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Clements, “you’ll be needing money, I’m thinking. Look, it’s your guardian
angel’s brought me here: I’m bringing you some.”
“Oh, my gracious!” replied my father, leaning his whole weight upon the
lever, so that the oil-cake in the press had to yield its last drains, which,
however, were received into a separate little pot, for these dregs are not quite
so clear and mild as the first stream. “Oh, my gracious!” said he. “I could do
with the money well enough; but you can just take it away again: I know what
you want for it. You want the six old fir-trees that stand outside my house.
Things are a sight worse with me than they were a year ago, when you came
and asked to buy the trees, but I have no other answer for you than I gave you
then: the six trees outside the house are a memory of the old days; and, if I
had to sell field and meadow and the cattle in the stable, those trees shall stay
where they are; and, if they have to lay me in the grave without a coffin, those
old trees shall stay where they are until God’s lightning cracks them or the
storm fells them.”
The last words were spoken with violence; and, with that, the last drop of
oil left the press.
But Clements said:
“Forest-farmer, you shall not sell a field, nor a head of cattle from your
stable; you shall have a coffin of good white ash-wood: God grant that you
may not need it for a long time to come! You shall have good days yet in this
world. You shall not sell the old fir-trees, but you shall sell the larch in your
wood that are fit for felling. Have you your pocket-book on you? If so, just
open it.”
I got a fright, when I saw the figure on the bank-note which the tempter had
now drawn from his leather case and which, holding it between his finger-
tips, he sent fluttering to and fro, like a little flag, before my father’s blinking
eyes. Misfortune had cleared the way in our house for the timber-merchant:
we were no longer able to get all we wanted for our ten heads and stomachs
out of that eighty yoke of mountain land; the doctor was sending us letters
which I could not read soft and low enough to make them bearable to my
father:
“The forest-farmer is hereby summoned within fourteen days to … failing
which….”
“As my patience is at last exhausted, I have placed the matter in the hands
of the imperial and royal courts, and if, within eight days … execution and
distraint….”
Those were more or less the first sentences which I was given to read in our
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