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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trenches, climb the barricades, peep into the necks of the mines, and
pluck at the gabions. This was the spot where such a one had been
posted, and here so-and-so had fallen, and over there another had
rushed forward and been surrounded. Everything was remarkable, from
the wheel tracks of the cannon carriages and the cinders of the watch
fires to the bullet-pierced board fences and the sun-bleached skull of
a horse. And so the narrating and explaining, the supposing and
debating, went on, up the ramparts and down the barricades.
Gert Pyper was strutting about with his whole family. He stamped the
ground at least a hundred times and generally thought he noticed a
strangely hollow sound while his rotund spouse pulled him anxiously by
the sleeve and begged him not to be too foolhardy, but Master Gert
only stamped the harder. The grown-up son showed his little betrothed
where he had been standing on the night when he got a bullet hole
through his duffel great-coat, and where the turner’s boy had had his
head shot off. The smaller children cried because they were not
allowed to keep the rifle ball they had found, for Erik Lauritzen, who
was also there, said it might be poisoned. He was poking the
half-rotten straw where the barracks had stood, for he remembered a
story of a soldier who had been hanged outside of Magdeburg and under
whose pillow seven of his comrades had found so much money that they
had deserted before the official looting of the city began.
The green fields and grayish white roads were dotted black with people
coming and going. They walked about examining the well-known spots
like a newly discovered world or an island suddenly shot up from the
bottom of the sea, and there were many who, when they saw the country
stretching out before them field behind field and meadow behind
meadow, were seized with wanderlust and began to walk on and on as
though intoxicated with the sense of space, of boundless space.
Toward supper time, however, the crowds turned homeward and, as moved
by one impulse, sought the North Quarter, where the graveyard of St.
Peter’s Church lay surrounded by spacious gardens, for it was an
old-time custom to take the air under the green trees after vespers on
summer Sundays. While the enemy was encamped before the ramparts, the
custom naturally fell into disuse, and the churchyard had been as
empty on Sundays as on week days; but this day old habits were
revived, and people streamed in through both entrances from Norregade:
nobles and citizens, high and low, all had remembered the full-crowned
linden trees of St. Peter’s churchyard.
On the grassy mounds and the broad tombstones sat merry groups of
townspeople, man and wife, children and neighbors, eating their
supper, while in the outskirts of the party stood the ‘prentice boy
munching the delicious Sunday sandwich as he waited for the basket.
Tiny children tripped with hands full of broken food for the beggar
youngsters that hung on the wall. Lads thirsting for knowledge spelled
their way through the lengthy epitaphs while father listened full of
admiration, and mother and the girls scanned the dresses of the
passers-by, for by this time the gentlefolk were walking up and down
in the broad paths. They usually came a little later than the others
and either supped at home or in one of the eating-houses in the
gardens round about.
Stately matrons and dainty maids, old councillors and young
officers, stout noblemen and foreign ministers passed in review. There
went bustling, gray-haired Hans Nansen, shortening his steps to the
pace of the wealthy Villem Fiuren and listening to his piping voice.
There came Corfits Trolle and the stiff Otto Krag. Mistress Ide Daa,
famed for her lovely eyes, stood talking to old Axel Urup, who showed
his huge teeth in an everlasting smile, while the shrunken form of his
lady, Mistress Sidsel Grubbe, tripped slowly by the side of Sister
Rigitze and the impatient Marie. There were Gersdorf and Schack and
Thuresen of the tow-colored mane and Peder Retz with Spanish dress
and Spanish manners.
Ulrik Frederik was among the rest, walking with Niels Rosenkrands, the
bold young lieutenant-colonel whose French breeding showed in his
lively gestures. When they met Mistress Rigitze and her companions,
Ulrik Frederik would have passed them with a cold, formal greeting,
for ever since his separation from Sofie Urne he had nursed a spite
against Mistress Rigitze, whom he suspected, as one of the Queen’s
warmest adherents, of having had a finger in the matter. But
Rosenkrands stopped, and Axel Urup urged them so cordially to sup with
the party in Johan Adolph’s garden that they could not well refuse.
A few minutes later they were all sitting in the little brick summer
house eating the simple country dishes that the gardener set before
them.
“Is it true, I wonder,” asked Mistress Ide Daa, “that the Swedish
officers have so bewitched the maidens of Sjaelland with their pretty
manners that they have followed them in swarms out of land and
kingdom?”
“Marry, it’s true enough at least of that minx Mistress Dyre,” replied
Mistress Sidsel Grubbe.
“Of what Dyres is she?” asked Mistress Rigitze.
“The Dyres of Skaaneland, you know, sister, those who have such light
hair. They’re all intermarried with the Powitzes. The one who fled the
country, she’s a daughter of Henning Dyre of West Neergaard, he who
married Sidonie, the eldest of the Ove Powitzes, and she went bag and
baggage—took sheets, bolsters, plate, and ready money from her
father.”
“Ay,” smiled Axel Urup, “strong love draws a heavy load.”
“Faith,” agreed Oluf Daa, who always struck out with his left hand when
he talked, “love—as a man may say—love is strong.”
“Lo-ove,” drawled Rosenkrands, daintily stroking his moustache with
the back of his little finger, “is like Hercules in female dress;
gentle and charming in appearance and seeming all weakness and
mild-ness, yet it has stre-ength and craftiness to complete all the
twelve labors of Hercules.”
“Indeed,” broke in Mistress Ide Daa, “that is plainly to be seen from
the love of Mistress Dyre, which at least completed one of the labors
of Hercules, inasmuch as it cleaned out chests and presses, even as he
cleaned the stable of Uriah—or whatever his name was—you know.”
“I would rather say”—Ulrik Frederik turned to Marie Grubbe—“that
love is like falling asleep in a desert and waking in a balmy pleasure
garden, for such is the virtue of love that it changes the soul of man
and that which was barren now seems a very wonder of delight. But what
are your thoughts about love, fair Mistress Marie?”
“Mine?” she asked. “I think love is like a diamond, for as a diamond
is beautiful to look upon, so is love fair, but as the diamond is
poison to anyone who swallows it, in the same manner love is a kind of
poison and produces a baneful raging distemper in those who are
infected by it—at least if one is to judge by the strange antics one
may observe in amorous persons and by their curious conversation.”
“Ay,” whispered Ulrik Frederik gallantly, “the candle may well talk
reason to the poor moth that is crazed by its light!”
“Forsooth, I think you are right, Marie,” began Axel Urup, pausing to
smile and nod to her. “Yes, yes, we may well believe that love is but
a poison, else how can we explain that coldblooded persons may be
fired with the most burning passion merely by giving them
miracle-philtres and love-potions?”
“Fie!” cried Mistress Sidsel; “don’t speak of such terrible godless
business—and on a Sunday, too!”
“My dear Sidse,” he replied, “there’s no sin in that—none at all.
Would you call it a sin, Colonel Gyldenlove? No? Surely not. Does not
even Holy Writ tell of witches and evil sorceries? Indeed and indeed
it does. What I was about to say is that all our humors have their
seat in the blood. If a man is fired with anger, can’t he feel the
blood rushing up through his body and flooding his eyes and ears? And
if he’s frightened o’ the sudden, does not the blood seem to sink
down into his feet and grow cold all in a trice? Is it for nothing,
do you think, that grief is pale and joy red as a rose? And as for
love, it comes only after the blood has ripened in the summers and
winters of seventeen or eighteen years; then it begins to ferment like
good grape wine; it seethes and bubbles. In later years it clears and
settles as do other fermenting juices; it grows less hot and fierce.
But as good wine begins to effervesce again when the grape-vine is in
bloom, so the disposition of man, even of the old, is more than
ordinarily inclined to love at certain seasons of the year when the
blood, as it were, remembers the springtime of life.”
“Ay, the blood,” added Oluf Daa, “as a man may say, the blood—‘t is a
subtle matter to understand—as a man may say.”
“Indeed,” nodded Mistress Rigitze, “everything acts on the blood, both
sun and moon and approaching storm; that’s as sure as if ‘t were
printed.”
“And likewise the thoughts of other people,” said Mistress Ide. “I
saw it in my eldest sister. We lay in one bed together, and every
night as soon as her eyes were closed, she would begin to sigh and
stretch her arms and legs and try to get out of bed as someone were
calling her. And ‘twas but her betrothed, who was in Holland, and was
so full of longing for her that he would do nothing day and night but
think of her until she never knew an hour’s peace, and her
health—don’t you remember, dear Mistress Sidsel, how weak her
eyesight was all the time Jorgen Bille was from home?”
“Do I remember? Ah, the dear soul! But she bloomed again like a
rosebud. Bless me, her first lying-in—” and she continued the subject
in a whisper.
Rosenkrands turned to Axel Urup. “Then you believe,” he said, “that an
elixir d’am-our is a fermenting juice poured into the blood? That
tallies well with a tale the late Mr. Ulrik Christian told me one day
we were on the ramparts together. ‘T was in Antwerp it happened—in
the Hotellerie des Trois Brochets, where he had lodgings. That morning
at mass he had seen a fair, fair maid-en, and she had looked quite
kind-ly at him. All day long she was not in his thoughts, but at night
when he entered his chamber, there was a rose at the head of the bed.
He picked it up and smelled it, and in the same moment the
counterfeit of the maiden stood before him as painted on the wall,
and he was seized with such sudden and furious longing for her that
he could have cried aloud. He rushed out of the house and into the
street, and there he ran up and down, wailing like one bewitched.
Something seemed to draw and draw him and burn like fire, and he never
stopped till day dawned.”
So they talked until the sun went down, and they parted to go home
through the darkening streets. Ulrik Frederik joined but little in
the general conversation, for he was afraid that if he said anything
about love, it might be taken for reminiscences of his relation with
Sofie Urne. Nor was he in the mood for talking, and when he and
Rosenkrands were alone, he made such brief, absentminded replies that
his companion soon wearied of him and left
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