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<h2> IV </h2>
<p>Carl had changed, Alexandra felt, much less than one might have expected.
He had not become a trim, self-satisfied city man. There was still
something homely and wayward and definitely personal about him. Even his
clothes, his Norfolk coat and his very high collars, were a little
unconventional. He seemed to shrink into himself as he used to do; to hold
himself away from things, as if he were afraid of being hurt. In short, he
was more self-con-scious than a man of thirty-five is expected to be. He
looked older than his years and not very strong. His black hair, which
still hung in a triangle over his pale forehead, was thin at the crown,
and there were fine, relentless lines about his eyes. His back, with its
high, sharp shoulders, looked like the back of an over-worked German
professor off on his holiday. His face was intelligent, sensitive,
unhappy.</p>
<p>That evening after supper, Carl and Alexandra were sitting by the clump of
castor beans in the middle of the flower garden. The gravel paths
glittered in the moonlight, and below them the fields lay white and still.</p>
<p>"Do you know, Alexandra," he was saying, "I've been thinking how strangely
things work out. I've been away engraving other men's pictures, and you've
stayed at home and made your own." He pointed with his cigar toward the
sleeping landscape. "How in the world have you done it? How have your
neighbors done it?"</p>
<p>"We hadn't any of us much to do with it, Carl. The land did it. It had its
little joke. It pretended to be poor because nobody knew how to work it
right; and then, all at once, it worked itself. It woke up out of its
sleep and stretched itself, and it was so big, so rich, that we suddenly
found we were rich, just from sitting still. As for me, you remember when
I began to buy land. For years after that I was always squeezing and
borrowing until I was ashamed to show my face in the banks. And then, all
at once, men began to come to me offering to lend me money—and I
didn't need it! Then I went ahead and built this house. I really built it
for Emil. I want you to see Emil, Carl. He is so different from the rest
of us!"</p>
<p>"How different?"</p>
<p>"Oh, you'll see! I'm sure it was to have sons like Emil, and to give them
a chance, that father left the old country. It's curious, too; on the
outside Emil is just like an American boy,—he graduated from the
State University in June, you know,—but underneath he is more
Swedish than any of us. Sometimes he is so like father that he frightens
me; he is so violent in his feelings like that."</p>
<p>"Is he going to farm here with you?"</p>
<p>"He shall do whatever he wants to," Alexandra declared warmly. "He is
going to have a chance, a whole chance; that's what I've worked for.
Sometimes he talks about studying law, and sometimes, just lately, he's
been talking about going out into the sand hills and taking up more land.
He has his sad times, like father. But I hope he won't do that. We have
land enough, at last!" Alexandra laughed.</p>
<p>"How about Lou and Oscar? They've done well, haven't they?"</p>
<p>"Yes, very well; but they are different, and now that they have farms of
their own I do not see so much of them. We divided the land equally when
Lou married. They have their own way of doing things, and they do not
altogether like my way, I am afraid. Perhaps they think me too
independent. But I have had to think for myself a good many years and am
not likely to change. On the whole, though, we take as much comfort in
each other as most brothers and sisters do. And I am very fond of Lou's
oldest daughter."</p>
<p>"I think I liked the old Lou and Oscar better, and they probably feel the
same about me. I even, if you can keep a secret,"—Carl leaned
forward and touched her arm, smiling,—"I even think I liked the old
country better. This is all very splendid in its way, but there was
something about this country when it was a wild old beast that has haunted
me all these years. Now, when I come back to all this milk and honey, I
feel like the old German song, 'Wo bist du, wo bist du, mein geliebtest
Land?'—Do you ever feel like that, I wonder?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sometimes, when I think about father and mother and those who are
gone; so many of our old neighbors." Alexandra paused and looked up
thoughtfully at the stars. "We can remember the graveyard when it was wild
prairie, Carl, and now—"</p>
<p>"And now the old story has begun to write itself over there," said Carl
softly. "Isn't it queer: there are only two or three human stories, and
they go on repeating themselves as fiercely as if they had never happened
before; like the larks in this country, that have been singing the same
five notes over for thousands of years."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes! The young people, they live so hard. And yet I sometimes envy
them. There is my little neighbor, now; the people who bought your old
place. I wouldn't have sold it to any one else, but I was always fond of
that girl. You must remember her, little Marie Tovesky, from Omaha, who
used to visit here? When she was eighteen she ran away from the convent
school and got married, crazy child! She came out here a bride, with her
father and husband. He had nothing, and the old man was willing to buy
them a place and set them up. Your farm took her fancy, and I was glad to
have her so near me. I've never been sorry, either. I even try to get
along with Frank on her account."</p>
<p>"Is Frank her husband?"</p>
<p>"Yes. He's one of these wild fellows. Most Bohemians are good-natured, but
Frank thinks we don't appreciate him here, I guess. He's jealous about
everything, his farm and his horses and his pretty wife. Everybody likes
her, just the same as when she was little. Sometimes I go up to the
Catholic church with Emil, and it's funny to see Marie standing there
laughing and shaking hands with people, looking so excited and gay, with
Frank sulking behind her as if he could eat everybody alive. Frank's not a
bad neighbor, but to get on with him you've got to make a fuss over him
and act as if you thought he was a very important person all the time, and
different from other people. I find it hard to keep that up from one
year's end to another."</p>
<p>"I shouldn't think you'd be very successful at that kind of thing,
Alexandra." Carl seemed to find the idea amusing.</p>
<p>"Well," said Alexandra firmly, "I do the best I can, on Marie's account.
She has it hard enough, anyway. She's too young and pretty for this sort
of life. We're all ever so much older and slower. But she's the kind that
won't be downed easily. She'll work all day and go to a Bohemian wedding
and dance all night, and drive the hay wagon for a cross man next morning.
I could stay by a job, but I never had the go in me that she has, when I
was going my best. I'll have to take you over to see her to-morrow."</p>
<p>Carl dropped the end of his cigar softly among the castor beans and
sighed. "Yes, I suppose I must see the old place. I'm cowardly about
things that remind me of myself. It took courage to come at all,
Alexandra. I wouldn't have, if I hadn't wanted to see you very, very
much."</p>
<p>Alexandra looked at him with her calm, deliberate eyes. "Why do you dread
things like that, Carl?" she asked earnestly. "Why are you dissatisfied
with yourself?"</p>
<p>Her visitor winced. "How direct you are, Alexandra! Just like you used to
be. Do I give myself away so quickly? Well, you see, for one thing,
there's nothing to look forward to in my profession. Wood-engraving is the
only thing I care about, and that had gone out before I began.
Everything's cheap metal work nowadays, touching up miserable photographs,
forcing up poor drawings, and spoiling good ones. I'm absolutely sick of
it all." Carl frowned. "Alexandra, all the way out from New York I've been
planning how I could deceive you and make you think me a very enviable
fellow, and here I am telling you the truth the first night. I waste a lot
of time pretending to people, and the joke of it is, I don't think I ever
deceive any one. There are too many of my kind; people know us on sight."</p>
<p>Carl paused. Alexandra pushed her hair back from her brow with a puzzled,
thoughtful gesture. "You see," he went on calmly, "measured by your
standards here, I'm a failure. I couldn't buy even one of your cornfields.
I've enjoyed a great many things, but I've got nothing to show for it
all."</p>
<p>"But you show for it yourself, Carl. I'd rather have had your freedom than
my land."</p>
<p>Carl shook his head mournfully. "Freedom so often means that one isn't
needed anywhere. Here you are an individual, you have a background of your
own, you would be missed. But off there in the cities there are thousands
of rolling stones like me. We are all alike; we have no ties, we know
nobody, we own nothing. When one of us dies, they scarcely know where to
bury him. Our landlady and the delicatessen man are our mourners, and we
leave nothing behind us but a frock-coat and a fiddle, or an easel, or a
typewriter, or whatever tool we got our living by. All we have ever
managed to do is to pay our rent, the exorbitant rent that one has to pay
for a few square feet of space near the heart of things. We have no house,
no place, no people of our own. We live in the streets, in the parks, in
the theatres. We sit in restaurants and concert halls and look about at
the hundreds of our own kind and shudder."</p>
<p>Alexandra was silent. She sat looking at the silver spot the moon made on
the surface of the pond down in the pasture. He knew that she understood
what he meant. At last she said slowly, "And yet I would rather have Emil
grow up like that than like his two brothers. We pay a high rent, too,
though we pay differently. We grow hard and heavy here. We don't move
lightly and easily as you do, and our minds get stiff. If the world were
no wider than my cornfields, if there were not something beside this, I
wouldn't feel that it was much worth while to work. No, I would rather
have Emil like you than like them. I felt that as soon as you came."</p>
<p>"I wonder why you feel like that?" Carl mused.</p>
<p>"I don't know. Perhaps I am like Carrie Jensen, the sister of one of my
hired men. She had never been out of the cornfields, and a few years ago
she got despondent and said life was just the same thing over and over,
and she didn't see the use of it. After she had tried to kill herself once
or twice, her folks got worried and sent her over to Iowa to visit some
relations. Ever since she's come back she's been perfectly cheerful, and
she says she's contented to live and work in a world that's so big and
interesting. She said that anything as big as the bridges over the Platte
and the Missouri reconciled her. And it's what goes on in the world that
reconciles me."</p>
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