Seite - 130 - in The Forest Farm - Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
Bild der Seite - 130 -
Text der Seite - 130 -
schoolmaster. âHowever, sometimes itâs better not to know how to read.
Hereâs what the note says to the old man that I am: âWe sincerely regret to
have to make the following communication to you in the name of the
honourable Consistory and of the local parish. Whereas you, Michel Bieder,
school teacher in the aforesaid parish, have repeatedly, in the instruction of
the youth entrusted to your care, acted contrary to the regulations, and
whereas, but recently, you took it upon yourself, in an unprecedented manner,
on your own responsibility, to perform an ecclesiastical function, and this,
moreover, in favour of a suicide, so now take note and be it known to you that
we have relieved you of your post. Given at the presbytery at Rattenstein.ââ
The old man ceased.
Peter snuffed the candle in great perplexity, and then said:
âYes, Mr. Schoolmaster, you might have known that it does not do to toll
everyone promiscuous-like into the grave. That much would have occurred
even to me, Heath Peter.â
âAnd so there I sat upon the stone-heap, and I wanted nothing to make me
a complete beggar but a stick and wallet. The stars were out by this time, and
an owl hooting in the forest was hooting at me it seemed. Then I did not know
what to do. There I was cast out, a poor old man, that had buried a parish and
christened one. So I lay down upon the stone-heap and my white hairs were
wet with dew. And the church clock ticked just like a bird pecking the naked
grains in a field in autumn, that clock ticked away second after second from
the little bit left of my life. âTick on, tick on, you honest pendulum,â thought I.
âItâs late.â And then, suddenly, I wondered, âWho will ring the vesper-bell to-
night?â I darted up and on, over the mound, to the church, and into the belfry,
took hold of the ropes, and rang all the bells at once. And that was my
farewell to my dear church and to the congregation. I should have liked to
wake the dead in their graves and tell them all about my unfair treatment. But
they slept on in peace, while I rang in my beggarhood. Then I cut myself a
stick from the bushes by the churchyard walls and went on and on. Oh, I can
walk right enough still! It took me barely three hours here to the Wilderness.â
The old man bent his head and held his hand before his eyes.
âWhat nonsense!â said the farmerâs wife, who had been standing some
time by the table with the soup-plate in her hand. âAnd you are going up to
the wilds next, Schoolmaster?â
âMust I go to the wilds?â cried the old schoolmaster. âGod! what should I
do in that stony place?â
He hid his face again.
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