Short Fiction by Selma Lagerlöf (android based ebook reader txt) đ
Description
Selma Lagerlöf was a Swedish author, who, starting in 1891 with The Story of Gösta Berling, wrote a series of novels and short stories that soon garnered both national and international praise. This led to her winning the 1909 Nobel Prize for Literature âin appreciation of the lofty idealism, vivid imagination, and spiritual perception that characterize her writings,â the first woman to do so. She happily wrote for both adults and children, but the same feeling of romantic infatuation with the spiritual mysteries of life runs through all of her work, often anchored to her childhood home of VĂ€rmland in middle Sweden.
The collection brings together the available public domain translations into English, in chronological order of their original publication. The subjects are many, and include Swedish folk-stories, Biblical legends, and tales of robbers, kings and queens, fishermen, and saints. They were translated by Pauline Bancroft Flach, Jessie Brochner, and Velma Swanston Howard.
Read free book «Short Fiction by Selma Lagerlöf (android based ebook reader txt) đ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Selma Lagerlöf
Read book online «Short Fiction by Selma Lagerlöf (android based ebook reader txt) đ». Author - Selma Lagerlöf
It was a Christmas Day and all the folks had driven to church except grandmother and I. I believe we were all alone in the house. We had not been permitted to go along, because one of us was too old and the other was too young. And we were sad, both of us, because we had not been taken to early mass to hear the singing and to see the Christmas candles.
But as we sat there in our loneliness, grandmother began to tell a story.
âThere was a man,â said she, âwho went out in the dark night to borrow live coals to kindle a fire. He went from hut to hut and knocked. âDear friends, help me!â said he. âMy wife has just given birth to a child, and I must make a fire to warm her and the little one.â
âBut it was way in the night, and all the people were asleep. No one replied.
âThe man walked and walked. At last he saw the gleam of a fire a long way off. Then he went in that direction, and saw that the fire was burning in the open. A lot of sheep were sleeping around the fire, and an old shepherd sat and watched over the flock.
âWhen the man who wanted to borrow fire came up to the sheep, he saw that three big dogs lay asleep at the shepherdâs feet. All three awoke when the man approached and opened their great jaws, as though they wanted to bark; but not a sound was heard. The man noticed that the hair on their backs stood up and that their sharp, white teeth glistened in the firelight. They dashed toward him. He felt that one of them bit at his leg and one at his hand and that one clung to his throat. But their jaws and teeth wouldnât obey them, and the man didnât suffer the least harm.
âNow the man wished to go farther, to get what he needed. But the sheep lay back to back and so close to one another that he couldnât pass them. Then the man stepped upon their backs and walked over them and up to the fire. And not one of the animals awoke or moved.â
Thus far, grandmother had been allowed to narrate without interruption. But at this point I couldnât help breaking in. âWhy didnât they do it, grandma?â I asked.
âThat you shall hear in a moment,â said grandmotherâ âand went on with her story.
âWhen the man had almost reached the fire, the shepherd looked up. He was a surly old man, who was unfriendly and harsh toward human beings. And when he saw the strange man coming, he seized the long spiked staff, which he always held in his hand when he tended his flock, and threw it at him. The staff came right toward the man, but, before it reached him, it turned off to one side and whizzed past him, far out in the meadow.â
When grandmother had got this far, I interrupted her again. âGrandma, why wouldnât the stick hurt the man?â Grandmother did not bother about answering me, but continued her story.
âNow the man came up to the shepherd and said to him: âGood man, help me, and lend me a little fire! My wife has just given birth to a child, and I must make a fire to warm her and the little one.â
âThe shepherd would rather have said no, but when he pondered that the dogs couldnât hurt the man, and the sheep had not run from him, and that the staff had not wished to strike him, he was a little afraid, and dared not deny the man that which he asked.
âââTake as much as you need!â he said to the man.
âBut then the fire was nearly burnt out. There were no logs or branches left, only a big heap of live coals; and the stranger had neither spade nor shovel, wherein he could carry the red-hot coals.
âWhen the shepherd saw this, he said again: âTake as much as you need!â And he was glad that the man wouldnât be able to take away any coals.
âBut the man stooped and picked coals from the ashes with his bare hands, and laid them in his mantle. And he didnât burn his hands when he touched them, nor did the coals scorch his mantle; but he carried them away as if they had been nuts or apples.â
But here the storyteller was interrupted for the third time. âGrandma, why wouldnât the coals burn the man?â
âThat you shall hear,â said grandmother, and went on:
âAnd when the shepherd, who was such a cruel and hardhearted man, saw all this, he began to wonder to himself: âWhat kind of a night is this, when the dogs do not bite, the sheep are not scared, the staff does not kill, or the fire scorch?â He called the stranger back, and said to him: âWhat kind of a night is this? And how does it happen that all things show you compassion?â
âThen said the man: âI cannot tell you if you yourself do not see it.â And he wished to go his way, that he might soon make a fire and warm his wife and child.
âBut the shepherd did not wish to lose sight of the man before he had found out what all this might portend. He got up and followed the man till they came to the place where he lived.
âThen the shepherd saw that the man didnât have so much as a hut to dwell in, but that his wife and babe were lying in a mountain grotto, where there was nothing except the cold and naked stone walls.
âBut the shepherd thought that perhaps the poor innocent child might freeze to death there in the
Comments (0)