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sorrow and for our only consolation in the hour when no other comfort
reaches the soul, when strangers cannot understand us and when the mother’s
heart has ceased to beat. Hail, O rich and eternal legacy!
Now the door of the parlour opened softly and Maria, the younger sister,
stepped out. The girl at once began to cry when she saw the brother of whom
they had all spoken so often, for whom mother’s last glance had asked and
who was far away when she closed her eyes. Now he lay there on his knees
and cried over the memory of her life.
Even her children here at home had slept through the night of the death.
Not till the glow of early morning lit up the little windows did father go to the
girls in the bedroom and say:
“Open your eyes and look out. The sun is already rising over the Wechsel;
and the Blessed Virgin is sitting on the mountain-top, with the Child Jesus on
her knee; and your mother is sitting on the stool at her feet, with a spinning-
wheel before her, weaving her heavenly garment.”
Then they knew at once that mother was dead.
“Would you like to look at her?” my sister now asked.
And she went to the head of the bier and slowly raised the shroud.
I saw my mother. Heaven’s bliss still lay on the stiff, stark visage. The load
was gone from my heart, relieved and comforted; I looked upon the dear
features as though I were contemplating a white flower. It was no longer the
poor, sick, weary woman that lay before me: it was the face lit up with a ray
from the youthful days long past. She lay there slumbering and was strong
and well. She was young again and white and gentle; she wore a little smile,
as she often did when she looked at the merry little fellow playing about with
his toys at her feet. The dark and glossy hair (she had no grey hairs yet) was
carefully braided and peeped out a little at the temples from under the brown
kerchief, the one which she loved best to wear upon her head when she went
to church on holidays. She held her hands folded over her breast, with the
rosary and the wax candle between them. She lay there just as though she had
fallen asleep in church on Whit Sunday, during the solemn High Mass; and
thus, even in death, she comforted her child. But the rough hands clearly
showed that the slumberer had led a hard and toilful life.
And so you stood before this sacred image, nearly as still and motionless as
the sleeper.
At last, you whispered to your little sister, who stood softly weeping by
your side:
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