<h2>XII</h2>
<p>“Come, cubby, cubby, cubby! Come on, you silly little chicken,
there’s nothing to be afraid of!” Pelle was enticing his favorite
calf with a wisp of green corn; but it was not quite sure of him to-day, for it
had had a beating for bad behavior.</p>
<p>Pelle felt very much like a father whose child gives him sorrow and compels him
to use severe measures. And now this misunderstanding —that the calf
would have nothing to do with him, although it was for its own good that he had
beaten it! But there was no help for it, and as long as Pelle had them to mind,
he intended to be obeyed.</p>
<p>At last it let him come close up to it, so that he could stroke it. It stood
still for a little and was sulky, but yielded at last, ate the green food and
snuffed in his face by way of thanks.</p>
<p>“Will you be good, then?” said Pelle, shaking it by its stumps of
horns. “Will you, eh?” It tossed its head mischievously.
“Very well, then you shan’t carry my coat to-day.”</p>
<p>The strange thing about this calf was that the first day it was let out, it
would not stir, and at last the boy left it behind for Lasse to take in again.
But no sooner was it behind him than it followed of its own accord, with its
forehead close to his back; and always after that it walked behind him when
they went out and came home, and it carried his overcoat on its back when it
looked as if there would be rain.</p>
<p>Pelle’s years were few in number, but to his animals he was a grown man.
Formerly he had only been able to make them respect him sufficiently to obey
him at close quarters; but this year he could hit a cow at a distance of a
hundred paces with a stone, and that gave him power over the animals at a
distance, especially when he thought of calling out the animal’s name as
he hit it. In this way they realized that the pain came from him, and learned
to obey the mere call.</p>
<p>For punishment to be effectual, it must follow immediately upon the misdeed.
There was therefore no longer any such thing as lying in wait for an animal
that had offended, and coming up behind it when later on it was grazing
peacefully. That only caused confusion. To run an animal until it was tired
out, hanging on to its tail and beating it all round the meadow only to revenge
one’s self, was also stupid; it made the whole flock restless and
difficult to manage for the rest of the day. Pelle weighed the end and the
means against one another; he learned to quench his thirst for revenge with
good practical reasons.</p>
<p>Pelle was a boy, and he was not an idle one. All day, from five in the morning
until nine at night, he was busy with something or other, often most useless
things. For hours he practiced walking on his hands, turning a somersault, and
jumping the stream; he was always in motion. Hour after hour he would run
unflaggingly round in a circle on the grass, like a tethered foal, leaning
toward the center as he ran, so that his hand could pluck the grass, kicking up
behind, and neighing and snorting. He was pouring forth energy from morning
till night with open-handed profusion.</p>
<p>But minding the cattle was <i>work</i>, and here he husbanded his energy. Every
step that could be saved here was like capital acquired; and Pelle took careful
notice of everything, and was always improving his methods. He learned that
punishment worked best when it only hung as a threat; for much beating made an
animal callous. He also learned to see when it was absolutely necessary to
interfere. If this could not be done in the very act, he controlled himself and
endeavored upon the strength of his experience to bring about exactly the same
situation once more, and then to be prepared. The little fellow, unknown to
himself, was always engaged in adding cubits unto his stature.</p>
<p>He had obtained good results. The driving out and home again no longer gave him
any difficulty; he had succeeded for a whole week in driving the flock along a
narrow field road, with growing corn on both sides, without their having bitten
off so much as a blade. And there was the still greater task of keeping them
under control on a hot, close day—to hedge them in in full gallop, so
that they stood in the middle of the meadow stamping on the ground with
uplifted tails, in fear of the gad-flies. If he wanted to, he could make them
tear home to the stable in wild flight, with their tails in the air, on the
coldest October day, only by lying down in the grass and imitating the hum of
gad-flies. But that was a tremendous secret, that even Father Lasse knew
nothing about.</p>
<p>The amusing thing about the buzzing was that calves that were out for the first
time, and had never made the acquaintance of a gad-fly, instantly set off
running, with tail erect, when they heard its angry buzz.</p>
<p>Pelle had a remote ideal, which was to lie upon some elevated place and direct
the whole flock by the sole means of his voice, and never need to resort to
punishment. Father Lasse never beat either, no matter how wrong things went.</p>
<p>There were some days—well, what did become of them? Before he had any
idea of it, it was time to drive home. Other days were long enough, but seemed
to sing themselves away, in the ring of scythes, the lowing of cattle, and
people’s voices far away. Then the day itself went singing over the
ground, and Pelle had to stop every now and then to listen. Hark! there was
music! And he would run up on to the sandbanks and gaze out over the sea; but
it was not there, and inland there was no merrymaking that he knew of, and
there were no birds of passage flying through the air at this time of year. But
hark! there was music again! far away in the distance, just such a sound of
music as reaches the ear from so far off that one cannot distinguish the
melody, or say what instruments are playing. Could it be the sun itself?</p>
<p>The song of light and life streamed through him, as though he were a fountain;
and he would go about in a dreamy half-consciousness of melody and happiness.</p>
<p>When the rain poured down, he hung his coat over a briar and lay sheltered
beneath it, carving or drawing with a lead button on paper—horses, and
bulls lying down, but more often ships, ships that sailed across the sea upon
their own soft melody, far away to foreign lands, to Negroland and China, for
rare things. And when he was quite in the mood, he would bring out a broken
knife and a piece of shale from a secret hiding-place, and set to work. There
was a picture scratched on the stone, and he was now busy carving it in relief.
He had worked at it on and off all through the summer, and now it was beginning
to stand out. It was a bark in full sail, sailing over rippling water to
Spain—yes, it was going to Spain, for grapes and oranges, and all the
other delightful things that Pelle had never tasted yet.</p>
<p>On rainy days it was a difficult matter to keep count of the time, and required
the utmost exertion. On other days it was easy enough, and Pelle could tell it
best by the feeling. At certain times of the day there were signs at home on
the farm that told him the time, and the cattle gave him other hours by their
habits. At nine the first one lay down to chew the morning cud, and then all
gradually lay down one by one; and there was always a moment at about ten when
they all lay chewing. At eleven the last of them were upon their legs again. It
was the same in the afternoon between three and five.</p>
<p>Midday was easy to determine when the sun was shining. Pelle could always feel
it when it turned in its path. And there were a hundred other things in nature
that gave him a connection with the times of day, such as the habits of the
birds, and something about the fir-trees, and much besides that he could not
lay his finger upon and say it was there, because it was only a feeling. The
time to drive home was given by the cattle themselves. When it drew near, they
grazed slowly around until their heads pointed in the direction of the farm;
and there was a visible tension in their bodies, a homeward yearning.</p>
<hr />
<p>Rud had not shown himself all the week, and no sooner had he come today than
Pelle had to give him a blowing-up for some deceitfulness. Then he ran home,
and Pelle lay down at the edge of the fir-plantation, on his face with the
soles of his feet in the air, and sang. All round him there were marks of his
knife on the tree-stems. On the earliest ships you saw the keel, the deck was
perpendicular to the body. Those had been carved the first summer. There was
also a collection of tiny fields here on the edge of the stream, properly
ploughed, harrowed, and sown, each field about two feet square.</p>
<p>Pelle was resting now after the exertion with Rud, by making the air rock with
his jubilant bawling. Up at the farm a man came out and went along the
high-road with a bundle under his arm. It was Erik, who had to appear in court
in answer to a summons for fighting. Then the farmer drove out at a good pace
toward the town, so he was evidently off on the spree. Why couldn’t the
man have driven with him, as they were both going the same way? How quickly he
drove, although she never followed him now. She consoled herself at home
instead! Could it be true that he had spent five hundred krones in drinking and
amusement in one evening?</p>
<p class="poem">
“The war is raging, the red blood streams,<br/>
Among the mountains ring shouts and screams!<br/>
The Turk advances with cruel rage,<br/>
And sparing neither youth nor age.<br/>
They go—”</p>
<p>“Ho!” Pelle sprang to his feet and gazed up over the clover field.
The dairy cows up there for the last quarter of an hour had been looking up at
the farm every other moment, and now Aspasia lowed, so his father must soon be
coming out to move them. There he came, waddling round the corner of the farm.
It was not far to the lowest of the cows, so when his father was there, Pelle
could seize the opportunity just to run across and say good-day to him.</p>
<p>He brought his animals nearer together and drove them slowly over to the other
fence and up the fields. Lasse had moved the upper half, and was now crossing
over diagonally to the bull, which stood a little apart from the others. The
bull was growling and kicking up the earth; its tongue hung out at one side of
its mouth, and it tossed its head quickly; it was angry. Then it advanced with
short steps and all kinds of antics; and how it stamped! Pelle felt a desire to
kick it on the nose as he had often done before; it had no business to threaten
Lasse, even if it meant nothing by it.</p>
<p>Father Lasse took no notice of it, either. He stood hammering away at the big
tether-peg, to loosen it. “Good-day!” shouted Pelle. Lasse turned
his head and nodded, then bent down and hammered the peg into the ground. The
bull was just behind him, stamping quickly, with open mouth and tongue hanging
out; it looked as if it were vomiting, and the sound it made answered exactly
to that. Pelle laughed as he slackened his pace. He was close by.</p>
<p>But suddenly Father Lasse turned a somersault, fell, and was in the air again,
and then fell a little way off. Again the bull was about to toss him, but Pelle
was at its head. He was not wearing wooden shoes, but he kicked it with his
bare feet until he was giddy. The bull knew him and tried to go round him, but
Pelle sprang at its head, shouting and kicking and almost beside himself,
seized it by the horns. But it put him gently on one side and went forward
toward Lasse, blowing along the ground so that the grass waved.</p>
<p>It took hold of him by the blouse and shook him a little, and then tried to get
both his horns under him to send him up into the air; but Pelle was on his feet
again, and as quick as lightning had drawn his knife and plunged it in between
the bull’s hind legs. The bull uttered a short roar, turned Lasse over on
one side, and dashed off over the fields at a gallop, tossing its head as it
ran, and bellowing. Down by the stream it began to tear up the bank, filling
the air with earth and grass.</p>
<p>Lasse lay groaning with his eyes closed, and Pelle stood pulling in vain at his
arm to help him up, crying: “Father, little Father Lasse!” At last
Lasse sat up.</p>
<p>“Who’s that singing?” he asked. “Oh, it’s you, is
it, laddie? And you’re crying! Has any one done anything to you? Ah, yes,
of course, it was the bull! It was just going to play fandango with me. But
what did you do to it, that the devil took it so quickly? You saved your
father’s life, little though you are. Oh, hang it! I think I’m
going to be sick! Ah me!” he went on, when the sickness was past, as he
wiped the perspiration from his forehead. “If only I could have had a
dram. Oh, yes, he knew me, the fellow, or I shouldn’t have got off so
easily. He only wanted to play with me a little, you know. He was a wee bit
spiteful because I drove him away from a cow this morning; I’d noticed
that. But who’d have thought he’d have turned on me? He
wouldn’t have done so, either, if I hadn’t been so silly as to wear
somebody else’s clothes. This is Mons’s blouse; I borrowed it of
him while I washed my own. And Mr. Bull didn’t like the strange smell
about me. Well, we’ll see what Mons’ll say to this here slit.
I’m afraid he won’t be best pleased.”</p>
<p>Lasse talked on for a good while until he tried to rise, and stood up with
Pelle’s assistance. As he stood leaning on the boy’s shoulder, he
swayed backward and forward. “I should almost have said I was drunk, if
it hadn’t been for the pains!” he said, laughing feebly.
“Well, well, I suppose I must thank God for you, laddie. You always
gladden my heart, and now you’ve saved my life, too.”</p>
<p>Lasse then stumbled homeward, and Pelle moved the rest of the cows on the road
down to join his own. He was both proud and affected, but most proud. He had
saved Father Lasse’s life, and from the big, angry bull that no one else
on the farm dared have anything to do with. The next time Henry Bodker came out
to see him, he should hear all about it.</p>
<p>He was a little vexed with himself for having drawn his knife. Every one here
looked down upon that, and said it was Swedish. He wouldn’t have needed
to do it either if there’d been time, or if only he had had on his wooden
shoes to kick the bull in the eyes with. He had very often gone at it with the
toes of his wooden shoes, when it had to be driven into its stall again after a
covering; and it always took good care not to do anything to him. Perhaps he
would put his finger in its eye and make it blind, or take it by the horns and
twist its head round, like the man in the story, until its neck was wrung.</p>
<p>Pelle grew and swelled up until he overshadowed everything. There was no limit
to his strength while he ran about bringing his animals together again. He
passed like a storm over everything, tossed strong Erik and the bailiff about,
and lifted—yes, lifted the whole of Stone Farm merely by putting his hand
under the beam. It was quite a fit of berserker rage!</p>
<p>In the very middle of it all, it occurred to him how awkward it would be if the
bailiff got to know that the bull was loose. It might mean a thrashing both for
him and Lasse. He must go and look for it; and for safety’s sake he took
his long whip with him and put on his wooden shoes.</p>
<p>The bull had made a terrible mess down on the bank of the stream, and had
ploughed up a good piece of the meadow. It had left bloody traces along the bed
of the stream and across the fields. Pelle followed these out toward the
headland, where he found the bull. The huge animal had gone right in under the
bushes, and was standing licking its wound. When it heard Pelle’s voice,
it came out. “Turn round!” he cried, flicking its nose with the
whip. It put its head to the ground, bellowed, and moved heavily backward.
Pelle continued flicking it on the nose while he advanced step by step,
shouting determinedly: “Turn round! Will you turn round!” At last
it turned and set off at a run, Pelle seizing the tether-peg and running after.
He kept it going with the whip, so that it should have no time for evil
thoughts.</p>
<p>When this was accomplished, he was ready to drop with fatigue, and lay crouched
up at the edge of the fir-plantation, thinking sadly of Father Lasse, who must
be going about up there ill and with nobody to give him a helping hand with his
work. At last the situation became unbearable: he had to go home!</p>
<p><i>Zzzz! Zzzz!</i> Lying flat on the ground, Pelle crept over the grass,
imitating the maddening buzz of the gad-fly. He forced the sound out between
his teeth, rising and falling, as if it were flying hither and thither over the
grass. The cattle stopped grazing and stood perfectly still with attentive
ears. Then they began to grow nervous, kicking up their legs under their
bodies, turning their heads to one side in little curves, and starting; and
then up went their tails. He made the sound more persistently angry, and the
whole flock, infecting one another, turned and began to stamp round in wild
panic. Two calves broke out of the tumult, and made a bee-line for the farm,
and the whole flock followed, over stock and stone. All Pelle had to do now was
to run after them, making plenty of fuss, and craftily keep the buzzing going,
so that the mood should last till they reached home.</p>
<p>The bailiff himself came running to open the gate into the enclosure, and
helped to get the animals in. Pelle expected a box on the ears, and stood
still; but the bailiff only looked at him with a peculiar smile, and said:
“They’re beginning to get the upper hand of you, I think. Well,
well,” he went on, “it’s all right as long as you can manage
the bull!” He was making fun of him, and Pelle blushed up to the roots of
his hair.</p>
<p>Father Lasse had crept into bed. “What a good thing you came!” he
said. “I was just lying here and wondering how I was going to get the
cows moved. I can scarcely move at all, much less get up.”</p>
<p>It was a week before Lasse was on his feet again, and during that time the
field-cattle remained in the enclosure, and Pelle stayed at home and did his
father’s work. He had his meals with the others, and slept his midday
sleep in the barn as they did.</p>
<p>One day, in the middle of the day, the Sow came into the yard, drunk. She took
her stand in the upper yard, where she was forbidden to go, and stood there
calling for Kongstrup. The farmer was at home, but did not show himself, and
not a soul was to be seen behind the high windows. “Kongstrup, Kongstrup!
Come here for a little!” she called, with her eyes on the pavement, for
she could not lift her head. The bailiff was not at home, and the men remained
in hiding in the barn, hoping to see some fun. “I say, Kongstrup, come
out a moment! I want to speak to you!” said the Sow
indistinctly—and then went up the steps and tried to open the door. She
hammered upon it a few times, and stood talking with her face close to the
door; and when nobody came, she reeled down the steps and went away talking to
herself and not looking round.</p>
<p>A little while after the sound of weeping began up there, and just as the men
were going out to the fields, the farmer came rushing out and gave orders that
the horse should be harnessed to the chaise. While it was being done, he walked
about nervously, and then set off at full speed. As he turned the corner of the
house, a window opened and a voice called to him imploringly: “Kongstrup,
Kongstrup!” But he drove quickly on, the window closed, and the weeping
began afresh.</p>
<p>In the afternoon Pelle was busying himself about the lower yard when Karna came
to him and told him to go up to mistress. Pelle went up hesitatingly. He was
not sure of her and all the men were out in the fields.</p>
<p>Fru Kongstrup lay upon the sofa in her husband’s study, which she always
occupied, day or night, when her husband was out. She had a wet towel over her
forehead, and her whole face was red with weeping.</p>
<p>“Come here!” she said, in a low voice. “You aren’t
afraid of me, are you?”</p>
<p>Pelle had to go up to her and sit on the chair beside her. He did not know what
to do with his eyes; and his nose began to run with the excitement, and he had
no pocket-handkerchief.</p>
<p>“Are you afraid of me?” she asked again, and a bitter smile crossed
her lips.</p>
<p>He had to look at her to show that he was not afraid, and to tell the truth,
she was not like a witch at all, but only like a human being who cried and was
unhappy.</p>
<p>“Come here!” she said, and she wiped his nose with her own fine
handkerchief, and stroked his hair. “You haven’t even a mother,
poor little thing!” And she smoothed down his clumsily mended blouse.</p>
<p>“It’s three years now since Mother Bengta died, and she’s
lying in the west corner of the churchyard.”</p>
<p>“Do you miss her very much?”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, Father Lasse mends my clothes!”</p>
<p>“I’m sure she can’t have been very good to you.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes!” said Pelle, nodding earnestly. “But she was so
fretful, she was always ailing; and it’s better they should go when they
get like that. But now we’re soon going to get married again—when
Father Lasse’s found somebody that’ll do.”</p>
<p>“And then I suppose you’ll go away from here? I’m sure you
aren’t comfortable here, are you?”</p>
<p>Pelle had found his tongue, but now feared a trap, and became dumb. He only
nodded. Nobody should come and accuse him afterward of having complained.</p>
<p>“No, you aren’t comfortable,” she said, in a plaintive tone.
“No one is comfortable at Stone Farm. Everything turns to misfortune
here.”</p>
<p>“It’s an old curse, that!” said Pelle.</p>
<p>“Do they say so? Yes, yes, I know they do! And they say of me that
I’m a devil—only because I love a single man—and cannot put
up with being trampled on.” She wept and pressed his hand against her
quivering face.</p>
<p>“I’ve got to go out and move the cows,” said Pelle, wriggling
about uneasily in an endeavor to get away.</p>
<p>“Now you’re afraid of me again!” she said, and tried to
smile. It was like a gleam of sunshine after rain.</p>
<p>“No—only I’ve got to go out and move the cows.”</p>
<p>“There’s still a whole hour before that. But why aren’t you
herding to-day? Is your father ill?”</p>
<p>Then Pelle had to tell her about the bull.</p>
<p>“You’re a good boy!” said the mistress, patting his head.
“If I had a son, I should like him to be like you. But now you shall have
some jam, and then you must run to the shop for a bottle of black-currant rum,
so that we can make a hot drink for your father. If you hurry, you can be back
before moving-time.”</p>
<p>Lasse had his hot drink, even before the boy returned; and every day while he
kept his bed he had something strengthening—although there was no
black-currant rum in it.</p>
<p>During this time Pelle went up to the mistress nearly every day. Kongstrup had
gone on business to Copenhagen. She was kind to him and gave him nice things to
eat; and while he ate, she talked without ceasing about Kongstrup, or asked him
what people thought about her. Pelle had to tell her, and then she was upset
and began to cry. There was no end to her talk about the farmer, but she
contradicted herself, and Pelle gave up trying to make anything of it. Besides,
the good things she gave him were quite enough for him to think about.</p>
<p>Down in their room he repeated everything word for word, and Lasse lay and
listened, and wondered at this little fellow who had the run of high places,
and was in the mistress’s confidence. Still he did not quite like it.</p>
<p>“… She could scarcely stand, and had to hold on to the table when she was
going to fetch me the biscuits, she was so ill. It was only because he’d
treated her badly, she said. Do you know she hates him, and would like to kill
him, she says; and yet she says that he’s the handsomest man in the
world, and asked me if I’ve seen any one handsomer in all Sweden. And
then she cries as if she was mad.”</p>
<p>“Does she?” said Lasse thoughtfully. “I don’t suppose
she knows what she’s saying, or else she says it for reasons of her own.
But all the same, it’s not true that he beats her! She’s telling a
lie, I’m sure.”</p>
<p>“And why should she lie?”</p>
<p>“Because she wants to do him harm, I suppose. But it’s true
he’s a fine man—and cares for everybody except just her; and
that’s the misfortune. I don’t like your being so much up there;
I’m so afraid you may come to some harm.”</p>
<p>“How could I? She’s so good, so very good.”</p>
<p>“How am I to know that? No, she isn’t good—her eyes
aren’t good, at any rate. She’s brought more than one person into
misfortune by looking at them. But there’s nothing to be done about it;
the poor man has to risk things.”</p>
<p>Lasse was silent, and stumbled about for a little while. Then he came up to
Pelle. “Now, see here! Here’s a piece of steel I’ve found,
and you must remember always to have it about you, especially when you go up
<i>there</i>! And then—yes, then we must leave the rest in God’s
hand. He’s the only one who perhaps looks after poor little boys.”</p>
<p>Lasse was up for a short while that day. He was getting on quickly, thank God,
and in two days they might be back in their old ways again. And next winter
they must try to get away from it all!</p>
<p>On the last day that Pelle stayed at home, he went up to the mistress as usual,
and ran her errand for her. And that day he saw something unpleasant that made
him glad that this was over. She took her teeth, palate, and everything out of
her mouth, and laid them on the table in front of her!</p>
<p>So she <i>was</i> a witch!</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />