<SPAN name="ch004"><!--Marker--></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER IV </h2>
<h3> MONI CAN NO LONGER SING </h3>
<p>On the following morning Moni came up the path to the Bath
House, just as silent and cast down as the evening before. He
brought out the landlord's goats quietly and went on upwards,
but he sang not a note, nor did he give a yodel up into the
air; he let his head hang and looked as if he were afraid of
something; now and then he looked around timidly, as if some
one were coming after him to question him.</p>
<p>Moni could no longer be merry; he didn't know himself exactly
why. He wanted to be glad that he had saved Mäggerli,
and sing, but he couldn't express it. To-day the sky was
covered with clouds, and Moni thought when the sun came out
it would be different and he could be happy again.</p>
<p>When he reached the top, it began to rain quite hard. He took
refuge under the Rain-rock, for it soon poured in streams
from the sky.</p>
<p>The goats came, too, and placed themselves here and there
under the rock. The aristocratic Blackie immediately wanted
to protect her beautiful shiny coat and crept in under the
rock before Moni did. She was now standing behind Moni and
looking out from her comfortable corner into the pouring
rain. Mäggerli was standing in front of its protector
under the projecting rock and gently rubbed its little head
against his knee; then it looked up at him in surprise,
because Moni did not say a word, and it was not accustomed to
that. Moni sat thoughtfully, leaning on his staff, for in
such weather he always kept it in his hand, to keep himself
from slipping on the steep places, for on such days he wore
shoes. Now, as he sat for hours under the Rain-rock, he had
plenty of time for reflection.</p>
<p>Moni thought over what he had promised Jörgli, and it
seemed to him that if Jörgli had taken something, he was
practically doing the same thing himself, because Jörgli
had promised to give him something or do something for him.
He had surely done what was wrong, and the dear Lord was now
against him. This he felt in his heart, and it was right that
it was dark and rainy and that he was hidden under the rock,
for he would not even have dared look up into the blue sky,
as usual.</p>
<p>But there were still other things that Moni had to think
about. If Mäggerli should fall down over a steep
precipice again, and he wanted to get it, the dear Lord would
no longer protect him, and he no longer dared to pray to Him
about it and call upon Him, and so had no more safety; and if
then he should slip and fall down with Mäggerli deep
over the jagged, rocks, and both of them should lie all torn
and maimed! Oh, no, he said with anguish in his heart, that
must not happen anyway; he must manage to be able to pray
again and come to the dear Lord with everything that weighed
on his heart; then he could be happy again, that he felt sure
of. Moni would throw off the weight that oppressed him, he
would go and tell the landlord everything—But then?
Then Jörgli would not persuade his father, and the
landlord would slaughter Mäggerli. Oh, no! Oh, no! he
couldn't bear that, and he said: "No, I will not do it! I
will say nothing!" But he did not feel satisfied, and the
weight on his heart grew heavier and heavier. Thus Moni's
whole day passed.</p>
<p>He started home at evening as silent as he had come in the
morning. When he found Paula standing near the Bath House,
and she sprang quickly across to the goat-shed and asked
sympathetically: "Moni, what is the matter? Why don't you
sing any more?" he turned shyly away and said:</p>
<p>"I can't," and as quickly as possible made off with his
goats.</p>
<p>Paula said to her aunt above: "If I only knew what was the
matter with the goat-boy! He is quite changed. You wouldn't
know him. If he would only sing again!"</p>
<p>"It must be the frightful rain which has silenced the boy
so!" remarked the aunt.</p>
<p>"Everything all comes together; let us go home, Aunt," begged
Paula, "there is no more pleasure here. First I lost my
beautiful cross, and it can't be found; then comes this
endless rain, and now we can't ever hear the merry goat-boy
any more. Let us go away!"</p>
<p>"The cure must be finished, or it will do no good," explained
the aunt.</p>
<p>It was also dark and gray on the following day, and the rain
poured down without ceasing. Moni spent the day exactly like
the one before. He sat under the rock and his thoughts went
restlessly round in a circle, for when he decided: "Now, I
will go and confess the wrong, so that I shall dare to look
up to the dear Lord again," then he saw the little kid under
the knife before him and it all began over again in his mind
from the beginning; so that with thinking and brooding, and
the weight he carried, he was very tired by night, and crept
home in the streaming rain as if he didn't notice it at all.</p>
<p>By the Bath House below the landlord was standing in the back
doorway and called to Moni: "Come in with them. They are wet
enough! Why, you are crawling down the mountain like a snail!
I wonder what is the matter with you!"</p>
<p>The landlord had never been so unfriendly before. On the
contrary he had always made the most friendly remarks to the
merry goat-boy. But Moni's changed appearance did not please
him, and besides he was in a worse humor than usual because
Fräulein Paula had just complained to him about her loss
and assured him that the valuable cross could only have been
lost in the house or directly in front of the house-door. She
had only stepped out on that day towards evening, to hear the
goat-boy sing on his way home. To have it said that it was
possible for such a costly thing to be lost in his house,
beyond recovery, made him very cross. The day before he had
called together the whole staff of servants, examined and
threatened them, and finally offered a reward to the finder.
The whole house was in an uproar over the lost ornament.</p>
<p>When Moni with his goats passed by the front of the house,
Paula was standing there. She had been waiting for him, for
she wondered very much whether he would ever sing any more or
be merry. As he now crept by, she called:</p>
<p>"Moni! Moni! Are you really the same goat-boy who used to
sing from morning till night:</p>
<p><br/>
"'And so blue is the sky there<br/>
My joy can't be told'?"<br/></p>
<p>Moni heard the words very well; he gave no answer, but they
made a great impression on him. Oh, how different it really
was from the time when he could sing all day long and he felt
exactly as he sang. Oh, if it could only be like that again!</p>
<p>Again Moni climbed up the mountain, silent and sad and
without singing. The rain had now ceased, but thick fog hung
around on the mountains, and the sky was still full of dark
clouds. Moni again sat under the rock and battled with his
thoughts. About noon the sky began to clear; it grew brighter
and brighter. Moni came out of his cave and looked around.
The goats once more sprang gayly here and there, and the
little kid was quite frolicsome from delight at the returning
sun and made the merriest leaps.</p>
<p>Moni stood on the Pulpit-rock and saw how it was growing
brighter and more beautiful below in the valley and above
over the mountains beyond. Now the clouds scattered and the
lovely light blue sky looked down so cheerfully that it
seemed to Moni as if the dear Lord were looking out of the
bright blue at him, and suddenly it became quite clear in his
heart what he ought to do. He could not carry the wrong
around with him any more; he must throw it off. Then Moni
seized the little kid, that was jumping about him, took it in
his arms and said tenderly: "Oh, Mäggerli, you poor
Mäggerli! I have certainly done what I could, but it is
wrong, and that must not be done. Oh, if only you didn't have
to die! I can't bear it!"</p>
<p>And Moni began to cry so hard, that he could no longer speak,
and the kid bleated pitifully and crept far under his arm, as
if it wanted to cling to him and be protected. Then Moni
lifted the little goat on his shoulders, saying:</p>
<p>"Come, Mäggerli, I will carry you home once more to-day.
Perhaps I can't carry you much longer."</p>
<p>When the flock came down to the Bath House, Paula was again
standing on the watch. Moni put the young goat with the black
one in the shed, and instead of going on farther, he came
toward the young lady and was going past her into the house.
She stopped him.</p>
<p>"Still no singing, Moni? Where are you going with such a
troubled face?"</p>
<p>"I have to tell about something," replied Moni, without
lifting his eyes.</p>
<p>"Tell about something? What is it? Can't I know?"</p>
<p>"I must tell the landlord. Something has been found."</p>
<p>"Found? What is it? I have lost something, a beautiful
cross."</p>
<p>"Yes, that is just what it is."</p>
<p>"What do you say?" exclaimed Paula, in the greatest surprise.
"Is it a cross with sparkling stones?"</p>
<p>"Yes, exactly that."</p>
<p>"What have you done with it, Moni? Give it to me. Did you
find it?"</p>
<p>"No, Jörgli from Küblis found it."</p>
<p>Then Paula wanted to know who he was and where he lived, and
to send some one to Küblis at once to get the cross.</p>
<p>"I will go as fast as I can, and if he still has it I will
bring it to you," said Moni.</p>
<p>"If he still has it?" said Paula. "Why shouldn't he still
have it? And how do you know all about it, Moni? When did he
find it, and how did you hear about it?"</p>
<p>Moni looked on the ground. He didn't dare say how it had all
come about, and how he had helped to conceal the discovery
until he could no longer bear it.</p>
<p>But Paula was very kind to Moni. She took him aside, sat down
on the trunk of a tree, beside him, and said with the
greatest friendliness:</p>
<p>"Come, tell me all about how it happened, Moni, for I want so
much to know everything from you."</p>
<p>Then Moni gained confidence and began to relate the whole
story, and told her every word of his struggle about
Mäggerli and how he had lost all happiness and dared no
longer look up to the dear Lord, and how to-day he couldn't
bear it any longer.</p>
<p>Then Paula talked with him very kindly and said he should
have come immediately and told everything, and it was right
that he had told her all now so frankly, and that he would
not regret it. Then she said he could promise Jörgli ten
francs, as soon as she had the cross in her hands again.</p>
<p>"Ten francs!" repeated Moni, full of astonishment, for he
knew how Jörgli would have sold it for much less. Then
Moni rose and said he would go right away that very day to
Küblis, and if he got the cross he would bring it with
him early the next morning. He ran along and was once more
able to leap and jump, for he had a much lighter heart and
the heavy burden no longer weighed him down to the ground.</p>
<p>When he reached home, he only put his goats in, told his
grandmother he had an errand to do, and ran at once down to
Küblis. He found Jörgli at home and told him
without delay what he had done. At first the boy was very
angry, but when he considered that all was known, he took out
the cross and asked:</p>
<p>"Will she give me anything for it?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and now you can see, Jörgli," said Moni,
indignantly, "how by being honorable you will receive ten
francs, and by being deceitful only four: the ten francs you
are going to have now."</p>
<p>Jörgli was very much amazed. He regretted that he had
not gone immediately with the cross to the Bath House, after
he had picked it up in front of the door, for now he had not
a clear conscience and it might have been so different! But
now it was too late. He gave the cross to Moni, who hastened
home with it, for it had already grown quite dark.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />