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wooden wares, glass-cutters, old-clothes men, who were always glad to go
about the Wilderness in summer-time, would prop their back burdens against
their sticks and have a good look at the figure before they entered the house.
Even the beggars did the same, with a benevolent expression on their faces, as
if admiring the man who had carved it.
But as to what the object represented opinions were very various. One said
it was a cow, another a donkey, another a chamois; some, however, said it
must be a stag. This last supposition was well founded. From the creature’s
head protruded two little bits of wood, notched saw-like on top, which just
conceivably stood for the antlers. Heidepeter was very decided about the
matter: the animal really was a stag.
All sorts of sayings and proverbs about the stag had become bound up with
the household life inside the walls.
When Peter said to his little son Gabriel, “Laddie, we must hunt the red
stag to-morrow!” he meant nothing else than that the child must get up at
sunrise next morning. The stag was always glowing red at that hour.
When the wind blew from the north the figure beat its feet upon the wall,
and the people inside would say, “The stag is knocking again; there’ll be a
change in the weather.”
Through one whole summer Gabriel had been watching how two sparrows
built their nest between the wooden antlers. (At that time a new bird’s nest
was the greatest joy on earth to Gabriel.) He could no longer resist the
temptation, leant a ladder against the wall, and was going to climb up. Then,
by chance, his father came along, and he, usually so mild, gave the boy quite
unmistakably to understand that he must, once and for all, leave the stag in
peace.
About this carved figure there clung a curious memory for Heidepeter.
While still in the early days of his married life there came some bad years,
and there in the Wilderness nothing would grow or ripen save turnips and
cabbage. Rye and oats started hopefully enough in the spring, greening and
gathering strength for an output of ears. Then, in the heart of summer, came
rain and cold, and the mists hung about the hills for weeks. The corn grew
pale and stooped, as if it would rather creep back into the sheltering soil.
There followed a few weeks of sunshine after that, but before even the grain
could mature the snow had fallen. And so it happened several years running.
The people lost heart and hardly cared to sow in the following spring, or
had no seed to sow with.
And Peter’s grain-chest became empty, and he was unable to lend his
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