<h2>IV</h2>
<p>At four, Lasse and Pelle were dressed and were opening the cow-stable doors on
the field side. The earth was rolling off its white covering of night mist, and
the morning rose prophetically. Lasse stood still in the doorway, yawning, and
making up his mind about the weather for the day; but Pelle let the soft tones
of the wind and the song of the lark—all that was stirring—beat
upon his little heart. With open mouth and doubtful eyes he gazed into the
incomprehensible as represented by each new day with all its unimagined
possibilities. “To-day you must take your coat with you, for we shall
have rain about midday,” Lasse would then say; and Pelle peered into the
sky to find out where his father got his knowledge from. For it generally came
true.</p>
<p>They then set about cleaning out the dung in the cow-stable, Pelle scraping the
floor under the cows and sweeping it up, Lasse filling the wheelbarrow and
wheeling it out. At half-past five they ate their morning meal of salt herring
and porridge.</p>
<p>After that Pelle set out with the young cattle, his dinner basket on his arm,
and his whip wound several times round his neck. His father had made him a
short, thick stick with rings on it, that he could rattle admonishingly and
throw at the animals; but Pelle preferred the whip, because he was not yet
strong enough to use it.</p>
<p>He was little, and at first he had some difficulty in making an impression upon
the great forces over which he was placed. He could not get his voice to sound
sufficiently terrifying, and on the way out from the farm he had hard work,
especially up near the farm, where the corn stood high on both sides of the
field-road. The animals were hungry in the morning, and the big bullocks did
not trouble to move when once they had their noses buried in the corn and he
stood belaboring them with the short handle of the cattle- whip. The
twelve-foot lash, which, in a practised hand, left little triangular marks in
the animal’s hide, he could not manage at all; and if he kicked the
bullock on the head with his wooden shoe, it only closed its eyes
good-naturedly, and browsed on sedately with its back to him. Then he would
break into a despairing roar, or into little fits of rage in which he attacked
the animal blindly and tried to get at its eyes; but it was all equally
useless. He could always make the calves move by twisting their tails, but the
bullocks’ tails were too strong.</p>
<p>He did not cry, however, for long at a time over the failure of his resources.
One evening he got his father to put a spike into the toe of one of his wooden
shoes, and after that his kick was respected. Partly by himself, and partly
through Rud, he also learned where to find the places on the animals where it
hurt most. The cow-calves and the two bull-calves all had their particular
tender spot, and a well-directed blow upon a horn could make even the large
bullocks bellow with pain.</p>
<p>The driving out was hard work, but the herding itself was easy. When once the
cattle were quietly grazing, he felt like a general, and made his voice sound
out incessantly over the meadow, while his little body swelled with pride and a
sense of power.</p>
<p>Being away from his father was a trouble to him. He did not go home to dinner,
and often in the middle of his play, despair would come over him and he would
imagine that something had happened to his father, that the great bull had
tossed him or something else; and he would leave everything, and start running
homeward crying, but would remember in time the bailiff’s whip, and
trudge back again. He found a remedy for his longing by stationing himself so
that he could keep a lookout on the fields up there, and see his father when he
went out to move the dairy-cows.</p>
<p>He taught himself to whittle boats and little rakes and hoes and decorate
sticks with patterns cut upon the bark. He was clever with his knife and made
diligent use of it. He would also stand for hours on the top of a
monolith—he thought it was a gate-post—and try to crack his
cattle-whip like a pistol-shot. He had to climb to a height to get the lash off
the ground at all.</p>
<p>When the animals lay down in the middle of the morning, he was often tired too,
and then he would seat himself upon the head of one of the big bullocks, and
hold on to the points of its horns; and while the animal lay chewing with a
gentle vibration like a machine, he sat upon its head and shouted at the top of
his voice songs about blighted affections and horrible massacres.</p>
<p>Toward midday Rud came running up, as hungry as a hunter. His mother sent him
out of the house when the hour for a meal drew near. Pelle shared the contents
of his basket with him, but required him to bring the animals together a
certain number of times for every portion of food. The two boys could not exist
apart for a whole day together. They tumbled about in the field like two
puppies, fought and made it up again twenty times a day, swore the most fearful
threats of vengeance that should come in the shape of this or that grown-up
person, and the next moment had their arms round one another’s necks.</p>
<p>About half-a-mile of sand-dunes separated the Stone Farm fields from the sea.
Within this belt of sand the land was stony and afforded poor grazing; but on
both sides of the brook a strip of green meadow-land ran down among the dunes,
which were covered with dwarf firs and grass-wrack to bind the sand. The best
grazing was on this meadow-land, but it was hard work minding both sides of it,
as the brook ran between; and it had been impressed upon the boy with severe
threats, that no animal must set its foot upon the dune-land, as the smallest
opening might cause a sand-drift. Pelle took the matter quite literally, and
all that summer imagined something like an explosion that would make everything
fly into the air the instant an animal trod upon it; and this possibility hung
like a fate at the back of everything when he herded down there. When Rud came
and they wanted to play, he drove the cattle up on to the poor pasture where
there was plenty of room for them.</p>
<p>When the sun shone the boys ran about naked. They dared not venture down to the
sea for fear of the bailiff, who, they were sure, always stood up in the attic
of the big house, and watched Pelle through his telescope; but they bathed in
the brook—in and out of the water continually for hours together.</p>
<p>After heavy rain it became swollen, and was then quite milky from the china
clay that it washed away from the banks farther up. The boys thought it was
milk from an enormous farm far up in the island. At high water the sea ran up
and filled the brook with decaying seaweed that colored the water crimson; and
this was the blood of all the people drowned out in the sea.</p>
<p>Between their bathes they lay under the dunes and let the sun dry them. They
made a minute examination of their bodies, and discussed the use and intention
of the various parts. Upon this head Rud’s knowledge was superior, and he
took the part of instructor. They often quarrelled as to which of them was the
best equipped in one way or another—in other words, had the largest.
Pelle, for instance, envied Rud his disproportionately large head.</p>
<p>Pelle was a well-built little fellow, and had put on flesh since he had come to
Stone Farm. His glossy skin was stretched smoothly over his body, and was of a
warm, sunburnt color. Rud had a thin neck in proportion to his head, and his
forehead was angular and covered with scars, the results of innumerable falls.
He had not full command of all his limbs, and was always knocking and bruising
himself; there were blue, livid patches all over him that were slow to
disappear, for he had flesh that did not heal easily. But he was not so open in
his envy as Pelle. He asserted himself by boasting of his defects until he made
them out to be sheer achievements; so that Pelle ended by envying him
everything from the bottom of his heart.</p>
<p>Rud had not Pelle’s quick perception of things, but he had more instinct,
and on certain points possessed quite a talent in anticipating what Pelle only
learned by experience. He was already avaricious to a certain extent, and
suspicious without connecting any definite thoughts with it. He ate the
lion’s share of the food, and had a variety of ways of getting out of
doing the work.</p>
<p>Behind their play there lay, clothed in the most childish forms, a struggle for
the supremacy, and for the present Pelle was the one who came off second best.
In an emergency, Rud always knew how to appeal to his good qualities and turn
them to his own advantage.</p>
<p>And through all this they were the best friends in the world, and were quite
inseparable. Pelle was always looking toward “the Sow’s”
cottage when he was alone, and Rud ran off from home as soon as he saw his
opportunity.</p>
<p class="p2">
It had rained hard in the course of the morning, in spite of Lasse, and Pelle
was wet through. Now the blue-black cloud was drawing away over the sea, and
the boats lay in the middle of it with all their red sails set, and yet
motionless. The sunlight flashed and glittered on wet surfaces, making
everything look bright; and Pelle hung his clothes on a dwarf fir to dry.</p>
<p>He was cold, and crept close up to Peter, the biggest of the bullocks, as he
lay chewing the cud. The animal was steaming, but Pelle could not bring warmth
into his extremities, where the cold had taken hold. His teeth chattered, too,
and he was shivering.</p>
<p>And even now there was one of the cows that would not let him have any peace.
Every time he had snuggled right in under the bullock and was beginning to get
a little warmer, the cow strayed away over the northern boundary. There was
nothing but sand there, but when it was a calf there had been a patch of mixed
crops, and it still remembered that.</p>
<p>It was one of two cows that had been turned out of the dairy-herd on account of
their dryness. They were ill-tempered creatures, always discontented and doing
some mischief or other; and Pelle detested them heartily. They were two regular
termagants, upon which even thrashing made no impression. The one was a savage
beast, that would suddenly begin stamping and bellowing like a mad bull in the
middle of grazing, and, if Pelle went toward it, wanted to toss him; and when
it saw its opportunity, it would eat up the cloth in which Pelle’s dinner
was wrapped. The other was old and had crumpled horns that pointed in toward
its eyes, one of which had a white pupil.</p>
<p>It was the noisy one that was now at its tricks. Every other minute Pelle had
to get up and shout: “Hi, Blakka, you villainous beast! Just you come
back!” He was hoarse with anger, and at last his patience gave way, and
he caught up a big stick and began to chase the cow. As soon as it saw his
intention, it set off at a run up toward the farm, and Pelle had to make a wide
circle to turn it down to the herd again. Then it ran at full gallop in and out
among the other animals, the herd became confused and ran hither and thither,
and Pelle had to relinquish his pursuit for a time while he gathered them
together. But then he began again at once. He was boiling with rage, and leaped
about like an indiarubber ball, his naked body flashing in loops and curves
upon the green grass. He was only a few yards from the cow, but the distance
remained the same; he could not catch her up to-day.</p>
<p>He stopped up by the rye-field, and the cow stood still almost at the same
moment. It snapped at a few ears, and moved its head slowly to choose its
direction. In a couple of leaps Pelle was up to it and had hold of its tail. He
hit it over the nose with his cudgel, it turned quickly away from the rye, and
set off at a flying pace down toward the others, while blows rained down upon
its bony prominences. Every stroke echoed back from the dunes like blows upon
the trunk of a tree, and made Pelle swell with pride. The cow tried to shake
Pelle off as it ran, but he was not to be got rid of; it crossed the brook in
long bounds, backward and forward, with Pelle almost floating through the air;
but the blows continued to rain down upon it. Then it grew tired and began to
slacken its pace; and at last it came to a standstill, coughed, and resigned
itself to the thrashing.</p>
<p>Pelle threw himself flat upon his face, and panted. Ha, ha! <i>That</i> had
made him warm! Now that beast should—He rolled suddenly over on to his
side with a start. The bailiff! But it was a strange man with a beard who stood
over him, looking at him with serious eyes. The stranger went on gazing at him
for a long time without saying anything, and Pelle grew more and more uneasy
under his scrutiny; he had the sun right in his eyes too, if he tried to return
the man’s gaze, and the cow still stood there coughing.</p>
<p>“What do you think the bailiff will say?” asked the man at last,
quietly.</p>
<p>“I don’t think he’s seen it,” whispered Pelle, looking
timidly round.</p>
<p>“But God has seen it, for He sees everything. And He has led me here to
stop the evil in you while there’s still time. Wouldn’t you like to
be God’s child?” The man sat down beside him and took his hand.</p>
<p>Pelle sat tugging at the grass and wishing he had had his clothes on.</p>
<p>“And you must never forget that God sees everything you do; even in the
darkest night He sees. We are always walking in God’s sight. But come
now, it’s unseemly to run about naked!” And the man took him by the
hand and led him to his clothes, and then, going across to the north side, he
gathered the herd together while Pelle dressed himself. The wicked cow was over
there again already, and had drawn a few of the others after it. Pelle watched
the man in surprise; he drove the animals back quite quietly, neither using
stones nor shouting. Before he got back, Blakka had once more crossed the
boundary; but he turned and brought her back again just as gently as before.</p>
<p>“That’s not an easy cow to manage,” he said kindly, when he
returned; “but you’ve got young legs. Shan’t we agree to burn
that?” he asked, picking up the thick cudgel, “and do what we have
to do with just our hands? God will always help you when you’re in
difficulties. And if you want to be a true child of God, you must tell the
bailiff this evening what you did—and take your punishment.” He
placed his hand upon Pelle’s head, and looked at him with that
unendurable gaze; and then he left him, taking the stick with him.</p>
<p>For a long time Pelle followed him with his eyes. So that was what a man looked
like, who was sent by God to warn you! Now he knew, and it would be some time
before he chased a cow like that again. But go to the bailiff, and tell of
himself, and get the whip-lash on his bare legs? Not if he knew it! Rather than
that, God would have to be angry—if it was really true that He could see
everything? It couldn’t be worse than the bailiff, anyhow.</p>
<p>All that morning he was very quiet. He felt the man’s eyes upon him in
everything he did, and it robbed him of his confidence. He silently tested
things, and saw everything in a new light; it was best not to make a noise, if
you were always walking in the sight of God. He did not go on cracking his
cattle-whip, but meditated a little on whether he should burn that too.</p>
<p>But a little before midday Rud appeared, and the whole incident was forgotten.
Rud was smoking a bit of cane that he had cut off the piece his mother used for
cleaning the stove-pipes, and Pelle bartered some of his dinner for a few pulls
at it. First they seated themselves astride the bullock Cupid, which was lying
chewing the cud. It went on calmly chewing with closed eyes, until Rud put the
glowing cane to the root of its tail, when it rose hastily, both boys rolling
over its head. They laughed and boasted to one another of the somersault they
had turned, as they went up on to the high ground to look for blackberries.
Thence they went to some birds’ nests in the small firs, and last of all
they set about their best game—digging up mice-nests.</p>
<p>Pelle knew every mouse-hole in the meadow, and they lay down and examined them
carefully. “Here’s one that has mice in it,” said Rud.
“Look, here’s their dunghill!”</p>
<p>“Yes, that smells of mouse,” said Pelle, putting his nose to the
hole. “And the blades of grass turn outward, so the old ones must be
out.”</p>
<p>With Pelle’s knife they cut away the turf, and set to work eagerly to dig
with two pieces of pot. The soil flew about their heads as they talked and
laughed.</p>
<p>“My word, how fast we’re getting on!”</p>
<p>“Yes; Ström couldn’t work as fast!” Ström was a famous worker
who got twenty-five öres a day more than other autumn farm-hands, and his
example was used as an incentive to coax work out of the laborers.</p>
<p>“We shall soon get right into the inside of the earth.”</p>
<p>“Well, but it’s burning hot in there.”</p>
<p>“Oh, nonsense: is it?” Pelle paused doubtfully in his digging.</p>
<p>“Yes, the schoolmaster says so.”</p>
<p>The boys hesitated and put their hands down into the hole. Yes, it was warm at
the bottom—so warm that Pelle found it necessary to pull out his hand and
say: “Oh, my word!” They considered a little, and then went on
scraping out the hole as carefully as if their lives depended on it. In a
little while straw appeared in the passage, and in a moment the internal heat
of the earth was forgotten. In less than a minute they had uncovered the nest,
and laid the little pink, new-born mice out on the grass. They looked like
half-hatched birds.</p>
<p>“They <i>are</i> ugly,” said Pelle, who did not quite like taking
hold of them, but was ashamed not to do so. “They’re much nastier
to touch than toads. I believe they’re poisonous.”</p>
<p>Rud lay pinching them between his fingers.</p>
<p>“Poisonous! Don’t be silly! Why, they haven’t any teeth!
There are no bones in them at all; I’m sure you could eat them quite
well.”</p>
<p>“Pah! Beastly!” Pelle spat on the ground.</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t be at all afraid of biting one; would you?” Rud
lifted a little mouse up toward his mouth.</p>
<p>“Afraid? Of course I’m not afraid—but—” Pelle
hesitated.</p>
<p>“No, you’re afraid, because you’re a blue-bag!”</p>
<p>Now this nickname really only applied to boys who were afraid of water, but
Pelle quickly seized one of the little mice, and held it up to his mouth, at
exactly the same distance from his lips that Rud was from his. “You can
see for yourself!” he cried, in an offended tone.</p>
<p>Rud went on talking, with many gestures.</p>
<p>“You’re afraid,” he said, “and it’s because
you’re Swedish. But when you’re afraid, you should just shut your
eyes—so—and open your mouth. Then you pretend to put the mouse
right into your mouth, and then—” Rud had his mouth wide open, and
held his hand close to his mouth; Pelle was under his influence, and imitated
his movements—“and then—” Pelle received a blow that
sent the little mouse halfway down his throat. He retched and spat; and then
his hands fumbled in the grass and got hold of a stone. But by the time he was
on his feet and was going to throw it, Rud was far away up the fields. “I
must go home now!” he shouted innocently. “There’s something
I’ve got to help mother with.”</p>
<p>Pelle did not love solitude, and the prospect of a blockade determined him at
once for negotiations. He dropped the stone to show his serious wish for a
reconciliation, and had to swear solemnly that he would not bear malice. Then
at last Rud came back, tittering.</p>
<p>“I was going to show you something funny with the mouse,” he said
by way of diversion; “but you held on to it like an idiot.” He did
not venture to come quite close up to Pelle, but stood watching his movements.</p>
<p>Pelle was acquainted with the little white lie when the danger of a thrashing
was imminent, but the lie as an attack was still unknown to him. If Rud, now
that the whole thing was over, said that he only wanted to have shown him
something funny, it must be true. But then why was he mistrustful? Pelle tried,
as he had so often done before, to bend his little brain round the possible
tricks of his playmate, but failed.</p>
<p>“You may just as well come up close,” he said stoutly. “For
if I wanted to, I could easily catch you up.”</p>
<p>Rud came. “Now we’ll catch big mice.” he said.
“That’s better fun.”</p>
<p>They emptied Pelle’s milk-bottle, and hunted up a mouse’s nest that
appeared to have only two exits, one up in the meadow, the other halfway down
the bank of the stream. Here they pushed in the mouth of the bottle, and
widened the hole in the meadow into a funnel; and they took it in turns to keep
an eye on the bottle, and to carry water up to the other hole in their caps. It
was not long before a mouse popped out into the bottle, which they then corked.</p>
<p>What should they do with it? Pelle proposed that they should tame it and train
it to draw their little agricultural implements; but Rud, as usual, got his
way—it was to go out sailing.</p>
<p>Where the stream turned, and had hollowed out its bed into a hole as big as a
cauldron, they made an inclined plane and let the bottle slide down into the
water head foremost, like a ship being launched. They could follow it as it
curved under the water until it came up slantingly, and stood bobbing up and
down on the water like a buoy, with its neck up. The mouse made the funniest
leaps up toward the cork to get out; and the boys jumped up and down on the
grass with delight.</p>
<p>“It knows the way it got in quite well!” They imitated its
unsuccessful leaps, lay down again and rolled about in exuberant mirth. At
last, however, the joke became stale.</p>
<p>“Let’s take out the cork!” suggested Rud.</p>
<p>“Yes—oh, yes!” Pelle waded quickly in, and was going to set
the mouse at liberty.</p>
<p>“Wait a minute, you donkey!” Rud snatched the bottle from him, and
holding his hand over the mouth, put it back, into the water. “Now
we’ll see some fun!” he cried, hastening up the bank.</p>
<p>It was a little while before the mouse discovered that the way was open, but
then it leaped. The leap was unsuccessful, and made the bottle rock, so that
the second leap was slanting and rebounded sideways. But then followed with
lightning rapidity a number of leaps—a perfect bombardment; and suddenly
the mouse flew right out of the bottle, head foremost into the water.</p>
<p>“That was a leap and a half!” cried Pelle, jumping straight up and
down in the grass, with his arms at his sides. “It could just squeeze its
body through, just exactly!” And he jumped again, squeezing himself
together.</p>
<p>The mouse swam to land, but Rud was there, and pushed it out again with his
foot. “It swam well,” he said, laughing. It made for the opposite
bank. “Look out for the fellow!” Rud roared, and Pelle sprang
forward and turned it away from the shore with a good kick. It swam helplessly
backward and forward in the middle of the pool, seeing one of the two dancing
figures every time it approached a bank, and turning and turning endlessly. It
sank deeper and deeper, its fur becoming wet and dragging it down, until at
last it swam right under water. Suddenly it stretched out its body
convulsively, and sank to the bottom, with all four legs outspread like a wide
embrace.</p>
<p>Pelle had all at once comprehended the perplexity and helplessness
—perhaps was familiar with it. At the animal’s final struggle, he
burst into tears with a little scream, and ran, crying loudly, up the meadow
toward the fir-plantation. In a little while he came back again. “I
really thought Cupid had run away,” he said repeatedly, and carefully
avoided looking Rud in the face. Quietly he waded into the water, and fished up
the dead mouse with his foot.</p>
<p>They laid it upon a stone in the sun, so that it might come to life again. When
that failed, Pelle remembered a story about some people who were drowned in a
lake at home, and who came to themselves again when cannons were fired over
them. They clapped their hollowed hands over the mouse, and when that too
brought about no result, they decided to bury it.</p>
<p>Rud happened to remember that his grandmother in Sweden was being buried just
now, and this made them go about the matter with a certain amount of solemnity.
They made a coffin out of a matchbox, and ornamented it with moss; and then
they lay on their faces and lowered the coffin into the grave with twine,
taking every possible care that it should not land upon its head. A rope might
give way; such things did sometimes happen, and the illusion did not permit of
their correcting the position of the coffin afterward with their hands. When
this was done, Pelle looked down into his cap, while Rud prayed over the
deceased and cast earth upon the coffin; and then they made up the grave.</p>
<p>“I only hope it’s not in a trance and going to wake up
again!” exclaimed Pelle suddenly. They had both heard many unpleasant
stories of such cases, and went over all the possibilities—how they woke
up and couldn’t get any air, and knocked upon the lid, and began to eat
their own hands—until Pelle could distinctly hear a knocking on the lid
below. They had the coffin up in a trice, and examined the mouse. It had not
eaten its forepaws, at any rate, but it had most decidedly turned over on its
side. They buried it again, putting a dead beetle beside it in the coffin for
safety’s sake, and sticking a straw down into the grave to supply it with
air. Then they ornamented the mound, and set up a memorial stone.</p>
<p>“It’s dead now!” said Pelle, gravely and with conviction.</p>
<p>“Yes, I should just think so—dead as a herring.” Rud had put
his ear to the straw and listened.</p>
<p>“And now it must be up with God in all His glory—right high, high
up.”</p>
<p>Rud sniffed contemptuously. “Oh, you silly! Do you think it can crawl up
there?”</p>
<p>“Well, can’t mice crawl, I should like to know?” Pelle was
cross.</p>
<p>“Yes; but not through the air. Only birds can do that.”</p>
<p>Pelle felt himself beaten off the field and wanted to be revenged.</p>
<p>“Then your grandmother isn’t in heaven, either!” he declared
emphatically. There was still a little rancor in his heart from the young mouse
episode.</p>
<p>But this was more than Rud could stand. It had touched his family pride, and he
gave Pelle a dig in the side with his elbow. The next moment they were rolling
in the grass, holding one another by the hair, and making awkward attempts to
hit one another on the nose with their clenched fists. They turned over and
over like one lump, now one uppermost, now the other; they hissed hoarsely,
groaned and made tremendous exertions. “I’ll make you sneeze
red,” said Pelle angrily, as he rose above his adversary; but the next
moment he was down again, with Rud hanging over him and uttering the most
fearful threats about black eyes and seeing stars. Their voices were thick with
passion.</p>
<p>And suddenly they were sitting opposite one another on the grass wondering
whether they should set up a howl. Rud put out his tongue, Pelle went a step
further and began to laugh, and they were once more the best of friends. They
set up the memorial stone, which had been overturned in the heat of battle, and
then sat down hand in hand, to rest after the storm, a little quieter than
usual.</p>
<p>It was not because there was more evil in Pelle, but because the question had
acquired for him an importance of its own, and he must understand it, that a
meditative expression came into his eyes, and he said thoughtfully:</p>
<p>“Well, but you’ve told me yourself that she was paralyzed in her
legs!”</p>
<p>“Well, what if she was?”</p>
<p>“Why, then she couldn’t crawl up into heaven.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you booby! It’s her spirit, of course!”</p>
<p>“Then the mouse’s spirit can very well be up there too.”</p>
<p>“No, it can’t, for mice haven’t got any spirit.”</p>
<p>“Haven’t they? Then how is it they can breathe?”<SPAN href="#fn1" name="fnref1" id="fnref1"><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p class="footnote">
<SPAN name="fn1" id="fn1"></SPAN> <SPAN href="#fnref1">[1]</SPAN>
In Danish, spirit = aand, and to breathe = aande.</p>
<p>That was one for Rud! And the tiresome part of it was that he attended
Sunday-school. His fists would have come in handy again now, but his instinct
told him that sooner or later Pelle would get the better of him in fighting.
And anyhow his grandmother was saved.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said, yielding; “and it certainly could breathe.
Well, then, it was its spirit flying up that overturned the
stone—that’s what it was!”</p>
<p>A distant sound reached them, and far off near the cottage they could see the
figure of a fat woman, beckoning threateningly.</p>
<p>“The Sow’s calling you,” said Pelle. The two boys never
called her anything but “the Sow” between themselves.</p>
<p>So Rud had to go. He was allowed to take the greater part of the contents of
the dinner-basket with him, and ate as he ran. They had been too busy to eat.</p>
<p>Pelle sat down among the dunes and ate his dinner. As usual when Rud had been
with him, he could not imagine what had become of the day. The birds had ceased
singing, and not one of the cattle was still lying down, so it must be at least
five o’clock.</p>
<p>Up at the farm they were busy driving in. It went at full gallop— out and
in, out and in. The men stood up in the carts and thrashed away at the horses
with the end of the reins, and the swaying loads were hurried along the
field-roads, looking like little bristling, crawling things, that have been
startled and are darting to their holes.</p>
<p>A one-horsed vehicle drove out from the farm, and took the high-road to the
town at a quick trot. It was the farmer; he was driving so fast that he was
evidently off to the town on the spree. So there was something gone wrong at
home, and there would be crying at the farm that night.</p>
<p>Yes, there was Father Lasse driving out with the water-cart, so it was
half-past five. He could tell that too by the birds beginning their pleasant
evening twittering, that was soft and sparkling like the rays of the sun.</p>
<p>Far inland above the stone-quarry, where the cranes stood out against the sky,
a cloud of smoke rose every now and then into the air, and burst in a fountain
of pieces of rock. Long after came the explosion, bit by bit in a series of
rattling reverberations. It sounded as if some one were running along and
slapping his thigh with fingerless gloves.</p>
<p>The last few hours were always long—the sun was so slow about it. And
there was nothing to fill up the time either. Pelle himself was tired, and the
tranquillity of evening had the effect of subduing his voice. But now they were
driving out for milking up there, and the cattle were beginning to graze along
the edge of the meadow that turned toward the farm; so the time was drawing
near.</p>
<p>At last the herd-boys began to jodel over at the neighboring farms, first one,
and then several joining in:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Oh, drive home, o-ho, o-o-ho!<br/>
O-ho, o-ho!<br/>
O-ho, o-ho!<br/>
Oh, drive home, o-o-ho!<br/>
O-ho!”</p>
<p>From all sides the soft tones vibrated over the sloping land, running out, like
the sound of happy weeping, into the first glow of evening; and Pelle’s
animals began to move farther after each pause to graze. But he did not dare to
drive them home yet, for it only meant a thrashing from the bailiff or the
pupil if he arrived too early.</p>
<p>He stood at the upper end of the meadow, and called his homeward- drifting
flock together; and when the last tones of the call had died away, he began it
himself, and stepped on one side. The animals ran with a peculiar little trot
and heads extended. The shadow of the grass lay in long thin stripes across the
ground, and the shadows of the animals were endless. Now and then a calf lowed
slowly and broke into a gallop. They were yearning for home, and Pelle was
yearning too.</p>
<p>From behind a hollow the sun darted long rays out into space, as if it had
called all its powers home for the night, and now poured them forth in one
great longing, from west to east. Everything pointed in long thin lines, and
the eager longing of the cattle seemed visible in the air.</p>
<p>To the mind of the child there was nothing left out of doors now; everything
was being taken in, and he longed for his father with a longing that was almost
a pain. And when at last he turned the corner with the herd, and saw old Lasse
standing there, smiling happily with his red-rimmed eyes, and opening the gate
to the fold, the boy gave way and threw himself weeping into his father’s
arms.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter, laddie? What’s the matter?” asked
the old man, with concern in his voice, stroking the child’s face with a
trembling hand. “Has any one been unkind to you? No? Well, that’s a
good thing! They’d better take care, for happy children are in
God’s own keeping. And Lasse would be an awkward customer if it came to
that. So you were longing for me, were you? Then it’s good to be in your
little heart, and it only makes Lasse happy. But go in now and get your supper,
and don’t cry any more.” And he wiped the boy’s nose with his
hard, crooked fingers, and pushed him gently away.</p>
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