Seite - 122 - in The Forest Farm - Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
Bild der Seite - 122 -
Text der Seite - 122 -
mountain-chain. Its river is the clear-running Feistritz, rich in trout, with its
countless tributaries. When one crosses the top of the watershed over the
Wechsel, or the Pfaffen, or from the Mürzthal, everything at once wears a
different look. The mountains are lower, the forests more scattered, because
they are broken up on every hand by cornfields. The farms lie isolated in the
fields, on the skirts of the forests, often very high in the mountains. In the
valley are the bright green pastures, with running brooks and corn-mills. The
air is calm and peaceful, disturbed by the whistle of no locomotive, the
chimney of no factory. The old farm-houses are humbly built; and the kitchen,
living-room, hen-house and so on often form but one general room. This
makes the new sort of houses, which are springing up on every side, look all
the grander, with their sundry apartments and numerous windows,—from
which many a pretty, fair-haired face peeps out at us, for it is an event when a
stranger comes that way.
The farm premises are, for the most part, extensive, built of wood, straw-
thatched and enclosed within a plank fence. Every farm has its open-air
crucifix, often artistically carved, sometimes, I admit, adorned with a figure of
Christ which faith alone can save from ridicule. On the spreading mountain-
heights lie wide forests, such as Teufelstein, Fischbacherwald, Vorauerwald,
Feistritzwald, Rabenwald. There are no work-houses, except the few on the
Wechsel. For the rest, the region is well-populated and rich in compact
villages and beautiful churches. The mountain-village of St. Jakob im Walde,
which gives the Jakobsland its name, lies on a spur of the Wechsel, some four
thousand feet above the level of the sea.
The inhabitants do not call themselves Jacklers: they are only so-called by
the people in the districts round about; for the name does not stand for
anything very fine, though it has grown old in honour. They simply call
themselves after their parishes: the Rattners, the St. Jakobers, the
Miesenbachers and so on. Almost every village has its own peculiarity. The
Kathreiner goes in for finery, the Rattner for disputes and litigation; the
Wenigzeller is a great man for backbiting and quarrelling; the Fischbacher is a
notorious brawler.
The people are powerfully built and have tall and slender figures; they are
mostly fair-haired. The men wear clothes of dark stuff, in the summer, and, in
winter, the so-called Wilfling, a mixture of thread and sheep’s wool; on
workdays they tie on long blue aprons, a practice which prevails even among
the schoolboys. The women favour a bunchy style of dress; and when one of
them wants to look particularly smart (and this applies to many), she puts on
three, or five, or more petticoats, one over the other. Many villages are
already infected with the fashion of dress introduced from the Mürzthal.
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