Seite - 68 - in The Forest Farm - Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
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My coals were now hardly flickering and looked wretched beside that fire.
I put the pot down sadly in a corner of the hearth and slunk away. I had been
gone much too long; then, by good fortune, Cousin Jok had come home from
the meadow, and he had a burning-glass, which he held over a piece of tinder
in the sun until it caught. And so the sun which I had slandered had stolen a
march upon me and provided fire for the porridge before I did. I was heartily
ashamed of myself and, to this day, am unable to look the benefactor straight
in the face.
I slunk into the paddock. There I saw Cousin Jok squatting in his long grey,
red-embroidered fur, with his white head. And, when I drew nigh, I saw why
he was squatting here like that. The snow-white kid lay in front of him, with
its head and its feet outstretched and Cousin Jok was stripping off its hide.
At that I burst into loud weeping. Cousin Jok stood up, took me by the
hand, and said:
“There it lies and looks at you!”
And the kid really was staring into my face with its glassy eyes. And yet it
was dead.
“Peterle!” whispered my cousin, gravely. “Mother sent the Knierutscher
woman a loaf of bread.”
“Yes,” I sobbed, “and it ran away from me, right down over the edge.”
“Since you own up, laddie,” said Cousin Jok, “I will arrange things so that
nothing happens to you. I have told mother that a stone or something came
rolling down and killed the kid. (Somehow, I thought in my own mind that
Peterle was at the back of it!) That loaf of bread came straight out of the air,
down over the high edge, passed me and hit the kid right on the head. The
poor little thing staggered and fell and was dead as a mouse at once. However,
don’t be afraid, we’ll keep to the stone idea. I’ll make things all right with the
Knierutscher woman too; and now be quiet, laddie, and don’t pull such dismal
faces. To-night we’ll eat the poor beastie, and mother will cook us a
horseradish-soup to go with it.”
In such wise died the little white kid. My brother and sisters told me it had
been killed by a naughty, cruel stone.
To please me, mother added my coals to the fire on the hearth, and before
this fire the kid was roasted. It was to have been a gift for Cousin Jok; and
now he was to have roast kid instead. But he invited all of us to join him and
gave us the best bits. I did not relish mine at all.
The next morning, Jakoberle armed himself with a cudgel, followed Cousin
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