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<h2> CHAPTER FOURTH </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> HARD TIMES </h3>
<p><br/></p>
<p>The following morning Sami was awakened by loud tones, but it was no
longer the birds singing; it was the farmer's wife ordering the boys
harshly to get up right away. She had already called them three times, and
if this time they didn't obey, their father would come. Then they all
sprang out of bed and in a few minutes were down-stairs, where their
father was already sitting at the table and would not have waited much
longer.</p>
<p>The day did not pass very differently from the one before, and thus passed
a long series of days. There was already a change in the work.</p>
<p>Sami, little by little, learned to do everything very well, for he took
pains and followed his grandmother's advice carefully. He always had
something to do for the other boys still, so that he never finished his
work a moment before supper-time. But he was no longer late. A change had
also come about in this. St�ffi had learned that there was one thing Sami
could not or would not do which he himself could do very well: he could
not tell a lie.</p>
<p>He had been late again a couple of times, but had never told the reason.
Finally, however, the farmer had spoken harshly:</p>
<p>"Now speak out, and tell why you can't get through your work faster; you
are quick enough when anyone is watching you."</p>
<p>Then Sami had accordingly told all the truth, and the father had
threatened to beat the boys if they didn't do their work themselves.
Afterwards St�ffi had thrashed Sami to punish him, and had warned him that
he would do it every time Sami complained of him.</p>
<p>Sami had replied that he had never complained and didn't want to do so,
but when his father questioned him he could only tell him the truth.
St�ffi tried to explain to him that it didn't matter whether he told the
truth or not, but here he found Sami more obstinate than he had expected,
and no matter what fearful threats he hurled at him, he always said the
same thing in the end:</p>
<p>"But I shall do it."</p>
<p>This firmness was the result of Sami's sure conviction that the dear Lord
heard and knew everything and that lying was something wicked, which did
not please Him.</p>
<p>So St�ffi had to find some other way to get off from his work early and
make Sami finish what he left. He found that all three could never dare
abandon their work and leave it for Sami, but one of them might do so each
evening, and he threatened to punish his brothers severely if they would
not agree to this. Then there would always be three or four evenings in
succession when St�ffi wanted to go away early; then the brothers had to
stay and work, and this led to many a quarrel, with heavy blows which
regularly fell upon Sami.</p>
<p>So he never had any happy days. But every evening he could be alone with
his thoughts of his grandmother, of all the beautiful bygone days and all
the good words she had spoken to him. Nobody troubled him, or called to
him, or pulled him then, as usually happened all day long.</p>
<p>Thus the Summer and Autumn passed away, and a cold Winter had come. There
was no more work to be done in the fields and meadows, but there were all
sorts of things to be done to help the farmer in the barn and his wife in
the house and the kitchen. This Sami had to do.</p>
<p>Meanwhile their own three boys could go to school, which had now begun
again, for they had to get some education. Sami could get that by and by.
In the Summer he had acquired a good deal of quickness and now did his
work so skilfully that the farmer said a couple of times:</p>
<p>"I would not have believed it, for in the Summer he was always the last."</p>
<p>Sami now thought that everything would go easier than in the Summer, but
something came which was much harder to bear than the extra burden of
work, which was too much for the others.</p>
<p>Every day the boys fought in the field outside, and Sami, as the smallest,
always came off with the most blows. But that was the end of it, and when
the boys came home at night no one thought any more about it. In the
evening the three boys were assigned to the little room with the feeble
light of a low oil lamp, to do their arithmetic for school, while Sami had
to cut apples and pears for drying. From the first the three were angry
because Sami had no arithmetic to do, and then one would accuse the other
of taking the light away from him, and all three would scream that Sami
didn't need any at all for his work. Then one would pull the lamp one way,
and another the other way, until it was upset and the oil would run over
the table into Sami's apples. Then there would be a really murderous
tumult in the darkness; all hands would grope in the oil and one would
always outcry the others. Then the mother would come in very cross and
want to know who was always starting such mischief. Then one would blame
the other, and finally the blame would fall on Sami, because he made the
least noise. Usually the farmer too came in then, and his angry wife would
always reply that she had indeed said the boy would be an apple of discord
in the house, and a Winter like this they had never experienced. Often
Sami had to endure many hard words and undeserved punishment. On such
evenings he remained sleepless for a long time sitting on his bed.</p>
<p>Then he would rack his brains as to how it could happen so, since his
grandmother had told him that if he was God-fearing everything would
happen for the best. That he should be so scolded and badly treated was
not the best for him. He really wanted to be God-fearing and not forget
that the dear Lord saw and heard everything. But Sami was still very young
and could not know, what he later knew, that it is good for everyone if he
learns early in life to bear hardship. Then when the evil days, which none
escape, come again later on, he can cope with them bravely, because he
knows them already and his strength has become hardened; and when the good
days come he can enjoy them as no one else can who has never tasted the
bad ones.</p>
<p>At this time Sami knew nothing about this and almost never went to sleep
without tears; indeed, he often wondered whether the birds were still
calling up in the ash-trees: "Only trust in the dear Lord!" and if it were
still true that everything would come out right. The only comfort for him
was that his grandmother had told him so positively, and he held fast to
that.</p>
<p>It was a long, hard Winter. The snow lay so deep and immovable on the
meadows and trees, that Sami often asked with anxiety in his heart, if it
would ever entirely disappear, so that the meadows would be green again,
and the flowers become alive. It was already April, and the cold white
covering of snow still lay all around. Then a warm wind from the South
blew all one night into the valley, and when on the next day a very warm
rain fell, the obstinate snow melted into great brooks. Then came the sun
and dried up all the brooks, and everywhere the new young grass sprang up
over the meadows.</p>
<p>The four boys came across the big street of the village and turned into
the meadow. They were pulling along the cart, on which lay the cooking
utensils which the farmer's wife had just purchased at the annual fair in
the village. The boys had followed their mother's command to go slowly and
carefully, so that nothing would be broken, for they knew very well that
their mother set great store by these things, and it was worth while to
follow her instructions.</p>
<p>Now that they had come safely over the rough street and had turned into
the meadow road, two pulling, two pushing, they wanted to rest a little
while. They stopped under the first large pear-tree, stretched themselves
out on the ground and looked up into the blue sky. In the pear-tree above,
the birds were singing merrily together, and suddenly one piped up in the
midst of the others, always the same note, exactly as if he had a special
call to give.</p>
<p>"There he is," cried Sami, springing up from the ground with delight. Then
he listened again, and again sounded the staccato call, clear and sharp
above the singing of all the other birds.</p>
<p>"Do you hear it? Do you hear it?" cried Sami in his delight. "Now he is
calling again: 'Trust! Trust! Trust! Trust!' And then they all sing
together: 'Only trust the dear Lord!'"</p>
<p>"You are just talking nonsense!" exclaimed St�ffi to the happy Sami. "The
bird is more knowing than you are. That is the rain bird; I know him well.
He notices the rain-wind and is calling: 'Shower! Shower! Shower!' Then we
know it is going to rain."</p>
<p>But Sami would not give up what was so dear to him and kept saying to
himself:</p>
<p>"But he is singing: 'Trust! Trust! Trust! Trust!'"</p>
<p>"Keep quiet!" continued St�ffi sharply to him. "You are nothing but a
little tramp, who can't do anything and doesn't know anything and twists
everything he hears."</p>
<p>Then the blood rose to Sami's cheeks and the tears came into his eyes and,
more courageously than usual towards St�ffi, he cried:</p>
<p>"I don't do that, but you have done it many times!"</p>
<p>Then St�ffi sprang up and seized hold of Sami to throw him down; but in
his anger Sami turned quite differently from usual, so that St�ffi had to
call the others to help him.</p>
<p>A great struggle ensued; the blows became more and more violent, first on
one side and then on the other. Suddenly the cart was upset. A fearful
cracking and crashing sounded, and a great heap of red, brown and white
crockery lay on the ground. Dumb with fright, the boys stood and looked at
the destruction.</p>
<p>St�ffi was the first to recover himself.</p>
<p>"We will say that a wheel came off the cart, and it suddenly fell down."
He immediately picked up a big stone in order to pound out the nail and
take the wheel off from the axle.</p>
<p>"I shall say just how it all happened, that we quarreled, and upset the
wagon," said Sami calmly.</p>
<p>Then Steffi's wrath rose to its height.</p>
<p>"You traitor, you spy and mischief-maker!" he screamed. "You are nothing
but a ragamuffin. We will force you."</p>
<p>"You cannot," said Sami, "and you are no good either! If you were
God-fearing, you would not want to lie so."</p>
<p>"Well, well," they all screamed together, and shaking their fists in the
most threatening way. "You needn't say that. We are just exactly as
God-fearing as you, and even much more so!"</p>
<p>Suddenly a new thought came to St�ffi. He ran off with all his might, and
Michael and Uli rushed after him. Sami saw that they were hurrying to the
house; he followed slowly after. The farmer's wife had come back to the
house by a shorter way, and the farmer was just returning home too from
the field, when the three boys came rushing along. The whole family was
standing in great excitement at the door and all were talking loudly
together and making threatening gestures, when Sami came along. He was met
by the farmer, shaking his fist, and his wife threw such harsh words at
him that he stood quite dumfounded.</p>
<p>"That was the last straw," she said, "that after all the kindness he had
received he should tell them they were not God-fearing people."</p>
<p>Then the farmer joined in. Such talk was insolent from Sami, and it had
been known for a long time how upright they were in his house, before such
a scamp had come there and tried to show them the way. Then his wife began
again and said Sami would have nothing more to do in her house; for he had
brought nothing but trouble since he stepped into it; he could go to his
room, and she would come right along.</p>
<p>Sami was so surprised and confused by all the attacks and charges, that he
had stood quite dumb until now. Now he wanted to explain how the cart had
been upset, but the father said they knew everything already, and all he
had to do was to go to his room. He obeyed.</p>
<p>Soon the farmer's wife came upstairs, packed Sami's things together and
tied them up again into a bundle, which was now much smaller than when he
had brought it there, for some pieces of his old things had been worn out
and were not replaced, and his grandmother's clothes were no longer there.</p>
<p>While she was packing the woman kept on talking very angrily about Sami's
wickedness and insolence, so that he now for the first time understood it
all. The boys had stated that he had reproached them for not being
God-fearing people; they had punished him for it, and through his
resistance he had overturned the cart. Sami now tried to explain to the
woman that it had not happened so, but she said she knew enough, threw his
tied-up bundle beside his bed, and went out.</p>
<p>Now for the first time Sami was able to think over what had happened to
him and what was going to come. Then he was angry because he had to bear
such injustice and not once have a chance to speak. And now he was driven
out, or perhaps he would be sent to people where it would be even worse
for him. Then he was so overcome with anger and fear and anguish, that he
began to cry aloud and called out:</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, Grandmother, you said if I was God-fearing everything would
happen to me for the best; and I have been, and now it has happened this
way!"</p>
<p>But with the thought of his grandmother, there rose in his heart all the
memories of his life with her, how they had wandered so peacefully through
the meadows, and how beautiful it had been under those trees, how the
birds had sung and the brook murmured, and suddenly Sami was mightily
overcome, and he exclaimed:</p>
<p>"Away! away! Over there! over there!"</p>
<p>From that moment on a bright light rose in his heart. It was hope in a new
life as beautiful as the first had been. Then Sami said his evening prayer
gladly and fell asleep.</p>
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