<h2>XIII</h2>
<p>Pelle was coming home with his young cattle. As he came near the farm he issued
his commands in a loud voice, so that his father might hear. “Hi!
Spasianna! where are you going to? Dannebrog, you confounded old ram, will you
turn round!” But Lasse did not come to open the gate of the enclosure.</p>
<p>When he had got the animals in, he ran into the cow-stable. His father was
neither there nor in their room, and his Sunday wooden shoes and his woollen
cap were gone. Then Pelle remembered that it was Saturday, and that probably
the old man had gone to the shop to fetch spirits for the men.</p>
<p>Pelle went down into the servants’ room to get his supper. The men had
come home late, and were still sitting at the table, which was covered with
spilt milk and potato-skins. They were engrossed in a wager; Erik undertook to
eat twenty salt herrings with potatoes after he had finished his meal. The
stakes were a bottle of spirits, and the others were to peel the potatoes for
him.</p>
<p>Pelle got out his pocket-knife and peeled himself a pile of potatoes. He left
the skin on the herring, but scraped it carefully and cut off the head and
tail; then he cut it in pieces and ate it without taking out the bones, with
the potatoes and the sauce. While he did so, he looked at Erik—the giant
Erik, who was so strong and was not afraid of anything between heaven and
earth. Erik had children all over the place! Erik could put his finger into the
barrel of a gun, and hold the gun straight out at arm’s length! Erik
could drink as much as three others!</p>
<p>And now Erik was sitting and eating twenty salt herrings after his hunger was
satisfied. He took the herring by the head, drew it once between his legs, and
then ate it as it was; and he ate potatoes to them, quite as quickly as the
others could peel them. In between whiles he swore because the bailiff had
refused him permission to go out that evening; there was going to be the devil
to pay about that: he’d teach them to keep Erik at home when he wanted to
go out!</p>
<p>Pelle quickly swallowed his herring and porridge, and set off again to run to
meet his father; he was longing immensely to see him. Out at the pump the girls
were busy scouring the milkpails and kitchen pans; and Gustav was standing in
the lower yard with his arms on the fence, talking to them. He was really
watching Bodil, whose eyes were always following the new pupil, who was
strutting up and down and showing off his long boots with patent-leather tops.</p>
<p>Pelle was stopped as he ran past, and set to pump water. The men now came up
and went across to the barn, perhaps to try their strength. Since Erik had
come, they always tried their strength in their free time. There was nothing
Pelle found so exciting as trials of strength, and he worked hard so as to get
done and go over there.</p>
<p>Gustav, who was generally the most eager, continued to stand and vent his
ill-nature upon the pupil.</p>
<p>“There must be money there!” said Bodil, thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“Yes, you should try him; perhaps you might become a farmer’s wife.
The bailiff won’t anyhow; and the farmer—well, you saw the Sow the
other day; it must be nice to have that in prospect.”</p>
<p>“Who told you that the bailiff won’t?” answered Bodil
sharply. “Don’t imagine that we need you to hold the candle for us!
Little children aren’t allowed to see everything.”</p>
<p>Gustav turned red. “Oh, hold your jaw, you hussy!” he muttered, and
sauntered down to the barn.</p>
<p class="poem">
“Oh, goodness gracious, my poor old mother,<br/>
Who’s up on deck and can’t stand!”</p>
<p>sang Mons over at the stable door, where he was standing hammering at a cracked
wooden shoe. Pelle and the girls were quarreling, and up in the attic the
bailiff could be heard going about; he was busy putting pipes in order. Now and
then a long-drawn sound came from the high house, like the distant howling of
some animal, making the people shudder with dreariness.</p>
<p>A man dressed in his best clothes, and with a bundle under his arm, slipped out
of the door from the men’s rooms, and crept along by the building in the
lower yard. It was Erik.</p>
<p>“Hi, there! Where the devil are you going?” thundered a voice from
the bailiff’s window. The man ducked his head a little and pretended not
to hear. “Do you hear, you confounded Kabyle! <i>Erik</i>!” This
time Erik turned and darted in at a barn-door.</p>
<p>Directly after the bailiff came down and went across the yard. In the
chaff-cutting barn the men were standing laughing at Erik’s bad luck.
“He’s a devil for keeping watch!” said Gustav. “You
must be up early to get the better of <i>him</i>.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ll manage to dish him!” said Erik. “I
wasn’t born yesterday. And if he doesn’t mind his own business, we
shall come to blows.”</p>
<p>There was a sudden silence as the bailiff’s well-known step was heard
upon the stone paving. Erik stole away.</p>
<p>The form of the bailiff filled the doorway. “Who sent Lasse for
gin?” he asked sternly.</p>
<p>They looked at one another as if not understanding. “Is Lasse out?”
asked Mons then, with the most innocent look in the world. “Ay, the old
man’s fond of spirits,” said Anders, in explanation.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes; you’re good comrades!” said the bailiff.
“First you make the old man go, and then you leave him in the lurch. You
deserve a thrashing, all of you.”</p>
<p>“No, we don’t deserve a thrashing, and don’t mean to submit
to one either,” said the head man, going a step forward. “Let me
tell you—”</p>
<p>“Hold your tongue, man!” cried the bailiff, going close up to him,
and Karl Johan drew back.</p>
<p>“Where’s Erik?”</p>
<p>“He must be in his room.”</p>
<p>The bailiff went in through the horse-stable, something in his carriage showing
that he was not altogether unprepared for an attack from behind. Erik was in
bed, with the quilt drawn up to his eyes.</p>
<p>“What’s the meaning of this? Are you ill?” asked the bailiff.</p>
<p>“Yes, I think I’ve caught cold, I’m shivering so.” He
tried to make his teeth chatter.</p>
<p>“It isn’t the rot, I hope?” said the bailiff sympathetically.
“Let’s look at you a little, poor fellow.” He whipped off the
quilt. “Oho, so you’re in bed with your best things on—and
top-boots! It’s your grave-clothes, perhaps? And I suppose you were going
out to order a pauper’s grave for yourself, weren’t you? It’s
time we got you put underground, too; seems to me you’re beginning to
smell already!” He sniffed at him once or twice.</p>
<p>But Erik sprang out of bed as if shot by a spring, and stood erect close to
him. “I’m not dead yet, and perhaps I don’t smell any more
than some other people!” he said, his eyes flashing and looking about for
a weapon.</p>
<p>The bailiff felt his hot breath upon his face, and knew it would not do to draw
back. He planted his fist in the man’s stomach, so that he fell back upon
the bed and gasped for breath; and then held him down with a hand upon his
chest. He was burning with a desire to do more, to drive his fist into the face
of this rascal, who grumbled whenever one’s back was turned, and had to
be driven to every little task. Here was all the servant-worry that embittered
his existence —dissatisfaction with the fare, cantankerousness in work,
threats of leaving when things were at their busiest—difficulties without
end. Here was the slave of many years of worry and ignominy, and all he wanted
was one little pretext—a blow from this big fellow who never used his
strength for work, but only to take the lead in all disturbances.</p>
<p>But Erik lay quite still and looked at his enemy with watchful eye. “You
may hit me, if you like. There is such a thing as a magistrate in the
country,” he said, with irritating calm. The bailiff’s muscles
burned, but he was obliged to let the man go for fear of being summoned.
“Then remember another time not to be fractious!” he said, letting
go his hold, “or I’ll show you that there is a magistrate.”</p>
<p>“When Lasse comes, send him up to me with the gin!” he said to the
men as he passed through the barn.</p>
<p>“The devil we will!” said Mons, in an undertone.</p>
<p>Pelle had gone to meet his father. The old man had tasted the purchase, and was
in good spirits. “There were seven men in the boat, and they were all
called Ole except one, and he was called Ole Olsen!” he said solemnly,
when he saw the boy. “Yes, wasn’t it a strange thing, Pelle, boy,
that they should every one of them be called Ole—except the one, of
course; for his name was Ole Olsen.” Then he laughed, and nudged the boy
mysteriously; and Pelle laughed too, for he liked to see his father in good
spirits.</p>
<p>The men came up to them, and took the bottles from the herdsman.
“He’s been tasting it!” said Anders, holding the bottle up to
the light. “Oh, the old drunkard! He’s had a taste at the
bottles.”</p>
<p>“No, the bottles must leak at the bottom!” said Lasse, whom the
dram had made quite bold. “For I’ve done nothing but just smell.
You’ve got to make sure, you know, that you get the genuine thing and not
just water.”</p>
<p>They moved on down the enclosure, Gustav going in front and playing on his
concertina. A kind of excited merriment reigned over the party. First one and
then another would leap into the air as they went; they uttered short, shrill
cries and disconnected oaths at random. The consciousness of the full bottles,
Saturday evening with the day of rest in prospect, and above all the row with
the bailiff, had roused their tempers.</p>
<p>They settled down below the cow-stable, in the grass close to the pond. The sun
had long since gone down, but the evening sky was bright, and cast a flaming
light upon their faces turned westward; while the white farms inland looked
dazzling in the twilight.</p>
<p>Now the girls came sauntering over the grass, with their hands under their
aprons, looking like silhouettes against the brilliant sky. They were humming a
soft folk-song, and one by one sank on to the grass beside the men; the evening
twilight was in their hearts, and made their figures and voices as soft as a
caress. But the men’s mood was not a gentle one, and they preferred the
bottle.</p>
<p>Gustav walked about extemporizing on his concertina. He was looking for a place
to sit down, and at last threw himself into Karna’s lap, and began to
play a dance. Erik was the first upon his feet. He led on account of his
difference with the bailiff, and pulled Bengta up from the grass with a jerk.
They danced a Swedish polka, and always at a certain place in the melody, he
tossed her up into the air with a shout. She shrieked every time, and her heavy
skirts stood out round her like the tail of a turkey-cock, so that every one
could see how long it was till Sunday.</p>
<p>In the middle of a whirl he let go of her, so that she stumbled over the grass
and fell. The bailiff’s window was visible from where they sat, and a
light patch had appeared at it. “He’s staring! Lord, how he’s
staring! I say, can you see this?” Erik called out, holding up a
gin-bottle. Then, as he drank: “Your health! Old Nick’s health! He
smells, the pig! Bah!” The others laughed, and the face at the window
disappeared.</p>
<p>In between the dances they played, drank, and wrestled. Their actions became
more and more wild, they uttered sudden yells that made the girls scream, threw
themselves flat upon the ground in the middle of a dance, groaned as if they
were dying, and sprang up again suddenly with wild gestures and kicked the legs
of those nearest to them. Once or twice the bailiff sent the pupil to tell them
to be quiet, but that only made the noise worse. “Tell him to go his own
dog’s errands!” Erik shouted after the pupil.</p>
<p>Lasse nudged Pelle and they gradually drew farther and farther away.
“We’d better go to bed now,” Lasse said, when they had
slipped away unnoticed. “One never knows what this may lead to. They all
of them see red; I should think they’ll soon begin to dance the dance of
blood. Ah me, if I’d been young I wouldn’t have stolen away like a
thief; I’d have stayed and taken whatever might have come. There was a
time when Lasse could put both hands on the ground and kick his man in the face
with the heels of his boots so that he went down like a blade of grass; but
that time’s gone, and it’s wisest to take care of one’s self.
This may end in the police and much more, not to mention the bailiff.
They’ve been irritating him all the summer with that Erik at their head;
but if once he gets downright angry, Erik may go home to his mother.”</p>
<p>Pelle wanted to stay up for a little and look at them. “If I creep along
behind the fence and lie down—oh, do let me, father!” he begged.</p>
<p>“Eh, what a silly idea! They might treat you badly if they got hold of
you. They’re in the very worst of moods. Well, you must take the
consequences, and for goodness’ sake take care they don’t see
you!”</p>
<p>So Lasse went to bed, but Pelle crawled along on the ground behind the fence
until he came close up to them and could see everything.</p>
<p>Gustav was still sitting on Karna’s open lap and playing, and she was
holding him fast in her arms. But Anders had put his arm around Bodil’s
waist. Gustav discovered it, and with an oath flung away his concertina,
sending it rolling over the grass, and sprang up. The others threw themselves
down in a circle on the grass, breathing hard. They expected something.</p>
<p>Gustav was like a savage dancing a war-dance. His mouth was open and his eyes
bright and staring. He was the only man on the grass, and jumped up and down
like a ball, hopped upon his heels, and kicked up his legs alternately to the
height of his head, uttering a shrill cry with each kick. Then he shot up into
the air, turning round as he did so, and came down on one heel and went on
turning round like a top, making himself smaller and smaller as he turned, and
then exploded in a leap and landed in the lap of Bodil, who threw her arms
about him in delight.</p>
<p>In an instant Anders had both hands on his shoulders from behind, set his feet
against his back, and sent him rolling over the grass. It all happened without
a pause, and Gustav himself gave impetus to his course, rolling along in jolts
like an uneven ball. But suddenly he stopped and rose to his feet with a bound,
stared straight in front of him, turned round with a jerk, and moved slowly
toward Anders. Anders rose quickly, pushed his cap on one side, clicked with
his tongue, and advanced. Bodil spread herself out more comfortably on the
ground, and looked proudly round the circle, eagerly noting the envy of the
others.</p>
<p>The two antagonists stood face to face, feeling their way to a good grasp. They
stroked one another affectionately, pinched one another in the side, and made
little jesting remarks.</p>
<p>“My goodness me, how fat you are, brother!” This was Anders.</p>
<p>“And what breasts you’ve got! You might quite well be a
woman,” answered Gustav, feeling Anders’ chest. “Eeh, how
soft you are!” Scorn gleamed in their faces, but their eyes followed
every movement of their opponent. Each of them expected a sudden attack from
the other.</p>
<p>The others lay stretched around them on the grass, and called out impatiently:
“Have done with that and look sharp about it!”</p>
<p>The two men continued to stand and play as if they were afraid to really set
to, or were spinning the thing out for its still greater enjoyment. But
suddenly Gustav had seized Anders by the collar, thrown himself backward and
flung Anders over his head. It was done so quickly that Anders got no hold of
Gustav; but in swinging round he got a firm grasp of Gustav’s hair, and
they both fell on their backs with their heads together and their bodies
stretched in opposite directions.</p>
<p>Anders had fallen heavily, and lay half unconscious, but without loosening his
hold on Gustav’s hair. Gustav twisted round and tried to get upon his
feet, but could not free his head. Then he wriggled back into this position
again as quickly as a cat, turned a backward somersault over his antagonist,
and fell down upon him with his face toward the other’s. Anders tried to
raise his feet to receive him, but was too late.</p>
<p>Anders threw himself about in violent jerks, lay still and strained again with
sudden strength to turn Gustav off, but Gustav held on. He let himself fall
heavily upon his adversary, and sticking out his legs and arms to support him
on the ground, raised himself suddenly and sat down again, catching Anders in
the wind. All the time the thoughts of both were directed toward getting out
their knives, and Anders, who had now fully recovered his senses, remembered
distinctly that he had not got his. “Ah!” he said aloud.
“What a fool I am!”</p>
<p>“You’re whining, are you?” said Gustav, bending his face him.
“Do you want to ask for mercy?”</p>
<p>At that moment Anders felt Gustav’s knife pressing against his thigh, and
in an instant had his hand down there and wrenched it free. Gustav tried to
take it from him, but gave up the attempt for fear of being thrown off. He then
confined himself to taking possession of one of Anders’ hands, so that he
could not open the knife, and began sitting upon him in the region of his
stomach.</p>
<p>Anders lay in half surrender, and bore the blows without trying to defend
himself, only gasping at each one. With his left hand he was working eagerly to
get the knife opened against the ground, and suddenly plunged it into Gustav
just as the latter had risen to let himself fall heavily upon his
opponent’s body.</p>
<p>Gustav seized Anders by the wrist, his face distorted. “What the devil
are you up to now, you swine?” he said, spitting down into Anders’
face. “He’s trying to sneak out by the back door!” he said,
looking round the circle with a face wrinkled like that of a young bull.</p>
<p>They fought desperately for the knife, using hands and teeth and head; and when
Gustav found that he could not get possession of the weapon, he set to work so
to guide Anders’ hand that he should plunge it into his own body. He
succeeded, but the blow was not straight, and the blade closed upon
Anders’ fingers, making him throw the knife from him with an oath.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Erik was growing angry at no longer being the hero of the evening.
“Will you soon be finished, you two cockerels, or must I have a bite
too?” he said, trying to separate them. They took firm hold of one
another, but then Erik grew angry, and did something for which he was ever
after renowned. He took hold of them and set them both upon their feet.</p>
<p>Gustav looked as if he were going to throw himself into the battle again, and a
sullen expression overspread his face; but then he began to sway like a tree
chopped at the roots, and sank to the ground. Bodil was the first to come to
his assistance. With a cry she ran to him and threw her arms about him.</p>
<p>He was carried in and laid upon his bed, Karl Johan poured spirit into the deep
cut to clean it, and held it together while Bodil basted it with needle and
thread from one of the men’s lockers. Then they dispersed, in pairs, as
friendship permitted, Bodil, however, remaining with Gustav. She was true to
him after all.</p>
<hr />
<p>Thus the summer passed, in continued war and friction with the bailiff, to
whom, however, they dared do nothing when it came to the point. Then the
disease struck inward, and they set upon one another. “It must come out
somewhere,” said Lasse, who did not like this state of things, and vowed
he would leave as soon as anything else offered, even if they had to run away
from wages and clothes and everything.</p>
<p>“They’re discontented with their wages, their working-hours are too
long, and the food isn’t good enough; they pitch it about and waste it
until it makes one ill to see them, for anyhow it’s God’s gift,
even if it might be better. And Erik’s at the bottom of it all!
He’s forever boasting and bragging and stirring up the others the whole
day long. But as soon as the bailiff is over him, he daren’t do anything
any more than the others; so they all creep into their holes. Father Lasse is
not such a cowardly wind-bag as any of them, old though he is.</p>
<p>“I suppose a good conscience is the best support. If you have it and have
done your duty, you can look both the bailiff and the farmer —and God the
Father, too—in the face. For you must always remember, laddie, not to set
yourself up against those that are placed over you. Some of us have to be
servants and others masters; how would everything go on if we who work
didn’t do our duty? You can’t expect the gentlefolk to scrape up
the dung in the cow-stable.”</p>
<p>All this Lasse expounded after they had gone to bed, but Pelle had something
better to do than to listen to it. He was sound asleep and dreaming that he was
Erik himself, and was thrashing the bailiff with a big stick.</p>
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