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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warming to a stately dance over parquet floors while the wine sparkled
in ancestral goblets.
All these festivities passed Marie Grubbeby; none invited her. Because
of their ties to the royal family, some of the Grubbes were suspected
of siding with the King against the Estate, and moreover the good old
nobility cordially hated that rather numerous upper aristocracy formed
by the natural children of the kings and their relatives. Marie was
therefore slighted for a twofold reason, and as the court lived in
retirement during the session of the States-General, it offered her no
compensation.
It seemed hard at first, but soon it woke the latent defiance of her
nature and made her draw closer to Ulrik Frederik. She loved him more
tenderly for the very reason that she felt herself being wronged for
his sake. So when the two were quietly married on the sixteenth of
December, sixteen hundred and sixty, there was the best reason to
believe that she would live happily with the Master of the King’s
Hunt, which was the title and office Ulrik Frederik had won as his
share of the favors distributed by triumphant royalty.
This private ceremony was not in accordance with the original plan,
for it had long been the intention of the King to celebrate their
wedding in the castle, as Christian the Fourth had done that of Hans
Ulrik and Mistress Rigitze, but at the eleventh hour he had scruples
and decided, in consideration of Ulrik Frederik’s former marriage and
divorce to refrain from public display.
So now they are married and settled, and time passes, and time flies,
and all is well—and time slackened its speed, and time crawled; for
it is true, alas! that when Leander and Leonora have lived together
for half a year, the glory is often departed from Leander’s
love, though Leonora usually loves him much more tenderly than in the
days of their betrothal. She is like the small children who find the
old story new no matter how often it is told with the very same words,
the same surprises, and the selfsame “Snip, snap, snout, my tale’s
out,” while Leander is more exacting and grows weary as soon as his
feeling no longer makes him new to himself. When he ceases to be
intoxicated, he suddenly becomes more than sober. The flush and glamor
of his ecstasy, which for a while gave him the assurance of a
demigod, suddenly departs: he hesitates, he thinks and begins to doubt.
He looks back at the chequered course of his passion, heaves a sigh,
and yawns. He is beset with longing, like one who has come home after
a lengthy sojourn in foreign parts and sees the altogether too
familiar though long-forgotten spots before him; as he looks at them,
he wonders idly whether he has really been gone from this well-known
part of the world so long.
In such a mood Ulrik Frederik sat at home one rainy day in September.
He had called in his dogs and had frolicked with them for a while, had
tried to read, and had played a game of backgammon with Marie. The
rain was pouring. It was impossible to go walking or riding, and so he
had sought his armory, as he called it, thinking he would polish and
take stock of his treasures—this was just the day for it! It occurred
to him that he had inherited a chest of weapons from Ulrik Christian;
he had ordered it brought down from the attic and sat lifting out one
piece after another.
There were splendid rapiers of bluish steel inlaid with gold or
silvery bright with dull engraving. There were hunting knives, some
heavy and one-edged, some long and flexible like tongues of flame,
some three-edged and sharp as needles. There were toledo blades, many
toledos, light as reeds and flexible as willows, with hilts of silver
and jasper agate or of chased gold or gold and carbuncles. One had
nothing but a hilt of etched steel and for a sword-knot a little silk
ribbon embroidered in roses and vines with red glass beads and green
floss. It must be either a bracelet, a cheap bracelet, or—Ulrik
Frederik thought—more likely a garter, and the rapier was stuck
through it.
It comes from Spain, said Ulrik Frederik to himself, for the late
owner had served in the Spanish army for nine years. Alack-a-day! He
too was to have entered foreign service with Carl Gustaf; but then
came the war, and now he supposed he would never have a chance to get
out and try his strength, and yet he was but three and twenty. To live
forever here at this tiresome little court—doubly tiresome since the
nobility stayed at home—to hunt a little, look to his estate once in
a while, some time in the future by the grace of the King to be made
Privy Councillor of the Realm and be knighted, keep on the right side
of Prince Christian and retain his office, now and then be sent on a
tedious embassy to Holland, grow old, get the rheumatism, die, and be
buried in Vor Frue Church—such was the brilliant career that
stretched before him. And now they were fighting down in Spain! There
was glory to be won, a life to be lived—that was where the rapier and
the sword-knot came from. No, he must speak to the King. It was still
raining, and it was a long way to Frederiksborg, but there was no help
for it. He could not wait; the matter must be settled.
The King liked his scheme. Contrary to his custom he assented at once,
much to the surprise of Ulrik Frederik, who during his whole ride had
debated with himself all the reasons that made his plan difficult,
unreasonable, impossible. But the King said, Yes, he might leave
before Christmas. By that time the preparations could be completed
and an answer received from the King of Spain.
The reply came in the beginning of December, but Ulrik Frederik did
not start until the middle of April, for there was much to be done.
Money had to be raised, retainers equipped, letters written. Finally
he departed.
Marie Grubbe was ill pleased with this trip to Spain. It is true she
saw the justice of Mistress Rigitze’s argument that it was necessary
for Ulrik Frederik to go abroad and win honor and glory in order that
the King might do something handsome for him; for although his Majesty
had been made an absolute monarch, he was sensitive to what people
said, and the noblemen had grown so captious and perverse that they
would be sure to put the very worst construction on anything the King
might do. Yet women have an inborn dread of all farewells, and in
this case there was much to fear. Even if she could forget the chances
of war and the long, dangerous journey and tell herself that a king’s
son would be well taken care of, yet she could not help her foreboding
that their life together might suffer such a break by a separation of
perhaps more than a year that it would never be the same again. Their
love was yet so lightly rooted, and just as it had begun to grow, it
was to be mercilessly exposed to ill winds and danger. Was it not
almost like going out deliberately to lay it waste? And one thing she
had learned in her brief married life: the kind of marriage she had
thought so easy in the days of her betrothal, that in which man and
wife go each their own way, could mean only misery with all darkness
and no dawn. The wedge had entered their outward life; God forbid that
it should pierce to their hearts! Yet it was surely tempting fate to
open the door by such a parting.
Moreover, she was sadly jealous of all the light papistical feminine
rabble in the land and dominions of Spain.
Frederik the Third, who, like many sovereigns of his time, was much
interested in the art of transmuting baser metals into gold, had
charged Ulrik Frederik when he came to Amsterdam to call on a renowned
alchemist, the Italian Burrhi, and to drop a hint that if he should
think of visiting Denmark, the King and the wealthy Christian Skeel of
Sostrup would make it worth his while.
When Ulrik Frederik arrived in Amsterdam, he therefore asked Ole Borch,
who was studying there and knew Burrhi well, to conduct him to the
alchemist. They found him a man in the fifties, below middle height,
and with a tendency to fat, but erect and springy in his movements.
His hair and his narrow moustache were black, his nose was hooked and
rather thick, his face full and yellow in color; from the corners of
his small, glittering black eyes innumerable furrows and lines spread
out like a fan, giving him an expression at once sly and goodhumored.
He wore a black velvet coat with wide collar and cuffs and
crape-covered silver buttons, black knee-breeches and silk stockings,
and shoes with large black rosettes. His taste for fine lace appeared
in the edging on his cravat and shirt bosom and in the ruffles that
hung in thick folds around his wrists and knees. His hands were small,
white, and chubby and were loaded with rings of such strange, clumsy
shapes that he could not bring the tips of his fingers together. Large
brilliants glittered even on his thumbs. As soon as they were seated,
he remarked that he was troubled with cold hands and stuck them in a
large fur muff, although it was summer.
The room into which he conducted Ulrik Frederik was large and spacious
with a vaulted ceiling and narrow Gothic windows set high in the
walls. Chairs were ranged around a large centre table, their wooden
seats covered with soft cushions of red silk from which hung long,
heavy tassels. The top of the table was inlaid with a silver plate on
which the twelve signs of the zodiac, the planets, and some of the
more important constellations were done in niello. Above it, a string
of ostrich eggs hung from the ceiling. The floor had been painted in a
chequered design of red and gray, and near the door a triangle was
formed by old horseshoes that had been fitted into the boards. A large
coral tree stood under one window, and a cupboard of dark carved wood
with brass mountings was placed under the other. A life-size doll
representing a Moor was set in one corner, and along the walls lay
blocks of tin and copper ore. The blackamoor held a dried palm leaf in
his hand.
When they were seated and the first interchange of amenities was over,
Ulrik Frederik—they were speaking in French—asked whether Burrhi
would not with his learning and experience come to the aid of the
searchers after wisdom in the land of Denmark.
Burrhi shook his head.
“‘Tis known to me,” he replied, “that the secret art has many great
and powerful votaries in Denmark, but I have imparted instruction to
so many royal gentlemen and church dignitaries and, while I will not
say that ingratitude or meagre appreciation have always been my
appointed portion, yet have I encountered so much captiousness and
lack of understanding that I am unwilling to assume again the duties
of a master to such distinguished scholars. I do not know what rule or
method the King of Denmark employs in his investigations, and my
remarks can therefore contain no disparagement of him, but I can
assure you in confidence that I have known gentlemen of the highest
nobility in the land, nay, anointed rulers and hereditary kings who
have
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