Marie Grubbe by Jens Peter Jacobsen (parable of the sower read online txt) 📕
- Author: Jens Peter Jacobsen
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these people into his company, and for a while they amused him, but
when the whole thing began to pall and seem rather disgusting and when
furthermore he felt some faint stirrings of remorse, he had to justify
himself by pretending that such means had been necessary. He actually
made himself believe that he had been pursuing a plan in order to
bring Marie Grubbe back repentant. Unfortunately, her penitence did
not seem to be forthcoming, and so he had recourse to harsher measures
in the hope that, by making her life as miserable as possible, he
would beat down her resistance. That she had really ceased to love him
he never believed for a moment. He was convinced that in her heart she
longed to throw herself into his arms, though she used his returning
love as a good chance to avenge herself for his faithlessness. Nor did
he begrudge her this revenge; he was pleased that she wanted it, if
she had only not dragged it out so long. He was getting bored in this
barbarous land of Norway!
He had a sneaking feeling that it might have been wiser to have let
Karen Fiol stay in Copenhagen, but he simply could not endure the
others any longer; moreover, jealousy was a powerful ally, and Marie
Grubbe had once been jealous of Karen; that he knew.
Time passed, and still Marie Grubbe did not come. He began to doubt
that she ever would, and his love grew with his doubt. Something of
the excitement of a game or a chase had entered into their relation.
It was with an anxious mind and with a calculating fear that he heaped
upon her one mortification after another, and he waited in suspense
for even the faintest sign that his quarry was being driven into the
right track, but nothing happened.
Ah, at last! At last something came to pass, and he was certain that
it was the sign, the very sign he had been waiting for. One day when
Karen had been more than ordinarily impudent, Marie Grubbe took a good
strong bridle rein in her hand, walked through the house to the room
where Karen just then was taking her after-dinner nap, fastened the
door from within, and gave the dumbfounded strumpet a good beating
with the heavy strap, then went quietly back to the western parlor
past the speechless servants who had come running at the sound of
Karen’s screams.
Ulrik Frederik was downtown when it happened. Karen sent a messenger
to him at once, but he did not hurry, and it was late afternoon before
Karen, anxiously waiting, heard his horse in the courtyard. She ran
down to meet him, but he put her aside quietly and firmly and went
straight up to Marie Grubbe.
The door was ajar—then she must be out. He stuck his head in, sure of
finding the room empty, but she was there, sitting at the window
asleep. He stepped in as softly and carefully as he could, for he was
not quite sober.
The low September sun was pouring a stream of yellow and golden light
through the room, lending color and richness to its poor tints. The
plastered walls took on the whiteness of swans, the brown timbered
ceiling glowed as copper, and the faded curtains around the bed were
changed to wine-red folds and purple draperies. The room was flooded
with light; even in the shadows it gleamed as through a shimmering
mist of autumn yellow leaves. It spun a halo of gold around Marie
Grubbe’s head and kissed her white forehead, but her eyes and mouth
were in deep shadow cast by the yellowing apple tree which lifted to
the window branches red with fruit.
She was asleep sitting in a chair, her hands folded in her lap. Ulrik
Frederik stole up to her on tiptoe, and the glory faded as he came
between her and the window.
He scanned her closely. She was paler than before. How kind and gentle
she looked as she sat there, her head bent back, her lips slightly
parted, her white throat uncovered and bare! He could see the pulse
throbbing on both sides of her neck, right under the little brown
birthmark. His eyes followed the line of the firm, rounded shoulder
under the close-fitting silk, down the slender arm to the white,
passive hand. And that hand was his! He saw the fingers closing over
the brown strap, the white blue-veined arm growing tense and bright,
then relaxing and softening after the blow it dealt Karen’s poor back.
He saw her jealous eyes gleaming with pleasure, her angry lips curling
in a cruel smile at the thought that she was blotting out kiss after
kiss with the leather rein. And she was his! He had been harsh and
stern and ruthless; he had suffered these dear hands to be wrung with
anguish and these dear lips to open in sighing.
His eyes took on a moist lustre at the thought, and he felt suffused
with the easy, indolent pity of a drunken man. He stood there staring
in sottish sentimentality until the rich flood of sunlight had shrunk
to a thin bright streak high among the dark rafters of the ceiling.
Then Marie Grubbe awoke.
“You!” she almost screamed as she jumped up and darted back so quickly
that the chair tumbled along the floor.
“Marie!” said Ulrik Frederik as tenderly as he could, and held out his
hands pleadingly to her.
“What brings you here? Have you come to complain of the beating your
harlot got?”
“No, no, Marie; let’s be friends—good friends!”
“You are drunk,” she said coldly, turning away from him.
“Ay, Marie, I’m drunk with love of you—I’m drunk and dizzy with
your beauty, my heart’s darling.”
“Yes, truly, so dizzy that your eyesight has failed you, and you have
taken others for me.”
“Marie, Marie, leave your jealousy!”
She made a contemptuous gesture as if to brush him aside.
“Indeed, Marie, you were jealous. You betrayed yourself when you took
that bridle rein, you know. But now let the whole filthy rabble be
forgotten as dead and given over to the devil. Come, come, cease
playing unkind to me as I have played the faithless rogue to you with
all these make-believe pleasures and gallantries. We do nothing but
prepare each other a pit of hell whereas we might have an Eden of
delight. Come, whatever you desire, it shall be yours. Would you dance
in silks as thick as chainlet, would you have pearls in strings as
long as your hair, you shall have them, and rings, and tissue of gold
in whole webs, and plumes, and precious stones, whatever you
will—nothing is too good to be worn by you.”
He tried to put his arm around her waist, but she caught his wrist and
held him away from her.
“Ulrik Frederik,” she said, “let me tell you something. If you could
wrap your love in ermine and marten, if you could clothe it in sable
and crown it with gold, ay, give it shoes of purest diamond, I would
cast it away from me like filth and dung, for I hold it less than the
ground I tread with my feet. There’s no drop of my blood that’s fond
of you, no fibre of my flesh that doesn’t cry out upon you. Do you
hear? There’s no corner of my soul where you’re not called names.
Understand me aright! If I could free your body from the pangs of
mortal disease and your soul from the fires of hell by being as yours,
I would not do it.”
“Yes, you would, woman, so don’t deny it!”
“No, and no, and more than no!”
“Then begone! Out of my sight in the accursed name of hell!”
He was white as the wall and shook in every limb. His voice sounded
hoarse and strange, and he beat the air like a madman.
“Take your foot from my path! Take your—take your—take your foot
from my path, or I’ll split your skull! My blood’s lusting to kill,
and I’m seeing red. Begone—out of the land and dominion of Norway,
and hell-fire go with you! Begone—”
For a moment Marie stood looking at him in horror, then ran as fast as
she could out of the room and away from the castle.
When the door slammed after her, Ulrik Frederik seized the chair in
which she had been sitting when he came in and hurled it out of the
window, then caught the curtains from the bed and tore the worn stuff
into shreds and tatters, storming round the room all the while. He
threw himself on the floor and crawled around, snarling like a wild
beast, and pounding with his fists till the knuckles were bloody.
Exhausted at last, he crept over to the bed and flung himself face
downward in the pillows, called Marie tender names, and wept and
sobbed and cursed her, then again began to talk in low, wheedling
tones as if he were fondling her.
That same night Marie Grubbe for fair words and good pay got a skipper
to sail with her to Denmark.
The following day Ulrik Frederik turned Karen Fiol out of the castle,
and a few days later he himself left for Copenhagen.
One fine day Erik Grubbe was surprised to see Madam Gyldenlove driving
in to Tjele. He knew at once that something was wrong, since she came
thus without servants or anything, and when he learned the facts, it
was no warm welcome he gave her. In truth, he was so angry that he
went away, slamming the door after him, and did not appear again that
day. When he had slept on the matter, however, he grew more civil and
even treated his daughter with an almost respectful affection while
his manner took on some of the formal graces of the old courtier. It
had occurred to him that, after all, there was no great harm done, for
even though there had been some little disagreement between the young
people, Marie was still Madam Gyldenlove, and no doubt matters could
easily be brought back into the old rut again.
To be sure, Marie was clamoring for a divorce and would not hear of a
reconciliation, but it would have been unreasonable to expect anything
else from her in the first heat of her anger with all her memories
like sore bruises and gaping wounds, so he did not lay much stress
upon that. Time would cure it, he felt sure.
There was another circumstance from which he hoped much. Marie had
come from Aggershus almost naked, without clothes or jewels, and she
would soon miss the luxury which she had learned to look upon as a
matter of course. Even the plain food and poor service, the whole
simple mode of living at Tjele would have its effect on her by making
her long for what she had left. On the other hand, Ulrik Frederik,
however angry he might be, could not well think of a divorce. His
financial affairs were hardly in such a state that he could give up
Marie’s fortune, for twelve thousand rix-dollars was a large sum in
ready money, and gold, landed estates, and manorial rights were hard
to part with when once acquired.
For upward of six months all went well at Tjele. Marie felt a sense of
comfort in the quiet country place where day after day passed all
empty of events. The monotony was something new to her, and she drank
in the deep peace with dreamy, passive enjoyment. When she thought of
the past, it
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