The Wonderful Adventures of Nils by Selma Lagerlöf (i can read book club TXT) đ
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In The Wonderful Adventures of Nils, Selma Lagerlöf tells the story of Nils Holgersson, a young boy who is transformed into an elf after a set of misdeeds. Escaping with his familyâs farm goose he joins up with a flock of wild geese and travels with them across Sweden as they return to their annual nesting grounds in Lapland.
The story was originally written as a commission for the Swedish National Teachersâ Association to write a geography book for children and has become a firm favourite in the country. Itâs been adapted for screen many times, translated into over 30 languages and, until recently, was the artwork on the 20 krona banknote.
Although originally published in English in two volumesâthe second starting at âThe Story of Karr and Grayskinââhere they are presented as a single combined story.
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- Author: Selma Lagerlöf
Read book online «The Wonderful Adventures of Nils by Selma Lagerlöf (i can read book club TXT) đ». Author - Selma Lagerlöf
Smirre thought that Akka sounded scared, and he said quickly: âIf you, Akka, will take that Thumbietotâ âwho has so often opposed meâ âand throw him down to me, Iâll promise to make peace with you. Then Iâll never more pursue you or any of yours.â
âIâm not going to give you Thumbietot,â said Akka. âFrom the youngest of us to the oldest, we would willingly give our lives for his sake!â
âSince youâre so fond of him,â said Smirre, âIâll promise you that he shall be the first among you that I will wreak vengeance upon.â
Akka said no more, and after Smirre had sent up a few more yowls, all was still. The boy lay all the while awake. Now it was Akkaâs words to the fox that prevented him from sleeping. Never had he dreamed that he should hear anything so great as that anyone was willing to risk life for his sake. From that moment, it could no longer be said of Nils Holgersson that he did not care for anyone.
KarlskronaSaturday, April second.
It was a moonlight evening in Karlskronaâ âcalm and beautiful. But earlier in the day, there had been rain and wind; and the people must have thought that the bad weather still continued, for hardly one of them had ventured out on the streets.
While the city lay there so desolate, Akka, the wild goose, and her flock, came flying toward it over Vemmön and Pantarholmen. They were out in the late evening to seek a sleeping place on the islands. They couldnât remain inland because they were disturbed by Smirre Fox wherever they lighted.
When the boy rode along high up in the air, and looked at the sea and the islands which spread themselves before him, he thought that everything appeared so strange and spook-like. The heavens were no longer blue, but encased him like a globe of green glass. The sea was milk-white, and as far as he could see rolled small white waves tipped with silver ripples. In the midst of all this white lay numerous little islets, absolutely coal black. Whether they were big or little, whether they were as even as meadows, or full of cliffs, they looked just as black. Even dwelling houses and churches and windmills, which at other times are white or red, were outlined in black against the green sky. The boy thought it was as if the Earth had been transformed, and he was come to another world.
He thought that just for this one night he wanted to be brave, and not afraidâ âwhen he saw something that really frightened him. It was a high cliff island, which was covered with big, angular blocks; and between the blocks shone specks of bright, shining gold. He couldnât keep from thinking of Maglestone, by Trolle-Ljungby, which the trolls sometimes raised upon high gold pillars; and he wondered if this was something like that.
But with the stones and the gold it might have gone fairly well, if such a lot of horrid things had not been lying all around the island. It looked like whales and sharks and other big sea-monsters. But the boy understood that it was the sea-trolls, who had gathered around the island and intended to crawl up on it, to fight with the land-trolls who lived there. And those on the land were probably afraid, for he saw how a big giant stood on the highest point of the island and raised his armsâ âas if in despair over all the misfortune that should come to him and his island.
The boy was not a little terrified when he noticed that Akka began to descend right over that particular island! âNo, for pityâs sake! We must not light there,â said he.
But the geese continued to descend, and soon the boy was astonished that he could have seen things so awry. In the first place, the big stone blocks were nothing but houses. The whole island was a city; and the shining gold specks were street lamps and lighted windowpanes. The giant, who stood highest up on the island, and raised his arms, was a church with two cross-towers; all the sea-trolls and monsters, which he thought he had seen, were boats and ships of every description, that lay anchored all around the island. On the side which lay toward the land were mostly rowboats and sailboats and small coast steamers; but on the side that faced the sea lay armour-clad battleships; some were broad, with very thick, slanting smokestacks; others were long and narrow, and so constructed that they could glide through the water like fishes.
Now what city might this be? That, the boy could figure out because he saw all the battleships. All his life he had loved ships, although he had had nothing to do with any, except the galleys which he had sailed in the road ditches. He knew very well that this cityâ âwhere so many battleships layâ âcouldnât be any place but Karlskrona.
The boyâs grandfather had been an old marine; and as long as he had lived, he had talked of Karlskrona every day; of the great warship dock, and of all the other things to be seen in that city. The boy felt perfectly at home, and he was glad that he should see all this of which he had heard so much.
But he only had a glimpse of the towers and fortifications which barred the entrance to the harbour, and the many buildings, and the shipyardâ âbefore Akka came down on one of the flat church-towers.
This was a pretty safe place for those who wanted to get away from a fox, and the boy began to wonder if he couldnât venture to crawl in under the goosey-ganderâs wing for this one night. Yes, that he might safely do. It would do him good to get a little sleep. He should try to see a little more of the dock
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