Marie Grubbe by Jens Peter Jacobsen (parable of the sower read online txt) đź“•
He was a large-boned, long-limbed man with a stoop in his broad shoulders. His hair was rough as a crow's nest, grayish and tangled, but his face was of a deep yet clear pink, seemingly out of keeping with his coarse, rugged features and bushy eyebrows.
Erik Grubbe invited him to a seat and asked about his haymaking. The conversation dwelt on the chief labors of the farm at that season and died away in a sigh over the poor harvest of last year. Meanwhile the pastor was casting sidelong glances at the mug and finally said: "Your honor is always temperate--keeping to the natural drinks. No doubt they are the healthiest. New milk is a blessed gift of heaven, good both for a weak stomach and a sore chest."
"Indeed the gifts of God are all good, whether they come from the udder or the tap. But you must taste a keg of genuine mum that we brought home from Viborg the other day. She's both good and German, though I can't see that the customs have put their mark on her."
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MARIE GRUBBE
(1876)
By Jens Peter Jacobsen
(1847-1885)
Translated from the Danish by
Hanna Astrup Larsen
New York: Boni-Liveright, 1917
THE air beneath the linden crowns had flown in across brown heath and
parched meadow. It brought the heat of the sun and was laden with dust
from the road, but in the cool, thick foliage it had been cleansed and
freshened, while the yellow linden flowers had given it moisture and
fragrance. In the blissful haven of the green vault it lay quivering
in light waves, caressed by the softly stirring leaves and the flutter
of white-gold butterfly wings.
The human lips that breathed this air were full and fresh; the bosom
it swelled was young and slight. The bosom was slight, and the foot
was slight, the waist small, the shape slim, and there was a certain
lean strength about the whole figure. Nothing was luxuriant except the
partly loosened hair of dull gold, from which the little dark blue cap
had slipped until it hung on her back like a tiny cowl. Otherwise
there was no suggestion of the convent in her dress. A wide,
square-cut collar was turned down over a frock of lavender homespun,
and from its short, slashed sleeves billowed ruffles of fine Holland.
A bow of red ribbon was on her breast, and her shoes had red rosettes.
Her hands behind her back, her head bent forward, she went slowly up
the path, picking her steps daintily. She did not walk in a straight
line but meandered, sometimes almost running into a tree at her left,
then again seeming on the point of strolling out among the bushes to
her right. Now and then she would stop, shake the hair from her
cheeks, and look up to the light. The softened glow gave her
child-white face a faint golden sheen and made the blue shadows under
the eyes less marked. The scarlet of her lips deepened to red-brown,
and the great blue eyes seemed almost black. She was
lovely—lovely!—a straight forehead, faintly arched nose, short,
clean-cut upper lip, a strong, round chin and finely curved cheeks,
tiny ears, and delicately pencilled eyebrows… .
She smiled as she walked, lightly and carelessly, thought of nothing,
and smiled in harmony with everything around her. At the end of the
path, she stopped and began to rock on her heel, first to the right,
then to the left, still with her hands behind her back, head held
straight, and eyes turned upward, as she hummed fitfully in time with
her swaying.
Two flagstones led down into the garden, which lay glaring under the
cloudless, whitish blue sky. The only bit of shade hugged the feet of
the clipped box hedge. The heat stung the eyes, and even the hedge
seemed to flash light from the burnished leaves. The amber bush
trailed its white garlands in and out among thirsty balsamines,
nightshade, gillyflowers, and pinks, which stood huddling like sheep
in the open. The peas and beans flanking the lavender border were
ready to fall from their trellis with heat. The marigolds had given up
the struggle and stared the sun straight in the face, but the poppies
had shed their large red petals and stood with bared stalks.
The child in the linden lane jumped down the steps, ran through the
sun-heated garden with head lowered as one crosses a court in the
rain, made for a triangle of dark yew-trees, slipped behind them, and
entered a large arbor, a relic from the days of the Belows. A wide
circle of elms had been woven together at the top as far as the
branches would reach, and a framework of withes closed the round
opening in the centre. Climbing roses and Italian honeysuckle, growing
wild in the foliage, made a dense wall, but on one side they had
failed, and the hop vines planted instead had but strangled the elms
without filling the gap.
Two white seahorses were mounted at the door. Within the arbor stood a
long bench and table made of a stone slab which had once been large
and oval but now lay in three fragments on the ground while only one
small piece was unsteadily poised on a corner of the frame. The child
sat down before it, pulled her feet up under her on the bench, leaned
back, and crossed her arms. She closed her eyes and sat quite still.
Two fine lines appeared on her forehead, and sometimes she would lift
her eyebrows, smiling slightly.
“In the room with the purple carpets and the gilded alcove, Griselda
lies at the feet of the margrave, but he spurns her. He has just torn
her from her warm bed. Now he opens the narrow, round-arched door, and
the cold air blows in on poor Griselda, who lies on the floor weeping,
and there is nothing between the cold night air and her warm, white
body except the thin, thin linen. But he turns her out and locks the
door on her. And she presses her naked shoulder against the cold,
smooth door and sobs, and she hears him walking inside on the soft
carpet, and through the keyhole the light from the scented taper falls
and makes a little sun on her bare breast. And she steals away, and
goes down the dark staircase, and it is quite still, and she hears
nothing but the soft patter of her own feet on the ice-cold steps.
Then she goes out into the snow—no, it’s rain, pouring rain, and the
heavy cold water splashes on her shoulders. Her shift clings to her
body, and the water runs down her bare legs, and her tender feet press
the soft, chilly mud which oozes out beside them. And the wind—the
bushes scratch her and tear her frock—but no, she hasn’t any frock
on—just as they tore my brown petticoat! The nuts must be ripe in
Fastrup Grove—such heaps of nuts there were at Viborg market! God
knows if Anne’s teeth have stopped aching… No, No, Brynhild!—the
wild steed comes galloping … Brynhild and Grimhild—Queen Grimhild
beckons to the men, then turns, and walks away. They drag in Queen
Brynhild, and a squat, black yokel with long arms—something like
Bertel in the turnpike house—catches her belt and tears it in two,
and he pulls off her robe and her underkirtle, and his huge black
hands brush the rings from her soft white arms, and another big,
half-naked, brown and shaggy churl puts his hairy arm around her
waist, and he kicks off her sandals with his clumsy feet, and Bertel
winds her long black locks around his hands and drags her along, and
she follows with body bent forward, and the big fellow puts his sweaty
palms on her naked back and shoves her over to the black, fiery
stallion, and they throw her down in the gray dust in the road, and
they tie the long tail of the horse around her ankles—
The lines came into her forehead again and stayed there a long time.
She shook her head and looked more and more vexed. At last she opened
her eyes, half rose, and glanced around her wearily and
discontentedly.
Mosquitoes swarmed in the gap between the hopvines, and from the
garden came puffs of fragrance from mint and common balm, mingling
sometimes with a whiff of sow-thistle or anise. A dizzy little yellow
spider ran across her hand, tickling her, and made her jump up. She
went to the door and tried to pick a rose growing high among the
leaves, but could not reach it. Then she began to gather the blossoms
of the climbing rose outside and, getting more and more eager, soon
filled her skirt with flowers which she carried into the arbor. She
sat down by the table, took them from her lap, and laid one upon the
other until the stone was hidden under a fragrant cover of pale rose.
When the last flower had been put in its place, she smoothed the folds
of her frock, brushed off the loose petals and green leaves that had
caught in the nap, and sat with hands in her lap gazing at the
blossoming mass.
This bloom of color, curling in sheen and shadow, white flushing to
red and red paling to blue, moist pink that is almost heavy, and
lavender light as wafted on air, each petal rounded like a tiny vault,
soft in the shadow, but gleaming in the sun with thousands of fine
light points, with all its fair blood-of-rose flowing in the veins,
spreading through the skin—and the sweet, heavy fragrance rising like
vapor from that red nectar that seethes in the flower-cup… .
Suddenly she turned back her sleeves and laid her bare arms in the
soft, moist coolness of the flowers. She turned them round and round
under the roses until the loosened petals fluttered to the ground,
then jumped up and with one motion swept everything from the table and
went out into the garden, pulling down her sleeves as she walked. With
flushed cheeks and quickened step she followed the path to the end,
then skirted the garden toward the turnpike. A load of hay had just
been overturned and was blocking the way to the gate. Several other
wagons halted behind it, and she could see the brown polished stick of
the overseer gleaming in the sun as he beat the unlucky driver.
She put her fingers in her ears to shut out the sickening sound of the
blows, ran toward the house, darted within the open cellar door and
slammed it after her.
The child was Marie Grubbe, the fourteen-year-old daughter of Squire
Erik Grubbe of Tjele Manor.
The blue haze of twilight rested over Tjele. The falling dew had put a
stop to the haymaking. The maids were in the stable milking while the
men busied themselves about the wagons and harness in the shed. The
tenant farmers, after doing their stint of work for the squire, were
standing in a group outside the gate, waiting for the call to supper.
Erik Grubbe stood at an open window, looking out into the court. The
horses, freed from harness and halter, came slowly, one by one, from
the stable and went up to the watering trough. A red-capped boy was
hard at work putting new tines in a rake, and two greyhounds played
around the wooden horse and the large grindstone in one corner of the
yard.
It was growing late. Every few minutes the men would come out of the
stable door and draw back, whistling or humming a tune. A maid
carrying a full bucket of milk tripped with quick, firm steps across
the yard, and the farmers were straggling in, as though to hasten the
supper bell. The rattling of plates and trenchers grew louder in the
kitchen, and presently someone pulled the bell violently, letting out
two groups of rusty notes which soon died away in the clatter of
wooden shoes and the creaking of doors. In a moment the yard was
empty, except for the two dogs barking loudly out through the gate.
Erik Grubbe drew in the window and sat down thoughtfully. The room was
known as the winter parlor, though it was in fact used all the year
round for dining room and sitting
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