<h2>XVIII</h2>
<p>It was Pelle who, one day in his first year at school, when he was being
questioned in Religion, and Fris asked him whether he could give the names of
the three greatest festivals in the year, amused every one by answering:
“Midsummer Eve, Harvest-home and—and——” There was
a third, too, but when it came to the point, he was shy of mentioning
it—his birthday! In certain ways it was the greatest of them all, even
though no one but Father Lasse knew about it—and the people who wrote the
almanac, of course; they knew about simply everything!</p>
<p>It came on the twenty-sixth of June and was called Pelagius in the calendar. In
the morning his father kissed him and said: “Happiness and a blessing to
you, laddie!” and then there was always something in his pocket when he
came to pull on his trousers. His father was just as excited as he was himself,
and waited by him while he dressed, to share in the surprise. But it was
Pelle’s way to spin things out when something nice was coming; it made
the pleasure all the greater. He purposely passed over the interesting pocket,
while Father Lasse stood by fidgeting and not knowing what to do.</p>
<p>“I say, what’s the matter with that pocket? It looks to me so fat!
You surely haven’t been out stealing hens’ eggs in the
night?”</p>
<p>Then Pelle had to take it out—a large bundle of paper—and undo it,
layer after layer. And Lasse would be amazed.</p>
<p>“Pooh, it’s nothing but paper! What rubbish to go and fill your
pockets with!” But in the very inside of all there was a pocket- knife
with two blades.</p>
<p>“Thank you!” whispered Pelle then, with tears in his eyes.</p>
<p>“Oh, nonsense! It’s a poor present, that!” said Lasse,
blinking his red, lashless eyelids.</p>
<p>Beyond this the boy did not come in for anything better on that day than usual,
but all the same he had a solemn feeling all day. The sun never failed to
shine—was even unusually bright; and the animals looked meaningly at him
while they lay munching. “It’s my birthday to-day!” he said,
hanging with his arms round the neck of Nero, one of the bullocks. “Can
you say ‘A happy birthday’?” And Nero breathed warm breath
down his back, together with green juice from his chewing; and Pelle went about
happy, and stole green corn to give to him and to his favorite calf, kept the
new knife—or whatever it might have been—in his hand the whole day
long, and dwelt in a peculiarly solemn way upon everything he did. He could
make the whole of the long day swell with a festive feeling; and when he went
to bed he tried to keep awake so as to make the day longer still.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, Midsummer Eve was in its way a greater day; it had at any rate
the glamour of the unattainable over it. On that day everything that could
creep and walk went up to the Common; there was not a servant on the whole
island so poor-spirited as to submit to the refusal of a holiday on that
day—none except just Lasse and Pelle.</p>
<p>Every year they had seen the day come and go without sharing in its pleasure.
“Some one must stay at home, confound it!” said the bailiff always.
“Or perhaps you think I can do it all for you?” They had too little
power to assert themselves. Lasse helped to pack appetizing food and beverages
into the carts, and see the others off, and then went about
despondently—one man to all the work. Pelle watched from the field their
merry departure and the white stripe of dust far away behind the rocks. And for
half a year afterward, at meals, they heard reminiscences of drinking and
fighting and love-making—the whole festivity.</p>
<p>But this was at an end. Lasse was not the man to continue to let himself be
trifled with. He possessed a woman’s affection, and a house in the
background. He could give notice any day he liked. The magistrate was
presumably busy with the prescribed advertising for Madam Olsen’s
husband, and as soon as the lawful respite was over, they would come together.</p>
<p>Lasse no longer sought to avoid the risk of dismissal. As long ago as the
winter, he had driven the bailiff into a corner, and only agreed to be taken on
again upon the express condition that they both took part in the Midsummer Eve
outing; and he had witnesses to it. On the Common, where all lovers held tryst
that day, Lasse and she were to meet too, but of this Pelle knew nothing.</p>
<p>“To-day we can say the day after to-morrow, and to-morrow we can say
to-morrow,” Pelle went about repeating to his father two evenings before
the day. He had kept an account of the time ever since May Day, by making
strokes for all the days on the inside of the lid of the chest, and crossing
them out one by one.</p>
<p>“Yes, and the day after to-morrow we shall say to-day,” said Lasse,
with a juvenile fling.</p>
<p>They opened their eyes upon an incomprehensibly brilliant world, and did not at
first remember that this was the day. Lasse had anticipated his wages to the
amount of five krones, and had got an old cottager to do his work—for
half a krone and his meals. “It’s not a big wage,” said the
man; “but if I give you a hand, perhaps the Almighty’ll give me one
in return.”</p>
<p>“Well, we’ve no one but Him to hold to, we poor creatures,”
answered Lasse. “But I shall thank you in my grave.”</p>
<p>The cottager arrived by four o’clock, and Lasse was able to begin his
holiday from that hour. Whenever he was about to take a hand in the work, the
other said: “No, leave it alone! I’m sure you’ve not often
had a holiday.”</p>
<p>“No; this is the first real holiday since I came to the farm,” said
Lasse, drawing himself up with a lordly air.</p>
<p>Pelle was in his best clothes from the first thing in the morning, and went
about smiling in his shirt-sleeves and with his hair plastered down with water;
his best cap and jacket were not to be put on until they were going to start.
When the sun shone upon his face, it sparkled like dewy grass. There was
nothing to trouble about; the animals were in the enclosure and the bailiff was
going to look after them himself.</p>
<p>He kept near his father, who had brought this about. Father Lasse was powerful!
“What a good thing you threatened to leave!” he kept on exclaiming.
And Lasse always gave the same answer: “Ay, you must carry things with a
high hand if you want to gain anything in this world!”—and nodded
with a consciousness of power.</p>
<p>They were to have started at eight o’clock, but the girls could not get
the provisions ready in time. There were jars of stewed gooseberries, huge
piles of pancakes, a hard-boiled egg apiece, cold veal and an endless supply of
bread and butter. The carriage boxes could not nearly hold it all, so large
baskets were pushed in under the seats. In the front was a small cask of beer,
covered with green oats to keep the sun from it; and there was a whole keg of
spirits and three bottles of cold punch. Almost the entire bottom of the large
spring-wagon was covered, so that it was difficult to find room for one’s
feet.</p>
<p>After all, Fru Kongstrup showed a proper feeling for her servants when she
wanted to. She went about like a kind mistress and saw that everything was well
packed and that nothing was wanting. She was not like Kongstrup, who always had
to have a bailiff between himself and them. She even joked and did her best,
and it was evident that whatever else there might be to say against her, she
wanted them to have a merry day. That her face was a little sad was not to be
wondered at, as the farmer had driven out that morning with her young relative.</p>
<p>At last the girls were ready, and every one got in—in high spirits. The
men inadvertently sat upon the girls’ laps and jumped up in alarm.
“Oh, oh! I must have gone too near a stove!” cried the rogue Mons,
rubbing himself behind. Even the mistress could not help laughing.</p>
<p>“Isn’t Erik going with us?” asked his old sweetheart Bengta,
who still had a warm spot in her heart for him.</p>
<p>The bailiff whistled shrilly twice, and Erik came slowly up from the barn,
where he had been standing and keeping watch upon his master.</p>
<p>“Won’t you go with them to the woods to-day, Erik man?” asked
the bailiff kindly. Erik stood twisting his big body and murmuring something
that no one could understand, and then made an unwilling movement with one
shoulder.</p>
<p>“You’d better go with them,” said the bailiff, pretending he
was going to take him and put him into the cart. “Then I shall have to
see whether I can get over the loss.”</p>
<p>Those in the cart laughed, but Erik shuffled off down through the yard, with
his dog-like glance directed backward at the bailiff’s feet, and
stationed himself at the corner of the stable, where he stood watching. He held
his cap behind his back, as boys do when they play at “Robbers.”</p>
<p>“He’s a queer customer!” said Mons. Then Karl Johan guided
the horses carefully through the gate, and they set off with a crack of the
whip.</p>
<p>Along all the roads, vehicles were making their way toward the highest part of
the island, filled to overflowing with merry people, who sat on one
another’s laps and hung right over the sides. The dust rose behind the
conveyances and hung white in the air in stripes miles in length, that showed
how the roads lay like spokes in a wheel all pointing toward the middle of the
island. The air hummed with merry voices and the strains of concertinas. They
missed Gustav’s playing now—yes, and Bodil’s pretty face,
that always shone so brightly on a day like this.</p>
<p>Pelle had the appetite of years of fasting for the great world, and devoured
everything with his eyes. “Look there, father! Just look!” Nothing
escaped him. It made the others cheerful to look at him—he was so rosy
and pretty. He wore a newly-washed blue blouse under his waistcoat, which
showed at the neck and wrists and did duty as collar and cuffs; but Fair Maria
bent back from the box-seat, where she was sitting alone with Karl Johan, and
tied a very white scarf round his neck, and Karna, who wanted to be motherly to
him, went over his face with a corner of her pocket-handkerchief, which she
moistened with her tongue. She was rather officious, but for that matter it was
quite conceivable that the boy might have got dirty again since his thorough
morning wash.</p>
<p>The side roads continued to pour their contents out on to the high-roads, and
there was soon a whole river of conveyances, extending as far as the eye could
see in both directions. One would hardly have believed that there were so many
vehicles in the whole world! Karl Johan was a good driver to have; he was
always pointing with his whip and telling them something. He knew all about
every single house. They were beyond the farms and tillage by now; but on the
heath, where self-sown birch and aspen trees stood fluttering restlessly in the
summer air, there stood desolate new houses with bare, plastered walls, and not
so much as a henbane in the window or a bit of curtain. The fields round them
were as stony as a newly-mended road, and the crops were a sad sight; the corn
was only two or three inches in height, and already in ear. The people here
were all Swedish servants who had saved a little—and had now become
land-owners. Karl Johan knew a good many of them.</p>
<p>“It looks very miserable,” said Lasse, comparing in his own mind
the stones here with Madam Olsen’s fat land.</p>
<p>“Oh, well,” answered the head man, “it’s not of the
very best, of course; but the land yields something, anyhow.” And he
pointed to the fine large heaps of road-metal and hewn stone that surrounded
every cottage. “If it isn’t exactly grain, it gives something to
live on; and then it’s the only land that’ll suit poor
people’s purses.” He and Fair Maria were thinking of settling down
here themselves. Kongstrup had promised to help them to a farm with two horses
when they married.</p>
<p>In the wood the birds were in the middle of their morning song; they were later
with it here than in the sandbanks plantation, it seemed. The air sparkled
brightly, and something invisible seemed to rise from the undergrowth; it was
like being in a church with the sun shining down through tall windows and the
organ playing. They drove round the foot of a steep cliff with overhanging
trees, and into the wood.</p>
<p>It was almost impossible to thread your way through the crowd of unharnessed
horses and vehicles. You had to have all your wits about you to keep from
damaging your own and other people’s things. Karl Johan sat watching both
his fore wheels, and felt his way on step by step; he was like a cat in a
thunderstorm, he was so wary. “Hold your jaw!” he said sharply,
when any one in the cart opened his lips. At last they found room to unharness,
and a rope was tied from tree to tree to form a square in which the horses were
secured. Then they got out the curry-combs—goodness, how dusty it had
been! And at last—well, no one said anything, but they all stood
expectant, half turned in the direction of the head man.</p>
<p>“Well, I suppose we ought to go into the wood and look at the
view,” he said.</p>
<p>They turned it over as they wandered aimlessly round the cart, looking
furtively at the provisions.</p>
<p>“If only it’ll keep!” said Anders, lifting a basket.</p>
<p>“I don’t know how it is, but I feel so strange in my inside
to-day,” Mons began. “It can’t be consumption, can it?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps we ought to taste the good things first, then?” said Karl
Johan.</p>
<p>Yes—oh, yes—it came at last!</p>
<p>Last year they had eaten their dinner on the grass. It was Bodil who had
thought of that; she was always a little fantastic. This year nobody would be
the one to make such a suggestion. They looked at one another a little
expectant; and they then climbed up into the cart and settled themselves there
just like other decent people. After all, the food was the same.</p>
<p>The pancakes were as large and thick as a saucepan-lid. It reminded them of
Erik, who last year had eaten ten of them.</p>
<p>“It’s a pity he’s not here this year!” said Karl Johan.
“He was a merry devil.”</p>
<p>“He’s not badly off,” said Mons. “Gets his food and
clothes given him, and does nothing but follow at the bailiff’s heels and
copy him. And he’s always contented now. I wouldn’t a bit mind
changing with him.”</p>
<p>“And run about like a dog with its nose to the ground sniffing at its
master’s footsteps? Oh no, not I!”</p>
<p>“Whatever you may say, you must remember that it’s the Almighty
Himself who’s taken his wits into safekeeping,” said Lasse
admonishingly; and for a little while they were quite serious at the thought.</p>
<p>But seriousness could not claim more than was its due. Anders wanted to rub his
leg, but made a mistake and caught hold of Lively Sara’s, and made her
scream; and this so flustered his hand that it could not find its way up, but
went on making mistakes, and there was much laughter and merriment.</p>
<p>Karl Johan was not taking much part in the hilarity; he looked as if he were
pondering something. Suddenly he roused himself and drew out his purse.
“Here goes!” he said stoutly. “I’ll stand beer!
Bavarian beer, of course. Who’ll go and fetch it?”</p>
<p>Mons leaped quickly from the cart. “How many?”</p>
<p>“Four.” Karl Johan’s eye ran calculating over the cart.
“No; just bring five, will you? That’ll be a half each,” he
said easily. “But make sure that it’s real Bavarian beer they give
you.”</p>
<p>There was really no end to the things that Karl Johan knew about; and he said
the name “Bavarian beer” with no more difficulty than others would
have in turning a quid in their mouth. But of course he was a trusted man on
the farm now and often drove on errands into the town.</p>
<p>This raised their spirits and awakened curiosity, for most of them had never
tasted Bavarian beer before. Lasse and Pelle openly admitted their
inexperience; but Anders pretended he had got drunk on it more than once,
though every one knew it was untrue.</p>
<p>Mons returned, moving cautiously, with the beer in his arms; it was a precious
commodity. They drank it out of the large dram-glasses that were meant for the
punch. In the town, of course, they drank beer out of huge mugs, but Karl Johan
considered that that was simply swilling. The girls refused to drink, but did
it after all, and were delighted. “They’re always like that,”
said Mons, “when you offer them something really good.” They became
flushed with the excitement of the occurrence, and thought they were drunk.
Lasse took away the taste of his beer with a dram; he did not like it at all.
“I’m too old,” he said, in excuse.</p>
<p>The provisions were packed up again, and they set out in a body to see the
view. They had to make their way through a perfect forest of carts to reach the
pavilion. Horses were neighing and flinging up their hind legs, so that the
bark flew off the trees. Men hurled themselves in among them, and tugged at
their mouths until they quieted down again, while the women screamed and ran
hither and thither like frightened hens, with skirts lifted.</p>
<p>From the top they could form some idea of the number of people. On the sides of
the hill and in the wood beyond the roads—everywhere carts covered the
ground; and down at the triangle where the two wide high-roads met, new loads
were continually turning in. “There must be far more than a thousand
pairs of horses in the wood to-day,” said Karl Johan. Yes, far more!
There were a million, if not more, thought Pelle. He was quite determined to
get as much as possible out of everything to-day.</p>
<p>There stood the Bridge Farm cart, and there came the people from Hammersholm,
right out at the extreme north of the island. Here were numbers of people from
the shore farms at Dove Point and Rönne and Neksö—the whole island was
there. But there was no time now to fall in with acquaintances. “We shall
meet this afternoon!” was the general cry.</p>
<p>Karl Johan led the expedition; it was one of a head man’s duties to know
the way about the Common. Fair Maria kept faithfully by his side, and every one
could see how proud she was of him. Mons walked hand in hand with Lively Sara,
and they went swinging along like a couple of happy children. Bengta and Anders
had some difficulty in agreeing; they quarrelled every other minute, but they
did not mean much by it. And Karna made herself agreeable.</p>
<p>They descended into a swamp, and went up again by a steep ascent where the
great trees stood with their feet in one another’s necks. Pelle leaped
about everywhere like a young kid. In under the firs there were anthills as big
as haycocks, and the ants had broad trodden paths running like foothpaths
between the trees, on and on endlessly; a multitude of hosts passed backward
and forward upon those roads. Under some small fir-trees a hedgehog was busy
attacking a wasps’ nest; it poked its nose into the nest, drew it quickly
back, and sneezed. It looked wonderfully funny, but Pelle had to go on after
the others. And soon he was far ahead of them, lying on his face in a ditch
where he had smelt wild strawberries.</p>
<p>Lasse could not keep pace with the younger people up the hill, and it was not
much better with Karna. “We’re getting old, we two,” she
said, as they toiled up, panting.</p>
<p>“Oh, are we?” was Lasse’s answer. He felt quite young in
spirit; it was only breath that he was short of.</p>
<p>“I expect you think very much as I do; when you’ve worked for
others for so many years, you feel you want something of your own.”</p>
<p>“Yes, perhaps,” said Lasse evasively.</p>
<p>“One wouldn’t come to it quite empty-handed, either—if it
should happen.”</p>
<p>“Oh, indeed!”</p>
<p>Karna continued in this way, but Lasse was always sparing with his words, until
they arrived at the Rockingstone, where the others were standing waiting. That
was a block and a half! Fifty tons it was said to weigh, and yet Mons and
Anders could rock it by putting a stick under one end of it.</p>
<p>“And now we ought to go to the Robbers’ Castle,” said Karl
Johan, and they trudged on, always up and down. Lasse did his utmost to keep
beside the others, for he did not feel very brave when he was alone with Karna.
What a fearful quantity of trees there were! And not all of one sort, as in
other parts of the world. There were birches and firs, beech and larch and
mountain ash all mixed together, and ever so many cherry-trees. The head man
lead them across a little, dark lake that lay at the foot of the rock, staring
up like an evil eye. “It was here that Little Anna drowned her baby
—she that was betrayed by her master,” he said lingeringly. They
all knew the story, and stood silent over the lake; the girls had tears in
their eyes.</p>
<p>As they stood there silent, thinking of Little Anna’s sad fate, an
unspeakably soft note came up to them, followed by a long, affecting sobbing.
They moved nearer to one another. “Oh, Lord!” whispered Fair Maria,
shivering. “That’s the baby’s soul crying!” Pelle
stiffened as he listened, and cold waves seemed to flow down his back.</p>
<p>“Why, that’s a nightingale,” said Karl Johan,
“Don’t you even know that? There are hundreds of them in these
woods, and they sing in the middle of the day.” This was a relief to the
older people, but Pelle’s horror was not so easily thrown off. He had
gazed into the depths of the other world, and every explanation glanced off
him.</p>
<p>But then came the Robbers’ Castle as a great disappointment. He had
imagined it peopled with robbers, and it was only some old ruins that stood on
a little hill in the middle of a bog. He went by himself all round the bottom
of it to see if there were not a secret underground passage that led down to
the water. If there were, he would get hold of his father without letting the
others know, and make his way in and look for the chests of money; or else
there would be too many to share in it. But this was forgotten as a peculiar
scent arrested his attention, and he came upon a piece of ground that was green
with lily-of-the-valley plants that still bore a few flowers, and where there
were wild strawberries. There were so many that he had to go and call the
others.</p>
<p>But this was also forgotten as he made his way through the underwood to get up.
He had lost the path and gone astray in the damp, chilly darkness under the
cliff. Creeping plants and thorns wove themselves in among the overhanging
branches, and made a thick, low roof. He could not see an opening anywhere, and
a strange green light came through the matted branches, the ground was slippery
with moisture and decaying substances; from the cliff hung quivering
fern-fronds with their points downward, and water dripping from them like wet
hair. Huge tree-roots, like the naked bodies of black goblins writhing to get
free, lay stretched across the rocks. A little further on, the sun made a patch
of burning fire in the darkness, and beyond it rose a bluish vapor and a sound
as of a distant threshing-machine.</p>
<p>Pelle stood still, and his terror grew until his knees trembled; then he set
off running as if he were possessed. A thousand shadow- hands stretched out
after him as he ran; and he pushed his way through briars and creepers with a
low cry. The daylight met him with the force of a blow, and something behind
him had a firm grasp on his clothes; he had to shout for Father Lasse with all
his might before it let go.</p>
<p>And there he stood right out in the bog, while high up above his head the
others sat, upon a point of rock all among the trees. From up there it looked
as if the world were all tree-tops, rising and falling endlessly; there was
foliage far down beneath your feet and out as far as the eye could see, up and
down. You were almost tempted to throw yourself into it, it looked so
invitingly soft. As a warning to the others, Karl Johan had to tell them about
the tailor’s apprentice, who jumped out from a projecting rock here, just
because the foliage looked so temptingly soft, Strange to say, he escaped with
his life; but the high tree he fell through stripped him of every stitch of
clothing.</p>
<p>Mons had been teasing Sara by saying that he was going to jump down, but now he
drew back cautiously. “I don’t want to risk my confirmation
clothes,” he said, trying to look good.</p>
<p>After all, the most remarkable thing of all was the Horseman Hill with the
royal monument. The tower alone! Not a bit of wood had been used in it, only
granite; and you went round and round and round. “You’re counting
the steps, I suppose?” said Karl Johan admonishingly. Oh, yes, they were
all counting to themselves.</p>
<p>It was clear weather, and the island lay spread out beneath them in all its
luxuriance. The very first thing the men wanted to do was to try what it was
like to spit down; but the girls were giddy and kept together in a cluster in
the middle of the platform. The churches were counted under Karl Johan’s
able guidance, and all the well- known places pointed out. “There’s
Stone Farm, too,” said Anders, pointing to something far off toward the
sea. It was not Stone Farm, but Karl Johan could say to a nicety behind which
hill it ought to lie, and then they recognized the quarries.</p>
<p>Lasse took no part in this. He stood quite still, gazing at the blue line of
the Swedish coast that stood out far away upon the shining water. The sight of
his native land made him feel weak and old; he would probably never go home
again, although he would have dearly liked to see Bengta’s grave once
more. Ah yes, and the best that could happen to one would be to be allowed to
rest by her side, when everything else was ended. At this moment he regretted
that he had gone into exile in his old age. He wondered what Kungstorp looked
like now, whether the new people kept the land cultivated at all. And all the
old acquaintances—how were they getting on? His old-man’s
reminiscences came over him so strongly that for a time he forgot Madam Olsen
and everything about her. He allowed himself to be lulled by past memories, and
wept in his heart like a little child. Ah! it was dreary to live away from
one’s native place and everything in one’s old age; but if it only
brought a blessing on the laddie in some way or other, it was all as it should
be.</p>
<p>“I suppose that’s the King’s Copenhagen<SPAN href="#fn2" name="fnref2" id="fnref2"><sup>[2]</sup></SPAN>
we see over there?” asked Anders.</p>
<p class="footnote">
<SPAN name="fn2" id="fn2"></SPAN> <SPAN href="#fnref2">[2]</SPAN>
Country-people speak of Copenhagen as “the King’s Copenhagen.”</p>
<p>“It’s Sweden,” said Lasse quietly.</p>
<p>“Sweden, is it? But it lay on that side last year, if I remember
rightly.”</p>
<p>“Yes, of course! What else should the world go round for?”
exclaimed Mons.</p>
<p>Anders was just about to take this in all good faith when he caught a grimace
that Mons made to the others. “Oh, you clever monkey!” he cried,
and sprang at Mons, who dashed down the stone stairs; and the sound of their
footsteps came up in a hollow rumble as out of a huge cask. The girls stood
leaning against one another, rocking gently and gazing silently at the shining
water that lay far away round the island. The giddiness had made them languid.</p>
<p>“Why, your eyes are quite dreamy!” said Karl Johan, trying to take
them all into his embrace. “Aren’t you coming down with us?”</p>
<p>They were all fairly tired now. No one said anything, for of course Karl Johan
was leading; but the girls showed an inclination to sit down.</p>
<p>“Now there’s only the Echo Valley left,” he said
encouragingly, “and that’s on our way back. We must do that, for
it’s well worth it. You’ll hear an echo there that hasn’t its
equal anywhere.”</p>
<p>They went slowly, for their feet were tender with the leather boots and much
aimless walking; but when they had come down the steep cliff into the valley
and had drunk from the spring, they brightened up. Karl Johan stationed himself
with legs astride, and called across to the cliff: “What’s Karl
Johan’s greatest treat?” And the echo answered straight away:
“Eat!” It was exceedingly funny, and they all had to try it, each
with his or her name—even Pelle. When that was exhausted, Mons made up a
question which made the echo give a rude answer.</p>
<p>“You mustn’t teach it anything like that,” said Lasse.
“Just suppose some fine ladies were to come here, and he started calling
that out after them?” They almost killed themselves with laughing at the
old man’s joke, and he was so delighted at the applause that he went on
repeating it to himself on the way back. Ha, ha! he wasn’t quite fit for
the scrap-heap yet.</p>
<p>When they got back to the cart they were ravenously hungry and settled down to
another meal. “You must have something to keep you up when you’re
wandering about like this,” said Mons.</p>
<p>“Now then,” said Karl Johan, when they had finished, “every
one may do what they like; but at nine sharp we meet here again and drive
home.”</p>
<p>Up on the open ground, Lasse gave Pelle a secret nudge, and they began to do
business with a cake-seller until the others had got well ahead.
“It’s not nice being third wheel in a carriage,” said Lasse.
“We two’ll go about by ourselves for a little now.”</p>
<p>Lasse was craning his neck. “Are you looking for any one?” asked
Pelle.</p>
<p>“No, no one in particular; but I was wondering where all these people
come from. There are people from all over the country, but I haven’t seen
any one from the village yet.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you think Madam Olsen’ll be here to-day?”</p>
<p>“Can’t say,” said Lasse; “but it would be nice to see
her, and there’s something I want to say to her, too. Your eyes are
young; you must keep a lookout.”</p>
<p>Pelle was given fifty öre to spend on whatever he liked. Round the ground sat
the poor women of the Heath at little stalls, from which they sold colored
sugar-sticks, gingerbread and two-öre cigars. In the meantime he went from
woman to woman, and bought of each for one or two öre.</p>
<p>Away under the trees stood blind Hoyer, who had come straight from Copenhagen
with new ballads. There was a crowd round him. He played the tune upon his
concertina, his little withered wife sang to it, and the whole crowd sang
carefully with her. Those who had learnt the tunes went away singing, and
others pushed forward into their place and put down their five-öre piece.</p>
<p>Lasse and Pelle stood on the edge of the crowd listening. There was no use in
paying money before you knew what you would get for it; and anyhow the songs
would be all over the island by to-morrow, and going gratis from mouth to
mouth. “A Man of Eighty—a new and pleasant ballad about how things
go when a decrepit old man takes a young wife!” shouted Hoyer in a hoarse
voice, before the song began. Lasse didn’t care very much about that
ballad; but then came a terribly sad one about the sailor George Semon, who
took a most tender farewell of his sweetheart—</p>
<p class="poem">
“And said, When here I once more stand,<br/>
We to the church will go hand in hand.”</p>
<p>But he never did come back, for the storm was over them for forty-five days,
provisions ran short, and the girl’s lover went mad. He drew his knife
upon the captain, and demanded to be taken home to his bride; and the captain
shot him down. Then the others threw themselves upon the corpse, carried it to
the galley, and made soup of it.</p>
<p class="poem">
“The girl still waits for her own true love,<br/>
Away from the shore she will not move.<br/>
Poor maid, she’s hoping she still may wed,<br/>
And does not know that her lad is dead.”</p>
<p>“That’s beautiful,” said Lasse, rummaging in his purse for a
five-öre. “You must try to learn that; you’ve got an ear for that
sort of thing.” They pushed through the crowd right up to the musician,
and began cautiously to sing too, while the girls all round were sniffing.</p>
<p>They wandered up and down among the trees, Lasse rather fidgety. There was a
whole street of dancing-booths, tents with conjurers and panorama-men, and
drinking-booths. The criers were perspiring, the refreshment sellers were
walking up and down in front of their tents like greedy beasts of prey. Things
had not got into full swing yet, for most of the people were still out and
about seeing the sights, or amusing themselves in all seemliness, exerting
themselves in trials of strength or slipping in and out of the conjurers’
tents. There was not a man unaccompanied by a woman. Many a one came to a stand
at the refreshment-tents, but the woman pulled him past; then he would yawn and
allow himself to be dragged up into a roundabout or a magic-lantern tent where
the most beautiful pictures were shown of the way that cancer and other
horrible things made havoc in people’s insides.</p>
<p>“These are just the things for the women,” said Lasse, breathing
forth a sigh at haphazard after Madam Olsen. On a horse on Madvig’s
roundabout sat Gustav with his arm round Bodil’s waist. “Hey, old
man!” he cried, as they whizzed past, and flapped Lasse on the ear with
his cap, which had the white side out. They were as radiant as the day and the
sun, those two.</p>
<p>Pelle wanted to have a turn on a roundabout. “Then blest if I won’t
have something too, that’ll make things go round!” said Lasse, and
went in and had a “cuckoo”—coffee with brandy in it.
“There are some people,” he said, when he came out again,
“that can go from one tavern to another without its making any difference
in their purse. It would be nice to try—only for a year. Hush!”
Over by Max Alexander’s “Green House” stood Karna, quite
alone and looking about her wistfully. Lasse drew Pelle round in a wide circle.</p>
<p>“There’s Madam Olsen with a strange man!” said Pelle
suddenly.</p>
<p>Lasse started. “Where?” Yes, there she stood, and had a man with
her! And talking so busily! They went past her without stopping; she could
choose for herself, then.</p>
<p>“Hi, can’t you wait a little!” cried Madam Olsen, running
after them so that her petticoats crackled round her. She was round and smiling
as usual, and many layers of good home-woven material stood out about her;
there was no scrimping anywhere.</p>
<p>They went on together, talking on indifferent matters and now and then
exchanging glances about the boy who was in their way. They had to walk so
sedately without venturing to touch one another. He did not like any nonsense.</p>
<p>It was black with people now up at the pavilion, and one could hardly move a
step without meeting acquaintances. “It’s even worse than a swarm
of bees,” said Lasse. “It’s not worth trying to get in
there.” At one place the movement was outward, and by following it they
found themselves in a valley, where a man stood shouting and beating his fists
upon a platform. It was a missionary meeting. The audience lay encamped in
small groups, up the slopes, and a man in long black clothes went quietly from
group to group, selling leaflets. His face was white, and he had a very long,
thin red beard.</p>
<p>“Do you see that man?” whispered Lasse, giving Pelle a nudge.
“Upon my word, if it isn’t Long Ole—and with a glove on his
injured hand. It was him that had to take the sin upon him for Per
Olsen’s false swearing!” explained Lasse, turning to Madam Olsen.
“He was standing at the machine at the time when Per Olsen ought to have
paid the penalty with his three fingers, and so his went instead. He may be
glad of the mistake after all, for they say he’s risen to great things
among the prayer-meeting folks. And his complexion’s as fine as a young
lady’s—something different to what it was when he was carting
manure at Stone Farm! It’ll be fun to say good-day to him again.”</p>
<p>Lasse was quite proud of having served together with this man, and stationed
himself in front of the others, intending to make an impression upon his lady
friend by saying a hearty: “Good-day, Ole!” Long Ole was at the
next group, and now he came on to them and was going to hold out his tracts,
when a glance at Lasse made him drop both hand and eyes; and with a deep sigh
he passed on with bowed head to the next group.</p>
<p>“Did you see how he turned his eyes up?” said Lasse derisively.
“When beggars come to court, they don’t know how to behave!
He’d got a watch in his pocket, too, and long clothes; and before he
hadn’t even a shirt to his body. And an ungodly devil he was too! But the
old gentleman looks after his own, as the saying is; I expect it’s him
that helped him on by changing places at the machine. The way they’ve
cheated the Almighty’s enough to make Him weep!”</p>
<p>Madam Olsen tried to hush Lasse, but the “cuckoo” rose within him
together with his wrath, and he continued: “So <i>he’s</i> above
recognizing decent people who get what they have in an honorable way, and not
by lying and humbug! They do say he makes love to all the farmers’ wives
wherever he goes; but there was a time when he had to put up with the
Sow.”</p>
<p>People began to look at them, and Madam Olsen took Lasse firmly by the arm and
drew him away.</p>
<p>The sun was now low in the sky. Up on the open ground the crowds tramped round
and round as if in a tread-mill. Now and then a drunken man reeled along,
making a broad path for himself through the crush. The noise came seething up
from the tents—barrel-organs each grinding out a different tune, criers,
the bands of the various dancing-booths, and the measured tread of a
schottische or polka. The women wandered up and down in clusters, casting long
looks into the refreshment-tents where their men were sitting; and some of them
stopped at the tent-door and made coaxing signs to some one inside.</p>
<p>Under the trees stood a drunken man, pawing at a tree-trunk, and beside him
stood a girl, crying with her black damask apron to her eyes. Pelle watched
them for a long time. The man’s clothes were disordered, and he lurched
against the girl with a foolish grin when she, in the midst of her tears, tried
to put them straight. When Pelle turned away, Lasse and Madam Olsen had
disappeared in the crowd.</p>
<p>They must have gone on a little, and he went down to the very end of the
street. Then he turned despondingly and went up, burrowing this way and that in
the stream of people, with eyes everywhere. “Haven’t you seen
Father Lasse?” he asked pitifully, when he met any one he knew.</p>
<p>In the thickest of the crush, a tall man was moving along, holding forth
blissfully at the top of his voice. He was a head taller than anybody else, and
very broad; but he beamed with good-nature, and wanted to embrace everybody.
People ran screaming out of his way, so that a broad path was left wherever he
went. Pelle kept behind him, and thus succeeded in getting through the thickest
crowds, where policemen and rangers were stationed with thick cudgels. Their
eyes and ears were on the watch, but they did not interfere in anything. It was
said that they had handcuffs in their pockets.</p>
<p>Pelle had reached the road in his despairing search. Cart after cart was
carefully working its way out through the gloom under the trees, then rolling
out into the dazzling evening light, and on to the high-road with much cracking
of whips. They were the prayer-meeting people driving home.</p>
<p>He happened to think of the time, and asked a man what it was. Nine! Pelle had
to run so as not to be too late in getting to the cart. In the cart sat Karl
Johan and Fair Maria eating. “Get up and have something to eat!”
they said, and as Pelle was ravenous, he forgot everything while he ate. But
then Johan asked about Lasse, and his torment returned.</p>
<p>Karl Johan was cross; not one had returned to the cart, although it was the
time agreed upon. “You’d better keep close to us now,” he
said, as they went up, “or you might get killed.”</p>
<p>Up at the edge of the wood they met Gustav running. “Have none of you
seen Bodil?” he asked, gasping. His clothes were torn and there was blood
on the front of his shirt. He ran on groaning, and disappeared under the trees.
It was quite dark there, but the open ground lay in a strange light that came
from nowhere, but seemed to have been left behind by the day as it fled. Faces
out there showed up, some in ghostly pallor, some black like holes in the
light, until they suddenly burst forth, crimson with blood-red flame.</p>
<p>The people wandered about in confused groups, shouting and screaming at the top
of their voices. Two men came along with arms twined affectionately round one
another’s necks, and the next moment lay rolling on the ground in a
fight. Others joined the fray and took sides without troubling to discover what
it was all about, and the contest became one large struggling heap. Then the
police came up, and hit about them with their sticks; and those who did not run
away were handcuffed and thrown into an empty stable.</p>
<p>Pelle was quite upset, and kept close to Karl Johan; he jumped every time a
band approached, and kept on saying in a whimpering tone: “Where’s
Father Lasse? Let’s go and find him.”</p>
<p>“Oh, hold your tongue!” exclaimed the head man, who was standing
and trying to catch sight of his fellow-servants. He was angry at this
untrustworthiness. “Don’t stand there crying! You’d do much
more good if you ran down to the cart and see whether any one’s
come.”</p>
<p>Pelle had to go, little though he cared to venture in under the trees. The
branches hung silently listening, but the noise from the open ground came down
in bursts, and in the darkness under the bushes living things rustled about and
spoke in voices of joy or sorrow. A sudden scream rang through the wood, and
made his knees knock together.</p>
<p>Karna sat at the back of the cart asleep, and Bengta stood leaning against the
front seat, weeping. “They’ve locked Anders up,” she sobbed.
“He got wild, so they put handcuffs on him and locked him up.” She
went back with Pelle.</p>
<p>Lasse was with Karl Johan and Fair Maria; he looked defiantly at Pelle, and in
his half-closed eyes there was a little mutinous gleam.</p>
<p>“Then now there’s only Mons and Lively Sara,” said Karl
Johan, as he ran his eye over them.</p>
<p>“But what about Anders?” sobbed Bengta. “You surely
won’t drive away without Anders?”</p>
<p>“There’s nothing can he done about Anders!” said the head
man. “He’ll come of his own accord when once he’s let
out.”</p>
<p>They found out on inquiry that Mons and Lively Sara were down in one of the
dancing-booths, and accordingly went down there. “Now you stay
here!” said Karl Johan sternly, and went in to take a survey of the
dancers. In there blood burnt hot, and faces were like balls of fire that made
red circles in the blue mist of perspiring heat and dust. Dump! Dump! Dump! The
measure fell booming like heavy blows; and in the middle of the floor stood a
man and wrung the moisture out of his jacket.</p>
<p>Out of one of the dancing-tents pushed a big fellow with two girls. He had an
arm about the neck of each, and they linked arms behind his back. His cap was
on the back of his head, and his riotous mood would have found expression in
leaping, if he had not felt himself too pleasantly encumbered; so he opened his
mouth wide, and shouted joyfully, so that it rang again: “Devil take me!
Deuce take me! Seven hundred devils take me!” and disappeared under the
trees with his girls.</p>
<p>“That was Per Olsen himself,” said Lasse, looking after him.
“What a man, to be sure! He certainly doesn’t look as if he bore
any debt of sin to the Almighty.”</p>
<p>“His time may still come,” was the opinion of Karl Johan.</p>
<p>Quite by chance they found Mons and Lively Sara sitting asleep in one
another’s arms upon a bench under the trees.</p>
<p>“Well, now, I suppose we ought to be getting home?” said Karl Johan
slowly. He had been doing right for so long that his throat was quite dry.
“I suppose none of you’ll stand a farewell glass?”</p>
<p>“I will!” said Mons, “if you’ll go up to the pavilion
with me to drink it.” Mons had missed something by going to sleep and had
a desire to go once round the ground. Every time a yell reached them he gave a
leap as he walked beside Lively Sara, and answered with a long halloo. He tried
to get away, but she clung to his arm; so he swung the heavy end of his loaded
stick and shouted defiantly. Lasse kicked his old limbs and imitated
Mons’s shouts, for he too was for anything rather than going home; but
Karl Johan was determined—they <i>were</i> to go now! And in this he was
supported by Pelle and the women.</p>
<p>Out on the open ground a roar made them stop, and the women got each behind her
man. A man came running bareheaded and with a large wound in his temple, from
which the blood flowed down over his face and collar. His features were
distorted with fear. Behind him came a second, also bareheaded, and with a
drawn knife. A ranger tried to bar his way, but received a wound in his
shoulder and fell, and the pursuer ran on. As he passed them, Mons uttered a
short yell and sprang straight up into the air, bringing down his loaded stick
upon the back of the man’s neck. The man sank to the ground with a grunt,
and Mons slipped in among the groups of people and disappeared; and the others
found him waiting for them at the edge of the wood. He did not answer any more
yells.</p>
<p>Karl Johan had to lead the horses until they got out onto the road, and then
they all got in. Behind them the noise had become lost, and only one long cry
for help rang through the air and dropped again.</p>
<p>Down by a little lake, some forgotten girls had gathered on the grass and were
playing by themselves. The white mist lay over the grass like a shining lake,
and only the upper part of the girls’ bodies rose above it. They were
walking round in a ring, singing the mid-summer’s-night song. Pure and
clear rose the merry song, and yet was so strangely sad to listen to, because
they who sang it had been left in the lurch by sots and brawlers.</p>
<p class="poem">
“We will dance upon hill and meadow,<br/>
We will wear out our shoes and stockings.<br/>
Heigh ho, my little sweetheart fair,<br/>
We shall dance till the sun has risen high.<br/>
Heigh ho, my queen!<br/>
Now we have danced upon the green.”</p>
<p>The tones fell so gently upon the ear and mind that memories and thoughts were
purified of all that had been hideous, and the day itself could appear in its
true colors as a joyful festival. For Lasse and Pelle, indeed, it had been a
peerless day, making up for many years of neglect. The only pity was that it
was over instead of about to begin.</p>
<p>The occupants of the cart were tired now, some nodding and all silent. Lasse
sat working about in his pocket with one hand. He was trying to obtain an
estimate of the money that remained. It was expensive to keep a sweetheart when
you did not want to be outdone by younger men in any way. Pelle was asleep, and
was slipping farther and farther down until Bengta took his head onto her lap.
She herself was weeping bitterly about Anders.</p>
<p>The daylight was growing rapidly brighter as they drove in to Stone Farm.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />