+the insult that had been offered him. She forgot her own sufferings, and
+wept no more.
+
+'Take my life,' she said.
+
+A great temptation came upon King Olaf.
+
+'Slay this wicked bondwoman,' the old Adam said within him. 'Show the
+Svea-King what it costs to make a fool of the King of Norway.'
+
+At that moment Olaf Haraldsson felt no love for Astrid. He hated her for
+having been the means of his humiliation. He knew everybody would think
+it right when he returned evil for evil, and if he did not avenge this
+insult, he would be held in derision by the Bards, and his enemies would
+no longer fear him. He had but one wish: to slay Astrid, to take her
+life. His anger was so violent that it craved for blood. If a fool had
+dared to put his fool's cap upon his head, would he not have torn it
+off, torn it to pieces, thrown it on the ground, trampled upon it? If he
+now laid Astrid a bloody corpse upon her ship, and sent her back to her
+father, people would say of King Olaf that he was a worthy descendant of
+Harald Haarfager.
+
+But King Olaf still held his sword in his hand, and under his fingers he
+felt the hilt, upon which he had once had inscribed: 'Blessed are the
+peacemakers,' 'Blessed are the meek,' 'Blessed are the merciful.' And
+every time he, in this hour of anguish, grasped his sword firmly in
+order to slay Astrid, he felt these words under his hand. He thought he
+could feel every letter. He remembered the day when he had first heard
+these words.
+
+'This I will write in letters of gold on the hilt of my sword,' he had
+said, 'so that the words may burn in my hand every time I would swing my
+sword in fury, or for an unjust cause.'
+
+He felt that the hilt of the sword now burnt in his hand. King Olaf said
+aloud to himself:
+
+'Formerly thou wert the slave of many lusts; now thou hast but one
+master, and that is God.'
+
+With these words he put back the sword into its sheath, and began to
+walk to and fro on the bridge. Astrid remained lying in the same
+position. King Olaf saw that she crouched in fear of death every time he
+went past her.
+
+'I will not slay thee,' he said; but his voice sounded hard from hatred.
+
+King Olaf continued for awhile to walk backwards and forwards on the
+bridge; then he went up to Astrid, and asked her in the same hard voice
+what her real name was, and that she was able to answer him. He looked
+at this woman whom he had so highly treasured, and who now lay at his
+feet like a wounded deer--he looked down upon her as a dead man's soul
+looks with pity at the poor body which was once its dwelling.
+
+'Oh, thou my soul,' said King Olaf, 'it was there thou dwelt in love,
+and now thou art as homeless as a beggar.' He drew nearer to Astrid,
+and spoke as if she were no longer living or could hear what he said.
+'It was told me that there was a King's daughter whose heart was so pure
+and holy that she endued with peace all who came near her. They told me
+of her gentleness, that he who saw her felt as safe as a helpless child
+does with its mother, and when the beautiful woman who now lies here
+came to me, I thought that she was Ingegerd, and she became exceeding
+dear to me. She was so beautiful and glad, and she made my own heavy
+thoughts light. And did she sometimes act otherwise than I expected the
+proud Ingegerd to do, she was too dear to me to doubt her; she stole
+into my heart with her joyousness and beauty.'
+
+He was silent for a time, and thought how dear Astrid had been to him
+and how happiness had with her come to his house.
+
+'I could forgive her,' he said aloud. 'I could again make her my Queen,
+I could in love take her in my arms; but I _dare_ not, for my soul would
+still be homeless. Ah, thou fair woman,' he said, 'why dost lying dwell
+within thee? With thee there is no security, no rest.'
+
+The King went on bemoaning himself, but now Astrid stood up.
+
+'King Olaf, do not speak thus to me,' she said; 'I will rather die.
+Understand, I am in earnest.'
+
+Then she tried to say a few words to excuse herself. She told him that
+she had gone to Kungah[:a]lla not with the intention of deceiving him, but
+in order to be a Princess for a few weeks, to be waited upon like a
+Queen, to sail on the sea. But she had intended to confess who she was
+as soon as she came to Kungah[:a]lla. There she expected to find Hjalte and
+the other great men who knew Ingegerd. She had never thought of
+deceiving him when she came, but an evil spirit had sent all those away
+who knew Ingegerd, and then the temptation had come to her.
+
+'When I saw thee, King Olaf,' she said, 'I forgot everything to become
+thine, and I thought I would gladly suffer death at thine hand had I but
+for one day been thy wife.'
+
+King Olaf answered her:
+
+'I see that what was deadly earnest to me was but a pastime to thee.
+Never hast thou thought upon what it was to come and say to a man: "I am
+she whom thou most fervently desirest; I am that high-born maiden whom
+it is the greatest honour to win." And then thou art not that woman;
+thou art but a lying bondwoman.'
+
+'I have loved thee from the first moment I heard thy name,' Astrid said
+softly.
+
+The King clenched his hand in anger against her.
+
+'Know, Astrid, that I have longed for Ingegerd as no man has ever longed
+for woman. I would have clung to her as the soul of the dead clings to
+the angel bearing him upwards. I thought she was so pure that she could
+have helped me to lead a sinless life.'
+
+And he broke out into wild longings, and said that he longed for the
+power of the holy ones of God, but that he was too weak and sinful to
+attain to perfection.
+
+'But the King's daughter could have helped me,' he said; 'she the
+saintly and gentle one would have helped me. Oh, my God,' he said,
+'whichever way I turn I see sinners, wherever I go I meet those who
+would entice me to sin. Why didst Thou not send me the King's daughter,
+who had not a single evil thought in her heart? Her gentle eye would
+have found the right path for my foot. Whenever I strayed from it her
+gentle hand would have led me back.'
+
+A feeling of utter helplessness and the weariness of despair fell upon
+Olaf Haraldsson.
+
+'It was this upon which I had set my hopes,' he said--'to have a good
+woman at my side, not to wander alone amongst wickedness and sin
+forever. Now I feel that I must succumb; I am unable to fight any
+longer. Have I not asked God,' he exclaimed, 'what place I shall have
+before His face? To what hast Thou chosen me, Thou Lord of souls? Is it
+appointed unto me to become the equal of apostles and martyrs? But now,
+Astrid, I need ask no longer; God hath not been willing to give me that
+woman who should have assisted me in my wandering. Now I know that I
+shall never win the crown of the Saints.'
+
+The King was silent in inconsolable despair; then Astrid drew nearer to
+him.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'what thou now sayest both Hjalte and Ingegerd
+have told me long ago, but I would not believe that thou wert more than
+a good and brave knight and noble King. It is only now that I have
+lived under thy roof that my soul has begun to fear thee. I have felt
+that it was worse than death to appear before thee with a lie upon my
+lips. Never have I been so terrified,' Astrid continued, 'as when I
+understood that thou wast a Saint. When I saw thee burn the chips in
+thine hand, when I saw sickness flee at thy bidding, and the sword fall
+out of thine enemy's hand when he met thee, I was terrified unto death
+when I saw that thou wast a Saint, and I resolved to die before thou
+knewest that I had deceived thee.'
+
+King Olaf did not answer. Astrid looked up at him; she saw that his eyes
+were turned towards heaven. She did not know if he had heard her.
+
+'Ah,' she said, 'this moment have I feared every day and every hour
+since I came hither. I would have died rather than live through it.'
+
+Olaf Haraldsson was still silent.
+
+'King Olaf,' she said, 'I would gladly give my life for thee; I would
+gladly throw myself into the gray river so that thou shouldst not live
+with a lying woman at thy side. The more I saw of thy holiness the
+better I understood that I must go from thee. A Saint of God cannot have
+a lying bondwoman at his side.'
+
+The King was still silent, but now Astrid raised her eyes to his face;
+then she cried out, terror-stricken:
+
+'King Olaf, thy face shines.'
+
+Whilst Astrid spoke, God had shown King Olaf a vision. He saw all the
+stars of heaven leave their appointed places, and fly like swarming
+bees about the universe. But suddenly they all gathered above his head
+and formed a radiant crown.
+
+'Astrid,' said he, with trembling voice, 'God hath spoken to me. It is
+true what thou sayest. I shall become a Saint of God.'
+
+His voice trembled from emotion, and his face shone in the night. But
+when Astrid saw the light that surrounded his head, she arose. For her
+the last hope had faded.
+
+'Now I will go,' she said. 'Now thou knowest whom thou art. Thou canst
+never more bear me at thy side. But think gently of me. Without joy or
+happiness have I lived all my life. In rags have I gone; blows have I
+endured. Forgive me when I am gone. My love has done thee no harm.'
+
+When Astrid in silent despair crossed over the bridge, Olaf Haraldsson
+awoke from his ecstasy. He hastened after her.
+
+'Why wilt thou go?' he said. 'Why wilt thou go?'
+
+'_Must_ I not go from thee when thou art a Saint?' she whispered
+scarcely audibly.
+
+'Thou shalt not go. Now thou canst remain,' said King Olaf. 'Before, I
+was a lowly man and must fear all sin; a poor earthly King was I, too
+poor to bestow on thee my grace; but now all the glory of Heaven has
+been given to me. Art thou weak? I am the Lord's knight. Dost thou fall?
+I can lift thee up. God hath chosen me, Astrid. Thou canst not harm me,
+but I can help thee. Ah! what am I saying? In this hour God hath so
+wholly and fully shed the riches of His love in my heart that I cannot
+even see thou hast done wrong.'
+
+Gently and tenderly he lifted up the trembling form, and whilst lovingly
+supporting her, who was still sobbing and who could hardly stand
+upright, he and Astrid went back to the King's Castle.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ III
+
+ _Old_ AGNETE
+
+
+
+
+_Old_ AGNETE
+
+
+An old woman went up the mountain-path with short, tripping steps. She
+was little and thin. Her face was pale and wizened, but neither hard nor
+furrowed. She wore a long cloak and a quilled cap. She had a Prayer-Book
+in her hand and a sprig of lavender in her handkerchief.
+
+She lived in a hut far up the high mountain where no trees could grow.
+It was lying quite close to the edge of a broad glacier, which sent its
+river of ice from the snow-clad mountain peak into the depths of the
+valley. There she lived quite alone. All those who had belonged to her
+were dead.
+
+It was Sunday, and she had been to church. But whatever might be the
+cause, her going there had not made her happy, but sorrowful. The
+clergyman had spoken about death and the doomed, and that had affected
+her. She had suddenly begun to think of how she had heard in her
+childhood that many of the doomed were tormented in the region of
+eternal cold on the mountain right above her dwelling. She could
+remember many tales about these wanderers of the glaciers--these
+indefatigable shadows which were hunted from place to place by the icy
+mountain winds.
+
+All at once she felt a great terror of the mountain, and thought that
+her hut was dreadfully high up. Supposing those who moved about
+invisibly there wandered down the glaciers! And she who was quite alone!
+The word 'alone' gave to her thoughts a still sadder turn. She again
+felt the full burden of that sorrow which never left her. She thought
+how hard it was to be so far away from human beings.
+
+'Old Agnete,' she said aloud to herself, as she had got into the habit
+of doing in the lonely waste, 'you sit in your hut and spin, and spin.
+You work and toil all the hours of the day so as not to perish from
+hunger. But is there anyone to whom you give any pleasure by being
+alive? Is there anyone, old Agnete? If any of your own were
+living----Yes, then, perhaps, if you lived nearer the village, you might
+be of some use to somebody. Poor as you are, you could neither take dog
+nor cat home to you, but you could probably now and then give a beggar
+shelter. You ought not to live so far away from the highroad, old
+Agnete. If you could only once in a while give a thirsty wayfarer a
+drink, then you would know that it was of some use your being alive.'
+
+She sighed, and said to herself that not even the peasant women who gave
+her flax to spin would mourn her death. She had certainly striven to do
+her work honestly and well, but no doubt there were many who could have
+done it better. She began to cry bitterly, when the thought struck her
+that his reverence, who had seen her sitting in the same place in church
+for so many, many years, would perhaps think it a matter of perfect
+indifference whether she was dead or not.
+
+'It is as if I were dead,' she said. 'No one asks after me. I would just
+as well lie down and die. I am already frozen to death from cold and
+loneliness. I am frozen to the core of the heart, I am indeed. Ah me! ah
+me!' she said, now she had been set a-thinking; 'if there were only
+someone who really needed me, there might still be a little warmth left
+in old Agnete. But I cannot knit stockings for the mountain goats, or
+make the beds for the marmots, can I? I tell Thee,' she said, stretching
+our her hands towards heaven, 'something Thou must give me to do, or I
+shall lay me down and die.'
+
+At the same moment a tall, stern monk came towards her. He walked by her
+side because he saw that she was sorrowful, and she told him about her
+troubles. She said that her heart was nearly frozen to death, and that
+she would become like one of the wanderers on the glacier if God did not
+give her something to live for.
+
+'God will assuredly do that,' said the monk.
+
+'Do you not see that God is powerless here?' old Agnete said. 'Here
+there is nothing but an empty, barren waste.'
+
+They went higher and higher towards the snow mountains. The moss spread
+itself softly over the stones; the Alpine herbs, with their velvety
+leaves, grew along the pathway; the mountain, with its rifts and
+precipices, its glaciers and snow-drifts, towered above them, weighing
+them down. Then the monk discovered old Agnete's hut, right below the
+glacier.
+
+'Oh,' he said, 'is it there you live? Then you are not alone there; you
+have company enough. Only look!'
+
+The monk put his thumb and first finger together, held them before old
+Agnete's left eye, and bade her look through them towards the mountain.
+But old Agnete shuddered and closed her eyes.
+
+'If there is anything to see up there, then I will not look on any
+account,' she said. 'The Lord preserve us! it is bad enough without
+that.'
+
+'Good-bye, then,' said the monk; 'it is not certain that you will be
+permitted to see such a thing a second time.'
+
+Old Agnete grew curious; she opened her eyes and looked towards the
+glacier. At first she saw nothing remarkable, but soon she began to
+discern things moving about. What she had taken to be mist and vapour,
+or bluish-white shadows on the ice, were multitudes of doomed souls,
+tormented in the eternal cold.
+
+Poor old Agnete trembled like an aspen leaf. Everything was just as she
+had heard it described in days gone by. The dead wandered about there in
+endless anguish and pain. Most of them were shrouded in something long
+and white, but all had their faces and their hands bared.
+
+They could not be counted, there was such a multitude. The longer she
+looked, the more there appeared. Some walked proud and erect, others
+seemed to dance over the glacier; but she saw that they all cut their
+feet on the sharp and jagged edges of the ice.
+
+It was just as she had been told. She saw how they constantly huddled
+close together, as if to warm themselves, but immediately drew back
+again, terrified by the deathly cold which emanated from their bodies.
+
+It was as if the cold of the mountain came from them, as if it were they
+who prevented the snow from melting and made the mist so piercingly
+cold.
+
+They were not all moving; some stood in icy stoniness, and it looked as
+if they had been standing thus for years, for ice and snow had gathered
+around them so that only the upper portion of their bodies could be
+seen.
+
+The longer the little old woman gazed the quieter she grew. Fear left
+her, and she was only filled with sorrow for all these tormented beings.
+There was no abatement in their pain, no rest for their torn feet,
+hurrying over ice sharp as edged steel. And how cold they were! how they
+shivered! how their teeth chattered from cold! Those who were petrified
+and those who could move, all suffered alike from the snarling, biting,
+unbearable cold.
+
+There were many young men and women; but there was no youth in their
+faces, blue with cold. It looked as if they were playing, but all joy
+was dead. They shivered, and were huddled up like old people.
+
+But those who made the deepest impression on her were those frozen fast
+in the hard glacier, and those who were hanging from the mountain-side
+like great icicles.
+
+Then the monk removed his hand, and old Agnete saw only the barren,
+empty glaciers. Here and there were ice-mounds, but they did not
+surround any petrified ghosts. The blue light on the glacier did not
+proceed from frozen bodies; the wind chased the snowflakes before it,
+but not any ghosts.
+
+Still old Agnete was certain that she had really seen all this, and she
+asked the monk:
+
+'Is it permitted to do anything for these poor doomed ones?'
+
+He answered:
+
+'When has God forbidden Love to do good or Mercy to solace?'
+
+Then the monk went his way, and old Agnete went to her hut and thought
+it all over. The whole evening she pondered how she could help the
+doomed who were wandering on the glaciers. For the first time in many
+years she had been too busy to think of her loneliness.
+
+Next morning she again went down to the village. She smiled, and was
+well content. Old age was no longer so heavy a burden. 'The dead,' she
+said to herself, 'do not care so much about red cheeks and light steps.
+They only want one to think of them with a little warmth. But young
+people do not trouble to do that. Oh no, oh no. How should the dead
+protect themselves from the terrible coldness of death did not old
+people open their hearts to them?
+
+When she came to the village shop she bought a large package of candles,
+and from a peasant she ordered a great load of firewood; but in order to
+pay for it she had to take in twice as much spinning as usual.
+
+Towards evening, when she got home again, she said many prayers, and
+tried to keep up her courage by singing hymns. But her courage sank more
+and more. All the same, she did what she had made up her mind to do.
+
+She moved her bed into the inner room of her hut. In the front room she
+made a big fire and lighted it. In the window she placed two candles,
+and left the outer door wide open. Then she went to bed.
+
+She lay in the darkness and listened.
+
+Yes, there certainly was a step. It was as if someone had come gliding
+down the glacier. It came heavily, moaning. It crept round the hut as if
+it dared not come in. Close to the wall it stood and shivered.
+
+Old Agnete could not bear it any longer. She sprang out of bed, went
+into the outer room and closed the door. It was too much; flesh and
+blood could not stand it.
+
+Outside the hut she heard deep sighs and dragging steps, as of sore,
+wounded feet. They dragged themselves away further and further up the
+icy glacier. Now and again she also heard sobs; but soon everything was
+quiet.
+
+Then old Agnete was beside herself with anxiety. 'You are a coward, you
+silly old thing,' she said. 'Both the fire and the lights, which cost so
+much, are burning out. Shall it all have been done in vain because you
+are such a miserable coward?' And when she had said this she got out of
+bed again, crying from fear, with chattering teeth, and shivering all
+over; but into the other room she went, and the door she opened.
+
+Again she lay and waited. Now she was no longer frightened that they
+should come. She was only afraid lest she had scared them away, and that
+they dared not come back.
+
+And as she lay there in the darkness she began to call just as she used
+to do in her young days when she was tending the sheep.
+
+'My little white lambs, my lambs in the mountains, come, come! Come down
+from rift and precipice, my little white lambs!'
+
+Then it seemed as if a cold wind from the mountain came rushing into the
+room. She heard neither step nor sob, only gusts of wind that came
+rushing along the walls of the hut into the room. And it sounded as if
+someone were continually saying:
+
+'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't frighten her! don't frighten
+her!'
+
+She had a feeling as if the outside room was so overcrowded that they
+were being crushed against the walls, and that the walls were giving
+way. Sometimes it seemed as if they would lift the roof in order to gain
+more room. But the whole time there were whispers:
+
+'Hush, hush! Don't frighten her! don't frighten her!'
+
+Then old Agnete felt happy and peaceful. She folded her hands and fell
+asleep. In the morning it seemed as if the whole had been a dream.
+Everything looked as usual in the outer room; the fire had burnt out,
+and so had the candles. There was not a vestige of tallow left in the
+candlesticks.
+
+As long as old Agnete lived she continued to do this. She spun and
+worked so that she could keep her fire burning every night. And she was
+happy because someone needed her.
+
+Then one Sunday she was not in her usual seat in the church. Two
+peasants went up to her hut to see if there was anything the matter. She
+was already dead, and they carried her body down to the village to bury
+it.
+
+When, the following Sunday, her funeral took place, just before Mass,
+there were but few who followed, neither did one see grief on any face.
+But suddenly, just as the coffin was being lowered into the grave, a
+tall, stern monk came into the churchyard, and he stood still and
+pointed to the snow-clad mountains. Then they saw the whole
+mountain-ridge shining in a red light as if lighted with joy, and round
+it wound a procession of small yellow flames, looking like burning
+candles. And these flames numbered as many as the candles which old
+Agnete had burned for the doomed. Then people said: 'Praise the Lord!
+She whom no one mourns here below has all the same found friends in the
+solitude above.'
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ IV
+
+ _The Fisherman's_ RING
+
+
+
+
+_The Fisherman's_ RING
+
+
+During the reign of the Doge Gradenigos there lived in Venice an old
+fisherman, Cecco by name. He had been an unusually strong man, and was
+still very strong for his age, but lately he had given up work and left
+it to his two sons to provide for him. He was very proud of his sons,
+and he loved them--ah, signor, how he loved them!
+
+Fate had so ordered it that their bringing up had been almost entirely
+left to him. Their mother had died early, and so Cecco had to take care
+of them. He had looked after their clothes and cooked their food; he had
+sat in the boat with needle and cotton and mended and darned. He had not
+cared in the least that people had laughed at him on that account. He
+had also, quite alone, taught them all it was necessary for them to
+know. He had made a couple of able fishermen of them, and taught them to
+honour God and San Marco.
+
+'Always remember,' he said to them, 'that Venice will never be able to
+stand in her own strength. Look at her! Has she not been built on the
+waves? Look at the low islands close to land, where the sea plays
+amongst the seaweed. You would not venture to tread upon them, and yet
+it is upon such foundation that the whole city rests. And do you not
+know that the north wind has strength enough to throw both churches and
+palaces into the sea? Do you not know that we have such powerful
+enemies, that all the princes in Christendom cannot vanquish them?
+Therefore you must always pray to San Marco, for in his strong hands
+rests the chains which hold Venice suspended over the depths of the
+sea.'
+
+And in the evening, when the moon shed its light over Venice,
+greenish-blue from the sea-mist; when they quietly glided up the Canale
+Grande and the gondolas they met were full of singers; when the palaces
+shone in their white splendour, and thousands of lights mirrored
+themselves in the dark waters--then he always reminded them that they
+must thank San Marco for life and happiness.
+
+But oh, signor! he did not forget him in the daytime either. When they
+returned from fishing and glided over the water of the lagoons,
+light-blue and golden; when the city lay before them, swimming on the
+waves; when the great ships passed in and out of the harbour, and the
+palace of the Doges shone like a huge jewel-casket, holding all the
+world's treasure--then he never forgot to tell them that all these
+things were the gift of San Marco, and that they would all vanish if a
+single Venetian were ungrateful enough to give up believing in and
+adoring him.
+
+Then, one day, the sons went out fishing on the open sea, outside Lido.
+They were in company with several others, had a splendid vessel, and
+intended being away several days. The weather was fine, and they hoped
+for a goodly haul.
+
+They left the Rialto, the large island where the city proper lies, one
+early morning, and as they passed through the lagoons they saw all the
+islands which, like fortifications, protect Venice against the sea,
+appear through the mist of the morning. There were La Gindecca and San
+Giorgio on the right, and San Michele, Muracco and San Lazzaro on the
+left. Then island followed upon island in a large circle, right on to
+the long Lido lying straight before them, and forming, as it were, the
+clasp of this string of pearls. And beyond Lido was the wide, infinite
+sea.
+
+When they were well at sea, some of them got into a small boat and rowed
+out to set their nets. It was still fine weather, although the waves
+were higher here than inside the islands. None of them, however, dreamt
+of any danger. They had a good boat and were experienced men. But soon
+those left on the vessel saw that the sea and the sky suddenly grew
+darker in the north. They understood that a storm was coming on, and
+they at once shouted to their comrades, but they were already too far
+away to hear them.
+
+The wind first reached the small boat. When the fishermen suddenly saw
+the waves rise around them, as herds of cattle on a large plain arise in
+the morning, one of the men in the boat stood up and beckoned to his
+comrades, but the same moment he fell backwards into the sea.
+Immediately afterwards a wave came which raised the boat on her bows,
+and one could see how the men, as it were, were shaken from off their
+seats and flung into the sea. It only lasted a moment, and everything
+had disappeared. Then the boat again appeared, keel upwards. The men in
+the vessel tried to reach the spot, but could not tack against the wind.
+
+It was a terrific storm which came rushing over the sea, and soon the
+fishermen in the vessel had their work set to save themselves. They
+succeeded in getting home safely, however, and brought with them the
+news of the disaster. It was Cecco's two sons and three others who had
+perished.
+
+Ah me! how strangely things come about! The same morning Cecco had gone
+down to the Rialto to the fish-market. He went about amongst the stands
+and strutted about like a fine gentleman because he had no need to work.
+He even invited a couple of old Lido fishermen to an asteri and stood
+them a beaker of wine. He grew very important as he sat there and
+bragged and boasted about his sons. His spirits rose high, and he took
+out the zecchine--the one the Doge had given him when he had saved a
+child from drowning in Canale Grande. He was very proud of this large
+gold coin, carried it always about him, and showed it to people whenever
+there was an opportunity.
+
+Suddenly a man entered the asteri and began to tell about the disaster,
+without noticing that Cecco was sitting there. But he had not been
+speaking long before Cecco threw himself over him and seized him by the
+throat.
+
+'You do not dare to tell me that they are dead!' he shrieked--'not my
+sons!'
+
+The man succeeded in getting away from him, but Cecco for a long time
+went on as if he were out of his mind. People heard him shout and groan;
+they crowded into the asteri--as many as it could hold--and stood round
+him in a circle as if he were a juggler.
+
+Cecco sat on the floor and moaned. He hit the hard stone floor with his
+fist, and said over and over again:
+
+'It is San Marco, San Marco, San Marco!'
+
+'Cecco, you have taken leave of your senses from grief,' they said to
+him.
+
+'I knew it would happen on the open sea,' Cecco said; 'outside Lido and
+Malamocco, there, I knew it would happen. There San Marco would take
+them. He bore them a grudge. I have feared it, boy. Yes,' he said,
+without hearing what they said to quiet him, 'they once laughed at him,
+once when we were lying outside Lido. He has not forgotten it; he will
+not stand being laughed at.'
+
+He looked with confused glances at the bystanders, as if to seek help.
+
+'Look here, Beppo from Malamocca,' he said, stretching out his hand
+towards a big fisherman, 'don't you believe it was San Marco?'
+
+'Don't imagine any such thing, Cecco.'
+
+'Now you shall hear, Beppo, how it happened. You see, we were lying out
+at sea, and to while away the time I told them how San Marco had come to
+Venice. The evangelist San Marco was first buried in a beautiful
+cathedral at Alexandria in Egypt. But the town got into the possession
+of unbelievers, and one day the Khalifa ordered that they should build
+him a magnificent palace at Alexandria, and take some columns from the
+Christian churches for its decoration. But just at that time there were
+two Venetian merchants at Alexandria who had ten heavily-laden vessels
+lying in the harbour. When these men entered the church where San Marco
+was buried and heard the command of the Khalifa, they said to the
+sorrowful priests: "The precious body which you have in your church may
+be desecrated by the Saracens. Give it to us; we will honour it, for San
+Marco was the first to preach on the Lagoon, and the Doge will reward
+you." And the priests gave their consent, and in order that the
+Christians of Alexandria should not object, the body of another holy man
+was placed in the Evangelist's coffin. But to prevent the Saracens from
+getting any news of the removal of the body, it was placed at the bottom
+of a large chest, and above it were packed hams and smoked bacon, which
+the Saracens could not endure. So when the Custom-house officers opened
+the lid of the chest, they at once hurried away. The two merchants,
+however, brought San Marco safely to Venice; you know, Beppo, that this
+is what they say.'
+
+'I do, Cecco.'
+
+'Yes; but just listen now,' and Cecco half arose, and in his fear spoke
+in a low voice. 'Something terrible now happened. When I told the boys
+that the holy man had been hidden underneath the bacon, they burst out
+laughing. I tried to hush them, but they only laughed the louder.
+Giacomo was lying on his stomach in the bows, and Pietro sat with his
+legs dangling outside the boat, and they both laughed so that it could
+be heard far out over the sea.'
+
+'But, Cecco, surely two children may be allowed to laugh.'
+
+'But don't you understand that is where they have perished to-day--on
+the very spot? Or can you understand why they should have lost their
+lives on that spot?'
+
+Now they all began to talk to him and comfort him. It was his grief
+which made him lose his senses. This was not like San Marco. He would
+not revenge himself upon two children. Was it not natural that when a
+boat was caught in a storm this would happen on the open sea and not in
+the harbour?
+
+Surely his sons had not lived in enmity with San Marco. They had heard
+them shout, '_Eviva San Marco!_' as eagerly as all the others, and had
+he not protected them to this very day. He had never, during the years
+that had passed, shown any sign of being angry with them.
+
+'But, Cecco,' they said, 'you will bring misfortune upon us with your
+talk about San Marco. You, who are an old man and a wise man, should
+know better than to raise his anger against the Venetians. What are we
+without him?'
+
+Cecco sat and looked at them bewildered.
+
+'Then you don't believe it?'
+
+'No one in his senses would believe such a thing.'
+
+It looked as if they had succeeded in quieting him.
+
+'I will also try not to believe it,' he said. He rose and walked towards
+the door. 'It would be too cruel, would it not?' he said. 'They were
+too handsome and too brave for anyone to hate them; I will not believe
+it.'
+
+He went home, and in the narrow street outside his door he met an old
+woman, one of his neighbours.
+
+'They are reading a Mass in the cathedral for the souls of the dead,'
+she said to Cecco, and hurried away. She was afraid of him; he looked so
+strange.
+
+Cecco took his boat and made his way through the small canals down to
+Riva degli Schiavoni. There was a wide view from there; he looked
+towards Lido and the sea. Yes, it was a hard wind, but not a storm by
+any means; there were hardly any waves. And his sons had perished in
+weather like this! It was inconceivable.
+
+He fastened his boat, and went across the Piazetta and the Market Place
+into San Marco. There were many people in the church, and they were all
+kneeling and praying in great fear; for it is much more terrible for the
+Venetians, you know, than any other people when there is a disaster at
+sea. They do not get their living from vineyards or fields, but they are
+all, everyone of them, dependent on the sea. Whenever the sea rose
+against any one of them they were all afraid, and hurried to San Marco
+to pray to him for protection.
+
+As soon as Cecco entered the cathedral he stopped. He thought of how he
+had brought his little sons there, and taught them to pray to San Marco.
+'It is he who carries us over the sea, who opens the gates of Byzance
+for us and gives us the supremacy over the islands of the East,' he
+said to them. Out of gratitude for all this the Venetians had built San
+Marco the most beautiful temple in the world, and no vessel ever
+returned from a foreign port without bringing a gift for San Marco.
+
+Then they had admired the red marble walls of the cathedral and the
+golden mosaic ceiling. It was as if no misfortune could befall a city
+that had such a sanctuary for her patron Saint.
+
+Cecco quickly knelt down and began to pray, the one _Paternoster_ after
+the other. It came back, he felt. He would send it away by prayers. He
+would not believe anything bad about San Marco.
+
+But it had been no storm at all. And so much was certain, that even if
+the Saint had not sent the storm, he had, in any case, not done anything
+to help Cecco's sons, but had allowed them to perish as if by accident.
+When this thought came upon him he began to pray; but the thought would
+not leave him.
+
+And to think that San Marco had a treasury in this cathedral full of all
+the glories of fairyland! To think that he had himself prayed to him all
+his life, and had never rowed past the Piazetta without going into the
+cathedral to invoke him!
+
+Surely it was not by a mere accident that his sons had to-day perished
+on the sea! Oh, it was miserable for the Venetians to have no one better
+to depend upon! Just fancy a Saint who revenged himself upon two
+children--a patron Saint who could not protect against a gust of wind!
+
+He stood up, and he shrugged his shoulders, and disparagingly waved his
+hand when he looked towards the tomb of the Saint in the chancel.
+
+A verger was going about with a large chased silver-gilt dish,
+collecting gifts for San Marco. He went from the one person to the
+other, and also came to Cecco.
+
+Cecco drew back as if it were the Evil One himself who handed him the
+plate. Did San Marco ask for gifts from him? Did he think he deserved
+gifts from him?
+
+All at once he seized the large golden zecchine he had in his belt, and
+flung it into the plate with such violence that the ring of it could be
+heard all over the church. It disturbed those who were praying, and made
+them turn round. And all who saw Cecco's face were terrified; he looked
+as if he were possessed of evil spirits.
+
+Cecco immediately left the church, and at first felt it as a great
+relief that he had been revenged upon the Saint. He had treated him as
+one treats a usurer who demands more than he is entitled to. 'Take this
+too,' one says, and throws his last gold piece in the fellow's face so
+that the blood runs down over his eyes. But the usurer does not strike
+again--simply stoops and picks up the zecchine. So, too, had San Marco
+done. He had accepted Cecco's zecchine, having first robbed him of his
+sons. Cecco had made him accept a gift which had been tendered with such
+bitter hatred. Would an honourable man have put up with such treatment?
+But San Marco was a coward--both cowardly and revengeful. But he was not
+likely to revenge himself upon Cecco. He was, no doubt, pleased and
+thankful he had got the zecchine. He simply accepted it and pretended
+that it had been given as piously as could be.
+
+When Cecco stood at the entrance, two vergers quickly passed him.
+
+'It rises--it rises terribly!' the one said.
+
+'What rises?' asked Cecco.
+
+'The water in the crypt. It has risen a foot in the last two or three
+minutes.'
+
+When Cecco went down the steps, he saw a small pool of water on the
+Market Place close to the bottom step. It was sea-water, which had
+splashed up from the Piazetta. He was surprised that the sea had risen
+so high, and he hurried down to the Riva, where his boat lay. Everything
+was as he had left it, only the water had risen considerably. It came
+rolling in broad waves through the five sea-gates; but the wind was not
+very strong. At the Riva there were already pools of sea-water, and the
+canals rose so that the doors in the houses facing the water had to be
+closed. The sky was all gray like the sea.
+
+It never struck Cecco that it might grow into a serious storm. He would
+not believe any such thing. San Marco had allowed his sons to perish
+without cause. He felt sure this was no real storm. He would just like
+to see if it would be a storm, and he sat down beside his boat and
+waited.
+
+Then suddenly rifts appeared in the dull-gray clouds which covered the
+sky. The clouds were torn asunder and flung aside, and large
+storm-clouds came rushing, black like warships, and from them scourging
+rain and hail fell upon the city. And something like quite a new sea
+came surging in from Lido. Ah, signor! they were not the swan-necked
+waves you have seen out there, the waves that bend their transparent
+necks and hasten towards the shore, and which, when they are pitilessly
+repulsed, float away again with their white foam-hair dispersed over the
+surface of the sea. These were dark waves, chasing each other in furious
+rage, and over their tops the bitter froth of the sea was whipped into
+mist.
+
+The wind was now so strong that the seagulls could no longer continue
+their quiet flight, but, shrieking, were thrust from their course. Cecco
+soon saw them with much trouble making their way towards the sea, so as
+not to be caught by the storm and flung against the walls. Hundreds of
+pigeons on San Marco's square flew up, beating their wings, so that it
+sounded like a new storm, and hid themselves away in all the nooks and
+corners of the church roof.
+
+But it was not the birds alone that were frightened by the storm. A
+couple of gondolas had already got loose, and were thrown against the
+shore, and were nearly shattered. And now all the gondoliers came
+rushing to pull their boats into the boathouses, or place them in
+shelter in the small canals.
+
+The sailors on the ships lying in the harbour worked with the
+anchor-chains to make the vessels fast, in order to prevent them
+drifting on to the shore. They took down the clothes hanging up to dry,
+pulled their long caps well over their foreheads, and began to collect
+all the loose articles lying about in order to bring them below deck.
+Outside Canale Grande a whole fishing-fleet came hurrying home. All the
+people from Lido and Malamocco who had sold their goods at the Rialto
+were rushing homewards, before the storm grew too violent.
+
+Cecco laughed when he saw the fishermen bending over their oars and
+straining themselves as if they were fleeing from death itself. Could
+they not see that it was only a gust of wind? They could very well have
+remained and given the Venetian women time to buy all their cattle,
+fish, and crabs.
+
+He was certainly not going to pull his boat into shelter, although the
+storm was now violent enough for any ordinary man to have taken notice
+of it. The floating bridges were lifted up high and cast on to the
+shore, whilst the washerwomen hurried home shrieking. The broad-brimmed
+hats of the signors were blown off into the canals, from whence the
+street-boys fished them out with great glee. Sails were torn from the
+masts, and fluttered in the air with a cracking sound; children were
+knocked down by the strong wind; and the clothes hanging on the lines in
+the narrow streets were torn to rags and carried far away.
+
+Cecco laughed at the storm--a storm which drove the birds away, and
+played all sorts of pranks in the street, like a boy. But, all the same,
+he pulled his boat under one of the arches of the bridge. One could
+really not allow what that wind might take it into its head to do.
+
+In the evening Cecco thought that it would have been fun to have been
+out at sea. It would have been splendid sailing with such a fresh wind.
+But on shore it was unpleasant. Chimneys were blown down; the roofs of
+the boathouses were lifted right off; it rained tiles from the houses
+into the canals; the wind shook the doors and the window-shutters,
+rushed in under the open loggias of the palaces and tore off the
+decorations.
+
+Cecco held out bravely, but he did not go home to bed. He could not take
+the boat home with him, so it was better to remain and look after it.
+But when anyone went by and said that it was terrible weather he would
+not admit it. He had experienced very different weather in his young
+days.
+
+'Storm!' he said to himself--'call this a storm? And they think,
+perhaps, that it began the same moment I threw the zecchine to San
+Marco. As if he can command a real storm!'
+
+When night came the wind and the sea grew still more violent, so that
+Venice trembled in her foundations. Doge Gradenigo and the Gentlemen of
+the High Council went in the darkness of the night to San Marco to pray
+for the city. Torch-bearers went before them, and the flames were spread
+out by the wind, so that they lay flat, like pennants. The wind tore the
+Doge's heavy brocade gown, so that two men were obliged to hold it.
+
+Cecco thought this was the most remarkable thing he had ever seen--Doge
+Gradenigo going himself to the cathedral on account of this bit of a
+wind! What would those people have done if there had been a real storm?
+
+The waves beat incessantly against the bulwarks. In the darkness of the
+night it was as if white-headed wresters sprang up from the deep, and
+with teeth and claws clung fast to the piles to tear them loose from the
+shore. Cecco fancied he could hear their angry snorts when they were
+hurled back again. But he shuddered when he heard them come again and
+again, and tear in the bulwarks.
+
+It seemed to him that the storm was far more terrible in the night. He
+heard shouts in the air, and that was not the wind. Sometimes black
+clouds came drifting like a whole row of heavy galleys, and it seemed as
+if they advanced to make an assault on the city. Then he heard
+distinctly someone speaking in one of the riven clouds over his head.
+
+'Things look bad for Venice now,' it said from the one cloud. 'Soon our
+brothers the evil spirits will come and overthrow the city.'
+
+'I am afraid San Marco will not allow it to happen,' came as a response
+from the other cloud.
+
+'San Marco has been knocked down by a Venetian, so he lies powerless,
+and cannot help anyone,' said the first.
+
+The storm carried the words down to old Cecco, and from that moment he
+was on his knees, praying San Marco for grace and forgiveness. For the
+evil spirits had spoken the truth. It did indeed look bad for Venice.
+The fair Queen of the Isles was near destruction. A Venetian had mocked
+San Marco, and therefore Venice was in danger of being carried away by
+the sea. There would be no more moonlight sails or her sea and in her
+canals, and no more barcaroles would be heard from her black gondolas.
+The sea would wash over the golden-haired signoras, over the proud
+palaces, over San Marco, resplendent with gold.
+
+If there was no one to protect these islands, they were doomed to
+destruction. Before San Marco came to Venice it had often happened that
+large portions of them had been washed away by the waves.
+
+At early dawn San Marco's Church bells began to ring. People crept to
+the church, their clothes being nearly torn off them.
+
+The storm went on increasing. The priests had resolved to go out and
+adjure the storm and the sea. The main doors of the cathedral were
+opened, and the long procession streamed out of the church. Foremost the
+cross was carried, then came the choir-boys with wax candles, and last
+in the procession were carried the banner of San Marco and the Sacred
+Host.
+
+But the storm did not allow itself to be cowed; on the contrary, it was
+as if it wished for nothing better to play with. It upset the
+choir-boys, blew out the wax candles, and flung the baldachin, which was
+carried over the Host, on to the top of the Doge's palace. It was with
+the utmost trouble that they saved San Marco's banner, with the winged
+lion, from being carried away.
+
+Cecco saw all this, and stole down to his boat moaning loudly. The whole
+day he lay near the shore, often wet by the waves and in danger of being
+washed into the sea. The whole day he was praying incessantly to God and
+San Marco. He felt that the fate of the whole city depended upon his
+prayers.
+
+There were not many people about that day, but some few went moaning
+along the Riva. All spoke about the immeasurable damage the storm had
+wrought. One could see the houses tumbling down on the Murano. It was as
+if the whole island were under water. And also on the Rialto one or two
+houses had fallen.
+
+The storm continued the whole day with unabated violence. In the evening
+a large multitude of people assembled at the Market Place and the
+Piazetta, although these were nearly covered with water. People dared
+not remain in their houses, which shook in their very foundations. And
+the cries of those who feared disaster mingled with the lamentations of
+those whom it had already overtaken. Whole dwellings were under water;
+children were drowned in their cradles. The old and the sick had been
+swept with the overturned houses into the waves.
+
+Cecco was still lying and praying to San Marco. Oh, how could the crime
+of a poor fisherman be taken in such earnest? Surely it was not his
+fault that the saint was so powerless! He would let the demons take him
+and his boat; he deserved no better fate. But not the whole city!--oh,
+God in heaven, not the whole city!
+
+'My sons!' Cecco said to San Marco. 'What do I care about my sons when
+Venice is at stake! I would willingly give a son for each tile in danger
+of being blown into the canal if I could keep them in their place at
+that price. Oh, San Marco, each little stone of Venice is worth as much
+as a promising son.'
+
+At times he saw terrible things. There was a large galley which had torn
+itself from its moorings and now came drifting towards the shore. It
+went straight against the bulwark, and struck it with the ram's head in
+her bows, just as if it had been an enemy's ship. It gave blow after
+blow, and the attack was so violent that the vessel immediately sprang a
+leak. The water rushed in, the leak grew larger, and the proud ship went
+to pieces. But the whole time one could see the captain and two or three
+of the crew, who would not leave the vessel, cling to the deck and meet
+death without attempting to escape it.
+
+The second night came, and Cecco's prayers continued to knock at the
+gate of heaven.
+
+'Let me alone suffer!' he cried. 'San Marco, it is more than a man can
+bear, thus to drag others with him to destruction. Only send thy lion
+and kill me; I shall not attempt to escape. Everything that thou wilt
+have me give up for the city, that will I willingly sacrifice.'
+
+Just as he had uttered these words he looked towards the Piazetta, and
+he thought he could no longer see San Marco's lion on the granite
+pillar. Had San Marco permitted his lion to be overthrown? old Cecco
+cried. He was nearly giving up Venice.
+
+Whilst he was lying there he saw visions and heard voices all the time.
+The demons talked and moved to and fro. He heard them wheeze like wild
+beasts every time they made their assaults on the bulwarks. He did not
+mind them much; it was worse about Venice.
+
+Then he heard in the air above him the beating of strong wings; this
+was surely San Marco's lion flying overhead. It moved backwards and
+forwards in the air; he saw and yet he did not see it. Then it seemed to
+him as if it descended on Riva degli Schiavoni, where he was lying, and
+prowled about there. He was on the point of jumping into the sea from
+fear, but he remained sitting where he was. It was no doubt he whom the
+lion sought. If that could only save Venice, then he was quite willing
+to let San Marco avenge himself upon him.
+
+Then the lion came crawling along the ground like a cat. He saw it
+making ready to spring. He noticed that it beat its wings and screwed
+its large carbuncle eyes together till they were only small fiery slits.
+
+Then old Cecco certainly did think of creeping down to his boat and
+hiding himself under the arch of the bridge, but he pulled himself
+together and remained where he was. The same moment a tall, imposing
+figure stood by his side.
+
+'Good-evening, Cecco,' said the man; 'take your boat and row me across
+to San Giorgio Maggiore.'
+
+'Yes, signor,' immediately replied the old fisherman.
+
+It was as if he had awakened from a dream. The lion had disappeared, and
+the man must be somebody who knew him, although Cecco could not quite
+remember where he had seen him before. He was glad to have company. The
+terrible heaviness and anguish that had been over him since he had
+revolted against the Saint suddenly vanished. As to rowing across to
+San Giorgio, he did not for a moment think that it could be done.
+
+'I don't believe we can even get the boat out,' he said to himself.
+
+But there was something about the man at his side that made him feel he
+must do all he possibly could to serve him; and he did succeed in
+getting out the boat. He helped the stranger into the boat and took the
+oars.
+
+Cecco could not help laughing to himself.
+
+'What are you thinking about? Don't go out further in any case,' he
+said. 'Have you ever seen the like of these waves? Do tell him that it
+is not within the power of man.'
+
+But he felt as if he could not tell the stranger that it was impossible.
+He was sitting there as quietly as if he were sailing to the Lido on a
+summer's eve. And Cecco began to row to San Giorgio Maggiore.
+
+It was a terrible row. Time after time the waves washed over them.
+
+'Oh, stop him!' Cecco said under his breath; 'do stop the man who goes
+to sea in such weather! Otherwise he is a sensible old fisherman. Do
+stop him!'
+
+Now the boat was up a steep mountain, and then it went down into a
+valley. The foam splashed down on Cecco from the waves that rushed past
+him like runaway horses, but in spite of everything he approached San
+Giorgio.
+
+'For whom are you doing all this, risking boat and life?' he said. 'You
+don't even know whether he can pay you. He does not look like a fine
+gentleman. He is no better dressed than you are.'
+
+But he only said this to keep up his courage, and not to be ashamed of
+his tractability. He was simply compelled to do everything the man in
+the boat wanted.
+
+'But in any case not right to San Giorgio, you foolhardy old man,' he
+said. 'The wind is even worse there than at the Rialto.'
+
+But he went there, nevertheless, and made the boat fast whilst the
+stranger went on shore. He thought the wisest thing he could do would be
+to slip away and leave his boat, but he did not do it. He would rather
+die than deceive the stranger. He saw the latter go into the Church of
+San Giorgio. Soon afterwards he returned, accompanied by a knight in
+full armour.
+
+'Row us now to San Nicolo in Lido,' said the stranger.
+
+'Ay, ay,' Cecco thought; 'why not to Lido?' They had already, in
+constant anguish and death, rowed to San Giorgio; why should they not
+set out for Lido?
+
+And Cecco was shocked at himself that he obeyed the stranger even unto
+death, for he now actually steered for the Lido.
+
+Being now three in the boat, it was still heavier work. He had no idea
+how he should be able to do it. 'You might have lived many years yet,'
+he said sorrowfully to himself. But the strange thing was that he was
+not sorrowful, all the same. He was so glad that he could have laughed
+aloud. And then he was proud that he could make headway. 'He knows how
+to use his oars, does old Cecco,' he said.
+
+They laid-to at Lido, and the two strangers went on shore. They walked
+towards San Nicolo in Lido, and soon returned accompanied by an old
+Bishop, with robe and stole, crosier in hand, and mitre on head.
+
+'Now row out to the open sea,' said the first stranger.
+
+Old Cecco shuddered. Should he row out to the sea, where his sons
+perished? Now he had not a single cheerful word to say to himself. He
+did not think so much of the storm, but of the terror it was to have to
+go out to the graves of his sons. If he rowed out there, he felt that he
+gave the stranger more than his life.
+
+The three men sat silently in the boat as if they were on watch. Cecco
+saw them bend forward and gaze into the night. They had reached the gate
+of the sea at Lido, and the great storm-ridden sea lay before them.
+
+Cecco sobbed within himself. He thought of two dead bodies rolling about
+in these waves. He gazed into the water for two familiar faces. But
+onward the boat went. Cecco did not give in.
+
+Then suddenly the three men rose up in the boat; and Cecco fell upon his
+knees, although he still went on holding the oars. A big ship steered
+straight against them.
+
+Cecco could not quite tell whether it was a ship or only drifting mist.
+The sails were large, spread out, as it were, towards the four corners
+of heaven; and the hull was gigantic, but it looked as if it were built
+of the lightest sea-mist. He thought he saw men on board and heard
+shouting; but the crew were like deep darkness, and the shouting was
+like the roar of the storm.
+
+However it was, it was far too terrible to see the ship steer straight
+upon them, and Cecco closed his eyes.
+
+But the three men in the boat must have averted the collision, for the
+boat was not upset. When Cecco looked up the ship had fled out to sea,
+and loud wailings pierced the night.
+
+He rose, trembling to row further. He felt so tired that he could hardly
+hold the oars. But now there was no longer any danger. The storm had
+gone down, and the waves speedily laid themselves to rest.
+
+'Now row us back to Venice,' said the stranger to the fisherman.
+
+Cecco rowed the boat to Lido, where the Bishop went on shore, and to San
+Giorgio, where the knight left them. The first powerful stranger went
+with him all the way to the Rialto.
+
+When they had landed at Riva degli Schiavoni he said to the fisherman:
+
+'When it is daylight thou shalt go to the Doge and tell him what thou
+hast seen this night. Tell him that San Marco and San Giorgio and San
+Nicolo have to-night fought the evil spirits that would destroy Venice,
+and have put them to flight.'
+
+'Yes, signor,' the fisherman answered, 'I will tell everything. But how
+shall I speak so that the Doge will believe me?'
+
+Then San Marco handed him a ring with a precious stone possessed of a
+wonderful lustre.
+
+'Show this to the Doge,' he said, 'then he will understand that it
+brings a message from me. He knows my ring, which is kept in San Marco's
+treasury in the cathedral.'
+
+The fisherman took the ring, and kissed it reverently.
+
+'Further, thou shalt tell the Doge,' said the holy man, 'that this is a
+sign that I shall never forsake Venice. Even when the last Doge has left
+Palazzo Ducali I will live and preserve Venice. Even if Venice lose her
+islands in the East and the supremacy of the sea, and no Doge ever again
+sets out on the Bucintoro, even then I will preserve the city beautiful
+and resplendent. It shall always be rich and beloved, always be lauded
+and its praises sung, always a place of joy for men to live in. Say
+this, Cecco, and the Doge will not forsake thee in thine old age.'
+
+Then he disappeared; and soon the sun rose above the gate of the sea at
+Torcello. With its first beautiful rays it shed a rosy light over the
+white city and over the sea that shone in many colours. A red glow lay
+over San Giorgio and San Marco, and over the whole shore, studded with
+palaces. And in the lovely morning radiant Venetian ladies came out on
+to the loggias and greeted with smiles the rising day.
+
+Venice was once again the beautiful goddess, rising from the sea in her
+shell of rose-coloured pearl. Beautiful as never before, she combed her
+golden hair, and threw the purple robe around her, to begin one of her
+happiest days. For a transport of bliss filled her when the old
+fisherman brought San Marco's ring to the Doge, and she heard how the
+Saint, now, and until the end of time, would hold his protecting hand
+over her.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ V
+
+ _Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA
+
+
+
+
+_Santa_ CATERINA _of_ SIENA
+
+
+At Santa Caterina's house in Siena, on a day towards the end of April,
+in the week when her f[^e]te is being celebrated, people come to the old
+house in the Street of the Dyers, to the house with the pretty loggia
+and with the many small chambers, which have now been converted into
+chapels and sanctuaries, bringing bouquets of white lilies; and the
+rooms are fragrant with incense and violets.
+
+Walking through these rooms, one cannot help thinking that it is just as
+if she were dead yesterday, as if all those who go in and out of her
+home to-day had seen and known her.
+
+But, on the other hand, no one could really think that she had died
+recently, for then there would be more grief and tears, and not only a
+quiet sense of loss. It is more as if a beloved daughter had been
+recently married, and had left the parental home.
+
+Look only at the nearest houses. The old walls are still decorated as if
+for a f[^e]te. And in her own home garlands of flowers are still hanging
+beneath the portico and loggia, green leaves are strewn on the staircase
+and the doorstep, and large bouquets of flowers fill the rooms with
+their scent.
+
+She cannot possibly have been dead five hundred years. It looks much
+more as if she had celebrated her marriage, and had gone away to a
+country from which she would not return for many years, perhaps never.
+Are not the houses decorated with nothing but red table-cloths, red
+trappings, and red silken banners, and are there not stuck red-paper
+roses in the dark garlands of oak-leaves? and the hangings over the
+doors and the windows, are they not red with golden fringes? Can one
+imagine anything more cheerful?
+
+And notice how the old women go about in the house and examine her small
+belongings. It is as if they had seen her wear that very veil and that
+very shirt of hair. They inspect the room in which she lived, and point
+to the bedstead and the packets of letters, and they tell how at first
+she could not at all learn to write, but that it came to her all at once
+without her having learnt it. And only look at her writing--how good and
+distinct! And then they point to the little bottle she used to carry at
+her belt, so as always to have a little medicine at hand in case she met
+a sick person, and they utter a blessing over the old lantern she held
+in her hand when she went and visited the sick in the long weary nights.
+It is just as if they would say: 'Dear me--dear me! that our little
+Caterina Benincasa should be gone, that she will never come any more and
+look after us old people!' And they kiss her picture, and take a flower
+from the bouquets to keep as a remembrance.
+
+It looks as if those who were left in the home had long ago prepared
+themselves for the separation, and tried to do everything possible to
+keep alive the memory of the one who had gone away. See, there they
+have painted her on the wall; there is the whole of her little history
+represented in every detail. There she is when she cut off her beautiful
+long hair so that no man could ever fall in love with her, for she would
+never marry. Oh dear--oh dear! how much ridicule and scoffing she had
+suffered on that account! It is dreadful to think how her mother
+tormented her and treated her like a servant, and made her sleep on the
+stone floor in the hall, and would not give her any food, all because of
+her being so obstinate about that hair. But what was she to do when they
+continually tried to get her married--she who would have no other
+bridegroom than Christ? And there she is when she was kneeling in
+prayer, and her father coming into the room without her knowing it saw a
+beautiful white dove hovering over her head whilst she was praying. And
+there she is on that Christmas Eve when she had gone secretly to the
+Madonna's altar in order the more fully to rejoice over the birth of the
+Son of God, and the beautiful Madonna leaned out of her picture and
+handed the Child to her that she might be allowed to hold it for a
+moment in her arms. Oh, what a joy it had been for her!
+
+Oh dear, no; it is not at all necessary to say that our little Caterina
+Benincasa is dead. One need only say that she has gone away with the
+Bridegroom.
+
+In her home one will never forget her pious ways and doings. All the
+poor of Siena come and knock at her door because they know that it is
+the marriage-day of the little virgin, and large piles of bread lie in
+readiness for them as if she were still there. They have their pockets
+and baskets filled; had she herself been there, she could not have sent
+them away more heavily laden. She who had gone away had left so great a
+want that one almost wonders the Bridegroom had the heart to take her
+away with him.
+
+In the small chapels which have been arranged in every corner of the
+house they read Mass the whole day, and they invoke the bride and sing
+hymns in her praise.
+
+'Holy Caterina,' they say, 'on this the day of thy death, which is thine
+heavenly wedding-day, pray for us!'
+
+'Holy Caterina, thou who hadst no other love but Christ, thou who in
+life wert His affianced bride, and who in death wast received by Him in
+Paradise, pray for us!'
+
+'Holy Caterina, thou radiant heavenly bride, thou most blessed of
+virgins, thou whom the mother of God exalted to her Son's side, thou who
+on this day wast carried by angels to the kingdom of glory, pray for
+us!'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is strange how one comes to love her, how the home and the pictures
+and the love of the old and the poor seem to make her living, and one
+begins to wonder how she really was, whether she was only a saint, only
+a heavenly bride, and if it is true that she was unable to love any
+other than Christ. And then comes to one's mind an old story which
+warmed one's heart long ago, at first quite vague and without shape, but
+whilst one is sitting there under the loggia in the festively decorated
+home and watching the poor wander away with their full baskets, and
+hearing the subdued murmur from the chapels, the story becomes more and
+more distinct, and suddenly it is vivid and clear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nicola Tungo was a young nobleman of Perugia, who often came to Siena on
+account of the races. He soon found out how badly Siena was governed,
+and often said, both at the festive gatherings of the great and when he
+sat drinking in the inns, that Siena ought to rise against the Signoria
+and procure other rulers.
+
+The Signoria had not been in power for more than half a year; they did
+not feel particularly firm in their office, and did not like the
+Perugian stirring up the people. In order promptly to put a stop to it,
+they had him imprisoned, and after a short trial he was sentenced to
+death. He was placed in a cell in the Palazzo Publico whilst
+preparations were being made for his execution, which was to take place
+the next morning in the Market Place.
+
+At first he was strangely affected. To-morrow he would no more wear his
+green velvet doublet and his beautiful sword; he would no more walk down
+the street in his cap with the ostrich-feather and attract the glances
+of the young maidens, and he had a feeling of painful disappointment
+that he would never ride the new horse which he bought yesterday, and
+which he had only tried once.
+
+Suddenly he called the gaoler, and asked him to go to the gentlemen of
+the Signoria and tell them that he could not possibly allow himself to
+be killed; he had no time. He had far too much to do. Life could not do
+without him. His father was old, and he was the only son; it was through
+his descendants that the family should be continued. It was he who
+should give away his sisters in marriage, he who should build the new
+palace, he who should plant the new vineyard.
+
+He was a strong young man; he did not know what sickness was, had
+nothing but life in his veins. His hair was dark and his cheeks red. He
+could not realize that he should die.
+
+When he thought of their wanting to take him away from pleasure and
+dancing, and the carnival, and from the races next Sunday, and from the
+serenade he was going to sing to the beautiful Giulietta Lombardi, he
+became furiously angry, and his wrath was roused against the councillors
+as though they were thieves and robbers. The scoundrels--the scoundrels
+that would take his life from him!
+
+But as time went on his longings grew deeper; he longed for air and
+water and heaven and earth. He felt he would not mind being a beggar by
+the wayside; he would gladly suffer sickness and hunger and cold if only
+he were allowed to live.
+
+He wished that everything might die with him, that nothing would be left
+when he was gone; that would have been a great consolation.
+
+But that people should go to the Market Place and buy and sell, and that
+the women would fetch water from the well, and that the children would
+run in the streets the next day and all days, and that he would not be
+there to see, that he could not bear. He envied not only those who
+could live in luxury and pleasure, and were happy; he envied quite as
+much the most miserable cripple. What he wanted was life, solely life.
+
+Then the priests and the monks came to see him. It made him almost
+happy, for now he had someone upon whom he could wreak his anger. He
+first allowed them to talk a little. It amused him to hear what they had
+to say to a man so deeply wronged as he was, but when they said that he
+ought to rejoice that he was permitted to leave this life and gain the
+bliss of heaven in the fulness of his youth, then he started up and
+poured forth his wrath upon them. He scoffed at God and the joys of
+heaven--he did not want them. He would have life, and the world, and its
+pomps and vanities. He regretted every day in which he had not revelled
+in earthly enjoyment; he regretted every temptation he had resisted. God
+need not trouble Himself in the least about him; he felt no longing for
+His heaven.
+
+The priests continued to speak; he seized one of them by the throat, and
+would have killed him had not the gaoler thrown himself between them.
+They now bound and gagged him, and then preached to him; but as soon as
+he was allowed to speak he raged as before. They talked to him for many
+hours, but they saw that it was of no avail.
+
+When they could think of nothing else to do, one of them suggested they
+should send for the young Caterina Benincasa, who had shown great power
+in subduing defiant spirits. When the Perugian heard the name he
+suddenly ceased his abuse. In truth, it pleased him. It was something
+quite different, having to do with a young, beautiful maiden.
+
+'By all means send for the maiden,' he said.
+
+He knew that she was the young daughter of a dyer, and that she went
+about alone and preached in the lanes and streets of the town. Some
+thought she was mad, others said that she had visions. For him she
+might, anyhow, be better company than these dirty monks, who made him
+completely beside himself.
+
+The monks then went their way, and he was alone. Shortly afterwards the
+door was again opened, but if she for whom they had sent had really
+entered the cell, she must have walked with very light footsteps, for he
+heard nothing. He lay on the floor just as he had thrown himself down in
+his great anger; now he was too tired to raise himself, or make a
+movement, or even to look up. His arms were tied together with ropes,
+which cut deep into his flesh.
+
+He now felt that someone began to loosen his bands; a warm hand touched
+his arm, and he looked up. Beside him lay a little figure in the white
+dress of the Dominicans, with head and neck so shrouded in a white veil
+that there was not more of her face to be seen than of that of a knight
+in helmet and closed visor.
+
+She did not look so meek by any means; she was evidently a little
+annoyed. He heard her murmur something about the gaolers who had
+tightened the bands. It did not appear as if she had come for any other
+purpose than these knots. She was only taken up with loosening them so
+that they did not hurt. At last she had to bite in them, and then she
+succeeded. She untied the cord with a light hand, and then took the
+little bottle which was suspended from her belt and poured a few drops
+upon the chafed skin.
+
+He lay the whole time and looked at her, but she did not meet his
+glance; it appeared as if she could think of nothing else but what she
+had between her hands. It was as if nothing were further from her
+thoughts than that she was there to prepare him for death. He felt so
+exhausted after his passion, and at the same time so quieted by her
+presence, that he only said:
+
+'I think I will sleep.'
+
+'It is a great shame that they have not given you any straw,' she said.
+
+For a moment she looked about undecided. Then she sat down upon the
+floor, and placed his head in her lap.
+
+'Are you better now?' she said.
+
+Never in his whole life had he felt such a rest. Yet sleep he could not,
+but he lay and looked up in her face, which was like wax, and
+transparent. Such eyes he had never seen before. They were always
+looking far, far away, gazing into another world, whilst she sat quite
+motionless, so as not to disturb his sleep.
+
+'You are not sleeping, Nicola Tungo,' she said, and looked uneasy.
+
+'I cannot sleep,' he replied, 'because I am wondering who you can be.'
+
+'I am a daughter of Luca Benincasa the dyer, and his wife Lapa,' she
+said.
+
+'I know that,' he said, 'and I also know that you go about and preach in
+the streets. And I know that you have attired yourself in the dress of
+a nun, and have taken the vows of chastity. But yet I don't know who you
+are.'
+
+She turned her head away a little. Then she said, whispering like one
+who confesses her first love:
+
+'I am the Bride of Christ.'
+
+He did not laugh. On the contrary, he felt quite a pang in his heart, as
+from jealousy.
+
+'Oh, Christ!' he said, as if she had thrown herself away.
+
+She heard that his tone was contemptuous, but she thought he meant that
+she had spoken too presumptuously.
+
+'I do not understand it myself,' she said, 'but so it is.'
+
+'Is it an imagination or a dream?' he said.
+
+She turned her face towards him. The blood rose red behind the
+transparent skin. He saw suddenly that she was fair as a flower, and she
+became dear to him. He moved his lips as if to speak, but at first no
+sound came.
+
+'How can you expect me to believe that?' he said defiantly.
+
+'Is it not enough for you that I am here in the prison with you?' she
+asked, raising her voice. 'Is it any pleasure for a young girl like me
+to go to you and other evil-doers in their gloomy dungeons? Is it usual
+for a woman to stand and preach at the street corners as I do, and to be
+held in derision? Do I not require sleep as other people? And yet I must
+rise every night and go to the sick in the hospitals. Am I not timid as
+other women? And yet I must go to the high-born gentlemen at their
+castles and reason with them, I must go to the plague-smitten, I must
+see all vice and sin. When have you seen another maiden do all this? But
+I am obliged to do it.'
+
+'Poor thing!' he said, and stroked her hand gently--'poor thing!'
+
+'For I am not braver, or wiser, or stronger than others,' she said. 'It
+is just as hard for me as for other maidens. You can see that. I have
+come here to speak with you about your soul, but I do not at all know
+what I shall say to you.'
+
+It was strange how reluctantly he would allow himself to be convinced.
+
+'You may be mistaken all the same,' he said. 'How do you know that you
+can call yourself the Bride of Christ?'
+
+Her voice trembled, and it was as if she should tear out her heart when
+she replied:
+
+'It began when I was quite young; I was not more than six years old. It
+was one evening when I was walking with my brother in the meadow below
+the church of the Dominicans, and just as I looked up at the church I
+saw Christ sitting on a throne, surrounded by all His power and glory.
+He was attired in shining white garments like the Holy Father in Rome.
+His head was surrounded by all the splendour of Paradise, and around Him
+stood Pietro Paolo and the Evangelist Giovanni. And whilst I gazed upon
+Him my heart was filled with such a love and holy joy that I could
+hardly bear it. He lifted His hand and blessed me, and I sank down on
+the meadow, and was so overcome with bliss, that my brother had to take
+me in his arms and shake me. And ever since that time, Nicola Tungo, I
+have loved Jesus as a bridegroom.'
+
+He again objected.
+
+'You were a child then. You had fallen asleep in the meadow and were
+dreaming.'
+
+'Dreaming?' she repeated. 'Have I been dreaming all the time I have seen
+Him? Was it a dream when He came to me in the church in the likeness of
+a beggar and asked for alms? Then I was wide awake, at any rate. And do
+you think that for the sake of a dream only I could have borne all the
+worries I have had to bear as a young girl because I would not marry?'
+
+Nicola went on contradicting her because he could not bear the thought
+that her heart was filled with love to another.
+
+'But even if you do love Christ, maiden, how do you know that He loves
+you?'
+
+She smiled her very happiest smile and clapped her hands like a child.
+
+'Now you shall hear,' she said. 'Now I will tell you the most important
+of all. It was the last night before Lent. It was after my parents and I
+had been reconciled, and I had obtained their permission to take the vow
+of chastity and wear the dress of a nun, although I continued to live in
+their house; and it was night, as I told you, the last night of the
+carnival, when everybody turns night into day. There were f[^e]tes in every
+street. On the walls of the big palaces hung balconies like cages,
+completely covered with silken hangings and banners, and filled with
+noble ladies. I saw all their beauty by the light of the red torches in
+their bronze-holders, the one row over the other quite up to the roof;
+and in the gaily decorated streets there was a train of carriages, with
+golden towers, and all the gods and goddesses, and all the virtues and
+beauties went by in a long procession. And everywhere there was such a
+play of masks and so much merriment that I am sure that you, sir, have
+never taken part in anything more gay. And I took refuge in my chamber,
+but still I heard laughter from the street, and never before have I
+heard people laugh like that; it was so clear and bell-like that
+everyone was obliged to join in it. And they sang songs which, I
+suppose, were wicked, but they sounded so innocent, and caused such
+pleasure, that one's heart trembled. Then, in the middle of my prayers,
+I suddenly began to wonder why I was not out amongst them, and the
+thought fascinated and tempted me, as if I were dragged along by a
+runaway horse; but never before have I prayed so intensely to Christ to
+show me what was His will with me. Suddenly all the noise ceased, a
+great and wonderful silence surrounded me, and I saw a great meadow,
+where the Mother of God sat amongst the flowers, and on her lap lay the
+Child Jesus, playing with lilies. But I hurried thither in great joy,
+and knelt before the Child, and was at the same moment filled with peace
+and quietness, and then the Holy Child placed a ring on my finger, and
+said to me, "Know, Caterina, that to-day I celebrate My betrothal with
+thee, and bind thee to Me by the strongest faith."'
+
+'Oh, Caterina!'
+
+The young Perugian had turned himself on the floor, so that he could
+bury his face in her lap. It was as if he could not bear to see how
+radiant she was whilst she was speaking, and now her eyes became bright
+as stars. A shadow of pain passed over him. For whilst she spoke a great
+sorrow had sprung up in his heart. This little maiden, this little white
+maiden, he could never win. Her love belonged to another; it could never
+be his. It was of no use even to tell her that he loved her; but he
+suffered; his whole being groaned in love's agony. How could he bear to
+live without her? It almost became a consolation to remember that he was
+sentenced to death. It was not necessary for him to live and do without
+her.
+
+Then the little woman beside him sighed deeply, and came back from the
+joys of heaven in order to think of poor human beings.
+
+'I forgot to speak to you about your soul,' she said.
+
+Then, he thought: 'This burden, at any rate, I can lighten for her.'
+
+'Sister Caterina,' he said, 'I do not know how it is, but heavenly
+consolation has come to me. In God's name I will prepare for death. Now
+you may send for the priests and monks; now I will confess to them. But
+one thing you must promise me before you go: you must come to me
+to-morrow, when I shall die, and hold my head between your hands as you
+are doing now.'
+
+When he said this she burst into tears, from a great feeling of relief,
+and an unspeakable joy filled her.
+
+'How happy you must be, Nicola Tungo!' she said. 'You will be in
+Paradise before I am;' and she stroked his face gently.
+
+He said again:
+
+'You will come to me to-morrow in the Market Place? Perhaps I shall
+otherwise be afraid; perhaps I cannot otherwise die with steadfastness.
+But when you are there I shall feel nothing but joy, and all fear will
+leave me.'
+
+'You do not seem to me any more as a poor mortal,' she said, 'but as a
+dweller of Paradise. You appear to me radiant with life, surrounded by
+incense. Bliss comes to me from you, who shall so soon meet my beloved
+Bridegroom. Be assured I shall come.'
+
+She then led him to confession and the Communion. He felt the whole time
+as if he were asleep. All the fear of death and the longing for life had
+passed away from him. He longed for the morning, when he should see her
+again; he thought only of her, and of the love with which she had
+inspired him. Death seemed to him now but a slight thing compared with
+the pain of the thought that she would never love him.
+
+The young maiden did not sleep much during the night, and early in the
+morning she went to the place of execution, to be there when he came.
+She invoked Jesu, Mother, Marie, and the Holy Caterina of Egypt, virgin
+and martyr, incessantly with prayers to save his soul. Incessantly she
+repeated: 'I will that he shall be saved--I will, I will.' But she was
+afraid that her prayers were unavailing, for she did not feel any longer
+that ecstasy which had filled her the evening before; she only felt an
+infinite pity for him who should die. She was quite overcome with grief
+and sorrow.
+
+Little by little the Market Place filled with people. The soldiers
+marched up, the executioner arrived, and much noise and talking went on
+around her; but she saw and heard nothing. She felt as if she were quite
+alone.
+
+When Nicola Tungo arrived, it was just the same with him. He had no
+thought for all the others, but saw only her. When he saw at the first
+glance that she was entirely overcome with sorrow, his face beamed, and
+he felt almost happy. He called loudly to her:
+
+'You have not slept much this night, maiden?'
+
+'No,' she said; 'I have watched in prayer for you; but now I am in
+despair, for my prayers have no power.'
+
+He knelt down before the block, and she knelt so that she could hold his
+head in her hands.
+
+'Now I am going to your Bridegroom, Caterina.'
+
+She sobbed more and more.
+
+'I can comfort you so badly,' she said.
+
+He looked at her with a strange smile.
+
+'Your tears are my best comfort.'
+
+The executioner stood with his sword drawn, but she bade him with a
+movement stand on one side, for she would speak a few words with the
+doomed man.
+
+'Before you came,' she said, 'I laid my head down on the block to try if
+I could bear it; and then I felt that I was still afraid of death, that
+I do not love Jesus enough to be willing to die in this hour; and I do
+not wish you to die either, and my prayers have no power.'
+
+When he heard this he thought: 'Had I lived I should have won her'; and
+he was glad he should die before he had succeeded in drawing the radiant
+heavenly bride down to earth. But when he had laid his head in her
+hands, a great consolation came to them both.
+
+'Nicola Tungo,' she said, 'I see heaven open. The angels descend to
+receive your soul.'
+
+A wondering smile passed over his face. Could what he had done for her
+sake make him worthy of heaven? He lifted his eyes to see what she saw;
+the same moment the sword fell.
+
+But Caterina saw the angels descend lower and lower, saw them lift his
+soul, saw them carry it to heaven.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All at once it seemed so natural that Caterina Benincasa has lived all
+these five hundred years. How could one forget that gentle little
+maiden, that great loving heart? Again and again they must sing in her
+praise, as they are now singing in the small chapels:
+
+ 'Pia Mater et humilis,
+ Natur[ae] memor fragilis,
+ In hujus vit[ae] fluctibus
+ Nos rege tuis precibus.
+ Quem vidi, quem amavi,
+ In quem credidi, quem dilexi,
+ Ora pro nobis.
+ Ut digni efficiamur promessionibus Christi!
+ Santa Caterina, ora pro nobis!'[B]
+
+ [B] Pious and gentle Mother, thou who knowest our weak nature, guide
+ us by thy prayers through this life's vicissitudes. Thou, whom I saw
+ and loved, in whom I believed and whom I adored, pray for us, that we
+ may be worthy of Christ's promises. Holy Caterina, pray for us!
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VI
+
+ _The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST
+
+
+
+
+_The Empress's_ MONEY-CHEST
+
+
+The Bishop had summoned Father Verneau to appear before him. It was on
+account of a somewhat unpleasant matter. Father Verneau had been sent to
+preach in the manufacturing districts around Charleroi, but he had
+arrived there in the midst of a strike, when the workmen were rather
+excited and unmanageable. He informed the Bishop that he had immediately
+on his arrival in the Black Country received a letter from one of the
+leaders of the men to the effect that they were quite willing to hear
+him preach, but if he ventured to mention the name of God either
+directly or indirectly, there would be a disturbance in the church.
+
+'And when I went up into the pulpit and saw the congregation to whom I
+should preach,' said the Father, 'I felt no doubt but that the threat
+would be carried out.'
+
+Father Verneau was a little dried-up monk. The Bishop looked down upon
+him as being of a lower order. Such an unshaven, not too clean monk,
+with the most insignificant face, was, of course, a coward. He was,
+probably, also afraid of the Bishop.
+
+'I have been informed,' said the Bishop, 'that you carried out the
+workmen's wishes. But I need not point out----'
+
+'Monseigneur,' interrupted Father Verneau in all humility, 'I thought
+the Church, if possible, would avoid everything that might lead to a
+disturbance.'
+
+'But a Church that dare not mention the name of God----'
+
+'Has Monseigneur heard my sermon?'
+
+The Bishop walked up and down the floor to calm himself.
+
+'You know it by heart, of course?' he said.
+
+'Of course, Monseigneur.'
+
+'Let me hear it, then, as it was delivered, Father Verneau, word for
+word, exactly as you preached it.'
+
+The Bishop sat down in his arm-chair. Father Verneau remained standing.
+
+'"Citizens and citizenesses," he began in the tone of a lecturer.
+
+The Bishop started.
+
+'Yes, that is how they will be addressed, Monseigneur.'
+
+'Never mind, Father Verneau, only proceed.'
+
+The Bishop shuddered slightly; these two words had suddenly shown him
+the whole situation. He saw before him this gathering of the children of
+the Black Country, to whom Father Verneau had preached. He saw many wild
+faces, many rags, much coarse merriment. He saw these people for whom
+nothing had been done.
+
+'"Citizens and citizenesses," began Father Verneau afresh, "there is in
+this country an Empress called Maria Theresa. She is an excellent ruler,
+the best and wisest Belgium has ever had. Other rulers, my
+fellow-citizens, other rulers have successors when they die, and lose
+all power over their people. Not so the great Empress Maria Theresa.
+She may have lost the throne of Austria and Hungary; Brabant and Limburg
+may now be under other rulers, but not her good province of West
+Flanders. In West Flanders, where I have lived the last few years, no
+other ruler is known to this very day than Maria Theresa. We know King
+Leopold lives in Brussels, but that has nothing to do with us. It is
+Maria Theresa who still reigns here by the sea, more especially in the
+fishing villages. The nearer one gets to the sea, the mightier becomes
+her power. Neither the great Revolution, nor the Empire, nor the Dutch
+have had the power to overthrow her. How could they? They have done
+nothing for the children of the sea that can compare with what she has
+done. But what has she not done for the people on the dunes! What an
+invaluable treasure, my fellow-citizens, has she not bestowed upon them!
+
+'"About one hundred and fifty years ago, in the early part of her reign,
+she made a journey through Belgium. She visited Brussels and Bruges, she
+went to Liege and Louvain, and when she had at last seen enough of large
+cities and profusely ornamented town-halls, she went to the coast to see
+the sea and the dunes.
+
+'"It was not a very cheering sight for her. She saw the ocean, so vast
+and mighty that no man can fight against it. She saw the coast, helpless
+and unprotected. There lay the dunes, but the sea had washed over them
+before, and might do so again. There were also dams, but they had fallen
+down and were neglected.
+
+'"She saw harbours filled with sand; she saw marshes overgrown with
+rushes and weeds; she saw, below the dunes, fishing-huts ravaged by the
+wind--huts looking as if they had been thrown there, a prey for the sea;
+she saw poor old churches that had been moved away from the sea, lying
+between quicksands and lyme-grass, in desolate wastes.
+
+'"The great Empress sat a whole day by the sea. She was told all about
+the floods and the towns that had been washed away; she was shown the
+spot where a whole district had sunk under the sea; she was rowed out to
+the place where an old church stood at the bottom of the sea; and she
+was told about all the people who had been drowned, and of all the
+cattle that had been lost, the last time the sea had overflowed the
+dunes.
+
+'"The whole day through the Empress sat thinking: 'How shall I help
+these poor people on the dunes? I cannot forbid the sea to rise and
+fall; I cannot forbid it to undermine the shore; nor can I stay the
+storm, or prevent it from upsetting the fishermen's boats; and still
+less can I lead the fish into their nets, or transform the lyme-grass
+into nutritious wheat. There is no monarch in the world so mighty that
+he can help these poor people in their need.'
+
+'"The next day it was Sunday, and the Empress heard Mass at
+Blankenberghe. All the people from Dunkirk to Sluis had come to see her.
+But before Mass the Empress went about and spoke with the people.
+
+'"The first person she addressed was the harbour-master from Nieuport.
+'What news is there from your town?' asked the Empress. 'Nothing new,'
+answered the harbour-master, 'except that Cornelis Aertsen's boat was
+upset in the storm yesterday; and we found him this morning riding on
+the keel.' 'It was a good thing his life was saved,' said the Empress.
+'Well, I don't know,' said the harbour-master, 'for he was out of his
+mind when he came on shore.' 'Was it from fear?' asked the Empress.
+'Yes,' said the harbour-master; 'it is because we in Nieuport have
+nothing to depend upon in the hour of need. Cornelis knew that his wife
+and his small children would starve to death if he perished; and it was
+this thought, I suppose, that drove him out of his mind.' 'Then that is
+what you need here on the dunes--something to depend upon?' 'Yes, that
+is it,' said the harbour-master. 'The sea is uncertain, the harvest is
+uncertain, the fishing and the earnings are uncertain. Something to
+depend upon, that is what we need.'
+
+'"The Empress then went on, and the next she spoke to was the priest
+from Heyst. 'What news from Heyst?' said she to him. 'Nothing new,' he
+answered, 'except that Jacob van Ravesteyn has given up making ditches
+in the marshes, and dredging the harbour, and attending to the
+lighthouses, and all other useful work he had to do.' 'How is that?'
+said the Empress. 'He has inherited a sum of money,' said the priest;
+'but it was less than he had expected.' 'But now he has something
+certain,' said the Empress. 'Yes,' said the priest; 'but now he has got
+the money he dare not venture to do anything great for fear it will not
+be sufficient.' 'It is something infinitely great, then, that is needed
+to help you at Heyst?' said the Empress. 'It is,' said the priest;
+'there is infinitely much to do. And nothing can be done until we know
+that we have something infinitely great to fall back upon.'
+
+'"The Empress then went on until she came to the master-pilot from
+Middelkerke, whom she began to question about the news from his town. 'I
+do not know of anything new,' said the master-pilot, 'but that Ian van
+der Meer has quarrelled with Luca Neerwinden.' 'Indeed!' said the
+Empress. 'Yes, they have found the cod-bank they have both been looking
+for all their lives. They had heard about it from old people, and they
+had hunted for it all over the sea, and they have been the best of
+friends the whole time, but now they have found it they have fallen
+out.' 'Then it would have been better if they had never found it?' said
+the Empress. 'Yes,' answered the master-pilot, 'it would indeed have
+been better.' 'So, then, that which is to help you in Middelkerke,' said
+the Empress, 'must be hidden so well that no one can find it?' 'Just
+so,' said the master-pilot; 'well hidden it must be, for if anyone
+should find it, there would be nothing but quarrelling and strife over
+it, or else it would be all spent, and then it would be of no further
+use.'
+
+'"The Empress sighed, and felt she could do nothing.
+
+'"She then went to Mass, and the whole time she knelt and prayed that
+power might be given her to help the people. And--you must excuse me,
+citizens--when the Mass was finished, it had become clear to her that it
+was better to do a little than to do nothing. When all the people had
+come out of the church, she stood on the steps in order to address them.
+
+'"No man or woman of West Flanders will ever forget how she looked. She
+was beautiful, like an Empress, and she was attired like an Empress. She
+wore her crown and her ermine mantle, and held the sceptre in her hand.
+Her hair was dressed high and powdered, and a string of large pearls was
+entwined amongst the curls. She wore a robe of red silk, which was
+entirely covered with Flemish lace, and red, high-heeled shoes, with
+large diamond buckles. That is how she appears, she who to this day
+still reigns over our West Flanders.
+
+'"She spoke to the people of the coast, and told them her will. She told
+them of how she had thought of every way in which to help them. She said
+that they knew she could not compel the sea to quietness or chain the
+storm, that she could not lead the fish-shoals to the coast, or
+transform the lyme-grass into wheat; but what a poor mortal could do for
+them, that should be done.
+
+'"They all knelt before her whilst she spoke. Never before had they felt
+such a gentle and motherly heart beat for them. The Empress spoke to
+them in such a manner about their hard and toilsome life that tears came
+into their eyes over her pity.
+
+'"But now the Empress said she had decided to leave with them her
+Imperial money-chest, with all the treasures which it contained. That
+should be her gift to all those who lived on the dunes. That was the
+only assistance she could render them, and she asked them to forgive
+her that it was so poor; and the Empress herself had tears in her eyes
+when she said this.
+
+'"She now asked them if they would promise and swear not to use any of
+the treasure until the need amongst them was so great that it could not
+become any greater. Next, if they would swear to leave it as an
+inheritance for their descendants, if they did not require it
+themselves. And, lastly, she asked every man singly to swear that he
+would not try to take possession of the treasure for his own use without
+having first asked the consent of all his fellow-fishermen.
+
+'"If they were willing to swear? That they all were. And they blessed
+the Empress and cried from gratitude. And she cried and told them that
+she knew that what they needed was a support that would never fail them,
+a treasure that could never be exhausted, and a happiness that was
+unattainable, but that she could not give them. She had never been so
+powerless as here on the dunes.
+
+'"My fellow-citizens, without her knowing it, solely by force of the
+royal wisdom with which this great Queen was endowed, the power was
+given her to attain far more than she had intended, and it is therefore
+one can say that to this day she reigns over West Flanders.
+
+'"What a happiness, is it not, to hear of all the blessings which have
+been spread over West Flanders by the Empress's gift! The people there
+have now something to depend upon which they needed so badly, and which
+we all need. However bad things may be, there is never any despair.
+
+'"They have told me at the dunes what the Empress's money-chest is like.
+They say it is like the holy shrine of Saint Ursula at Bruges, only more
+beautiful. It is a copy of the cathedral at Vienna, and it is of pure
+gold; but on the sides the whole history of the Empress is depicted in
+the whitest alabaster. On the small side-towers are the four diamonds
+which the Empress took from the crown of the Sultan of Turkey, and in
+the gable are her initials inlaid with rubies. But when I ask them
+whether they have seen the money-chest, they reply that shipwrecked
+sailors when in peril always see it swimming before them on the waves as
+a sign that they shall not be in despair for their wives and children,
+should they be compelled to leave them. But they are the only ones who
+have seen the treasure, otherwise no one has been near enough to count
+it. And you know, citizens, that the Empress never told anyone how great
+it was. But if any of you doubt how much use it has been and is, then I
+will ask you to go to the dunes and see for yourself. There has been
+digging and building ever since that time, and the sea now lies cowed by
+bulwarks and dams, and no longer does harm. And there are green meadows
+inside the dunes, and there are flourishing towns and watering-places
+near the shore. But for every lighthouse that has been built, for every
+harbour that has been deepened, for every ship of which the keel has
+been laid, for every dam that has been raised, they have always thought:
+'If our own money should not be sufficient, we shall receive help from
+our Gracious Empress Maria Theresa.' But this has been but a spur to
+them: their own money has always sufficed.
+
+'"You know, also, that the Empress did not say where the treasure was.
+Was not this well considered, citizens? There is one who has it in his
+keeping, but only, when all are agreed upon dividing it, will he who
+keeps the treasure come forward and reveal where it is. Therefore one is
+certain that neither now nor in the future will it be unfairly divided.
+It is the same for all. Everyone knows that the Empress thinks as much
+of him as of his neighbour. There can be no strife or envy amongst the
+people of the dunes as there is amongst other men, for they all share
+alike in the treasure."'
+
+The Bishop interrupted Father Verneau.
+
+'That is enough,' he said. 'How did you continue?'
+
+'I said,' continued the monk, 'that it was very bad the good Empress had
+not also come to Charleroi. I pitied them because they did not own her
+money-chest. Considering the great things they had to accomplish,
+considering the sea which they had to tame, the quicksands which they
+had to bind, considering all this, I said to them surely there was
+nothing they needed so much.'
+
+'And then?' asked the Bishop.
+
+'One or two cabbages, your Eminence, a little hissing; but then I was
+already out of the pulpit. That was all.'
+
+'They had understood that you had spoken to them about the providence of
+God?'
+
+The monk bowed.
+
+'They had understood that you would show them that the power which they
+deride because they do not see it must be kept hidden? that it will be
+abused immediately it assumes a visible form? I congratulate you, Father
+Verneau.'
+
+The monk retired towards the door, bowing. The Bishop followed him,
+beaming benevolently.
+
+'But the money-chest--do they still believe in it at the dunes?'
+
+'As much as ever, Monseigneur.'
+
+'And the treasure--has there ever been a treasure?'
+
+'Monseigneur, I have sworn.'
+
+'But for me,' said the Bishop.
+
+'It is the priest at Blankenberghe, who has it in his keeping. He
+allowed me to see it. It is an old wooden chest with iron mountings.'
+
+'And?'
+
+'And at the bottom lie twenty bright Maria Theresa gold pieces.'
+
+The Bishop smiled, but became grave at once.
+
+'Is it right to compare such a wooden chest with God's providence?'
+
+'All comparisons are incomplete, Monseigneur; all human thoughts are
+vain.'
+
+Father Verneau bowed once again, and quietly withdrew from the
+audience-room.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VII
+
+ _The_ PEACE _of_ GOD
+
+
+
+
+_The_ PEACE _of_ GOD
+
+
+Once upon a time there was an old farmhouse. It was Christmas-eve, the
+sky was heavy with snow, and the north wind was biting. It was just that
+time in the afternoon when everybody was busy finishing their work
+before they went to the bath-house to have their Christmas bath. There
+they had made such a fire that the flames went right up the chimney, and
+sparks and soot were whirled about by the wind, and fell down on the
+snow-decked roofs of the outhouses. And as the flames appeared above the
+chimney of the bath-house, and rose like a fiery pillar above the farm,
+everyone suddenly felt that Christmas was at hand. The girl that was
+scrubbing the entrance floor began to hum, although the water was
+freezing in the bucket beside her. The men in the wood-shed who were
+cutting Christmas logs began to cut two at a time, and swung their axes
+as merrily as if log-cutting were a mere pastime.
+
+An old woman came out of the pantry with a large pile of cakes in her
+arms. She went slowly across the yard into the large red-painted
+dwelling-house, and carried them carefully into the best room, and put
+them down on the long seat. Then she spread the tablecloth on the table,
+and arranged the cakes in heaps, a large and a small cake in each heap.
+She was a singularly ugly old woman, with reddish hair, heavy drooping
+eyelids, and with a peculiar strained look about the mouth and chin, as
+if the muscles were too short. But being Christmas-eve, there was such a
+joy and peace over her that one did not notice how ugly she was.
+
+But there was one person on the farm who was not happy, and that was the
+girl who was tying up the whisks made of birch twigs that were to be
+used for the baths. She sat near the fireplace, and had a whole armful
+of fine birch twigs lying beside her on the floor, but the withes with
+which she was to bind the twigs would not keep knotted. The best room
+had a narrow, low window, with small panes, and through them the light
+from the bath-house shone into the room, playing on the floor and
+gilding the birch twigs. But the higher the fire burned the more unhappy
+was the girl. She knew that the whisks would fall to pieces as soon as
+one touched them, and that she would never hear the last of it until the
+next Christmas fire was lighted.
+
+Just as she sat there bemoaning herself, the person of whom she was most
+afraid came into the room. It was her master, Ingmar Ingmarson. He was
+sure to have been to the bath-house to see if the stove was hot enough,
+and now he wanted to see how the whisks were getting on. He was old, was
+Ingmar Ingmarson, and he was fond of everything old, and just because
+people were beginning to leave off bathing in the bath-houses and being
+whipped with birch twigs, he made a great point of having it done on his
+farm, and having it done properly.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson wore an old coat of sheep's-skin, skin trousers, and
+shoes smeared over with pitch. He was dirty and unshaven, slow in all
+his movements, and came in so softly that one might very well have
+mistaken him for a beggar. His features resembled his wife's features
+and his ugliness resembled his wife's ugliness, for they were relations,
+and from the time the girl first began to notice anything she had
+learned to feel a wholesome reverence for anybody who looked like that;
+for it was a great thing to belong to the old family of the Ingmars,
+which had always been the first in the village. But the highest to which
+a man could attain was to be Ingmar Ingmarson himself, and be the
+richest, the wisest, and the mightiest in the whole parish.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson went up to the girl, took one of the whisks, and swung
+it in the air. It immediately fell to pieces; one of the twigs landed on
+the Christmas table, another on the big four-poster.
+
+'I say, my girl,' said old Ingmar, laughing, 'do you think one uses that
+kind of whisk when one takes a bath at the Ingmar's, or are you very
+tender, my girl?'
+
+When the girl saw that her master did not take it more seriously than
+that, she took heart, and answered that she could certainly make whisks
+that would not go to pieces if she could get proper withes to bind them
+with.
+
+'Then I suppose I must try to get some for you, my girl,' said old
+Ingmar, for he was in a real Christmas humour.
+
+He went out of the room, stepped over the girl who was scouring the
+floor, and remained standing on the doorstep, to see if there were
+anyone about whom he could send to the birch-wood for some withes. The
+farm hands were still busy cutting Yule logs; his son came out of the
+barn with the Christmas sheaf; his two sons-in-law were putting the
+carts into the shed so that the yard could be tidy for the Christmas
+festival. None of them had time to leave their work.
+
+The old man then quietly made up his mind to go himself. He went across
+the yard as if he were going into the cowshed, looked cautiously round
+to make sure no one noticed him, and stole along outside the barn where
+there was a fairly good road to the wood. The old man thought it was
+better not to let anyone know where he was going, for either his son or
+his sons-in-law might then have begged him to remain at home, and old
+people like to have their own way.
+
+He went down the road, across the fields, through the small pine-forest
+into the birch-wood. Here he left the road, and waded in the snow to
+find some young birches.
+
+About the same time the wind at last accomplished what it had been busy
+with the whole day: it tore the snow from the clouds, and now came
+rushing through the wood with a long train of snow after it.
+
+Ingmar Ingmarson had just stooped down and cut off a birch twig, when
+the wind came tearing along laden with snow. Just as the old man was
+getting up the wind blew a whole heap of snow in his face. His eyes were
+full of snow, and the wind whirled so violently around him that he was
+obliged to turn round once or twice.
+
+The whole misfortune, no doubt, arose from Ingmar Ingmarson being so
+old. In his young days a snowstorm would certainly not have made him
+dizzy. But now everything danced round him as if he had joined in a
+Christmas polka, and when he wanted to go home he went in the wrong
+direction. He went straight into the large pine-forest behind the
+birch-wood instead of going towards the fields.
+
+It soon grew dark, and the storm continued to howl and whirl around him
+amongst the young trees on the outskirts of the forest. The old man saw
+quite well that he was walking amongst fir-trees, but he did not
+understand that this was wrong, for there were also fir-trees on the
+other side of the birch-wood nearest the farm. But by-and-by he got so
+far into the forest that everything was quiet and still--one could not
+feel the storm, and the trees were high with thick stems--then he found
+out that he had mistaken the road, and would turn back.
+
+He became excited and upset at the thought that he _could_ lose his way,
+and as he stood there in the midst of the pathless wood he was not
+sufficiently clear-headed to know in which direction to turn. He first
+went to the one side and then to the other. At last it occurred to him
+to retrace his way in his own footprints, but darkness came on, and he
+could no longer follow them. The trees around him grew higher and
+higher. Whichever way he went, it was evident to him that he got further
+and further into the forest.
+
+It was like witchcraft and sorcery, he thought, that he should be
+running about the woods like this all the evening and be too late for
+the bathing. He turned his cap and rebound his garter, but his head was
+no clearer. It had become quite dark, and he began to think that he
+would have to remain the whole night in the woods.
+
+He leant against a tree, stood still for a little, and tried to collect
+his thoughts. He knew this forest so well, and had walked in it so much,
+that he ought to know every single tree. As a boy he had gone there and
+tended sheep. He had gone there and laid snares for the birds. In his
+young days he had helped to fell trees there. He had seen old trees cut
+down and new ones grow up. At last he thought he had an idea where he
+was, and fancied if he went that and that way he must come upon the
+right road; but all the same, he only went deeper and deeper into the
+forest.
+
+Once he felt smooth, firm ground under his feet, and knew from that,
+that he had at last come to some road. He tried now to follow this, for
+a road, he thought, was bound to lead to some place or other; but then
+the road ended at an open space in the forest, and there the snowstorm
+had it all its own way; there was neither road nor path, only drifts and
+loose snow. Then the old man's courage failed him; he felt like some
+poor creature destined to die a lonely death in the wilderness.
+
+He began to grow tired of dragging himself through the snow, and time
+after time he sat down on a stone to rest; but as soon as he sat down he
+felt he was on the point of falling asleep, and he knew he would be
+frozen to death if he did fall asleep, therefore he tried to walk and
+walk; that was the only thing that could save him. But all at once he
+could not resist the inclination to sit down. He thought if he could
+only rest, it did not matter if it did cost him his life.
+
+It was so delightful to sit down that the thought of death did not in
+the least frighten him. He felt a kind of happiness at the thought that
+when he was dead the account of his whole life would be read aloud in
+the church. He thought of how beautifully the old Dean had spoken about
+his father, and how something equally beautiful would be sure to be said
+about him. The Dean would say that he had owned the oldest farm in the
+district, and he would speak about the honour it was to belong to such a
+distinguished family, and then something would be said about
+responsibility. Of course there was responsibility in the matter; that
+he had always known. One must endure to the very last when one was an
+Ingmar.
+
+The thought rushed through him that it was not befitting for him to be
+found frozen to death in the wild forest. He would not have that handed
+down to posterity; and he stood up again and began to walk. He had been
+sitting so long that masses of snow fell from his fur coat when he
+moved. But soon he sat down again and began to dream.
+
+The thought of death now came quite gently to him. He thought about the
+whole of the funeral and all the honour they would show his dead body.
+He could see the table laid for the great funeral feast in the large
+room on the first floor, the Dean and his wife in the seats of honour,
+the Justice of the Peace, with the white frill spread over his narrow
+chest; the Major's wife in full dress, with a low silk bodice, and her
+neck covered with pearls and gold; he saw all the best rooms draped in
+white--white sheets before the windows, white over the furniture;
+branches of fir strewn the whole way from the entrance-hall to the
+church; house-cleaning and butchering, brewing and baking for a
+fortnight before the funeral; the corpse on a bier in the inmost room;
+smoke from the newly-lighted fires in the rooms; the whole house crowded
+with guests; singing over the body whilst the lid of the coffin was
+being screwed on; silver plates on the coffin; twenty loads of wood
+burned in a fortnight; the whole village busy cooking food to take to
+the funeral; all the tall hats newly ironed; all the corn-brandy from
+the autumn drunk up during the funeral feast; all the roads crowded with
+people as at fair-time.
+
+Again the old man started up. He had heard them sitting and talking
+about him during the feast.
+
+'But how did he manage to go and get frozen to death?' asked the Justice
+of the Peace. 'What could he have been doing in the large forest?'
+
+And the Captain would say that it was probably from Christmas ale and
+corn-brandy. And that roused him again. The Ingmars had never been
+drunkards. It should never be said of him that he was muddled in his
+last moments. And he began again to walk and walk; but he was so tired
+that he could scarcely stand on his legs. It was quite clear to him now
+that he had got far into the forest, for there were no paths anywhere,
+but many large rocks, of which he knew there were none lower down. His
+foot caught between two stones, so that he had difficulty in getting it
+out, and he stood and moaned. He was quite done for.
+
+Suddenly he fell over a heap of fagots. He fell softly on to the snow
+and branches, so he was not hurt, but he did not take the trouble to get
+up again. He had no other desire in the world than to sleep. He pushed
+the fagots to one side and crept under them as if they were a rug; but
+when he pushed himself under the branches he felt that underneath there
+was something warm and soft. This must be a bear, he thought.
+
+He felt the animal move, and heard it sniff; but he lay still. The bear
+might eat him if it liked, he thought. He had not strength enough to
+move a single step to get out of its way.
+
+But it seemed as if the bear did not want to harm anyone who sought its
+protection on such a night as this. It moved a little further into its
+lair, as if to make room for its visitor, and directly afterwards it
+slept again with even, snorting breath.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the meantime there was but scanty Christmas joy in the old farm of
+the Ingmars. The whole of Christmas-eve they were looking for Ingmar
+Ingmarson. First they went all over the dwelling-house and all the
+outhouses. They searched high and low, from loft to cellar. Then they
+went to the neighbouring farms and inquired for Ingmar Ingmarson.
+
+As they did not find him, his sons and his sons-in-law went into the
+fields and roads. They used the torches which should have lighted the
+way for people going to early service on Christmas morning in the search
+for him. The terrible snowstorm had hidden all traces, and the howling
+of the wind drowned the sound of their voices when they called and
+shouted. They were out and about until long after midnight, but then
+they saw that it was useless to continue the search, and that they must
+wait until daylight to find the old man.
+
+At the first pale streak of dawn everybody was up at Ingmar's farm, and
+the men stood about the yard ready to set out for the wood. But before
+they started the old housewife came and called them into the best room.
+She told them to sit down on the long benches; she herself sat down by
+the Christmas table with the Bible in front of her and began to read.
+She tried her best to find something suitable for the occasion, and
+chose the story of the man who was travelling from Jerusalem to Jericho,
+and fell among thieves.
+
+She read slowly and monotonously about the unfortunate man who was
+succoured by the good Samaritan. Her sons and sons-in-law, her daughters
+and daughters-in-law, sat around her on the benches. They all resembled
+her and each other, big and clumsy, with plain, old-fashioned faces, for
+they all belonged to the old race of the Ingmars. They had all reddish
+hair, freckled skin, and light-blue eyes with white eyelashes. They
+might be different enough from each other in some ways, but they had all
+a stern look about the mouth, dull eyes, and heavy movements, as if
+everything were a trouble to them. But one could see that they all,
+every one of them, belonged to the first people in the neighbourhood,
+and that they knew themselves to be better than other people.
+
+All the sons and daughters of the house of Ingmar sighed deeply during
+the reading of the Bible. They wondered if some good Samaritan had found
+the master of the house and taken care of him, for all the Ingmars felt
+as if they had lost part of their own soul when a misfortune happened to
+anyone belonging to the family.
+
+The old woman read and read, and came to the question: 'Who was
+neighbour unto him that fell amongst thieves?' But before she had read
+the answer the door opened and old Ingmar came into the room.
+
+'Mother, here is father,' said one of the daughters; and the answer,
+that the man's neighbour was he who had shown mercy unto him, was never
+read.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Later in the day the housewife sat again in the same place, and read her
+Bible. She was alone; the women had gone to church, and the men were
+bear-hunting in the forest. As soon as Ingmar Ingmarson had eaten and
+drunk, he took his sons with him and went out to the forest; for it is
+every man's duty to kill a bear wherever and whenever he comes across
+one. It does not do to spare a bear, for sooner or later it will get a
+taste for flesh, and then it will spare neither man nor beast.
+
+But after they were gone a great feeling of fear came over the old
+housewife, and she began to read her Bible. She read the lesson for the
+day, which was also the text for the Pastor's sermon; but she did not
+get further than this: 'Peace on earth, goodwill towards men.' She
+remained sitting and staring at these words with her dull eyes, now and
+again sighing deeply. She did not read any further, but she repeated
+time after time in her slow, drawling voice, 'Peace on earth, goodwill
+towards men.'
+
+The eldest son came into the room just as she was going to repeat the
+words afresh.
+
+'Mother!' he said softly.
+
+She heard him, but did not take her eyes from the book whilst she asked:
+
+'Are you not with the others in the forest?'
+
+'Yes,' said he, still more softly, 'I have been there.'
+
+'Come to the table,' she said, 'so that I can see you.'
+
+He came nearer, but when she looked at him she saw that he was
+trembling. He had to press his hands hard against the edge of the table
+in order to keep them still.
+
+'Have you got the bear?' she asked again.
+
+He could not answer; he only shook his head.
+
+The old woman got up and did what she had not done since her son was a
+child. She went up to him, laid her hand on his arm, and drew him to the
+bench. She sat down beside him and took his hand in hers.
+
+'Tell me now what has happened, my boy.'
+
+The young man recognised the caress which had comforted him in bygone
+days when he had been in trouble and unhappy, and he was so overcome
+that he began to weep.
+
+'I suppose it is something about father?' she said.
+
+'It is worse than that,' the son sobbed. 'Worse than that?'
+
+The young man cried more and more violently; he did not know how to
+control his voice. At last he lifted his rough hand, with the broad
+fingers, and pointed to what she had just read: 'Peace on earth. . . .'
+
+'Is it anything about that?' she asked.
+
+'Yes,' he answered.
+
+'Is it anything about the peace of Christmas?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'You wished to do an evil deed this morning?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'And God has punished us?'
+
+'God has punished us.'
+
+So at last she was told how it had happened. They had with some trouble
+found the lair of the bear, and when they had got near enough to see the
+heap of fagots, they stopped in order to load their guns. But before
+they were ready the bear rushed out of its lair straight against them.
+It went neither to the right nor to the left, but straight for old
+Ingmar Ingmarson, and struck him a blow on the top of the head that
+felled him to the ground as if he had been struck by lightning. It did
+not attack any of the others, but rushed past them into the forest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the afternoon Ingmar Ingmarson's wife and son drove to the Dean's
+house to announce his death. The son was spokesman, and the old
+housewife sat and listened with a face as immovable as a stone figure.
+
+The Dean sat in his easy-chair near his writing-table. He had entered
+the death in the register. He had done it rather slowly; he wanted time
+to consider what he should say to the widow and the son, for this was,
+indeed, an unusual case. The son had frankly told him how it had all
+happened, but the Dean was anxious to know how they themselves looked at
+it. They were peculiar people, the Ingmars.
+
+When the Dean had closed the book, the son said:
+
+'We wanted to tell you, sir, that we do not wish any account of father's
+life to be read in church.'
+
+The Dean pushed his spectacles over his forehead and looked searchingly
+at the old woman. She sat just as immovable as before. She only crumpled
+the handkerchief a little which she held in her hand.
+
+'We wish to have him buried on a week day,' continued the son.
+
+'Indeed!' said the Dean.
+
+He could hardly believe his own ears. Old Ingmar Ingmarson to be buried
+without anyone taking any notice of it! The congregation not to stand on
+railings and mounds in order to see the display when he was being
+carried to the grave!
+
+'There will not be any funeral feast. We have let the neighbours know
+that they need not think of preparing anything for the funeral.'
+
+'Indeed, indeed!' said the Dean again.
+
+He could think of nothing else to say. He knew quite well what it meant
+for such people to forego the funeral feast. He had seen both widows and
+fatherless comforted by giving a splendid funeral feast.
+
+'There will be no funeral procession, only I and my brothers.'
+
+The Dean looked almost appealingly at the old woman. Could she really be
+a party to all this? He asked himself if it could be her wishes to which
+the son had given expression. She was sitting there and allowing herself
+to be robbed of what must be dearer to her than gold and silver.
+
+'We will not have the bells rung, or any silver plates on the coffin.
+Mother and I wish it to be done in this way, but we tell you all this,
+sir, in order to hear, sir, if you think we are wronging father.'
+
+Now the old woman spoke:
+
+'We should like to hear if your Reverence thinks we are doing father a
+wrong.'
+
+The Dean remained silent, and the old woman continued, more eagerly:
+
+'I must tell your Reverence that if my husband had sinned against the
+King or the authorities, or if I had been obliged to cut him down from
+the gallows, he should all the same have had an honourable funeral, as
+his father before him, for the Ingmars are not afraid of anyone, and
+they need not go out of their way for anybody. But at Christmas God has
+made peace between man and beast, and the poor beast kept God's
+commandment, whilst we broke it, and therefore we now suffer God's
+punishment; and it is not becoming for us to show any ostentatious
+display.'
+
+The Dean rose and went up to the old woman.
+
+'What you say is right,' he said, 'and you shall follow the dictates of
+your own conscience.' And involuntarily he added, perhaps most to
+himself: 'The Ingmars are a grand family.'
+
+The old woman straightened herself a little at these words. At that
+moment the Dean saw in her the symbol of her whole race. He understood
+what it was that had made these heavy, silent people, century after
+century, the leaders of the whole parish.
+
+'It behooves the Ingmars to set the people a good example,' she said.
+'It behooves us to show that we humble ourselves before God.'
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ VIII
+
+ _A_ STORY _from_ HALSTAN[:A]S
+
+
+
+
+_A_ STORY _from_ HALSTAN[:A]S
+
+
+In olden times there stood by the roadside an old country-house called
+Halstan[:a]s. It comprised a long row of red-painted houses, which were of
+low structure, and right behind them lay the forest. Close to the
+dwelling-house was a large wild cherry-tree, which showered its black
+fruit over the red-tiled roof. A bell under a small belfry hung over the
+gable of the stables.
+
+Just outside the kitchen-door was a dovecote, with a neat little
+trelliswork outside the holes. From the attic a cage for squirrels was
+hanging; it consisted of two small green houses and a large wheel, and
+in front of a big hedge of lilacs stood a long row of beehives covered
+with bark.
+
+There was a pond belonging to the farm, full of fat carp and slim
+water-snakes; there was also a kennel at the entrance; there were white
+gates at the end of the avenue, and at the garden walks, and in every
+place where they could possibly have a gate. There were big lofts with
+dark lumber-rooms, where old-fashioned uniforms and ladies' head-gear a
+hundred years old were stored away; there were large chests full of silk
+gowns and bridal finery; there were old pianos and violins, guitars and
+bassoons. In bureaus and cabinets were manuscript songs and old yellow
+letters; on the walls of the entrance-hall hung guns, pistols and
+hunting-bags; on the floor were rugs, in which patches of old silken
+gowns were woven together with pieces of threadbare cotton curtains.
+There was a large porch, where the deadly nightshade summer after summer
+grew up a thin trelliswork; there were large, yellow front-doors, which
+were fastened with bolts and catches; the hall was strewn with sprigs of
+juniper, and the windows had small panes and heavy wooden shutters.
+
+One summer old Colonel Beerencreutz came on a visit to this house. It is
+supposed to have been the very year after he left Ekeby. At that time he
+had taken rooms at a farm at Svartsj[:o], and it was only on rare occasions
+that he went visiting. He still had his horse and gig, but he scarcely
+ever used them. He said that he had grown old in earnest now, and that
+home was the best place for old people.
+
+Beerencreutz was also loath to leave the work he had in hand. He was
+weaving rugs for his two rooms--large, many-coloured rugs in a rich and
+strangely-thought-out pattern. It took him an endless time, because he
+had his own way of weaving, for he used no loom, but stretched his wool
+from the one wall to the other right across the one room. He did this in
+order to see the whole rug at one time; but to cross the woof and
+afterwards bring the threads together to a firm web was no easy matter.
+And then there was the pattern, which he himself thought out, and the
+colours which should match. This took the Colonel more time than anyone
+would have imagined; for whilst Beerencreutz was busy getting the
+pattern right, and whilst he was working with warp and woof, he often
+sat and thought of God. Our Lord, he thought, was likewise sitting at a
+loom, still larger, and with an even more peculiar pattern to weave. And
+he knew that there must be both light and dark shades in that weaving.
+But Beerencreutz would at times sit and think so long about this, until
+he fancied he saw before him his own life and the life of the people
+whom he had known, and with whom he had lived, forming a small portion
+of God's great weaving; and he seemed to see that piece so distinctly
+that he could discern both outlines and colouring. And if one asked
+Beerencreutz what the pattern in his work really meant, he would be
+obliged to confess that it was the life of himself and his friends which
+he wove into the rug as a faint imitation of what he thought he had seen
+represented on God's loom.
+
+The Colonel, however, was accustomed to pay a little visit to some old
+friends every year just after midsummer. He had always liked best to
+travel through the country when the fields were still scented with
+clover, and blue and yellow flowers grew along the roadside in two long
+straight rows.
+
+This year the Colonel had hardly got to the great highroad before he met
+his old friend Ensign von [:O]rneclou. And the Ensign, who was travelling
+about all the year round, and who knew all the country houses in
+V[:a]rmland, gave him some good advice.
+
+'Go to Halstan[:a]s and call upon Ensign Vestblad,' he said to the Colonel.
+'I can only tell you, old man, I don't know a house in the whole country
+where one fares better.'
+
+'What Vestblad are you speaking about?' asked the Colonel. 'I suppose
+you don't mean the old Ensign whom the Major's wife showed the door?'
+
+'The very man,' said the Ensign. 'But Vestblad is not the same man he
+was. He has married a fine lady--a real stunning woman, Colonel--who has
+made a man of him. It was a wonderful piece of good luck for Vestblad
+that such a splendid girl should take a fancy to him. She was not
+exactly young any longer; but no more was he. You should go to
+Halstan[:a]s, Colonel, and see what wonders love can work.'
+
+And the Colonel went to Halstan[:a]s to see if [:O]rneclou spoke the
+truth. He had, as a matter of fact, now and then wondered what had
+become of Vestblad; in his young days he had kicked so recklessly over
+the traces that even the Major's wife at Ekeby could not put up with
+him. She had not been able to keep him at Ekeby more than a couple of
+years before she was obliged to turn him out. Vestblad had become such a
+heavy drinker that a Cavalier could hardly associate with him. And now
+[:O]rneclou declared that he owned a country house, and had made an
+excellent match.
+
+The Colonel consequently went to Halstan[:a]s, and saw at the first glance
+that it was a real old country-seat. He had only to look at the avenue
+of birches with all the names cut on the fine old trees. Such birches he
+had only seen at good old country-houses. The Colonel drove slowly up to
+the house, and every moment his pleasure increased. He saw lime hedges
+of the proper kind, so close that one could walk on the top of them,
+and there were a couple of terraces with stone steps so old that they
+were half buried in the ground. When the Colonel drove past the pond, he
+saw indistinctly the dark carp in the yellowish water. The pigeons flew
+up from the road flapping their wings; the squirrel stopped its wheel;
+the watch-dog lay with its head on its paws, wagging its tail, and at
+the same time faintly growling. Close to the porch the Colonel saw an
+ant-hill, where the ants, unmolested, went to and fro--to and fro. He
+looked at the flower-beds inside the grass border. There they grew, all
+the old flowers: narcissus and pyrola, sempervivum and marigold; and on
+the bank grew small white daisies, which had been there so long that
+they now sowed themselves like weeds. Beerencreutz again said to himself
+that this was indeed a real old country-house, where both plants and
+animals and human beings throve as well as could be.
+
+When at last he drove up to the front-door he had as good a reception as
+he could wish for, and as soon as he had brushed the dust off him he was
+taken to the dining-room, and he was offered plenty of good
+old-fashioned food--the same old cakes for dessert that his mother used
+to give him when he came home from school; and any so good he had never
+tasted elsewhere.
+
+Beerencreutz looked with surprise at Ensign Vestblad. He went about
+quiet and content, with a long pipe in his mouth and a skull-cap on his
+head. He wore an old morning-coat, which he had difficulty in getting
+out of when it was time to dress for dinner. That was the only sign of
+the Bohemian left, as far as Beerencreutz could see. He went about and
+looked after his men, calculated their wages, saw how things were
+getting on in the fields and meadows, gathered a rose for his wife when
+he went through the garden, and he indulged no longer in either swearing
+or spitting. But what astonished the Colonel most of all was the
+discovery that old Ensign Vestblad kept his books. He took the Colonel
+into his office and showed him large books with red backs. And those he
+kept himself. He had lined them with red ink and black ink, written the
+headings with large letters, and put down everything, even to a stamp.
+
+But Ensign Vestblad's wife, who was a born lady, called Beerencreutz
+cousin, and they soon found out the relationship between them; and they
+talked all their relatives over. At last Beerencreutz became so intimate
+with Mrs. Vestblad that he consulted her about the rug he was weaving.
+
+It was a matter of course that the Colonel should stay the night. He was
+taken to the best spare room to the right of the hall and close to his
+host's bedroom, and his bed was a large four-poster, with heaps of
+eiderdowns.
+
+The Colonel fell asleep as soon as he got into bed, but awoke later on
+in the night. He immediately got out of bed and went and opened the
+window-shutters. He had a view over the garden, and in the light summer
+night he could see all the gnarled old apple-trees, with their
+worm-eaten leaves, and with numerous props under the decayed branches.
+He saw the large wild apple-tree, which in the autumn would give barrels
+of uneatable fruit; he saw the strawberries, which had just begun to
+ripen under their profusion of green leaves.
+
+The Colonel stood and looked at it as if he could not afford to waste
+his time in sleeping. Outside his window at the peasant farm where he
+lived all he could see was a stony hill and a couple of juniper-bushes;
+and it was natural that a man like Beerencreutz should feel more at home
+amongst well-trimmed hedges and roses in bloom.
+
+When in the quiet stillness of the night one looks out upon a garden,
+one often has a feeling that it is not real and natural. It can be so
+still that one can almost fancy one's self in the theatre; one imagines
+that the trees are painted and the roses made of paper. And it was
+something like this the Colonel felt as he stood there. 'It cannot be
+possible,' he thought, 'that all this is real. It can only be a dream.'
+But then a few rose-leaves fell softly to the ground from the big
+rose-tree just outside his window, and then he realized that everything
+was genuine. Everything was real and genuine; both day and night the
+same peace and contentment everywhere.
+
+When he went and laid down again he left the window-shutters open. He
+lay in the high bed and looked time after time at the rose-tree; it is
+impossible to describe his pleasure in looking at it. He thought what a
+strange thing it was that such a man as Vestblad should have this flower
+of Paradise outside his window.
+
+The more the Colonel thought of Vestblad the more surprised he became
+that such a foal should end his days in such a stable. He was not good
+for much at the time he was turned away from Ekeby. Who would have
+thought he would have become a staid and well-to-do man?
+
+The Colonel lay and laughed to himself, and wondered whether Vestblad
+still remembered how he used to amuse himself in the olden days when he
+was living at Ekeby. On dark and stormy nights he used to rub himself
+over with phosphorus, mount a black horse, and ride over the hills to
+the ironworks, where the smiths and the workmen lived; and if anyone
+happened to look out of his window and saw a horseman shining with a
+bluish-white light tearing past, he hastened to bar and bolt everywhere,
+saying it was best to say one's prayers twice that night, for the devil
+was abroad.
+
+Oh yes, to frighten simple folks by such tricks was a favourite
+amusement in olden days; but Vestblad had carried his jokes further than
+anyone else the Colonel knew of.
+
+An old woman on the parish had died at Viksta, which belonged to Ekeby.
+Vestblad happened to hear about this. He also heard that the corpse had
+been taken from the house and placed in a barn. At night Vestblad put on
+his fiery array, mounted his black horse, and rode to the farmstead; and
+people there who were about had seen a fiery horseman ride up to the
+barn, where the corpse lay, ride three times round it and disappear
+through the door. They had also seen the horseman come out again, ride
+three times round the house and then disappear. But in the morning, when
+they went into the barn to see the corpse, it was gone, and they
+thought the devil had been there and carried her off. This supposition
+had been enough for them. But a couple of weeks later they found the
+body, which had been thrown on to a hay-loft in the barn, and then there
+was a great outcry. They found out who the fiery horseman was, and the
+peasants were on the watch to give Vestblad a good hiding. But the
+Major's wife would not have him at her table or in her house any longer;
+she packed his knapsack and asked him to betake himself elsewhere. And
+Vestblad went out into the world and made his fortune.
+
+A strange feeling of uneasiness came over the Colonel as he lay in bed.
+He felt as if something were going to happen. He had hardly realized
+before what an ugly story it was. He had no doubt even laughed at it at
+the time. They had not been in the habit of taking much notice of what
+happened to a poor old pauper in those days; but, great God! how furious
+one would have been if anybody had done that to one's own mother!
+
+A suffocating feeling came over the Colonel; he breathed heavily. The
+thought of what Vestblad had done appeared so vile and hateful to him,
+it weighed him down like a nightmare. He was half afraid of seeing the
+dead woman, of seeing her appear from behind the bed. He felt as if she
+must be quite near. And from the four corners of the room the Colonel
+heard terrible words: 'God will not forgive it! God has never forgotten
+it!'
+
+The Colonel closed his eyes, but then he suddenly saw before him God's
+great loom, where the web was woven with the fates of men; and he
+thought he saw Ensign Vestblad's square, and it was dark on three sides;
+and he, who understood something about weaving and patterns, knew that
+the fourth side would also have to be covered with the dark shade. It
+could not be done in any other way, otherwise there would be a mistake
+in the weaving.
+
+A cold sweat broke out on his forehead; it seemed to him that he looked
+upon what was the hardest and the most immovable in all the world. He
+saw how the fate which a man has worked out in his past life will pursue
+him to the end. And to think there were actually people who thought they
+could escape it!
+
+Escape it! escape! All was noted and written down; the one colour and
+the one figure necessitated the other, and everything came about as it
+was bound to come about.
+
+Suddenly Colonel Beerencreutz sat up in bed; he would look at the
+flowers and the roses, and think that perhaps our Lord could forget
+after all. But at the moment Beerencreutz sat up in bed the bedroom door
+opened, and one of the farm-labourers--a stranger to him--put his head
+in and nodded to the Colonel.
+
+It was now so light that the Colonel saw the man quite distinctly. It
+was the most hideous face he had ever seen. He had small gray eyes like
+a pig, a flat nose, and a thin, bristly beard. One could not say that
+the man looked like an animal, for animals have nearly always good
+faces, but still, he had something of the animal about him. His lower
+jaw projected, his neck was thick, and his forehead was quite hidden by
+his rough, unkempt hair.
+
+He nodded three times to the Colonel, and every time his mouth opened
+with a broad grin; and he put out his hand, red with blood, and showed
+it triumphantly. Up to this moment the Colonel had sat up in bed as if
+paralyzed, but now he jumped up and was at the door in two steps. But
+when he reached the door, the fellow was gone and the door closed.
+
+The Colonel was just on the point of raising the alarm, when it struck
+him that the door must be fastened on the inside, on his side, as he had
+himself locked it the night before; and on examining it, he found that
+it had not been unlocked.
+
+The Colonel felt almost ashamed to think that in his old age he had
+begun to see ghosts. He went straight back to bed again.
+
+When the morning came, and he had breakfasted, the Colonel felt still
+more ashamed. He had excited himself to such an extent that he had
+trembled all over and perspired from fear. He said not a word about it.
+But later on in the day he and Vestblad went over the estate. As they
+passed a labourer who was cutting sods on a bank Beerencreutz recognised
+him again. It was the man he had seen in the night. He recognised
+feature for feature.
+
+'I would not keep that man a day longer in my service, my friend,' said
+Beerencreutz, when they had walked a short distance. And he told
+Vestblad what he had seen in the night. 'I tell you this simply to warn
+you, in order that you may dismiss the man.'
+
+But Vestblad would not; he was just the man he would not dismiss. And
+when Beerencreutz pressed him more and more, he at last confessed that
+he would not do anything to the man, because he was the son of an old
+pauper woman who had died at Viksta close to Ekeby.
+
+'You no doubt remember the story?' he added.
+
+'If that's the case, I would rather go to the end of the world than live
+another day with that man about the place,' said Beerencreutz. An hour
+after he left, and was almost angry that his warning was not heeded.
+'Some misfortune will happen before I come here again,' said the Colonel
+to Vestblad, as he took leave.
+
+Next year, at the same time, the Colonel was preparing for another visit
+to Halstan[:a]s. But before he got so far, he heard some sad news about his
+friends. As the clock struck one, a year after the very night he had
+slept there, Ensign Vestblad and his wife had been murdered in their
+bedroom by one of their labourers--a man with a neck like a bull, a flat
+nose, and eyes like a pig.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ IX
+
+ _The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE
+
+
+
+
+_The_ INSCRIPTION _on the_ GRAVE
+
+
+Nowadays no one ever takes any notice of the little cross standing in
+the corner of Svartsj[:o] Churchyard. People on their way to and from
+church go past it without giving it a glance. This is not so very
+wonderful, because it is so low and small that clover and bluebells grow
+right up to the arms of the cross, and timothy-grass to the very top of
+it. Neither does anyone think of reading the inscription which stands on
+the cross. The white letters are almost entirely washed out by the rain,
+and it never occurs to anyone to try and decipher what is still left,
+and try to make it out. But so it has not always been. The little cross
+in its time has been the cause of much surprise and curiosity. There was
+a time when not a person put his foot inside Svartsj[:o] Churchyard without
+going up to look at it. And when one of the old people from those days
+now happens to see it, a whole story comes back to him of people and
+events that have been long forgotten. He sees before him the whole of
+Svartsj[:o] parish in the lethargic sleep of winter, covered by even white
+snow, quite a yard deep, so that it is impossible to discern road or
+pathway, or to know where one is going. It is almost as necessary to
+have a compass here as at sea. There is no difference between sea and
+shore. The roughest ground is as even as the field which in the autumn
+yielded such a harvest of oats. The charcoal-burner living near the
+great bogs might imagine himself possessed of as much cultivated land as
+the richest peasant.
+
+The roads have left their secure course between the gray fences, and are
+running at random across the meadows and along the river. Even on one's
+own farm one may lose one's way, and suddenly discover that on one's way
+to the well one has walked over the spirea-hedge and round the little
+rose-bed.
+
+But nowhere is it so impossible to find one's way as in the churchyard.
+In the first place, the stone wall which separates it from the pastor's
+field is entirely buried under the snow, so with that it is all one; and
+secondly, the churchyard itself is only a simple large, white plain,
+where not even the smallest unevenness in the snow-cover betrays the
+many small mounds and tufts of the garden of the dead.
+
+On most of the graves are iron crosses, from which hang small, thin
+hearts of tin, which the summer wind sets in motion. These little hearts
+are now all hidden under the snow, and cannot tinkle their sad songs of
+sorrow and longing.
+
+People who work in the towns have brought back with them to their dead
+wreaths with flowers of beads and leaves of painted tin; and these
+wreaths are so highly treasured that they are kept in small glass cases
+on the graves. But now all this is hidden and buried under the snow, and
+the grave that possesses such an ornament is in no way more remarkable
+than any of the other graves.
+
+One or two lilac bushes raise their heads above the snow-cover, but
+their little stiff branches look so alike, that it is impossible to tell
+one from the other, and they are of no use whatever to anyone trying to
+find his way in the churchyard. Old women who are in the habit of going
+on Sundays to visit their graves can only get a little way down the main
+walk on account of the snow. There they stand, trying to make out where
+their own grave lies--is it near that bush, or that?--and they begin to
+long for the snow to melt. It is as if the one for whom they are
+sorrowing has gone so far away from them, now that they cannot see the
+spot where he lies.
+
+There are also a few large gravestones and crosses that are higher than
+the snow, but they are not many; and as these are also covered with
+snow, they cannot be distinguished either.
+
+There is only one pathway kept clear in the churchyard. It is the one
+leading from the entrance to the small mortuary. When anyone is to be
+buried the coffin is carried into the mortuary, and there the pastor
+reads the service and casts the earth upon the coffin. It is impossible
+to place the coffin in the ground as long as such a winter lasts. It
+must remain standing in the mortuary until God sees fit to thaw the
+earth, and the ground can be digged and made ready.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Just when the winter was at its hardest, and the churchyard quite
+inaccessible, a child died at Sander's, the ironmaster at Lerum
+ironworks.
+
+The ironworks at Lerum were large, and Sander, the ironmaster, was a
+great man in that part of the country. He had recently had a family
+grave made in the churchyard--a splendid grave, the position of which
+one could not easily forget, although the snow had laid its thick carpet
+over it. It was surrounded by heavy, hewn stones, with a massive chain
+between them, and in the middle of the grave stood a huge granite block,
+with their name inscribed upon it. There was only the one word 'Sander,'
+engraved in large letters, but it could be seen over the whole
+churchyard. But now that the child was dead, and was to be buried, the
+ironmaster said to his wife:
+
+'I will not allow this child to lie in my grave.'
+
+One can picture them both at that moment. It was in their dining-room at
+Lerum. The ironmaster was sitting at the breakfast-table alone, as was
+his wont. His wife, Ebba Sander, was sitting in a rocking-chair at the
+window, from where she had a wide view of the lake, with its small
+islands covered with birches.
+
+She had been weeping, but when her husband said this, her eyes became
+immediately dry. Her little figure seemed to shrink from fear, and she
+began to tremble.
+
+'What do you say? What are you saying?' she asked, and her voice sounded
+as if she were shivering from cold.
+
+'I object to it,' he said. 'My father and my mother lie there, and the
+name "Sander" stands on the stone. I will not allow that child to lie
+there.'
+
+'Oh,' she said, still trembling, 'is that what you have been thinking
+about? I always did think that some day you would have your revenge.'
+
+He threw down his serviette, rose from the table, and stood before her,
+broad and big. It was not his intention to assert his will with many
+words, but she could see, as he stood there, that nothing could make him
+change his mind. Stern, immovable, obstinate he was from top to toe.
+
+'I will not revenge myself,' he said, 'only I will not have it.'
+
+'You speak as if it were only a question of removing him from one bed to
+the other,' she said. 'He is dead. It does not matter to him where he
+lies, I suppose; but for me it is ruin, you know.'
+
+'I have also thought of that,' he said, 'but I cannot.'
+
+When two people have been married, and have lived together for some
+years, they do not require many words to understand one another. She
+knew it would be quite useless to try and move him.
+
+'Why did you forgive me, then?' she said, wringing her hands. 'Why did
+you let me stay with you as your wife and promise to forgive me?'
+
+He knew that he would not do her any harm. It was not his fault that he
+had now reached the limit of his forbearance.
+
+'Say to people what you like,' he said; 'I shall not say anything. You
+can say, if you like, that there is water in the vault, or that there is
+only room for father and mother and you and me.'
+
+'And you imagine that they will believe that!'
+
+'Well, you must manage that as best you can.'
+
+He was not angry; she knew that he was not. It was only as he said: on
+that point he could not give way.
+
+She went further into the room, put her hands at the back of her head,
+and sat gazing out of the window without saying anything. The terrible
+thing is that so much happens to one in life over which one has no
+control, and, above all, that something may spring up within one's self
+over which one is entirely powerless. Some years ago, when she was
+already a staid married woman, love came to her; and what a love--so
+violent that it was quite impossible for her to resist.
+
+Was not the feeling which now mastered her husband--was not that, after
+all, a desire to be revenged?
+
+He had never been angry with her. He forgave her at once when she came
+and confessed her sin.
+
+'You have been out of your senses,' he said, and allowed her to remain
+with him at Lerum as if nothing had happened.
+
+But although it is easy enough to say one forgives, it may be hard to do
+so, especially for one whose mind is slow and heavy, who ponders over
+but never forgets or gives vent to his feelings. Whatever he may say,
+and however much he may have made up his mind, something is always left
+within his heart which gnaws and longs to be satisfied with someone
+else's suffering. She had always had a strange feeling that it would
+have been better for her if he had been so enraged that he had struck
+her. Then, perhaps, things could have come right between them. All these
+years he had been morose and irritable, and she had become frightened.
+She was like a horse between the traces. She knew that behind her was
+one who held a whip over her, even if he did not use it; and now he had
+used it. He had not been able to refrain any longer. And now it was all
+over with her.
+
+Those who were about her said they had never seen such sorrow as hers.
+She seemed to be petrified. The whole time before the funeral it was as
+if there were no real life in her. One could not tell if she heard what
+was said to her, if she had any idea who was speaking to her. She did
+not eat; it was as if she felt no hunger. She went out in the bitterest
+cold; she did not feel it. But it was not grief that petrified her--it
+was fear.
+
+It never struck her for a moment to stay at home on the day of the
+funeral. She must go to the churchyard, she must walk in the funeral
+procession--must go there, feeling that all who were present expected
+that the body would be laid in the family vault of the Sanders. She
+thought she would sink into the ground at all the surprise and scorn
+which would rise up against her when the grave-digger, who headed the
+procession, led the way to an out-of-the-way grave. An outburst of
+astonishment would be heard from everybody, although it was a funeral
+procession: 'Why is the child not going to be buried in the Sanders'
+family vault?' Thoughts would go back to the vague rumours which were
+once circulated about her. 'There must have been something in them,
+after all,' people will whisper to each other. And before the mourners
+left the churchyard she would be condemned and lost. The only thing for
+her to do was to be present herself. She would go there with a quiet
+face, as if everything was as it ought to be. Then, perhaps, they might
+believe what she said to explain the matter. . . .
+
+Her husband went with her to the church; he had looked after everything,
+invited people, ordered the coffin, and arranged who should be the
+bearers. He was kind and good now that he had got his own way.
+
+It was on a Sunday. The service was over, and the mourners had assembled
+outside the porch, where the coffin was standing. The bearers had placed
+the white bands over their shoulders; all people of any position had
+joined in the procession, as did also many of the congregation. She had
+a feeling as if they had all gathered together in order to accompany a
+criminal to the scaffold.
+
+How they would all look at her when they came back from the funeral! She
+was there to prepare them for what was to happen, but she had not been
+able to utter a single word. She felt quite unable to speak quietly and
+sensibly. There was only one thing she wanted: to scream and moan so
+violently and loudly that it could be heard all over the churchyard; and
+she had to bite her lips so as not to cry out.
+
+The bells commenced to ring in the tower, and the procession began to
+move. Now all these people would find it out without the slightest
+preparation. Oh, why had she not spoken in time? She had to restrain
+herself to the utmost from shouting out and telling them that they must
+not go to the grave with the dead child. Those who are dead are dead and
+gone. Why should her whole life be spoiled for the sake of this dead
+child? They could put him in the earth, where they liked, only not in
+the churchyard. She had a confused idea that she would frighten them
+away from the churchyard; it was risky to go there; it was
+plague-smitten; there were marks of a wolf in the snow; she would
+frighten them as one frightens children.
+
+She did not know where they had digged the child's grave. She would know
+soon enough, she thought; and when the procession entered the
+churchyard, she glanced around the snow-covered ground to see where
+there was a new grave; but she saw neither path nor grave--nothing but
+the white snow. And the procession advanced towards the small mortuary.
+As many as possibly could pressed into the building and saw the earth
+cast on to the coffin. There was no question whatever about this or that
+grave. No one found out that the little one which was now laid to rest
+was never to be taken to the family vault.
+
+Had she but thought of that, had she not forgotten everything else in
+her fear and terror, then she need not have been afraid, not for a
+single moment.
+
+'In the spring,' she thought, 'when the coffin has to be placed in the
+ground, there will probably be no one there except the grave-digger;
+everybody will think that the child is lying in the Sanders' vault.' And
+she felt that she was saved.
+
+She sank down sobbing violently. People looked at her with sympathy.
+'How terribly she felt it!' they said. But she herself knew that she
+cried like one who has escaped from a mortal danger.
+
+A day or two after the funeral she was sitting in the twilight in her
+accustomed place in the dining-room, and as it grew darker she caught
+herself waiting and longing. She sat and listened for the child; that
+was the time when he always used to come in and play with her. Why did
+he not come that day? Then she started. 'Oh, he is dead, he is dead!'
+
+The next day she sat again in the twilight, and longed for him, and day
+by day this longing grew. It grew as the light does in the springtime,
+until at last it filled all the hours both of day and night.
+
+It almost goes without saying that a child like hers was more loved
+after death than whilst it was living. While it was living its mother
+had thought of nothing but regaining the trust and the love of her
+husband. And for him the child could never be a source of happiness. It
+was necessary to keep it away from him as much as possible; and the
+child had often felt he was in the way.
+
+She, who had failed in and neglected her duty, would show her husband
+that she was worth something after all. She was always about in the
+kitchen and in the weaving-room. Where could there be any room, then,
+for the little boy?
+
+But now, afterwards, she remembered how his eyes could beg and beseech.
+In the evening he liked so much to have her sitting at his bedside. He
+said he was afraid to lie in the dark; but now it struck her that that
+had probably only been an excuse to get her to stay with him. She
+remembered how he lay and tried not to fall asleep. Now she knew that he
+kept himself awake in order that he might lie a little longer and feel
+his hand in hers. He had been a shrewd little fellow, young as he was.
+He had exerted all his little brain to find out how he could get a
+little share of her love. It is incomprehensible that children can love
+so deeply. She never understood it whilst he was alive.
+
+It was really first now that she had begun to love the child. It was
+first now that she was really impressed by his beauty. She would sit and
+dream of his big, strange eyes. He had never been robust and ruddy like
+most children, but delicate and slender. But how sweet he had been! He
+seemed to her now as something wonderfully beautiful--more and more
+beautiful for every day that went. Children were indeed the best of all
+in this world. To think that there were little beings stretching out
+their hands to everybody, and thinking good of all; that never ask if a
+face be plain or pretty, but are equally willing to kiss either, loving
+equally old and young, rich and poor. And yet they were real little
+people.
+
+For every day that went she was drawn nearer and nearer to the child.
+She wished that the child had been still alive; but, on the other hand,
+she was not sure that in that case she would have been drawn so near to
+it. At times she was quite in despair at the thought that she had not
+done more for the child whilst he was alive. That was probably why he
+had been taken from her, she thought.
+
+But it was not often that she sorrowed like this. Earlier in life she
+had always been afraid lest some great sorrow should overtake her, but
+now it seemed to her that sorrow was not what she had then thought it to
+be. Sorrow was only to live over and over again through something which
+was no more. Sorrow in her case was to become familiar with her child's
+whole being, and to seek to understand him. And that sorrow had made her
+life so rich.
+
+What she was most afraid of now was that time would take him from her
+and wipe out the memory of him. She had no picture of him; perhaps his
+features little by little would fade for her. She sat every day and
+tried to think how he looked. 'Do I see him exactly as he was?' she
+said.
+
+Week by week, as the winter wore away, she began to long for the time
+when he would be taken from the mortuary and buried in the ground, so
+that she could go to his grave and speak with him. He should lie towards
+the west, that was the most beautiful, and she would deck the grave with
+roses. There should also be a hedge round the grave, and a seat where
+she could sit often and often. People would perhaps wonder at it; but
+they were not to know that her child did not lie in the family grave;
+and they were sure to think it strange that she placed flowers on an
+unknown grave and sat there for hours. What could she say to explain it?
+
+Sometimes she thought that she could, perhaps, do it in this way: First
+she would go to the big grave and place a large bouquet of flowers on
+it, and remain sitting there for some time, and afterwards she would
+steal away to the little grave; and he would be sure to be content with
+the little flower she would secretly give him. But even if he were
+satisfied with the one little flower, could she be? Could she really
+come quite near to him in this way? Would he not notice that she was
+ashamed of him? Would he not understand what a disgrace his birth had
+been to her? No, she would have to protect him from that. He must only
+think that the joy of having possessed him weighed against all the rest.
+
+At last the winter was giving way. One could see the spring was coming.
+The snow-cover began to melt, and the earth to peep out. It would still
+be a week or two before the ground was thawed, but it would not be long
+now before the dead could be taken away from the mortuary. And she
+longed--she longed so exceedingly for it.
+
+Could she still picture to herself how he looked? She tried every day;
+but it was easier when it was winter. Now, when the spring was coming,
+it seemed as if he faded away from her. She was filled with despair. If
+she were only soon able to sit by his grave and be near to him again,
+then she would be able to see him again, to love him. Would he never be
+laid in his little grave? She must be able to see him again, see him
+through her whole life; she had no one else to love.
+
+At last all her fears and scruples vanished before this great longing.
+She loved, she loved; she could not live without the dead! She knew now
+that she could not consider anybody or anything but him--him alone. And
+when the spring came in earnest, when mounds and graves once again
+appeared all over the churchyard, when the little hearts of the iron
+crosses again began to tinkle in the wind, and the beaded wreaths to
+sparkle in their glass cases, and when the earth at last was ready to
+receive the little coffin, she had ready a black cross to place on his
+grave. On the cross from arm to arm was written in plain white letters,
+
+'HERE RESTS MY CHILD,'
+
+and underneath, on the stem of the cross, stood her name.
+
+She did not mind that the whole world would know how she had sinned.
+Other things were of no consequence to her; all she thought about was
+that she would now be able to pray at the grave of her child.
+
+
+
+
+ _From a Swedish_ HOMESTEAD
+
+ X
+
+ _The_ BROTHERS
+
+
+
+
+_The_ BROTHERS
+
+
+It is very possible that I am mistaken, but it seems to me that an
+astonishing number of people die this year. I have a feeling that I
+cannot go down the street without meeting a hearse. One cannot help
+thinking about all those who are carried to the churchyard. I always
+feel as if it were so sad for the dead who have to be buried in towns. I
+can hear how they moan in their coffins. Some complain that they have
+not had plumes on the hearse; some count up the wreaths, and are not
+satisfied; and then there are some who have only been followed by two or
+three carriages, and who are hurt by it.
+
+The dead ought never to know and experience such things; but people in
+towns do not at all understand how they ought to honour those who have
+entered into eternal rest.
+
+When I really think over it I do not know any place where they
+understand it better than at home in Svartsj[:o]. If you die in the parish
+of Svartsj[:o] you know you will have a coffin like that of everyone
+else--an honest black coffin which is like the coffins in which the
+country judge and the local magistrate were buried a year or two ago.
+For the same joiner makes all the coffins, and he has only one pattern;
+the one is made neither better nor worse than the other. And you know
+also, for you have seen it so many times, that you will be carried to
+the church on a waggon which has been painted black for the occasion.
+You need not trouble yourself at all about any plumes. And you know that
+the whole village will follow you to the church, and that they will
+drive as slowly and as solemnly for you as for a landed proprietor.
+
+But you will have no occasion to feel annoyed because you have not
+enough wreaths, for they do not place a single flower on the coffin; it
+shall stand out black and shining, and nothing must cover it; and it is
+not necessary for you to think whether you will have a sufficiently
+large number of people to follow you, for those who live in your town
+will be sure to follow you, every one. Nor will you be obliged to lie
+and listen if there is lamenting and weeping around your coffin. They
+never weep over the dead when they stand on the church hill outside
+Svartsj[:o] Church. No, they weep as little over a strong young fellow who
+falls a prey to death just as he is beginning to provide for his old
+people as they will for you. You will be placed on a couple of black
+trestles outside the door of the parish room, and a whole crowd of
+people will gradually gather round you, and all the women will have
+handkerchiefs in their hands. But no one will cry; all the handkerchiefs
+will be kept tightly rolled up; not one will be applied to the eyes. You
+need not speculate as to whether people will shed as many tears over you
+as they would over others. They would cry if it were the proper thing,
+but it is not the proper thing.
+
+You can understand that if there were much sorrowing over one grave, it
+would not look well for those over whom no one sorrowed. They know what
+they were about at Svartsj[:o]. They do as it has been the custom to do
+there for many hundred years. But whilst you stand there, on the church
+hill, you are a great and important personage, although you receive
+neither flowers nor tears. No one comes to church without asking who you
+are, and then they go quietly up to you and stand and gaze at you; and
+it never occurs to anyone to wound the dead by pitying him. No one says
+anything but that it is well for him that it is all over.
+
+It is not at all as it is in a town, where you can be buried any day. At
+Svartsj[:o] you must be buried on a Sunday, so that you can have the whole
+parish around you. There you will have standing near your coffin both
+the girl with whom you danced at the last midsummer night's festival and
+the man with whom you exchanged horses at the last fair. You will have
+the schoolmaster who took so much trouble with you when you were a
+little lad, and who had forgotten you, although you remembered him so
+well; and you will have the old Member of Parliament who never before
+thought it worth his while to bow to you. This is not as in a town,
+where people hardly turn round when you are carried past. When they
+bring the long bands and place them under the coffin, there is not one
+who does not watch the proceedings.
+
+You cannot imagine what a churchwarden we have at Svartsj[:o]. He is an old
+soldier, and he looks like a Field-Marshal. He has short white hair and
+twisted moustaches, and a pointed imperial; he is slim and tall and
+straight, with a light and firm step. On Sundays he wears a
+well-brushed frock-coat of fine cloth. He really looks a very fine old
+gentleman, and it is he who walks at the head of the procession. Then
+comes the verger. Not that the verger is to be compared with the
+churchwarden. It is more than probable that his Sunday hat is too large
+and old-fashioned; as likely as not he is awkward--but when is a verger
+not awkward?
+
+Then you come next in your coffin, with the six bearers, and then follow
+the clergyman and the clerk and the Town Council and the whole parish.
+All the congregation will follow you to the churchyard, you may be sure
+of that. But I will tell you something: All those who follow you look so
+small and poor. They are not fine town's-people, you know--only plain,
+simple Svartsj[:o] folk. There is only one who is great and important, and
+that is you in your coffin--you who are dead.
+
+The others the next day will have to resume their heavy and toilsome
+work. They will have to live in poor old cottages and wear old, patched
+clothes; the others will always be plagued and worried, and dragged down
+and humbled by poverty.
+
+Those who follow you to your grave become far more sad by looking at the
+living than by thinking of you who are dead. You need not look any more
+at the velvet collar of your coat to see if it is not getting worn at
+the edges; you need not make a special fold of your silk handkerchief to
+hide that it is beginning to fray; you will never more be compelled to
+ask the village shopkeeper to let you have goods on credit; you will
+not find out that your strength is failing; you will not have to wait
+for the day when you must go on the parish.
+
+While they are following you to the grave everyone will be thinking that
+it is best to be dead--better to soar heavenwards, carried on the white
+clouds of the morning--than to be always experiencing life's manifold
+troubles. When they come to the wall of the churchyard, where the grave
+has been made, the bands are exchanged for strong ropes, and people get
+on to the loose earth and lower you down. And when this has been done
+the clerk advances to the grave and begins to sing: 'I walk towards
+death.'
+
+He sings the hymn quite alone; neither the clergyman nor any of the
+congregation help him. But the clerk must sing; however keen the north
+wind and however glaring the sun which shines straight in his face, sing
+he does.
+
+The clerk, however, is getting old now, and he has not much voice left;
+he is quite aware that it does not sound as well now as formerly when he
+sang people into their graves; but he does it all the same--it is part
+of his duty. For the day, you understand, when his voice quite fails
+him, so that he cannot sing any more, he must resign his office, and
+this means downright poverty for him. Therefore the whole gathering
+stands in apprehension while the old clerk sings, wondering whether his
+voice will last through the whole verse. But no one joins him, not a
+single person, for that would not do; it is not the custom. People never
+sing at a grave at Svartsj[:o]. People do not sing in the church either,
+except the first hymn on Christmas Day morning.
+
+Still, if one listened very attentively, one could hear that the clerk
+does not sing alone. There really is another voice, but it sounds so
+exactly the same that the two voices blend as if they were only one. The
+other who sings is a little old man in a long, coarse gray coat. He is
+still older than the clerk, but he gives out all the voice he has to
+help him. And the voice, as I have told you, is exactly the same kind as
+the clerk's; they are so alike one cannot help wondering at it.
+
+But when one looks closer, the little gray old man is also exactly like
+the clerk; he has the same nose and chin and mouth, only somewhat older,
+and, as it were, more hardly dealt with in life. And then one
+understands that the little gray man is the clerk's brother; and then
+one knows why he helps him. For, you see, things have never gone well
+with him in this world, and he has always had bad luck; and once he was
+made a bankrupt, and brought the clerk into his misfortunes. He knows
+that it is his fault that his brother has always had to struggle. And
+the clerk, you know, has tried to help him on to his legs again, but
+with no avail, for he has not been one of those one can help. He has
+always been unfortunate; and then, he has had no strength of purpose.
+
+But the clerk has been the shining light in the family; and for the
+other it has been a case of receiving and receiving, and he has never
+been able to make any return at all. Great God! even to talk of making
+any return--he who is so poor! You should only see the little hut in
+the forest where he lives. He knows that he has always been dull and
+sad, only a burden--only a burden for his brother and for others. But
+now of late he has become a great man; now he is able to give some
+return. And that he does. Now he helps his brother, the clerk, who has
+been the sunshine and life and joy for him all his days. Now he helps
+him to sing, so that he may keep his office.
+
+He does not go to church, for he thinks that everyone looks at him
+because he has no black Sunday clothes; but every Sunday he goes up to
+the church to see whether there is a coffin on the black trestles
+outside the parish room; and if there is one he goes to the grave, in
+spite of his old gray coat, and helps his brother with his pitiful old
+voice.
+
+The little old man knows very well how badly he sings; he places himself
+behind the others, and does not push forward to the grave. But sing he
+does; it would not matter so much if the clerk's voice should fail on
+one or other note, his brother is there and helps him.
+
+At the churchyard no one laughs at the singing; but when people go home
+and have thrown off their devoutness, then they speak about the service,
+and then they laugh at the clerk's singing--laugh both at his and his
+brother's. The clerk does not mind it, it is the same to him; but his
+brother thinks about it and suffers from it; he dreads the Sunday the
+whole week, but still he comes punctually to the churchyard and does his
+duty. But you in your coffin, you do not think so badly of the singing.
+You think that it is good music. Is it not true that one would like to
+be buried in Svartsj[:o], if only for the sake of that singing?
+
+It says in the hymn that life is but a walk towards death, and when the
+two old men sing this--the two who have suffered for each other during
+their whole life--then one understands better than ever before how
+wearisome it is to live, and one is so entirely satisfied with being
+dead.
+
+And then the singing stops, and the clergyman throws earth on the coffin
+and says a prayer over you. Then the two old voices sing: 'I walk
+towards heaven.' And they do not sing this verse any better than the
+former; their voices grow more feeble and querulous the longer they
+sing. But for you a great and wide expanse opens, and you soar upwards
+with tremulous joy, and everything earthly fades and disappears.
+
+But still the last which you hear of things earthly tells of
+faithfulness and love. And in the midst of your trembling flight the
+poor song will awake memories of all the faithfulness and love you have
+met with here below, and this will bear you upwards. This will fill you
+with radiance and make you beautiful as an angel.
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
+ GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+Hyphenation is inconsistent, for example sheepskin, sheep-skin and
+sheep's-skin all occur. These have been left as printed.
+
+On page 184 "... and the nip reddened on the naked branch of the
+hawthorn" has been left as printed, however the original Swedish talks
+of nyponet and t[:o]rnbuskens (rosehip and thornbush), rather than
+nip and hawthorn.
+
+Changes that have been made are:
+
+ Page 4 from: then I feel that I must speak
+ to: then I feel that I must speak.
+
+ Page 55 from: the newly-buried birl
+ to: the newly-buried girl
+
+ Page 94 from: the everlasting unrest that tormened him
+ to: the everlasting unrest that tormented him
+
+ Page 124 from: why had be been unhappy?
+ to: why had he been unhappy?
+
+ Page 229 from: found friends in the solitude above
+ to: found friends in the solitude above.
+
+ Page 264 from: Guilietta Lombardi
+ to: Giulietta Lombardi
+
+ Page 328 from: the snow had laid its thinck carpet
+ to: the snow had laid its thick carpet
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's From a Swedish Homestead, by Selma Lagerlöf
+
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