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again they lend an amused ear to various gassy gospels over the way, where,
as he perceives, he is once more among the children of this latter day alone:
notably certain insignificances who, because they have raised their self-
indulgence to the dignity of a problem play, are solemnly mistaking
themselves (as actors and audience too) for pioneers of social progress; and
some earnest women who have slammed the front door on their nearest and
dearest stay-at-home duties and privileges, to go questing after problematical
rights. It looks, too, as if the same types, modified for worse and better by
class conditions, were repeated below the salt; but there the multitude is so
great that the individuals are soon lost in a far-off colourless mass—
sometimes a menacing mass—by no means so content with stale bread as the
others with caviare.
Is then this civilisation to become the universal order? he asks himself; and
must the world it has laid waste be repeopled from these? The very fear of it
summons a shadowy memory of fathers’ fathers among Sussex sheepfolds,
Highland crofts, Tuscan vineyards, or German forests. After that the banquet
grits in the teeth like husks, and there is nothing possible but to get up and go
out from it, sick with longing for those simpler, saner people. To them, it is
said, fatherhood, motherhood, home, were chiefest of prides and sanctities
outside Heaven. They either kept or consciously broke the ten
commandments, but they never set up the Seven deadly Sins in their place.
They won life out of the earth, sometimes with difficulty enough, but the
struggle bred a muscle and fortitude only now failing their descendants in
hyper-civilisation. They laboured, and took their pleasures too, under open
skies and in quiet places where the divine voice could clearly be heard at
times, and unperplexedly obeyed.
Between fear and hope these famished feasters come at last to the ancestral
places; only too often to find them ruined, or sheltering some sad survival
unaware of his own splendid history. On the cold thresholds they stand,
stricken with the sense of the world’s irreparable loss in a virile and faithful
race.
Just so far have many thinking people come to-day, and there remain,
needing a leader who can turn regretful retrospect to rational hope. Such a one
is Peter Rosegger, whose life is a type of our own day and a prophecy of
better. He, too, left the land for the city, and now, because all his culture and
experience do but confirm his faith that Bauernthum is as necessary for the
world’s soul as the bread which the peasant grows for its body, he has gone
back to it. When he wants new vigour for daily life, or for his mission of
protecting and pleading for a vanishing folk, he touches earth and gets it.
Peasant-born, in most of his books he is Peasantry grown conscious and
The Forest Farm
Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
- Titel
- The Forest Farm
- Untertitel
- Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
- Autor
- Peter Rosegger
- Verlag
- The Vineyard Press
- Ort
- London
- Datum
- 1912
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 169
- Kategorien
- Geographie, Land und Leute
- International