The Wonderful Adventures of Nils by Selma Lagerlöf (i can read book club TXT) đ
Description
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.
Read free book «The Wonderful Adventures of Nils by Selma Lagerlöf (i can read book club TXT) đ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Selma Lagerlöf
Read book online «The Wonderful Adventures of Nils by Selma Lagerlöf (i can read book club TXT) đ». Author - Selma Lagerlöf
âIt happened that our Lord was just then creating SmĂ„land. It wasnât even half-ready but it looked as though it would be an indescribably pretty and fertile land. It was difficult for our Lord to say no to Saint Peter, and aside from this, he thought very likely that a thing so well begun no one could spoil. Therefore he said: âIf you like, we will prove which one of us two understands this sort of work the better. You, who are only a novice, shall go on with this which I have begun, and I will create a new land.â To this Saint Peter agreed at once; and so they went to workâ âeach one in his place.
âOur Lord moved southward a bit, and there he undertook to create SkĂ„ne. It wasnât long before he was through with it, and soon he asked if Saint Peter had finished, and would come and look at his work. âI had mine ready long ago,â said Saint Peter; and from the sound of his voice it could be heard how pleased he was with what he had accomplished.
âWhen Saint Peter saw SkĂ„ne, he had to acknowledge that there was nothing but good to be said of that land. It was a fertile land and easy to cultivate, with wide plains wherever one looked, and hardly a sign of hills. It was evident that our Lord had really contemplated making it such that people should feel at home there. âYes, this is a good country,â said Saint Peter, âbut I think that mine is better.â âThen weâll take a look at it,â said our Lord.
âThe land was already finished in the north and east when Saint Peter began the work, but the southern and western parts; and the whole interior, he had created all by himself. Now when our Lord came up there, where Saint Peter had been at work, he was so horrified that he stopped short and exclaimed: âWhat on earth have you been doing with this land, Saint Peter?â
âSaint Peter, too, stood and looked aroundâ âperfectly astonished. He had had the idea that nothing could be so good for a land as a great deal of warmth. Therefore he had gathered together an enormous mass of stones and mountains, and erected a highland, and this he had done so that it should be near the sun, and receive much help from the sunâs heat. Over the stone-heaps he had spread a thin layer of soil, and then he had thought that everything was well arranged.
âBut while he was down in SkĂ„ne, a couple of heavy showers had come up, and more was not needed to show what his work amounted to. When our Lord came to inspect the land, all the soil had been washed away, and the naked mountain foundation shone forth all over. Where it was about the best, lay clay and heavy gravel over the rocks, but it looked so poor that it was easy to understand that hardly anything except spruce and juniper and moss and heather could grow there. But what there was plenty of was water. It had filled up all the clefts in the mountain; and lakes and rivers and brooks; these one saw everywhere, to say nothing of swamps and morasses, which spread over large tracts. And the most exasperating thing of all was, that while some tracts had too much water, it was so scarce in others, that whole fields lay like dry moors, where sand and earth whirled up in clouds with the least little breeze.
âââWhat can have been your meaning in creating such a land as this?â said our Lord. Saint Peter made excuses, and declared he had wished to build up a land so high that it should have plenty of warmth from the sun. âBut then you will also get much of the night chill,â said our Lord, âfor that too comes from heaven. I am very much afraid the little that can grow here will freeze.â
âThis, to be sure, Saint Peter hadnât thought about.
âââYes, here it will be a poor and frost-bound land,â said our Lord, âit canât be helped.âââ
When little Mats had gotten this far in his story, Osa, the goose-girl, protested: âI cannot bear, little Mats, to hear you say that it is so miserable in SmĂ„land,â said she. âYou forget entirely how much good soil there is there. Only think of Möre district, by Kalmar Sound! I wonder where youâll find a richer grain region. There are fields upon fields, just like here in SkĂ„ne. The soil is so good that I cannot imagine anything that couldnât grow there.â
âI canât help that,â said little Mats. âIâm only relating what others have said before.â
âAnd I have heard many say that there is not a more beautiful coast land than Tjust. Think of the bays and islets, and the manors, and the groves!â said Osa.
âYes, thatâs true enough,â little Mats admitted.
âAnd donât you remember,â continued Osa, âthe school teacher said that such a lively and picturesque district as that bit of SmĂ„land which lies south of Lake Vettern is not to be found in all Sweden? Think of the beautiful sea and the yellow coast-mountains, and of Grenna and Jönköping, with its match factory, and think of Huskvarna, and all the big establishments there!â
âYes, thatâs true enough,â said little Mats once again.
âAnd think of Visingsö, little Mats, with
Comments (0)