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himself, while it occurred to me, “We are not so strict at home.” Certainly, our
mother said one ought to say one’s prayers, but she did not order one straight
away on to the bench.
Now I was to see too what came of the prayers. We had hardly raised our
elbows from the table when it was spread with a white cloth, and set with
white platters and with white bread, and a brown soup was poured out of the
spout of a bright tin pot. At home it was just the other way round, everything
else brown and the soup white. There was no milk-soup for breakfast here,
but coffee! I had already heard about it, that the grand people ate coffee, but
that an old charcoal-burner had said, “My dear people, I am certainly black.
Look at me and see if I’m black or no! But I’m not so black and bad as the
black broth from Morocco. The devil has invented it, and the peasant will
come to an end if he eats it.”
I do not know if the charcoal-burner knew how wisely he had spoken, and I
do not know if they had believed him. I only know that everyone was crazy
for coffee, and that I could not help putting my spoon into the black soup—
Ugh! that isn’t good, that is as bitter as gall! The devil has certainly invented
it——
“You haven’t put any sugar,” laughed Simmerl, and threw some pieces out
of a cup into my bowl. Now it was a little different. Simmerl looked at me and
grinned to himself. I should have liked to know why.
After breakfast it was “God keep you!” to the Zutrum people and off to
school. I had become quite brave and held out my right hand when saying
“Good-bye and thank you,” just like a well-mannered, grown-up man, and it
occurred to me, “How easy it is to be good when one is not at home!”
As we went along the hill-meadow old Kickel was to be seen with a
wooden fork spreading haycocks out so that they should dry better in the new
sunshine. To-day I saw, for the first time, that he was very decrepit, bent
double almost to cracking-point, and swaying and limping at every step. His
knee-breeches had certainly once been leather, but now they had many, many
patches of other stuffs stuck on with large, ungainly stitches. His feet and very
brown ankles were bare. Breast and arms were covered by a coarse brown
shirt; the old felt hat sat like a battered inverted kettle on the little grey head,
but all the same it was decorated by an eagle’s feather, which stood up high
into the air. Knees, elbows and fingers were all so terribly bony that one felt
as if the old man would never be able to do anything properly for the rest of
his life; he was like a deformed and twisted oak tree up on the high land
where the storm-wind cripples everything. When he caught sight of us he
raised his hat politely and then he went on working.
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