Pelle the Conqueror by Martin Andersen Nexø (great novels to read .TXT) đ
Description
Pelle is still just a young boy when his father decides to move them from Sweden to the Danish island of Bornholm in search of riches. Those richesâof courseâbeing nonexistent, they fall into the life of farm laborers. As Pelle grows up among the other lowly and poor residents of the island, their cares and worries seep into him, and he finds himself part of a greater struggle for their dignity.
Pelle the Conqueror has been compared to Victor Hugoâs Les MisĂŠrables in its themes and scope. Nexø had become involved in the Social Democratic movement in Denmark that flourished after the turn of the 19th century, and this work closely follows his journalistic observations of the struggles of the people. It was published in four books between 1906 and 1910, and was immensely popular; the first book in particular is still widely read in Danish schools, and was made in to an award-winning 1987 film starring Max von Sydow as Father Lasse.
In this Standard Ebooks edition books one and four are translated by Jesse Muir, while books two and three are translated by Bernard Miall.
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- Author: Martin Andersen Nexø
Read book online ÂŤPelle the Conqueror by Martin Andersen Nexø (great novels to read .TXT) đÂť. Author - Martin Andersen Nexø
âI donât rightly understand it,â he said at last. âBut today I joined the trade union. I shanât stand still and look on when thereâs anything big to be done.â
Morten nodded, faintly smiling. He was tired now, and hardly heard what Pelle was saying. âI must go to bed now so that I can get up at one. But where do you live? Iâll come and see you some time. How queer it is that we should have run across one another here!â
âI live out in Kristianshavnâ âin the âArk,â if you know where that is!â
âThatâs a queer sort of house to have tumbled into! I know the âArkâ very well, itâs been so often described in the papers. Thereâs all sorts of people live there!â
âI donât know anything about that,â said Pelle, half offended. âI like the people well enough.â ââ ⌠But itâs capital that we should have run into one anotherâs arms like this! What bit of luck, eh? And I behaved like a clown and kept out of your way? But that was when I was going to the dogs, and hated everybody! But now nothingâs going to come between us again, you may lay to that!â
âThatâs good, but now be off with you,â replied Morten, smiling; he was already half-undressed.
âIâm going, Iâm going!â said Pelle, and he picked up his hat, and stood for a moment gazing out over the city. âBut itâs magnificent, what you were saying about things just now!â he cried suddenly. âIf I had the strength of all us poor folks in me, Iâd break out right away and conquer the whole of it! If such a mass of wealth were shared out thereâd never be any poverty any more!â He stood there with his arms uplifted, as though he held it all in his hands. Then he laughed uproariously. He looked full of energy. Morten lay half asleep, staring at him and saying nothing. And then he went.
Pipman scolded Pelle outrageously when at last he returned. âCurse it all, what are you thinking of? To go strolling about and playing the duke while such as we can sit here working our eyes out of our heads! And we have to go thirsty too! Now donât you dream of being insolent to me, or thereâll be an end of the matter. I am excessively annoyed!â
He held out his hand in pathetic expostulation, although Pelle had no intention of answering him. He no longer took Pipman seriously. âDevil fry me, but a man must sit here and drink the clothes off his body while a lout like you goes for a stroll!â
Pelle was standing there counting the weekâs earnings when he suddenly burst into a loud laugh as his glance fell upon Pipman. His blue naked shanks, miserably shivering under his leather apron, looked so enormously ridiculous when contrasted with the fully-dressed body and the venerable beard.
âYes, you grin!â said Pipman, laughing too. âBut suppose it was you had to take off your trousers in front of the old clothesâ man, and wanted to get upstairs respectably! Those damned brats! âPipmanâs got D.T.,â they yell. âPipmanâs got D.T. And God knows I havenât got D.T., but I havenât got any trousers, and thatâs just the trouble! And these accursed open staircases! Olsenâs hired girl took the opportunity, and you may be sure she saw all there was to see! You might lend me your old bags!â
Pelle opened his green chest and took out his workday trousers.
âYouâd better put a few more locks on that spinach-green lumber-chest of yours,â said Pipman surlily. âAfter all, there might be a thief here, near heaven as we are!â
Pelle apparently did not hear the allusion, and locked the chest up again. Then, his short pipe in his hand, he strolled out on to the platform. Above the roofs the twilight was rising from the Sound. A few doves were flying there, catching the last red rays of the sun on their white pinions, while down in the shaft the darkness lay like a hot lilac mist. The hurdy-gurdy man had come home and was playing his evening tune down there to the dancing children, while the inhabitants of the âArkâ were gossiping and squabbling from gallery to gallery. Now and again a faint vibrating note rose upward, and all fell silent. This was the dwarf Vinslev, who sat playing his flute somewhere in his den deep within the âArk.â He always hid himself right away when he played, for at such times he was like a sick animal, and sat quaking in his lair. The notes of his flute were so sweet, as they came trickling out of his hiding place, that they seemed like a song or a lament from another world. And the restless creatures in the âArkâ must perforce be silent and listen. Now Vinslev was in one of his gentle moods, and one somehow felt better for hearing him. But at times, in his dark moods, the devil seemed to enter into him, and breathed such music into his crazy mind that all his hearers felt a panic terror. Then the decaying timbers of the âArkâ seemed to expand and form a vast monstrous, pitch-black forest, in which all terror lay lurking, and one must strike out blindly in order to avoid being trampled on. The hearse-driver in the fourth story, who at other times was so gentle in his cups, would beat his wife shamefully, and the two lay about in their den drinking and fighting in self-defence. And Vinslevâs devilish flute was to blame when Johnsen vainly bewailed his miserable life and ended it under the sewer-grating. But there was nothing to be said about the matter; Vinslev played the flute, and Johnsenâs suicide was a death like any other.
Now the devil was going about with a ring in his nose; Vinslevâs playing was like a gentle breeze that played on peopleâs hearts, so that
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