<h2>XI</h2>
<p class="poem">
“A safe stronghold our God is still,<br/>
A trusty shield and wea—pon;<br/>
He’ll help us clear from all the ill<br/>
That hath us now o’erta—ken.<br/>
The ancient prince of hell<br/>
Hath risen with purpose fell;<br/>
Strong mail of craft and power<br/>
He weareth in this hour;<br/>
On earth is not his fel—low.”</p>
<p>The whole school sat swaying backward and forward in time to the rhythm,
grinding out hymns in endless succession. Fris, the master, was walking up and
down the middle passage, smoking his pipe; he was taking exercise after an
hour’s reading of the paper. He was using the cane to beat time with, now
and then letting it descend upon the back of an offender, but always only at
the end of a line—as a kind of note of admiration. Fris could not bear to
have the rhythm broken. The children who did not know the hymn were carried
along by the crowd, some of them contenting themselves with moving their lips,
while others made up words of their own. When the latter were too dreadful,
their neighbors laughed, and then the cane descended.</p>
<p>When one verse came to an end, Fris quickly started the next; for the mill was
hard to set in motion again when once it had come to a standstill. “With
for—!” and the half-hundred children carried it on—</p>
<p class="poem">
“With force of arms we nothing can,<br/>
Full soon were we downrid—den;”</p>
<p>Then Fris had another breathing-space in which to enjoy his pipe and be lulled
by this noise that spoke of great and industrious activity. When things went as
they were now going, his exasperation calmed down for a time, and he could
smile at his thoughts as he paced up and down, and, old though he was, look at
the bright side of life. People in passing stopped to rejoice over the
diligence displayed, and Fris beat more briskly with the cane, and felt a
long-forgotten ideal stirring within him; he had this whole flock of children
to educate for life, he was engaged in creating the coming generation.</p>
<p>When the hymn came to an end, he got them, without a pause, turned on to
“Who puts his trust in God alone,” and from that again to “We
all, we all have faith in God.” They had had them all three the whole
winter through, and now at last, after tremendous labor, he had brought them so
far that they could say them more or less together.</p>
<p>The hymn-book was the business of Fris’s life, and his forty years as
parish-clerk had led to his knowing the whole of it by heart. In addition to
this he had a natural gift. As a child Fris had been intended for the ministry,
and his studies as a young man were in accordance with that intention. Bible
words came with effect from his lips, and his prospects were of the best, when
an ill-natured bird came all the way from the Faroe Islands to bring trouble
upon him. Fris fell down two flights from spiritual guide to parish-clerk and
child-whipper. The latter office he looked upon as almost too transparent a
punishment from Heaven, and arranged his school as a miniature clerical charge.</p>
<p>The whole village bore traces of his work. There was not much knowledge of
reading and writing, but when it was a question of hymns and Bible texts, these
fishermen and little artisans were bad to beat. Fris took to himself the credit
for the fairly good circumstances of the adults, and the receipt of proper
wages by the young men. He followed each one of them with something of a
father’s eyes, and considered them all to be practically a success. And
he was on friendly terms with them once they had left school. They would come
to the old bachelor and have a chat, and relieve their minds of some difficulty
or other.</p>
<p>But it was always another matter with the confounded brood that sat upon the
school benches for the time being; it resisted learning with might and main,
and Fris prophesied it no good in the future.</p>
<p>Fris hated the children. But he loved these squarely built hymns, which seemed
to wear out the whole class, while he himself could give them without relaxing
a muscle. And when it went as it was doing to-day, he could quite forget that
there were such things as children, and give himself up to this endless
procession, in which column after column filed past him, in the foot-fall of
the rhythm. It was not hymns, either; it was a mighty march-past of the strong
things of life, in which there stretched, in one endless tone, all that Fris
himself had failed to attain. That was why he nodded so happily, and why the
loud tramp of feet rose around him like the acclamations of armies, an <i>Ave
Cæsar</i>.</p>
<p>He was sitting with the third supplement of his newspaper before him, but was
not reading; his eyes were closed, and his head moved gently to the rhythm.</p>
<p>The children babbled on ceaselessly, almost without stopping for breath; they
were hypnotized by the monotonous flow of words. They were like the geese that
had been given leave by the fox to say a prayer before they were eaten, and now
went on praying and praying forever and ever. When they came to the end of the
three hymns, they began again by themselves. The mill kept getting louder, they
kept the time with their feet, and it was like the stroke of a mighty piston, a
boom! Fris nodded with them, and a long tuft of hair flapped in his face; he
fell into an ecstasy, and could not sit still upon his chair.</p>
<p class="poem">
“And were this world all devils o’er,<br/>
And watching to devour—us,<br/>
We lay it not to heart so sore;<br/>
Not they can overpower us.”</p>
<p>It sounded like a stamping-mill; some were beating their slates upon the
tables, and others thumping with their elbows. Fris did not hear it; he heard
only the mighty tramp of advancing hosts.</p>
<p class="poem">
“And let the prince of ill<br/>
Look grim as e’er he will,”—</p>
<p>Suddenly, at a preconcerted signal, the whole school stopped singing. Fris was
brought to earth again with a shock. He opened his eyes, and saw that he had
once more allowed himself to be taken by surprise. “You little devils!
You confounded brats!” he roared, diving into their midst with his cane.
In a moment the whole school was in a tumult, the boys fighting and the girls
screaming. Fris began hitting about him.</p>
<p>He tried to bring them back to the patter. “Who puts his trust in God
alone!” he shouted in a voice that drowned the clamor; but they did not
take it up—the little devils! Then he hit indiscriminately. He knew quite
well that one was just as good as another, and was not particular where the
strokes fell. He took the long-haired ones by the hair and dragged them to the
table, and thrashed them until the cane began to split. The boys had been
waiting for this; they had themselves rubbed onion into the cane that morning,
and the most defiant of them had on several pairs of trousers for the occasion.</p>
<p>When the cracked sound proclaimed that the cane was in process of
disintegration, the whole school burst into deafening cheers. Fris had thrown
up the game, and let them go on. He walked up and down the middle passage like
a suffering animal, his gall rising. “You little devils!” he
hissed; “You infernal brats!” And then, “Do sit still,
children!” This last was so ridiculously touching in the midst of all the
rest, that it had to be imitated.</p>
<p>Pelle sat farthest away, in the corner. He was fairly new at this sort of
thing, but did his best. Suddenly he jumped on to the table, and danced there
in his stockinged feet. Fris gazed at him so strangely, Pelle thought; he was
like Father Lasse when everything went wrong; and he slid down, ashamed. Nobody
had noticed his action, however; it was far too ordinary.</p>
<p>It was a deafening uproar, and now and then an ill-natured remark was hurled
out of the seething tumult. Where they came from it was difficult to say; but
every one of them hit Fris and made him cower. False steps made in his youth on
the other side of the water fifty years ago, were brought up again here on the
lips of these ignorant children, as well as some of his best actions, that had
been so unselfish that the district put the very worst interpretation upon
them. And as if that were not enough—but hush! He was sobbing.</p>
<p>“Sh—sh! Sh—sh!” It was Henry Bodker, the biggest boy in
the school, and he was standing on a bench and sh—ing threateningly. The
girls adored him, and became quiet directly; but some of the boys would not
obey the order; but when Henry held his clenched fist up to one eye, they too
became quiet.</p>
<p>Fris walked up and down the middle passage like a pardoned offender. He did not
dare to raise his eyes, but they could all see that he was crying.
“It’s a shame!” said a voice in an undertone. All eyes were
turned upon him, and there was perfect silence in the room.
“Play-time!” cried a boy’s voice in a tone of command: it was
Nilen’s. Fris nodded feebly, and they rushed out.</p>
<p>Fris remained behind to collect himself. He walked up and down with his hands
behind his back, swallowing hard. He was going to send in his resignation.
Every time things went quite wrong, Fris sent in his resignation, and when he
had come to himself a little, he put it off until the spring examinations were
over. He would not leave in this way, as a kind of failure. This very winter he
had worked as he had never done before, in order that his resignation might
have somewhat the effect of a bomb, and that they might really feel it as a
loss when he had gone. When the examination was held, he would take the
hymn-book for repetition in chorus—right from the beginning. Some of the
children would quickly drop behind, but there were some of them, into whom, in
the course of time, he had hammered most of its contents. Long before they had
run out, the clergyman would lift his hand to stop them, and say:
“That’s enough, my dear clerk! That’s enough!” and
would thank him in a voice of emotion; while the school committee and the
parents would whisper together in awed admiration.</p>
<p>And then would be the time to resign!</p>
<p>The school lay on the outskirts of the fishing-village, and the playground was
the shore. When the boys were let out after a few hours’ lessons, they
were like young cattle out for the first time after the long winter. They
darted, like flitting swallows, in all directions, threw themselves upon the
fresh rampart of sea-wrack and beat one another about the ears with the salt
wet weeds. Pelle was not fond of this game; the sharp weed stung, and sometimes
there were stones hanging to it, grown right in.</p>
<p>But he dared not hold himself aloof, for that would attract attention at once.
The thing was to join in it and yet not be in it, to make himself little and
big according to the requirements of the moment, so as to be at one time
unseen, and at another to exert a terrifying effect. He had his work cut out in
twisting and turning, and slipping in and out.</p>
<p>The girls always kept together in one corner of the playground, told
tittle-tattle and ate their lunch, but the boys ran all over the place like
swallows in aimless flight. A big boy was standing crouching close to the
gymnastic apparatus, with his arm hiding his face, and munching. They whirled
about him excitedly, now one and now another making the circle narrower and
narrower. Peter Kofod —Howling Peter—looked as if the world were
sailing under him; he clung to the climbing-pole and hid his face. When they
came close up to him, they kicked up behind with a roar, and the boy screamed
with terror, turned up his face and broke into a long-drawn howl. Afterward he
was given all the food that the others could not eat.</p>
<p>Howling Peter was always eating and always howling. He was a pauper child and
an orphan; he was big for his age, but had a strangely blue and frozen look.
His frightened eyes stood half out of his head, and beneath them the flesh was
swollen and puffy with crying. He started at the least sound, and there was
always an expression of fear on his face. The boys never really did him any
harm, but they screamed and crouched down whenever they passed him—they
could not resist it. Then he would scream too, and cower with fear. The girls
would sometimes run up and tap him on the back, and then he screamed in terror.
Afterward all the children gave him some of their food. He ate it all, roared,
and was as famished as ever.</p>
<p>No one could understand what was wrong with him. Twice he had made an attempt
to hang himself, and nobody could give any reason for it, not even he himself.
And yet he was not altogether stupid. Lasse believed that he was a visionary,
and saw things that others could not see, so that the very fact of living and
drawing breath frightened him. But however that might be, Pelle must on no
account do anything to him, not for all the world.</p>
<p>The crowd of boys had retired to the shore, and there, with little Nilen at
their head, suddenly threw themselves upon Henry Bodker. He was knocked down
and buried beneath the swarm, which lay in a sprawling heap upon the top of
him, pounding down with clenched fists wherever there was an opening. But then
a pair of fists began to push upward, tchew, tchew, like steam punches, the
boys rolled off on all sides with their hands to their faces, and Henry Bodker
emerged from the heap, kicking at random. Nilen was still hanging like a leech
to the back of his neck, and Henry tore his blouse in getting him thrown off.
To Pelle he seemed to be tremendously big as he stood there, only breathing a
little quickly. And now the girls came up, and fastened his blouse together
with pins, and gave him sweets; and he, by way of thanking them, seized them by
their pigtails and tied them together, four or five of them, so that they could
not get away from one another. They stood still and bore it patiently, only
gazing at him with eyes of devotion.</p>
<p>Pelle had ventured into the battle and had received a kick, but he bore no
malice. If he had had a sweet, he, like the girls, would have given it to Henry
Bodker, and would have put up with ungentle treatment too. He worshipped him.
But he measured himself by Nilen —the little bloodthirsty Nilen, who had
no knowledge of fear, and attacked so recklessly that the others got out of his
way! He was always in the thickest of the crowd, jumped right into the worst of
everything, and came safely out of it all. Pelle examined himself critically to
find points of resemblance, and found them—in his defence of Father Lasse
the first summer, when he kicked a big boy, and in his relations with the mad
bull, of which he was not in the least afraid. But in other points it failed.
He was afraid of the dark, and he could not stand a thrashing, while Nilen
could take his with his hands in his pockets. It was Pelle’s first
attempt at obtaining a general survey of himself.</p>
<p>Fris had gone inland, probably to the church, so it would be a playtime of some
hours. The boys began to look about for some more lasting ways of passing the
time. The “bulls” went into the schoolroom, and began to play about
on the tables and benches, but the “blennies” kept to the shore.
“Bulls” and “blennies” were the land and the sea in
conflict; the division came naturally on every more or less serious occasion,
and sometimes gave rise to regular battles.</p>
<p>Pelle kept with the shore boys; Henry Bodker and Nilen were among them, and
they were something new! They did not care about the land and animals, but the
sea, of which he was afraid, was like a cradle to them. They played about on
the water as they would in their mother’s parlor, and had much of its
easy movement. They were quicker than Pelle, but not so enduring; and they had
a freer manner, and made less of the spot to which they belonged. They spoke of
England in the most ordinary way and brought things to school that their
fathers and brothers had brought home with them from the other side of the
world, from Africa and China. They spent nights on the sea on an open boat, and
when they played truant it was always to go fishing. The cleverest of them had
their own fishing-tackle and little flat-bottomed prams, that they had built
themselves and caulked with oakum. They fished on their own account and caught
pike, eels, and tench, which they sold to the wealthier people in the district.</p>
<p>Pelle thought he knew the stream thoroughly, but now he was brought to see it
from a new side. Here were boys who in March and April—in the
holidays—were up at three in the morning, wading barefoot at the mouth of
the stream to catch the pike and perch that went up into the fresh water to
spawn. And nobody told the boys to do it; they did it because they liked it!</p>
<p>They had strange pleasures! Now they were standing “before the sea”
—in a long, jubilant row. They ran out with the receding wave to the
larger stones out in the water, and then stood on the stones and jumped when
the water came up again, like a flock of sea birds. The art consisted in
keeping yourself dryshod, and yet it was the quickest boys who got wettest.
There was of course a limit to the time you could keep yourself hovering. When
wave followed wave in quick succession, you had to come down in the middle of
it, and then sometimes it went over your head. Or an unusually large wave would
come and catch all the legs as they were drawn up in the middle of the jump,
when the whole row turned beautifully, and fell splash into the water. Then
with, a deafening noise they went up to the schoolroom to turn the
“bulls” away from the stove.</p>
<p>Farther along the shore, there were generally some boys sitting with a hammer
and a large nail, boring holes in the stones there. They were sons of
stone-masons from beyond the quarries. Pelle’s cousin Anton was among
them. When the holes were deep enough, powder was pressed into them, and the
whole school was present at the explosion.</p>
<p>In the morning, when they were waiting for the master, the big boys would stand
up by the school wall with their hands in their pockets, discussing the amount
of canvas and the home ports of vessels passing far out at sea. Pelle listened
to them open-mouthed. It was always the sea and what belonged to the sea that
they talked about, and most of it he did not understand. All these boys wanted
the same thing when they were confirmed—to go to sea. But Pelle had had
enough of it when he crossed from Sweden; he could not understand them.</p>
<p>How carefully he had always shut his eyes and put his fingers in his ears, so
that his head should not get filled with water when he dived in the stream! But
these boys swam down under the water like proper fish, and from what they said
he understood that they could dive down in deep water and pick up stones from
the bottom.</p>
<p>“Can you see down there, then?” he asked, in wonder.</p>
<p>“Yes, of course! How else would the fish be able to keep away from the
nets? If it’s only moonlight, they keep far outside, the whole
shoal!”</p>
<p>“And the water doesn’t run into your head when you take your
fingers out of your ears?”</p>
<p>“Take your fingers out of your ears?”</p>
<p>“Yes, to pick up the stone.”</p>
<p>A burst of scornful laughter greeted this remark, and they began to question
him craftily; he was splendid—a regular country bumpkin! He had the
funniest ideas about everything, and it very soon came out that he had never
bathed in the sea. He was afraid of the water —a “blue-bag”;
the stream could not do away with that.</p>
<p>After that he was called Blue-bag, notwithstanding that he one day took the
cattle-whip to school with him and showed them how he could cut three-cornered
holes in a pair of trousers with the long lash, hit a small stone so that it
disappeared into the air, and make those loud reports. It was all excellent,
but the name stuck to him all the same; and all his little personality smarted
under it.</p>
<p class="p2">
In the course of the winter, some strong young men came home to the village in
blue clothes and white neck-cloths. They had laid up, as it was called, and
some of them drew wages all through the winter without doing anything. They
always came over to the school to see the master; they came in the middle of
lessons, but it did not matter; Fris was joy personified. They generally
brought something or other for him—a cigar of such fine quality that it
was enclosed in glass, or some other remarkable thing. And they talked to Fris
as they would to a comrade, told him what they had gone through, so that the
listening youngsters hugged themselves with delight, and quite unconcernedly
smoked their clay pipes in the class—with the bowl turned nonchalantly
downward without losing its tobacco. They had been engaged as cook’s boys
and ordinary seamen, on the Spanish main and the Mediterranean and many other
wonderful places. One of them had ridden up a fire-spouting mountain on a
donkey. And they brought home with them lucifer matches that were as big,
almost, as Pomeranian logs, and were to be struck on the teeth.</p>
<p>The boys worshipped them and talked of nothing else; it was a great honor to be
seen in the company of such a man. For Pelle it was not to be thought of.</p>
<p>And then it came about that the village was awaiting the return of one such lad
as this, and he did not come. And one day word came that bark so-and-so had
gone to the bottom with all on board. It was the winter storms, said the boys,
spitting like grown men. The brothers and sisters were kept away from school
for a week, and when they came back Pelle eyed them curiously: it must be
strange to have a brother lying at the bottom of the sea, quite young!
“Then you won’t want to go to sea?” he asked them. Oh, yes,
they wanted to go to sea, too!</p>
<p>Another time Fris came back after an unusually long playtime in low spirits. He
kept on blowing his nose hard, and now and then dried his eyes behind his
spectacles. The boys nudged one another. He cleared his throat loudly, but
could not make himself heard, and then beat a few strokes on his desk with the
cane.</p>
<p>“Have you heard, children?” he asked, when they had become more or
less quiet.</p>
<p>“No! Yes! What?” they cried in chorus; and one boy said:
“That the sun’s fallen into the sea and set it on fire!”</p>
<p>The master quietly took up his hymn-book. “Shall we sing ‘How
blessed are they’?” he said; and they knew that something must have
happened, and sang the hymn seriously with him.</p>
<p>But at the fifth verse Fris stopped; he could not go on any longer.
“Peter Funck is drowned!” he said, in a voice that broke on the
last word. A horrified whisper passed through the class, and they looked at one
another with uncomprehending eyes. Peter Funck was the most active boy in the
village, the best swimmer, and the greatest scamp the school had ever
had—and he was drowned!</p>
<p>Fris walked up and down, struggling to control himself. The children dropped
into softly whispered conversation about Peter Funck, and all their faces had
grown old with gravity. “Where did it happen?” asked a big boy.</p>
<p>Fris awoke with a sigh. He had been thinking about this boy, who had shirked
everything, and had then become the best sailor in the village; about all the
thrashings he had given him, and the pleasant hours they had spent together on
winter evenings when the lad was home from a voyage and had looked in to see
his old master. There had been much to correct, and things of grave importance
that Fris had had to patch up for the lad in all secrecy, so that they should
not affect his whole life, and—</p>
<p>“It was in the North Sea,” he said. “I think they’d
been in England.”</p>
<p>“To Spain with dried fish,” said a boy. “And from there they
went to England with oranges, and were bringing a cargo of coal home.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I think that was it,” said Fris. “They were in the
North Sea, and were surprised by a storm; and Peter had to go aloft.”</p>
<p>“Yes, for the <i>Trokkadej</i> is such a crazy old hulk. As soon as
there’s a little wind, they have to go aloft and take in sail,”
said another boy.</p>
<p>“And he fell down,” Fris went on, “and struck the rail and
fell into the sea. There were the marks of his sea-boots on the rail. They
braced—or whatever it’s called—and managed to turn; but it
took them half-an-hour to get up to the place. And just as they got there, he
sank before their eyes. He had been struggling in the icy water for
half-an-hour—with sea-boots and oilskins on—and yet—”</p>
<p>A long sigh passed through the class. “He was the best swimmer on the
whole shore!” said Henry. “He dived backward off the gunwale of a
bark that was lying in the roads here taking in water, and came up on the other
side of the vessel. He got ten rye rusks from the captain himself for
it.”</p>
<p>“He must have suffered terribly,” said Fris. “It would almost
have been better for him if he hadn’t been able to swim.”</p>
<p>“That’s what my father says!” said a little boy. “He
can’t swim, for he says it’s better for a sailor not to be able to;
it only keeps you in torture.”</p>
<p>“My father can’t swim, either!” exclaimed another. “Nor
mine, either!” said a third. “He could easily learn, but he
won’t.” And they went on in this way, holding up their hands. They
could all swim themselves, but it appeared that hardly any of their fathers
could; they had a superstitious feeling against it. “Father says you
oughtn’t to tempt Providence if you’re wrecked,” one boy
added.</p>
<p>“Why, but then you’d not be doing your best!” objected a
little faltering voice. Fris turned quickly toward the corner where Pelle sat
blushing to the tips of his ears.</p>
<p>“Look at that little man!” said Fris, impressed. “And I
declare if he isn’t right and all the rest of us wrong! God helps those
that help themselves!”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” said a voice. It was Henry Bodker’s.</p>
<p>“Well, well, I know He didn’t help here, but still we ought always
to do what we can in all the circumstances of life. Peter did his
best—and he was the cleverest boy I ever had.”</p>
<p>The children smiled at one another, remembering various things. Peter Funck had
once gone so far as to wrestle with the master himself, but they had not the
heart to bring this up. One of the bigger boys, however, said, half for the
purpose of teasing: “He never got any farther than the twenty-seventh
hymn!”</p>
<p>“Didn’t he, indeed?” snarled Fris. “Didn’t he,
indeed? And you think perhaps you’re clever, do you? Let’s see how
far you’ve got, then!” And he took up the hymn-book with a
trembling hand. He could not stand anything being said against boys that had
left.</p>
<p class="p2">
The name Blue-bag continued to stick to Pelle, and nothing had ever stung him
so much; and there was no chance of his getting rid of it before the summer
came, and that was a long way off.</p>
<p>One day the fisher-boys ran out on to the breakwater in playtime. A boat had
just come in through the pack-ice with a gruesome cargo —five frozen men,
one of whom was dead and lay in the fire-engine house, while the four others
had been taken into various cottages, where they were being rubbed with ice to
draw the frost out of them. The farmer-boys were allowed no share in all this
excitement, for the fisher-boys, who went in and out and saw everything, drove
them away if they approached—and sold meagre information at extortionate
prices.</p>
<p>The boat had met a Finnish schooner drifting in the sea, covered with ice, and
with frozen rudder. She was too heavily laden, so that the waves went right
over her and froze; and the ice had made her sink still deeper. When she was
found, her deck was just on a level with the water, ropes of the thickness of a
finger had become as thick as an arm with ice, and the men who were lashed to
the rigging were shapeless masses of ice. They were like knights in armor with
closed visor when they were taken down, and their clothes had to be hacked off
their bodies. Three boats had gone out now to try and save the vessel; there
would be a large sum of money to divide if they were successful.</p>
<p>Pelle was determined not to be left out of all this, even if he got his shins
kicked in, and so kept near and listened. The boys were talking gravely and
looked gloomy. What those men had put up with! And perhaps their hands or feet
would mortify and have to be cut off. Each boy behaved as if he were bearing
his share of their sufferings, and they talked in a manly way and in gruff
voices. “Be off with you, bull!” they called to Pelle. They were
not fond of Blue-bags for the moment.</p>
<p>The tears came to Pelle’s eyes, but he would not give in, and wandered
away along the wharf.</p>
<p>“Be off with you!” they shouted again, picking up stones in a
menacing way. “Be off to the other bumpkins, will you!” They came
up and hit at him. “What are you standing there and staring into the
water for? You might turn giddy and fall in head first! Be off to the other
yokels, will you! Blue-bag!”</p>
<p>Pelle turned literally giddy, with the strength of the determination that
seized upon his little brain. “I’m no more a blue-bag than you
are!” he said. “Why, you wouldn’t even dare to jump into the
water!”</p>
<p>“Just listen to him! He thinks you jump into the water for fun in the
middle of winter, and get cramp!”</p>
<p>Pelle just heard their exultant laughter as he sprang off the breakwater, and
the water, thick with ground-up ice, closed above his head. The top of his head
appeared again, he made two or three strokes with his arms like a dog, and
sank.</p>
<p>The boys ran in confusion up and down and shouted, and one of them got hold of
a boat-hook. Then Henry Bodker came running up, sprang in head first without
stopping, and disappeared, while a piece of ice that he had struck with his
forehead made ducks and drakes over the water. Twice his head appeared above
the ice-filled water, to snatch a breath of air, and then he came up with
Pelle. They got him hoisted up on to the breakwater, and Henry set to work to
give him a good thrashing.</p>
<p>Pelle had lost consciousness, but the thrashing had the effect of bringing him
to. He suddenly opened his eyes, was on his legs in a trice, and darted away
like a sandpiper.</p>
<p>“Run home!” the boys roared after him. “Run as hard as ever
you can, or you’ll be ill! Only tell your father you fell in!” And
Pelle ran. He needed no persuasion. When he reached Stone Farm, his clothes
were frozen quite stiff, and his trousers could stand alone when he got out of
them; but he himself was as warm as a toast.</p>
<p>He would not lie to his father, but told him just what had happened. Lasse was
angry, angrier than the boy had ever seen him before.</p>
<p>Lasse knew how to treat a horse to keep it from catching cold, and began to rub
Pelle’s naked body with a wisp of straw, while the boy lay on the bed,
tossing about under the rough handling. His father took no notice of his
groans, but scolded him. “You mad little devil, to jump straight into the
sea in the middle of winter like a lovesick woman! You ought to have a
whipping, that’s what you ought to have—a good sound whipping! But
I’ll let you off this time if you’ll go to sleep and try to sweat
so that we can get that nasty salt water out of your body. I wonder if it
wouldn’t be a good thing to bleed you.”</p>
<p>Pelle did not want to be bled; he was very comfortable lying there, now that he
had been sick. But his thoughts were very serious. “Supposing I’d
been drowned!” he said solemnly.</p>
<p>“If you had, I’d have thrashed you to within an inch of your
life,” said Lasse angrily.</p>
<p>Pelle laughed.</p>
<p>“Oh, you may laugh, you word-catcher!” snapped Lasse. “But
it’s no joke being father to a little ne’er-do-weel of a cub like
you!” Saying which he went angrily out into the stable. He kept on
listening, however, and coming up to peep in and see whether fever or any other
devilry had come of it.</p>
<p>But Pelle slept quietly with his head under the quilt, and dreamed that he was
no less a person than Henry Bodker.</p>
<hr />
<p>Pelle did not learn to read much that winter, but he learned twenty and odd
hymns by heart only by using his ears, and he got the name Blue-bag, as applied
to himself, completely banished. He had gained ground, and strengthened his
position by several bold strokes; and the school began to take account of him
as a brave boy. And Henry, who as a rule took no notice of anybody, took him
several times under his wing.</p>
<p>Now and then he had a bad conscience, especially when his father in his
newly-awakened thirst for knowledge, came to him for the solution of some
problem or other, and he was at a loss for an answer.</p>
<p>“But it’s you who ought to have the learning,” Lasse would
then say reproachfully.</p>
<p>As the winter drew to an end, and the examination approached, Pelle became
nervous. Many uncomfortable reports were current of the severity of the
examination among the boys—of putting into lower classes and complete
dismissal from the school.</p>
<p>Pelle had the misfortune not to be heard independently in a single hymn. He had
to give an account of the Fall. The theft of the apple was easy to get through,
but the curse—! “And God said unto the serpent: Upon thy belly
shalt thou go, upon thy belly shalt thou go, upon thy belly shalt thou
go!” He could get no further.</p>
<p>“Does it still do that, then?” asked the clergyman kindly.</p>
<p>“Yes—for it has no limbs.”</p>
<p>“And can you explain to me what a limb is?” The priest was known to
be the best examiner on the island; he could begin in a gutter and end in
heaven, people said.</p>
<p>“A limb is—is a hand.”</p>
<p>“Yes, that is one. But can’t you tell me something that
distinguishes all limbs from other parts of the body? A limb
is—well?—a?—a part of the body that can move by itself, for
instance? Well!”</p>
<p>“The ears!” said Pelle, perhaps because his own were burning.</p>
<p>“O-oh? Can you move your ears, then?”</p>
<p>“Yes.” By dint of great perseverance, Pelle had acquired that art
in the course of the previous summer, so as not to be outdone by Rud.</p>
<p>“Then, upon my word, I should like to see it!” exclaimed the
clergyman.</p>
<p>So Pelle worked his ears industriously backward and forward, and the priest and
the school committee and the parents all laughed. Pelle got
“excellent” in religion.</p>
<p>“So it was your ears after all that saved you,” said Lasse,
delighted. “Didn’t I tell you to use your ears well? Highest marks
in religion only for moving your ears! Why, I should think you might become a
parson if you liked!”</p>
<p>And he went on for a long time. But wasn’t he the devil of a laddie to be
able to answer like that!</p>
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