Marie Grubbe by Jens Peter Jacobsen (parable of the sower read online txt) 📕
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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the royal house. Moreover, he said, Ulrik Frederik was standing in his
own light, since none could expect important posts to be entrusted to
one who was constantly under the influence of the enemies of the
court. Finally, he alluded to the intriguing character of Mistress
Sofie and even expressed doubt of the sincerity of her regard. True
love, he said, would have sacrificed itself rather than bring woe upon
its object, would have hidden its head in sorrow rather than exulted
from the housetops. But Mistress Sofie had shown no scruples; indeed,
she had used his youth and blind infatuation to serve her own ends.
The King talked long in this strain but could not prevail upon Ulrik
Frederik, who still had a lively recollection of the pleading it had
cost him to make Mistress Sofie reveal her affection. He left the
King, more than ever resolved that nothing should part them. His
courtship of Mistress Sofie was the first serious step he had ever
taken in his life, and it was a point of honor with him to take it
fully. There had always been so many hands ready to lead and direct
him, but he had outgrown all that; he was old enough to walk alone,
and he meant to do it. What was the favor of the King and the court,
what were honor and glory, compared to his love? For that alone he
would strive and sacrifice; in that alone he would live.
The King, however, let it be known to Christoffer Urne that he was
opposed to the match, and the house was closed to Ulrik Frederik, who
henceforth could see Mistress Sofie only by stealth. At first this
merely fed the flame, but soon his visits to his betrothed grew less
frequent. He became more clear-sighted where she was concerned, and
there were moments when he doubted her love and even wondered whether
she had not led him on, that summer day, while she seemed to hold him
off.
The court, which had hitherto met him with open arms, was cold as ice.
The King, who had taken such a warm interest in his future, was
indifference itself. There were no longer any hands stretched out to
help him, and he began to miss them, for he was by no means man enough
to go against the stream. When it merely ceased to waft him along, he
lost heart instantly. At his birth a golden thread had been placed in
his hand, and he had but to follow it upward to happiness and honor.
He had dropped this thread to find his own way, but he still saw it
glimmering. What if he were to grasp it again? He could neither
stiffen his back to defy the King nor give up Sofie. He had to visit
her in secret, and this was perhaps the hardest of all for his pride
to stomach. Accustomed to move in pomp and display, to take every
step in princely style, he winced at crawling through back alleys.
Days passed and weeks passed, filled with inactive brooding and
still-born plans. He loathed his own helplessness and began to despise
himself for a laggard. Then came the doubt: perhaps his dawdling had
killed her love, or had she never loved him? They said she was clever,
and no doubt she was, but—as clever as they said? Oh, no! What was
love, then, if she did not love, and yet—and yet …
Behind Christoffer Urne’s garden ran a passage just wide enough for a
man to squeeze through. This was the way Ulrik Frederik had to take
when he visited his mistress, and he would usually have
Hop-o’-my-Thumb mounted on guard at the end of the passage, lest
people in the street should see him climbing the board fence.
On a balmy, moonlit summer night three or four hours after bedtime,
Daniel had wrapped himself in his cloak and found a seat for himself
on the remains of a pig’s trough which someone had thrown out from a
neighboring house. He was in a pleasant frame of mind, slightly drunk,
and chuckling to himself at his own merry conceits. Ulrik Frederik had
already scaled the fence and was in the garden. It was fragrant with
elder blossoms. Linen laid out to bleach made long white strips across
the grass. There was a soft rustling in the maples overhead and the
rose bushes at his side; their red blossoms looked almost white in the
moonlight. He went up to the house, which stood shining white, the
windows in a yellow glitter. How quiet everything was—radiant and
calm! Suddenly the glassy whirr of a cricket shivered the stillness.
The sharp, blue-black shadows of the hollyhocks seemed painted on the
wall behind them. A faint mist rose from the bleach-linen. There!—he
lifted the latch, and the next moment he was in the darkness within.
Softly he groped his way up the rickety staircase until he felt the
warm, spice-scented air of the attic. The rotten boards of the floor
creaked under his step. The moon shone through a small window
overhead, throwing a square of light on the flat top of a grain pile.
Scramble over—the dust whirling in the column of light! Now—the
gable-room at last! The door opened from within and threw a faint
reddish glow that illuminated for a second the pile of grain, the
smoke-yellowed, sloping chimney, and the roof beams. The next moment
they were shut out, and he stood by Sofia’s side in the family
clothes-closet.
The small, low room was almost filled with large linen-presses. From
the loft hung bags full of down and feathers. Old spinning wheels were
flung into the corners, and the walls were festooned with red onions
and silver-mounted harness. The window was closed with heavy wooden
shutters, but on a brass-trimmed chest beneath it stood a small hand
lantern. Sofie opened its tiny horn-pane to get a brighter light. Her
loosened hair hung down over the fur-edged broadcloth robe she had
thrown over her homespun dress. Her face was pale and grief worn, but
she smiled gaily and poured out a stream of chatter. She was sitting
on a low stool, her hands clasped around her knees, looking up merrily
at Ulrik Frederik, who stood silent above her while she talked and
talked, lashed on by the fear his ill humor had roused in her.
“How now, Sir Grumpy?” she said. “You’ve nothing to say? In all the
hundred hours that have passed, have you not thought of a hundred
things you wanted to whisper to me? Oh, then you have not longed as I
have!” She trimmed the candle with her fingers and threw the bit of
burning wick on the floor. Instinctively Ulrik Frederik took a step
forward and put it out with his foot.
“That’s right!” she went on. “Come here and sit by my side; but first
you must kneel and sigh and plead with me to be fond again, for this
is the third night I’m watching. Yester eve and the night before I
waited in vain, till my eyes were dim.” She lifted her hand
threateningly. “To your knees, Sir Faithless, and pray as if for your
life!” She spoke with mock solemnity, then smiled, half beseeching,
half impatient. “Come here and kneel, come!”
Ulrik Frederik looked around almost grudgingly. It seemed too absurd
to fall on his knees there in Christoffer Urne’s attic. Yet he knelt
down, put his arm around her waist, and hid his face in her lap,
though without speaking.
She too was silent, oppressed with fear; for she had seen Ulrik
Frederik’s pale, tormented face and uneasy eyes. Her hand played
carelessly with his hair, but her heart beat violently in apprehension
and dread.
They sat thus for a long time.
Then Ulrik Frederik started up.
“No, no!” he cried. “This can’t go on! God our Father in heaven is my
witness that you’re dear to me as the innermost blood of my heart, and
I don’t know how I’m to live without you. But what does it avail?
What can come of it? They’re all against us—every one. Not a tongue
will speak a word of cheer, but all turn from me. When they see me,
‘tis as though a cold shadow fell over them where before I brought a
light. I stand so utterly alone, Sofie, ‘tis bitter beyond words.
True, I know you warned me, but I’m eaten up in this strife. It sucks
my courage and my honor, and though I’m consumed with shame, I must
ask you to set me free. Dearest girl, release me from my word!”
Sofie had risen and stood cold and unflinching like a statue, eyeing
him gravely as he spoke.
“I am with child,” she said quietly and firmly.
If she had consented, if she had given him his freedom, Ulrik Frederik
felt that he would not have taken it. He would have thrown himself at
her feet. Sure of her, he would have defied the King and all. But she
did not. She but pulled his chain to show him how securely he was
bound. Oh, she was clever as they said! His blood boiled; he could
have fallen upon her, clutched her white throat to drag the truth out
of her and force her to open every petal and lay bare every shadow and
fold in the rose of her love that he might know the truth at last! But
he mastered himself and said with a smile: “Yes, of course,! know—‘t
was nothing but a jest, you understand.”
Sofie looked at him uneasily. No, it had not been a jest. If it had
been, why did he not come close to her and kiss her? Why did he stand
there in the shadow? If she could only see his eyes! No, it was no
jest. He had asked as seriously as she had answered. Ah, that answer!
She began to see what she had lost by it. If she had only said yes, he
would never have left her! “Oh, Ulrik Frederik,” she said, “I was
but thinking of our child, but if you no longer love me, then go, go
at once and build your own happiness! I will not hold you back.”
“Did I not tell you that’t was but a jest? How can you think that I
would ask you to release me from my word and sneak off in base shame
and dishonor! Whenever I lifted my head again,” he went on, “I must
fear lest the eye that had seen my ignominy should meet mine and force
it to the ground.” And he meant what he said. If she had loved him as
passionately as he loved her, then perhaps, but now—never.
Sofie went to him and laid her head on his shoulder, weeping.
“Farewell, Ulrik Frederik,” she said. “Go, go! I would not hold you
one hour after you longed to be gone, no, not if I could bind you with
a hair.”
He shook his head impatiently. “Dear Sofie,” he said, winding himself
out of her arms, “let us not play a comedy with each other. I owe it
both to you and to myself that the pastor should join our hands; it
cannot be too soon. Let it be in two or three days—but secretly, for
it is of no use to set the world against us more than has been done
already.” Sofie dared not raise any objection. They agreed on the time
and the place and parted with tender good-nights.
When Ulrik Frederik came down into the garden, it was dark, for the
moon had veiled itself, and a few heavy raindrops fell from the inky
sky. The early cocks were
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