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Christ, confiscated by the licensing authorities as blasphemous. This induced
him twice afterwards openly to state his convictions; once in Mein
Himmelreich (My Kingdom of Heaven, 1900), and again in I.N.R.I: Frohe
Botschaft eines armen SĂźnders (The Gospel of a poor Sinner, 1904). These
much-discussed writings give us an image of Christ as Rosegger made it,
putting it together from the four gospels: a Christ rejoicing in God, intimate
with manâs heart, filled with joy of the earth, with mighty creative energy,
with consuming wrath in due season; the Superman, the God-man in the
highest sense.
Rosegger is as strongly opposed to all the violent âMissionsâ movements in
the Church as to the faith-destroying tendency of the modern worldâs point of
view. He holds piously by many an old belief, not because it is for him an
article of faith, but because it is a piece of poetic childhoodâs remembrance;
and he has saved many a dogma for himself by interpreting it symbolically
and not literally. To the most poetic of his interpretations belongs that of the
Cross: âThe Cross has a foot rooted in Earth; that means âMan, make use of
the Earth.â The Cross has a head that towers up into the air of heaven; that
means âMan, remember thy ideals.â The Cross has two arms stretching out to
right and left, not to chastise men, but to embrace all the world; that means
âMan, love thy brothers.â Love, Joy,âthose are the two beams of our Cross.
The world is not here as a penance, but a joy.â In such sentences as these is
contained Roseggerâs whole Gospel of Joy, which looks for its fulfilment on
this side. For him the highest aim of civilisation, as of religion, is the
happiness of mankind.
This brings us to a conclusion. We have now seen Rosegger develop from
peasant to craftsman, to teacher, to preacher. And now another question
arises: Has he not possibly reached a greater height stillâis he a prophet? Of
that only late generations may judge; to them it is given to see whether the
new birth of mankind, which Rosegger, like Tolstoy, looks for from a return
to the simplicities of life on the land, will be realised. With Roseggerâs
prophecy, which we shall do well to consider, I close this paper. âThe future
generations will find peace and happiness again when they turn back to
Nature and give themselves up to the healthy influences of the life of the soil.
As yet, when the leaves turn yellow, the townsfolk hurry back into their walls;
but there will come a time when the well-to-do citizens will buy land and
farm it themselves like peasants, and when artisans will clear and reclaim
such land from the wilderness itself. They will renounce hyper-
intellectualism, and find pleasure and new vigour in bodily toil; and they will
make laws under which a firm-rooted and honourable peasantry can once
more thrive.â
Footnote:
The Forest Farm
Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
- Title
- The Forest Farm
- Subtitle
- Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
- Author
- Peter Rosegger
- Publisher
- The Vineyard Press
- Location
- London
- Date
- 1912
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 169
- Categories
- Geographie, Land und Leute
- International