<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>Pelle the Conqueror</h1>
<h3>BOYHOOD</h3>
<h2 class="no-break">by Martin Andersen Nexö</h2>
<h3>Translated from the Danish by Jessie Muir.</h3>
<hr />
<h2>NOTE</h2>
<p>When the first part of “Pelle Erobreren” (Pelle the Conqueror)
appeared in 1906, its author, Martin Andersen Nexö, was practically unknown
even in his native country, save to a few literary people who knew that he had
written some volumes of stories and a book full of sunshiny reminiscences from
Spain. And even now, after his great success with “Pelle,” very
little is known about the writer. He was born in 1869 in one of the poorest
quarters of Copenhagen, but spent his boyhood in his beloved island Bornholm,
in the Baltic, in or near the town, Nexö, from which his final name is derived.
There, too, he was a shoemaker’s apprentice, like Pelle in the second
part of the book, which resembles many great novels in being largely
autobiographical. Later, he gained his livelihood as a bricklayer, until he
somehow managed to get to one of the most renowned of our “people’s
high-schools,” where he studied so effectually that he was enabled to
become a teacher, first at a provincial school, and later in Copenhagen.</p>
<p>“Pelle” consists of four parts, each, except perhaps the last, a
complete story in itself. First we have the open-air life of the boy in country
surroundings in Bornholm; then the lad’s apprenticeship in a small
provincial town not yet invaded by modern industrialism and still innocent of
socialism; next the youth’s struggles in Copenhagen against employers and
authorities; and last the man’s final victory in laying the foundation of
a garden-city for the benefit of his fellow-workers. The background everywhere
is the rapid growth of the labor movement; but social problems are never
obtruded, except, again, in the last part, and the purely human interest is
always kept well before the reader’s eye through variety of situation and
vividness of characterization. The great charm of the book seems to me to lie
in the fact that the writer knows the poor from within; he has not studied them
as an outsider may, but has lived with them and felt with them, at once a
participant and a keen-eyed spectator. He is no sentimentalist, and so rich is
his imagination that he passes on rapidly from one scene to the next, sketching
often in a few pages what another novelist would be content to work out into
long chapters or whole volumes. His sympathy is of the widest, and he makes us
see tragedies behind the little comedies, and comedies behind the little
tragedies, of the seemingly sordid lives of the working people whom he loves.
“Pelle” has conquered the hearts of the reading public of Denmark;
there is that in the book which should conquer also the hearts of a wider
public than that of the little country in which its author was born.</p>
<p class="right">
OTTO JESPERSEN,<br/>
Professor of English in the University of Copenhagen.</p>
<p class="letter">
GENTOFTE, COPENHAGEN.<br/>
April, 1913.</p>
<h2>Pelle the Conqueror</h2>
<h2>I. BOYHOOD</h2>
<h2>I</h2>
<p>It was dawn on the first of May, 1877. From the sea the mist came sweeping in,
in a gray trail that lay heavily on the water. Here and there there was a
movement in it; it seemed about to lift, but closed in again, leaving only a
strip of shore with two old boats lying keel uppermost upon it. The prow of a
third boat and a bit of breakwater showed dimly in the mist a few paces off. At
definite intervals a smooth, gray wave came gliding out of the mist up over the
rustling shingle, and then withdrew again; it was as if some great animal lay
hidden out there in the fog, and lapped at the land.</p>
<p>A couple of hungry crows were busy with a black, inflated object down there,
probably the carcass of a dog. Each time a wave glided in, they rose and
hovered a few feet up in the air with their legs extended straight down toward
their booty, as if held by some invisible attachment. When the water retreated,
they dropped down and buried their heads in the carrion, but kept their wings
spread, ready to rise before the next advancing wave. This was repeated with
the regularity of clock-work.</p>
<p>A shout came vibrating in from the harbor, and a little while after the heavy
sound of oars working over the edge of a boat. The sound grew more distant and
at last ceased; but then a bell began to ring—it must have been at the
end of the mole—and out of the distance, into which the beat of the oars
had disappeared, came the answering sound of a horn. They continued to answer
one another for a couple of minutes.</p>
<p>The town was invisible, but now and then the silence there was broken by the
iron tramp of a quarryman upon the stone paving. For a long time the regular
beat of his footsteps could be heard, until it suddenly ceased as he turned
some corner or other. Then a door was opened, followed by the sound of a loud
morning yawn; and someone began to sweep the pavement. Windows were opened here
and there, out of which floated various sounds to greet the gray day. A
woman’s sharp voice was heard scolding, then short, smart slaps and the
crying of a child. A shoemaker began beating leather, and as he worked fell to
singing a hymn—</p>
<p class="poem">
“But One is worthy of our hymn, O brothers:<br/>
The Lamb on Whom the sins of all men lay.”</p>
<p>The tune was one of Mendelssohn’s “Songs without Words.”</p>
<p>Upon the bench under the church wall sat a boat’s crew with their gaze
turned seaward. They were leaning forward and smoking, with hands clasped
between their knees. All three wore ear-rings as a preventive of colds and
other evils, and all sat in exactly the same position, as if the one were
afraid of making himself in the very least different from the others.</p>
<p>A traveller came sauntering down from the hotel, and approached the fishermen.
He had his coat-collar turned up, and shivered in the chill morning air.
“Is anything the matter?” he asked civilly, raising his cap. His
voice sounded gruff.</p>
<p>One of the fishermen moved his hand slightly in the direction of his head-gear.
He was the head man of the boat’s crew. The others gazed straight before
them without moving a muscle.</p>
<p>“I mean, as the bell’s ringing and the pilot-boat’s out
blowing her horn,” the traveller went on. “Are they expecting a
ship?”</p>
<p>“May be. You never can tell!” answered the head man unapproachably.</p>
<p>The stranger looked as if he were deeply insulted, but restrained himself. It
was only their usual secretiveness, their inveterate distrust of every one who
did not speak their dialect and look exactly like themselves. They sat there
inwardly uneasy in spite of their wooden exterior, stealing glances at him when
he was not looking, and wishing him at Jericho. He felt tempted to tease them a
little.</p>
<p>“Dear me! Perhaps it’s a secret?” he said, laughing.</p>
<p>“Not that I know of,” answered the fisherman cautiously.</p>
<p>“Well, of course I don’t expect anything for nothing! And besides
it wears out your talking-apparatus to be continually opening and shutting it.
How much do you generally get?” He took out his purse; it was his
intention to insult them now.</p>
<p>The other fishermen threw stolen glances at their leader. If only he did not
run them aground!</p>
<p>The head man took his pipe out of his mouth and turned to his companions:
“No, as I was saying, there are some folks that have nothing to do but go
about and be clever.” He warned them with his eyes, the expression of his
face was wooden. His companions nodded. They enjoyed the situation, as the
commercial traveller could see from their doltish looks.</p>
<p>He was enraged. Here he was, being treated as if he were air and made fun of!
“Confound you fellows! Haven’t you even learnt as much as to give a
civil answer to a civil question?” he said angrily.</p>
<p>The fishermen looked backward and forward at one another, taking mute counsel.</p>
<p>“No, but I tell you what it is! She must come some time,” said the
head man at last.</p>
<p>“What ‘she’?”</p>
<p>“The steamer, of course. And she generally comes about this time. Now
you’ve got it!”</p>
<p>“Naturally—of course! But isn’t it a little unwise to speak
so loud about it?” jeered the traveller.</p>
<p>The fishermen had turned their backs on him, and were scraping out their pipes.</p>
<p>“We’re not quite so free with our speech here as some people, and
yet we make our living,” said the head man to the others. They growled
their approval.</p>
<p>As the stranger wandered on down the harbor hill, the fishermen looked after
him with a feeling of relief. “What a talker!” said one. “He
wanted to show off a bit, but you gave him what he won’t forget in a
hurry.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I think it touched him on the raw, all right,” answered the
man, with pride. “It’s these fine gentlemen you need to be most
careful of.”</p>
<p>Half-way down the harbor hill, an inn-keeper stood at his door yawning. The
morning stroller repeated his question to him, and received an immediate
answer, the man being a Copenhagener.</p>
<p>“Well, you see we’re expecting the steamer from Ystad today, with a
big cargo of slaves—cheap Swedish laborers, that’s to say, who live
on black bread and salt herrings, and do the work of three. They ought to be
flogged with red-hot icicles, that sort, and the brutes of farmers, too! You
won’t take a little early morning glass of something, I suppose?”</p>
<p>“No, thank you, I think not—so early.”</p>
<p>“Very well, please yourself.”</p>
<p class="p2">
Down at the harbor a number of farmers’ carts were already standing, and
fresh ones arrived at full gallop every minute. The newcomers guided their
teams as far to the front as possible, examined their neighbors’ horses
with a critical eye, and settled themselves into a half-doze, with their fur
collars turned up about their ears. Custom-house men in uniform, and pilots,
looking like monster penguins, wandered restlessly about, peering out to sea
and listening. Every moment the bell at the end of the mole rang, and was
answered by the pilot-boat’s horn somewhere out in the fog over the sea,
with a long, dreary hoot, like the howl of some suffering animal.</p>
<p>“What was that noise?” asked a farmer who had just come, catching
up the reins in fear. His fear communicated itself to his horses, and they
stood trembling with heads raised listening in the direction of the sea, with
questioning terror in their eyes.</p>
<p>“It was only the sea-serpent,” answered a custom-house officer.
“He always suffers from wind in this foggy weather. He’s a
wind-sucker, you see.” And the custom-house men put their heads together
and grinned.</p>
<p>Merry sailors dressed in blue with white handkerchiefs round their necks went
about patting the horses, or pricking their nostrils with a straw to make them
rear. When the farmers woke up and scolded, they laughed with delight, and
sang—</p>
<p class="poem">
“A sailor he must go through<br/>
A deal more bad than good, good, good!”</p>
<p>A big pilot, in an Iceland vest and woollen gloves, was rushing anxiously about
with a megaphone in his hand, growling like an uneasy bear. Now and then he
climbed up on the molehead, put the megaphone to his mouth, and roared out over
the water: “Do—you—hear—any—thing?” The
roar went on for a long time out upon the long swells, up and down, leaving
behind it an oppressive silence, until it suddenly returned from the town
above, in the shape of a confused babble that made people laugh.</p>
<p>“N-o-o!” was heard a little while after in a thin and
long-drawn-out cry from the sea; and again the horn was heard, a long, hoarse
sound that came rocking in on the waves, and burst gurgling in the splash under
the wharf and on the slips.</p>
<p>The farmers were out of it all. They dozed a little or sat flicking their whips
to pass the time. But every one else was in a state of suspense. A number of
people had gradually gathered about the harbor —fishermen, sailors
waiting to be hired, and master-artisans who were too restless to stay in their
workshop. They came down in their leather aprons, and began at once to discuss
the situation; they used nautical expressions, most of them having been at sea
in their youth. The coming of the steamer was always an event that brought
people to the harbor; but to-day she had a great many people on board, and she
was already an hour behind time. The dangerous fog kept the suspense at high
pressure; but as the time passed, the excitement gave place to a feeling of
dull oppression. Fog is the seaman’s worst enemy, and there were many
unpleasant possibilities. On the best supposition the ship had gone inshore too
far north or south, and now lay somewhere out at sea hooting and heaving the
lead, without daring to move. One could imagine the captain storming and the
sailors hurrying here and there, lithe and agile as cats.
Stop!—Half-speed ahead! Stop!—Half-speed astern! The first engineer
would be at the engine himself, gray with nervous excitement. Down in the
engine-room, where they knew nothing at all, they would strain their ears
painfully for any sound, and all to no purpose. But up on deck every man would
be on the alert for his life; the helmsman wet with the sweat of his anxiety to
watch every movement of the captain’s directing hand, and the look-out on
the forecastle peering and listening into the fog until he could hear his own
heart beat, while the suspense held every man on deck on tenterhooks, and the
fog-horn hooted its warning. But perhaps the ship had already gone to the
bottom!</p>
<p>Every one knew it all; every man had in some way or other been through this
overcharged suspense—as cabin-boy, stoker, captain, cook—and felt
something of it again now. Only the farmers were unaffected by it; they dozed,
woke up with a jerk, and yawned audibly.</p>
<p>The seafarers and the peasants always had a difficulty in keeping on peaceable
terms with one another; they were as different as land and sea. But to-day the
indifferent attitude of the peasants made the sea-folk eye them with suppressed
rage. The fat pilot had already had several altercations with them for being in
his way; and when one of them laid himself open to criticism, he was down upon
him in an instant. It was an elderly farmer, who woke from his nap with a
start, as his head fell forward, and impatiently took out his watch and looked
at it.</p>
<p>“It’s getting rather late,” he said. “The captain
can’t find his stall to-day.”</p>
<p>“More likely he’s dropped into an inn on the way!” said the
pilot, his eyes gleaming with malice.</p>
<p>“Very likely,” answered the farmer, without for the moment
realizing the nature of the paths of the sea. His auditors laughed exultingly,
and passed the mistake on to their neighbors, and people crowded round the
unfortunate man, while some one cried: “How many inns are there between
this and Sweden?”</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s too easy to get hold of liquids out there, that’s
the worst of it,” the pilot went on. “But for that any booby could
manage a ship. He’s only got to keep well to the right of Mads
Hansen’s farm, and he’s got a straight road before him. And the
deuce of a fine road! Telegraph-wires and ditches and a row of poplars on each
side—just improved by the local board. You’ve just got to wipe the
porridge off your mustache, kiss the old woman, and climb up on to the bridge,
and there you are! Has the engine been oiled, Hans? Right away, then, off we
go; hand me my best whip!” He imitated the peasants’ manner of
speech. “Be careful about the inns, Dad!” he added in a shrill
falsetto. There were peals of laughter, that had an evil sound in the
prevailing depression.</p>
<p>The farmer sat quite still under the deluge, only lowering his head a little.
When the laughter had almost died away, he pointed at the pilot with his whip,
and remarked to the bystanders—</p>
<p>“That’s a wonderful clever kid for his age! Whose father art thou,
my boy?” he went on, turning to the pilot.</p>
<p>This raised a laugh, and the thick-necked pilot swelled with rage. He seized
hold of the body of the cart and shook it so that the farmer had a difficulty
in keeping his seat. “You miserable old clodhopper, you pig-breeder, you
dung-carter!” he roared. “What do you mean by coming here and
saying ‘thou’ to grown-up people and calling them
‘boy’? And giving your opinions on navigation into the bargain! Eh!
you lousy old money-grubber! No, if you ever take off your greasy night-cap to
anybody but your parish clerk, then take it off to the captain who can find his
harbor in a fog like this. You can give him my kind regards and say I said
so.” And he let go of the cart so suddenly that it swung over to the
other side.</p>
<p>“I may as well take it off to you, as the other doesn’t seem able
to find us to-day,” said the farmer with a grin, and took off his fur
cap, disclosing a large bald head.</p>
<p>“Cover up that great bald pumpkin, or upon my word I’ll give it
something!” cried the pilot, blind with rage, and beginning to clamber up
into the cart.</p>
<p>At that moment, like the thin metallic voice of a telephone, there came faintly
from the sea the words:
“We—hear—a—steam—whistle!”</p>
<p>The pilot ran off on to the breakwater, hitting out as he passed at the
farmer’s horse, and making it rear. Men cleared a space round the
mooring-posts, and dragged up the gangways with frantic speed. Carts that had
hay in them, as if they were come to fetch cattle, began to move without having
anywhere to drive to. Everything was in motion. Labor-hirers with red noses and
cunning eyes, came hurrying down from the sailors’ tavern where they had
been keeping themselves warm.</p>
<p>Then as if a huge hand had been laid upon the movement, everything suddenly
stood still again, in strained effort to hear. A far-off, tiny echo of a steam
whistle whined somewhere a long way off. Men stole together into groups and
stood motionless, listening and sending angry glances at the restless carts.
Was it real, or was it a creation of the heart-felt wishes of so many?</p>
<p>Perhaps a warning to every one that at that moment the ship had gone to the
bottom? The sea always sends word of its evil doings; when the bread-winner is
taken his family hear a shutter creak, or three taps on the windows that look
on to the sea—there are so many ways.</p>
<p>But now it sounded again, and this time the sound come in little waves over the
water, the same vibrating, subdued whistle that long-tailed ducks make when
they rise; it seemed alive. The fog-horn answered it out in the fairway, and
the bell in at the mole-head; then the horn once more, and the steam-whistle in
the distance. So it went on, a guiding line of sound being spun between the
land and the indefinite gray out there, backward and forward. Here on terra
firma one could distinctly feel how out there they were groping their way by
the sound. The hoarse whistle slowly increased in volume, sounding now a little
to the south, now to the north, but growing steadily louder. Then other sounds
made themselves heard, the heavy scraping of iron against iron, the noise of
the screw when it was reversed or went on again.</p>
<p>The pilot-boat glided slowly out of the fog, keeping to the middle of the
fairway, and moving slowly inward hooting incessantly. It towed by the sound an
invisible world behind it, in which hundreds of voices murmured thickly amidst
shouting and clanging, and tramping of feet—a world that floated blindly
in space close by. Then a shadow began to form in the fog where no one had
expected it, and the little steamer made its appearance—looking enormous
in the first moment of surprise—in the middle of the harbor entrance.</p>
<p>At this the last remnants of suspense burst and scattered, and every one had to
do something or other to work off the oppression. They seized the heads of the
farmers’ horses and pushed them back, clapped their hands, attempted
jokes, or only laughed noisily while they stamped on the stone paving.</p>
<p>“Good voyage?” asked a score of voices at once.</p>
<p>“All well!” answered the captain cheerfully.</p>
<p>And now he, too, has got rid of his incubus, and rolls forth words of command;
the propeller churns up the water behind, hawsers fly through the air, and the
steam winch starts with a ringing metallic clang, while the vessel works
herself broadside in to the wharf.</p>
<p>Between the forecastle and the bridge, in under the upper deck and the after,
there is a swarm of people, a curiously stupid swarm, like sheep that get up on
to one another’s backs and look foolish. “What a cargo of
cattle!” cries the fat pilot up to the captain, tramping delightedly on
the breakwater with his wooden-soled boots. There are sheepskin caps, old
military caps, disreputable old rusty hats, and the women’s tidy black
handkerchiefs. The faces are as different as old, wrinkled pigskin and young,
ripening fruit; but want, and expectancy, and a certain animal greed are
visible in all of them. The unfamiliarity of the moment brings a touch of
stupidity into them, as they press forward, or climb up to get a view over
their neighbors’ heads and stare open-mouthed at the land where the wages
are said to be so high, and the brandy so uncommonly strong. They see the fat,
fur-clad farmers and the men come down to engage laborers.</p>
<p>They do not know what to do with themselves, and are always getting in the way;
and the sailors chase them with oaths from side to side of the vessel, or throw
hatches and packages without warning at their feet. “Look out, you
Swedish devil!” cries a sailor who has to open the iron doors. The Swede
backs in bewilderment, but his hand involuntarily flies to his pocket and
fingers nervously his big pocket-knife.</p>
<p>The gangway is down, and the two hundred and fifty passengers stream down
it—stone-masons, navvies, maid-servants, male and female day-laborers,
stablemen, herdsmen, here and there a solitary little cowherd, and tailors in
smart clothes, who keep far away from the rest. There are young men straighter
and better built than any that the island produces, and poor old men more worn
with toil and want than they ever become here. There are also faces among them
that bear an expression of malice, others sparkling with energy, and others
disfigured with great scars.</p>
<p>Most of them are in working-clothes and only possess what they stand in. Here
and there is a man with some tool upon his shoulder—a shovel or a
crowbar. Those that have any luggage, get it turned inside out by the
custom-house officers: woven goods are so cheap in Sweden. Now and then some
girl with an inclination to plumpness has to put up with the officers’
coarse witticisms. There, for instance, is Handsome Sara from Cimrishamn, whom
everybody knows. Every autumn she goes home, and comes again every spring with
a figure that at once makes her the butt of their wit; but Sara, who generally
has a quick temper and a ready tongue, to-day drops her eyes in modest
confusion: she has fourteen yards of cloth wrapped round her under her dress.</p>
<p>The farmers are wide awake now. Those who dare, leave their horses and go among
the crowd; the others choose their laborers with their eyes, and call them up.
Each one takes his man’s measure—width of chest, modest manner,
wretchedness; but they are afraid of the scarred and malicious faces, and leave
them to the bailiffs on the large farms. Offers are made and conditions fixed,
and every minute one or two Swedes climb up into the hay in the back of some
cart, and are driven off.</p>
<p class="p2">
A little on one side stood an elderly, bent little man with a sack upon his
back, holding a boy of eight or nine by the hand; beside them lay a green
chest. They eagerly watched the proceedings, and each time a cart drove off
with some of their countrymen, the boy pulled impatiently at the hand of the
old man, who answered by a reassuring word. The old man examined the farmers
one by one with an anxious air, moving his lips as he did so: he was thinking.
His red, lashless eyes kept watering with the prolonged staring, and he wiped
them with the mouth of the coarse dirty sack.</p>
<p>“Do you see that one there?” he suddenly asked the boy, pointing to
a fat little farmer with apple-cheeks. “I should think he’d be kind
to children. Shall we try him, laddie?”</p>
<p>The boy nodded gravely, and they made straight for the farmer. But when he had
heard that they were to go together, he would not take them; the boy was far
too little to earn his keep. And it was the same thing every time.</p>
<p>It was Lasse Karlsson from Tommelilla in the Ystad district, and his son Pelle.</p>
<p>It was not altogether strange to Lasse, for he had been on the island once
before, about ten years ago; but he had been younger then, in full vigor it
might be said, and had no little boy by the hand, from whom he would not be
separated for all the world; that was the difference. It was the year that the
cow had been drowned in the marl-pit, and Bengta was preparing for her
confinement. Things looked bad, but Lasse staked his all on one cast, and used
the couple of krones he got for the hide of the cow to go to Bornholm. When he
came back in the autumn, there were three mouths to fill; but then he had a
hundred krones to meet the winter with.</p>
<p>At that time Lasse had been equal to the situation, and he would still
straighten his bowed shoulders whenever he thought of that exploit. Afterward,
whenever there were short commons, he would talk of selling the whole affair
and going to Bornholm for good. But Bengta’s health failed after her late
child-bearing, and nothing came of it, until she died after eight years of
suffering, this very spring. Then Lasse sold their bit of furniture, and made
nearly a hundred krones on it; it went in paying the expenses of the long
illness, and the house and land belonged to the landlord. A green chest, that
had been part of Bengta’s wedding outfit, was the only thing he kept. In
it he packed their belongings and a few little things of Bengta’s, and
sent it on in advance to the port with a horse-dealer who was driving there.
Some of the rubbish for which no one would bid he stuffed into a sack, and with
it on his back and the boy’s hand clasped in his, he set out to walk to
Ystad, where the steamer for Rönne lay. The few coins he had would just pay
their passage.</p>
<p>He had been so sure of himself on the way, and had talked in loud tones to
Pelle about the country where the wages were so incomprehensibly high, and
where in some places you got meat or cheese to eat with your bread, and always
beer, so that the water-cart in the autumn did not come round for the laborers,
but only for the cattle. And—why, if you liked you could drink gin like
water, it was so cheap; but it was so strong that it knocked you down at the
third pull. They made it from real grain, and not from diseased potatoes; and
they drank it at every meal. And laddie would never feel cold there, for they
wore wool next their skin, and not this poor linen that the wind blew right
through; and a laborer who kept himself could easily make his two krones a day.
That was something different from their master’s miserable eighty öres
and finding themselves in everything.</p>
<p>Pelle had heard the same thing often before—from his father, from Ole and
Anders, from Karna and a hundred others who had been there. In the winter, when
the air was thick with frost and snow and the needs of the poor, there was
nothing else talked about in the little villages at home; and in the minds of
those who had not been on the island themselves, but had only heard the tales
about it, the ideas produced were as fantastic as the frost-tracery upon the
window-panes. Pelle was perfectly well aware that even the poorest boys there
always wore their best clothes, and ate bread-and-dripping with sugar on it as
often as they liked. There money lay like dirt by the roadside, and the
Bornholmers did not even take the trouble to stoop and pick it up; but Pelle
meant to pick it up, so that Father Lasse would have to empty the odds and ends
out of the sack and clear out the locked compartment in the green chest to make
room for it; and even that would be hardly enough. If only they could begin! He
shook his father’s hand impatiently.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes,” said Lasse, almost in tears. “You mustn’t
be impatient.” He looked about him irresolutely. Here he was in the midst
of all this splendor, and could not even find a humble situation for himself
and the boy. He could not understand it. Had the whole world changed since his
time? He trembled to his very finger-tips when the last cart drove off. For a
few minutes he stood staring helplessly after it, and then he and the boy
together carried the green chest up to a wall, and trudged hand in hand up
toward the town.</p>
<p>Lasse’s lips moved as he walked; he was thinking. In an ordinary way he
thought best when he talked out loud to himself, but to-day all his faculties
were alert, and it was enough only to move his lips.</p>
<p>As he trudged along, his mental excuses became audible. “Confound
it!” he exclaimed, as he jerked the sack higher up his back. “It
doesn’t do to take the first thing that comes. Lasse’s responsible
for two, and he knows what he wants—so there! It isn’t the first
time he’s been abroad! And the best always comes last, you know,
laddie.”</p>
<p>Pelle was not paying much attention. He was already consoled, and his
father’s words about the best being in store for them, were to him only a
feeble expression for a great truth, namely, that the whole world would become
theirs, with all that it contained in the way of wonders. He was already
engaged in taking possession of it, open-mouthed.</p>
<p>He looked as if he would like to swallow the harbor with all its ships and
boats, and the great stacks of timber, where it looked as if there would be
holes. This would be a fine place to play in, but there were no boys! He
wondered whether the boys were like those at home; he had seen none yet.
Perhaps they had quite a different way of fighting, but he would manage all
right if only they would come one at a time. There was a big ship right up on
land, and they were skinning it. So ships have ribs, just like cows!</p>
<p>At the wooden shed in the middle of the harbor square, Lasse put down the sack,
and giving the boy a piece of bread and telling him to stay and mind the sack,
he went farther up and disappeared. Pelle was very hungry, and holding the
bread with both hands he munched at it greedily.</p>
<p>When he had picked the last crumbs off his jacket, he set himself to examine
his surroundings. That black stuff in that big pot was tar. He knew it quite
well, but had never seen so much at once. My word! If you fell into that while
it was boiling, it would be worse even than the brimstone pit in hell. And
there lay some enormous fish-hooks, just like those that were hanging on thick
iron chains from the ships’ nostrils. He wondered whether there still
lived giants who could fish with such hooks. Strong John couldn’t manage
them!</p>
<p>He satisfied himself with his own eyes that the stacks of boards were really
hollow, and that he could easily get down to the bottom of them, if only he had
not had the sack to drag about. His father had said he was to mind the sack,
and he never let it out of his hands for a moment; as it was too heavy to
carry, he had to drag it after him from place to place.</p>
<p>He discovered a little ship, only just big enough for a man to lie down in, and
full of holes bored in the bottom and sides. He investigated the
ship-builders’ big grind-stone, which was nearly as tall as a man. There
were bent planks lying there, with nails in them as big as the parish
constable’s new tether-peg at home. And the thing that ship was tethered
to—wasn’t it a real cannon that they had planted?</p>
<p>Pelle saw everything, and examined every single object in the appropriate
manner, now only spitting appraisingly upon it, now kicking it or scratching it
with his penknife. If he came across some strange wonder or other, that he
could not get into his little brain in any other way, he set himself astride on
it.</p>
<p>This was a new world altogether, and Pelle was engaged in making it his own.
Not a shred of it would he leave. If he had had his playfellows from Tommelilla
here, he would have explained it all to them. My word, how they would stare!
But when he went home to Sweden again, he would tell them about it, and then he
hoped they would call him a liar.</p>
<p>He was sitting astride an enormous mast that lay along the timber- yard upon
some oak trestles. He kicked his feet together under the mast, as he had heard
of knights doing in olden days under their horses, and imagined himself seizing
hold of a ring and lifting himself, horse and all. He sat on horseback in the
midst of his newly discovered world, glowing with the pride of conquest, struck
the horse’s loins with the flat of his hand, and dug his heels into its
sides, while he shouted a song at the top of his voice. He had been obliged to
let go the sack to get up.</p>
<p class="poem">
“Far away in Smaaland the little imps were dancing<br/>
With ready-loaded pistol and rifle-barrelled gun;<br/>
All the little devils they played upon the fiddle,<br/>
But for the grand piano Old Harry was the one.”</p>
<p>In the middle of his noisy joy, he looked up, and immediately burst into a roar
of terror and dropped down on to the wood-shavings. On the top of the shed at
the place where his father had left him stood a black man and two black,
open-mouthed hell-hounds; the man leaned half out over the ridge of the roof in
a menacing attitude. It was an old figure-head, but Pelle thought it was Old
Harry himself, come to punish him for his bold song, and he set off at a run up
the hill. A little way up he remembered the sack and stopped. He didn’t
care about the sack; and he wouldn’t get a thrashing if he did leave it
behind, for Father Lasse never beat him. And that horrid devil would eat him up
at the very least, if he ventured down there again; he could distinctly see how
red the nostrils shone, both the devil’s and the dogs’.</p>
<p>But Pelle still hesitated. His father was so careful of that sack, that he
would be sure to be sorry if he lost it—he might even cry as he did when
he lost Mother Bengta. For perhaps the first time, the boy was being subjected
to one of life’s serious tests, and stood—as so many had stood
before him—with the choice between sacrificing himself and sacrificing
others. His love for his father, boyish pride, the sense of duty that is the
social dower of the poor—the one thing with the other—determined
his choice. He stood the test, but not bravely; he howled loudly the whole
time, while, with his eyes fixed immovably upon the Evil One and his
hell-hounds, he crept back for the sack and then dragged it after him at a
quick run up the street.</p>
<p>No one is perhaps a hero until the danger is over. But even then Pelle had no
opportunity of shuddering at his own courage; for no sooner was he out of the
reach of the black man, than his terror took a new form. What had become of his
father? He had said he would be back again directly! Supposing he never came
back at all! Perhaps he had gone away so as to get rid of his little boy, who
was only a trouble and made it difficult for him to get a situation.</p>
<p>Pelle felt despairingly convinced that it must be so, as, crying, he went off
with the sack. The same thing had happened to other children with whom he was
well acquainted; but they came to the pancake cottage and were quite happy, and
Pelle himself would be sure to—perhaps find the king and be taken in
there and have the little princes for his playmates, and his own little palace
to live in. But Father Lasse shouldn’t have a thing, for now Pelle was
angry and vindictive, although he was crying just as unrestrainedly. He would
let him stand and knock at the door and beg to come in for three days, and only
when he began to cry—no, he would have to let him in at once, for to see
Father Lasse cry hurt him more than anything else in the world. But he
shouldn’t have a single one of the nails Pelle had filled his pockets
with down in the timber-yard; and when the king’s wife brought them
coffee in the morning before they were up——</p>
<p>But here both his tears and his happy imaginings ceased, for out of a tavern at
the top of the street came Father Lasse’s own living self. He looked in
excellent spirits and held a bottle in his hand.</p>
<p>“Danish brandy, laddie!” he cried, waving the bottle. “Hats
off to the Danish brandy! But what have you been crying for? Oh, you were
afraid? And why were you afraid? Isn’t your father’s name
Lasse—Lasse Karlsson from Kungstorp? And he’s not one to quarrel
with; he hits hard, he does, when he’s provoked. To come and frighten
good little boys! They’d better look out! Even if the whole wide world
were full of naming devils, Lasse’s here and you needn’t be
afraid!”</p>
<p>During all this fierce talk he was tenderly wiping the boy’s tear-
stained cheeks and nose with his rough hand, and taking the sack upon his back
again. There was something touchingly feeble about his stooping figure, as,
boasting and comforting, he trudged down again to the harbor holding the boy by
the hand. He tottered along in his big waterproof boots, the tabs of which
stuck out at the side and bore an astonishing resemblance to Pelle’s
ears; out of the gaping pockets of his old winter coat protruded on one side
his red pocket-handkerchief, on the other the bottle. He had become a little
looser in his knee-joints now, and the sack threatened momentarily to get the
upper hand of him, pushing him forward and forcing him to go at a trot down the
hill. He looked decrepit, and perhaps his boastful words helped to produce this
effect; but his eyes beamed confidently, and he smiled down at the boy, who ran
along beside him.</p>
<p>They drew near to the shed, and Pelle turned cold with fear, for the black man
was still standing there. He went round to the other side of his father, and
tried to pull him out in a wide curve over the harbor square. “There he
is again,” he whimpered.</p>
<p>“So that’s what was after you, is it?” said Lasse, laughing
heartily; “and he’s made of wood, too! Well, you really are the
bravest laddie I ever knew! I should almost think you might be sent out to
fight a trussed chicken, if you had a stick in your hand!” Lasse went on
laughing, and shook the boy goodnaturedly. But Pelle was ready to sink into the
ground with shame.</p>
<p>Down by the custom-house they met a bailiff who had come too late for the
steamer and had engaged no laborers. He stopped his cart and asked Lasse if he
was looking for a place.</p>
<p>“Yes, we both want one,” answered Lasse, briskly. “We want to
be at the same farm—as the fox said to the goose.”</p>
<p>The bailiff was a big, strong man, and Pelle shuddered in admiration of his
father who could dare to speak to him so boldly.</p>
<p>But the great man laughed good-humoredly. “Then I suppose he’s to
be foreman?” he said, flicking at Pelle with his whip.</p>
<p>“Yes, he certainly will be some day,” said Lasse, with conviction.</p>
<p>“He’ll probably eat a few bushels of salt first. Well, I’m in
want of a herdsman, and will give you a hundred krones for a
year—although it’ll be confounded hard for you to earn them from
what I can see. There’ll always be a crust of bread for the boy, but of
course he’ll have to do what little he can. You’re his grandfather,
I suppose?”</p>
<p>“I’m his father—in the sight of God and man,” answered
Lasse, proudly.</p>
<p>“Oh, indeed! Then you must still be fit for something, if you’ve
come by him honestly. But climb up, if you know what’s for your own good,
for I haven’t time to stand here. You won’t get such an offer every
day.”</p>
<p>Pelle thought a hundred krones was a fearful amount of money; Lasse, on the
contrary, as the older and more sensible, had a feeling that it was far too
little. But, though he was not aware of it yet, the experiences of the morning
had considerably dimmed the brightness of his outlook on life. On the other
hand, the dram had made him reckless and generously-minded.</p>
<p>“All right then,” he said with a wave of the hand. “But the
master must understand that we won’t have salt herring and porridge three
times a day. We must have a proper bedroom too—and be free on
Sundays.” He lifted the sack and the boy up into the cart, and then
climbed up himself.</p>
<p>The bailiff laughed. “I see you’ve been here before, old man. But I
think we shall be able to manage all that. You shall have roast pork stuffed
with raisins and rhubarb jelly with pepper on it, just as often as you like to
open your mouth.”</p>
<p>They drove down to the quay for the chest, and then out toward the country
again. Lasse, who recognized one thing and another, explained it all in full to
the boy, taking a pull at the bottle between whiles; but the bailiff must not
see this. Pelle was cold and burrowed into the straw, where he crept close up
to his father.</p>
<p>“You take a mouthful,” whispered Lasse, passing the bottle to him
cautiously. “But take care that he doesn’t see, for he’s a
sly one. He’s a Jute.”</p>
<p>Pelle would not have a dram. “What’s a Jute?” he asked in a
whisper.</p>
<p>“A Jute? Good gracious me, laddie, don’t you know that? It was the
Jutes that crucified Christ. That’s why they have to wander all over the
world now, and sell flannel and needles, and such-like; and they always cheat
wherever they go. Don’t you remember the one that cheated Mother Bengta
of her beautiful hair? Ah, no, that was before your time. That was a Jute too.
He came one day when I wasn’t at home, and unpacked all his fine
wares—combs and pins with blue glass heads, and the finest
head-kerchiefs. Women can’t resist such trash; they’re like what we
others are when some one holds a brandy-bottle to our nose. Mother Bengta had
no money, but that sly devil said he would give her the finest handkerchief if
she would let him cut off just the end of her plait. And then he went and cut
it off close up to her head. My goodness, but she was like flint and steel when
she was angry! She chased him out of the house with a rake. But he took the
plait with him, and the handkerchief was rubbish, as might have been expected.
For the Jutes are cunning devils, who crucified——” Lasse
began at the beginning again.</p>
<p>Pelle did not pay much attention to his father’s soft murmuring. It was
something about Mother Bengta, but she was dead now and lay in the black earth;
she no longer buttoned his under-vest down the back, or warmed his hands when
they were cold. So they put raisins into roast pork in this country, did they?
Money must be as common as dirt! There was none lying about in the road, and
the houses and farms were not so very fine either. But the strangest thing was
that the earth here was of the same color as that at home, although it was a
foreign country. He had seen a map in Tommelilla, in which each country had a
different color. So that was a lie!</p>
<p>Lasse had long since talked himself out, and slept with his head upon the
boy’s back. He had forgotten to hide the bottle.</p>
<p>Pelle was just going to push it down into the straw when the bailiff —who
as a matter of fact was not a Jute, but a Zeelander—happened to turn
round and caught sight of it. He told the boy to throw it into the ditch.</p>
<p>By midday they reached their destination. Lasse awoke as they drove on to the
stone paving of the large yard, and groped mechanically in the straw. But
suddenly he recollected where he was, and was sober in an instant. So this was
their new home, the only place they had to stay in and expect anything of on
this earth! And as he looked out over the big yard, where the dinner-bell was
just sounding and calling servants and day-laborers out of all the doors, all
his self-confidence vanished. A despairing feeling of helplessness overwhelmed
him, and made his face tremble with impotent concern for his son.</p>
<p>His hands shook as he clambered down from the wagon; he stood irresolute and at
the mercy of all the inquiring glances from the steps down to the basement of
the big house. They were talking about him and the boy, and laughing already.
In his confusion he determined to make as favorable a first impression as
possible, and began to take off his cap to each one separately; and the boy
stood beside him and did the same. They were rather like the clowns at a fair,
and the men round the basement steps laughed aloud and bowed in imitation, and
then began to call to them; but the bailiff came out again to the cart, and
they quickly disappeared down the steps. From the house itself there came a
far-off, monotonous sound that never left off, and insensibly added to their
feeling of depression.</p>
<p>“Don’t stand there playing the fool!” said the bailiff
sharply. “Be off down to the others and get something to eat!
You’ll have plenty of time to show off your monkey-tricks to them
afterwards.”</p>
<p>At these encouraging words, the old man took the boy’s hand and went
across to the basement steps with despair in his heart, mourning inwardly for
Tommelilla and Kungstorp. Pelle clung close to him in fear. The unknown had
suddenly become an evil monster in the imagination of both of them.</p>
<p>Down in the basement passage the strange, persistent sound was louder, and they
both knew that it was that of a woman weeping.</p>
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