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again as if they are listening for any good counsels about life that the Mother
may have to give them. Then they aspire upwards, rolling themselves into
sheaths, out of which, little by little, emerges the stalk and the inmost being of
the corn. By the time Ascension Day is there the corn is looking skywards
even in the mountain districts, as if gazing in loving gratitude after Him who
called it to life, and who will come again to waken the human seeds that are
sown in all the churchyards. In the young summer breeze the cornfield ripples
like a blue-green lake, with the cloud-shadows gliding graciously over it. And
the single blade is now in its full glory. The four-sided ear, in which the still
tender grains lie scale-like over each other, hangs its blossom out like tiny
flags wherever a grainlet lies in its cradle, which flutter and tremble without
ceasing, while the high stalk rocks thoughtfully to and fro.
God keep us from storms in this blessed season! From rain, too, with the
sun shining through it, for that breeds mildew. Wet seasons cause a growth
upon the ears, for which the local name of Mother-grain is far too pretty for
truth. The sky-climbing youth of the corn soon comes to an end, the hot
summer whitens its hair; then, still conscious of its strength and its virtue, it
yet bows its head in humility before Him who has given it virtue and strength.
Deeper within this forest of grain, thistles and the parasitical couch grass,
the fair-seeming darnel, and every sort of tangled rubble and lawless company
thrive rankly enough in the shadow of the corn and are nourished upon its
roots. There, also, the wanton corn-cockle is to be found, whose seed later
makes the flour—if not already red with shame—such a dirty bluish colour;
there the will-o’-the-wisp poppy, and the kindly, patriarchal cornflower,
whose crown is made of many little crowns.
Many a time, while a thunderstorm was raging over Altenmoos, Jacob
would stand under the heavy eaves over his door, looking out quiet and
resigned. Man cannot alter things, God is almighty; what is the good, then, of
trembling or complaining? When it grows light, he sees his whole cornfield,
now nearly ripe, beaten down. Jacob says, “Thanks and praise be to God that
there was no ice in it—all the stalks lie in order and flat on the ground, not
one lifts so much as a knee! The heavy rain has laid the corn low, the wind
will dry it—lift it up again.” But there are years when it does not get up, when
the rain beats it down again and again; then it is that the alien, lawless rabble
get the upper hand—they rise up from between the prone stalks, and weave a
trellis overhead, and begin a godless blooming and bragging above the poor
imprisoned corn.
When, however, God does give rain and sunshine in due season (just as the
folks who go pilgrimages pray to have it), the fields are glorious. Strong and
slender the stalks grow up from joint to joint. The lance-shaped, dark green
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