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XVII
Forest-Lily in the Snow
(A chapter from The Forest Schoolmaster)
A LOAD is off our hearts. The storm has fallen. A soft wind came and gently
relieved the trees of their burdens. There were a few mild days; then the snow
settled and we can now go where we will with snow-shoes.
Nevertheless, something has happened lately over in the Karwässer.
Berthold, whose family increases from year to year, and from year to year has
less to eat—Berthold has turned poacher. A wood-cutter is a better hand at
this than any of us, who remain faint-hearted humbugs all our lives long.—
Poor people need not marry, says the wood-cutter. Well, according to custom
and practice, they have not married, but they have kneeled before me in the
forest … and … and now they are all starving together.
So Berthold has turned poacher. Wood-cutting brings in far too little for a
roomful of children. I send them all the food I can, but it is not enough. He
must have good, strong soup for the ailing wife and a piece of meat for the
children; so he shoots the roe that comes his way. To this, then, has passion
brought him, until Berthold, who once, as a herd, was such a good and jolly
fellow, has, through poverty, pride, and the love of his own, grown into a
pretty criminal.
I have once already pleaded with the gamekeeper for God’s sake to be a
little, just a little lenient with the poor husband and father: he was sure to
mend his ways, I said, and I would go bail for him. Up to the present he has
not mended his ways; but the events of these wild winter days have made him
weep aloud, for he loves his Lily-of-the-Forest above everything.
It happened on a murky winter evening. The little windows are walled up
with moss; outside new flakes are falling on the old snow. Berthold is sitting
up with the children and with his sick Aga, only waiting until the eldest girl,
Lily, comes back with the milk which she has gone to beg of a neighbouring
hermit on the Hinterkar. For the goats at home have been killed and eaten;
and, if only Lily would return, Berthold means to go into the forest with his
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