Seite - 18 - in The Forest Farm - Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
Bild der Seite - 18 -
Text der Seite - 18 -
forefathers, their natural conceptions of right and wrong, the blessing of
family life, their healthy contentment—the outcome of bodily toil and the
love of the home—against the demoralisation of modern hyperculture, is his
most earnest aim.
The principal heroes of his romances are by preference those whose calling
involves the task of cherishing and teaching the people: schoolmasters and
priests. The Writings of the Forest Schoolmaster (1878) is the name of
Rosegger’s most popular work, which already in 1908 appeared in its
seventy-eighth edition, and which, let us hope, may within the author’s
lifetime still reach its hundredth edition. The theme is the gradual emergence
of a forest parish from a group of demoralised and utterly uneducated men to
a social organisation, to a lawful and religiously organised community. A
similar Kulturroman is Der Gottsucher (The God-seeker, 1883), which leads
us back into past centuries. A parish has been excommunicated by the Church
for murdering its priest. The people cannot exist without religion, and,
deprived of their old church, they create a new one, a religion of Nature, by
means of which the leader of the community brings back order and industry to
the village. The third novel belonging to this series, Das Ewige Licht (The
Light Eternal, 1897), is a pessimistic counterpart to the Waldschulmeister.
This treats of the dangers to religion which arise from modern civilisation.
The faithful priest of a mountain parish has to look on helplessly while the
modern world thrusts itself into the mountain idyll; while the atmosphere of
the great cities, brought up by mountain climbers and summer visitors, and
the smoke from the chimneys of the ever-spreading industrialism in the
valleys below, poison the pure air, and, morally and economically, ruin the old
inhabitants.
But the peasantry has yet another enemy: the love of sport among the
nobility. As once Karl Marx, the theorist of collectivism, studied in Scotland
the expropriation of man from the soil in favour of deer, and in his Kapital
exposed the tragic consequences of such excessive sport, so now Rosegger in
his home must look on at the depopulating of entire villages. By this means
his own birthplace has been nearly ruined. In his first novel, Heidepeters
Gabriel, he already shows the hopeless struggle of the peasant against the
devastation of his fields by game, a struggle which leads to poaching and to
prison. And in his novel Jacob der Letzte (1888), which, from an artistic point
of view, is perhaps the most complete of his works, the principal character,
the last descendant of an old peasant family, who clings tenaciously to the old
soil, is beaten and goes under in the struggle. Such a single case becomes for
Rosegger an alarming symptom of the universal decline of the free peasantry.
“What will come of it?” he asks, when he receives from numerous parts of
Germany letters all witnessing to the same facts: “I am no practical teacher of
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