Marie Grubbe by Jens Peter Jacobsen (parable of the sower read online txt) 📕
- Author: Jens Peter Jacobsen
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bustling futilities of court duties by day and the streams of wine and
frenzied kisses at night, broken by the gorgeous revelry of the chase
or by nightly trysts and tender whisperings in the shelter of Ibstrup
park or the gilded halls of Hillerod castle.
Yet clearer than all these he saw the black, burning eyes of Sofie
Urne; more insistent than aught else her voice sounded in his
spell-bound memory—beautiful and voluptuously soft, its low notes
drawing like white arms, or rising like a flitting bird that soars and
mocks with wanton trills while it flees… .
A rustling among the bushes of the rampart below waked him from his
dreams.
“Who goes there!” he cried.
“None but Daniel, Lord Gyldenlove, Daniel Knopf,” was the answer as a
little crippled man came out from the bushes, bowing.
“Ha! Hop-o’-my-Thumb? A thousand plagues, what are you doing here?”
The man stood looking down at himself sadly.
“Daniel, Daniel!” said Ulrik Frederik, smiling. “You didn’t come
unscathed from the ‘fiery furnace’ last night. The German brewer must
have made too hot a fire for you.”
The cripple began to scramble up the edge of the rampart. Daniel
Knopf, because of his stature called Hop-o’-my-Thumb, was a wealthy
merchant of some and twenty years, known for his fortune as well as
for his sharp tongue and his skill in fencing. He was boon companion
with the younger nobility, or at least with a certain group of
gallants, le cercle des mourants, consisting chiefly of younger men
about the court. Ulrik Frederik was the life and soul of this crowd,
which, though convivial rather than intellectual and notorious rather
than beloved, was in fact admired and envied for its very peccadillos.
Half tutor and half mountebank, Daniel moved among these men. He did
not walk beside them on the public streets or in houses of quality,
but in the fencing school, the wine cellar, and the tavern he was
indispensable. No one else could discourse so scientifically on
bowling and dog training or talk with such unction of feints and
parrying. No one knew wine as he did. He had worked out profound
theories about dicing and love making and could speak learnedly and at
length on the folly of crossing the domestic stud with the Salzburger
horses. To crown all, he knew anecdotes about everybody, and—most
impressive of all to the young men—he had decided opinions about
everything.
Moreover, he was always ready to humor and serve them, never forgot
the line that divided him from the nobility, and was decidedly funny
when, in a fit of drunken frolic they would dress him up in some
whimsical guise. He let himself be kicked about and bullied without
resenting it and would often good-naturedly throw himself into the
breach to stop a conversation that threatened the peace of the
company.
Thus he gained admittance to circles that were to him as the very
breath of life. To him, the citizen and cripple, the nobles seemed
like demigods. Their cant alone was human speech. Their existence swam
in a shimmer of light and a sea of fragrance while common folk dragged
out their lives in drab-colored twilight and stuffy air. He cursed his
citizen birth as a far greater calamity than his lameness, and grieved
over it in solitude with a bitterness and passion that bordered on
insanity.
“How now, Daniel,” said Ulrik Frederik when the little man reached
him. “‘Twas surely no light mist that clouded your eyes last night,
since you’ve run aground here on the rampart, or was the clary at
flood tide, since I find you high and dry like Noah’s Ark on Mount
Ararat?”
“Prince of the Canaries, you rave if you suppose I was in your company
last night!”
“A thousand devils, what’s the matter then?” cried Ulrik Frederik
impatiently.
“Lord Gyldenlove,” said Daniel, looking up at him with tears in his
eyes, “I’m an unhappy wretch.”
“You’re a dog of a huckster! Is it a herring boat you’re afraid the
Swede will catch? Or are you groaning because trade has come to a
standstill, or do you think the saffron will lose its strength and the
mildew fall on your pepper and paradise grain? You’ve a ha’penny
soul! As if good citizens had naught else to think about than their
own trumpery going to the devil—now that we may look for the fall of
both King and realm!”
“Lord Gyldenlove—”
“Oh, go to the devil with your whining!”
“Not so, Lord Gyldenlove,” said Daniel solemnly, stepping back a pace.
“For I don’t fret about the stoppage of trade, nor the loss of money
and what money can buy. I care not a doit nor a damn for herring and
saffron, but to be turned away by officers and men like one sick with
the leprosy or convicted of crime, that’s a sinful wrong against me,
Lord Gyldenlove. That’s why I’ve been lying in the grass all night
like a scabby dog that’s been turned out; that’s why I’ve been
writhing like a miserable crawling beast and have cried to God in
heaven asking Him why I alone should be utterly cast away, why my arm
alone should be too withered and weak to wield a sword, though they’re
arming lackeys and ‘prentice boys—”
“But who the shining Satan has turned you away?”
“Faith, Lord Gyldenlove, I ran to the ramparts like the others, but
when I came to one party, they told me they had room for no more, and
they were only poor citizens anyway and not fit to be with the gentry
and persons of quality. Some parties said they would have no crooked
billets, for cripples drew the bullets and brought ill luck, and none
would hazard life and limb unduly by having amongst them one whom the
Lord had marked. Then I begged Major-General Ahlefeldt that he would
order me to a position, but he shook his head and laughed: things
hadn’t come to such a pass yet that they had to stuff the ranks with
stunted stumps who’d give more trouble than aid.”
“But why didn’t you go to the officers whom you know?”
“I did so, Lord Gyldenlove. I thought at once of the cercle and spoke
to one or two of the mourants, King Petticoat and the Gilded Knight.”
“And did they give you no help?”
“Ay, Lord Gyldenlove, they helped me—Lord Gyldenlove, they helped me,
may God find them for it! ‘Daniel,’ they said, ‘Daniel, go home and
pick the maggots out of your damson prunes!’ They had believed I had
too much tact to come here with my buffoonery. ‘Twas all very well if
they thought me fit to wear cap and bells at a merry bout, but when
they were on duty, I was to keep out of their sight. Now, was that
well spoken, Lord Gyldenlove? No, ‘twas a sin, a sin! Even if they’d
made free with me in the wine-cellars, they said, I needn’t think I
was one of them, or that I could be with them when they were at their
post. I was too presumptuous for them, Lord Gyldenlove! I’d best not
force myself into their company, for they needed no merry-andrew here.
That’s what they told me, Lord Gyldenlove! And yet I asked but to risk
my life side by side with the other citizens.”
“Oh, ay,” said Ulrik Frederik, yawning, “I can well understand that it
vexes you to have no part in it all. You might find it irksome to
sweat over your desk while the fate of the realm is decided here on
the ramparts. Look you, you shall be in it! For—” He broke off and
looked at Daniel with suspicion. “There’s no foul play, sirrah?”
The little man stamped the ground in his rage and gritted his teeth,
his face pale as a whitewashed wall.
“Come, come,” Ulrik Frederik went on, “I trust you, but you can scarce
expect me to put faith in your word as if ‘twere that of a gentleman.
And remember, ‘twas your own that scorned you first. Hush!”
From a bastion at East Gate boomed a shot, the first that had been
fired in this war. Ulrik Frederik drew himself up, while the blood
rushed to his face. He looked after the white smoke with eager,
fascinated eyes, and when he spoke, there was a strange tremor in his
voice.
“Daniel,” he said, “toward noon you can report to me, and think no
more of what I said.”
Daniel looked admiringly after him, then sighed deeply, sat down in
the grass, and wept as an unhappy child weeps.
In the afternoon of the same day, a fitful wind blew through the
streets of the city whirling up clouds of dust, whittlings, and bits
of straw and carrying them hither and thither. It tore the tiles from
the roofs, drove the smoke down the chimneys, and wrought sad havoc
with the tradesmen’s signs. The long, dull blue pennants of the dyers
were flung out on the breeze and fell down again in spirals that
tightened around their quivering staffs. The turners’ spinning wheels
rocked and swayed; hairy tails flapped over the doors of the furriers,
and the resplendent glass suns of the glaziers swung in a restless
glitter that vied with the polished basins of the barber-surgeons.
Doors and shutters were slamming in the back-yards. The chickens hid
their heads under barrels and sheds, and even the pigs grew uneasy in
their pens when the wind howled through sunlit cracks and gaping
joints.
The storm brought an oppressive heat. Within the houses the people
were gasping for breath, and only the flies were buzzing about
cheerfully in the sultry atmosphere. The streets were unendurable, the
porches were draughty, and hence people who possessed gardens
preferred to seek shelter there.
In the large enclosure behind Christoffer Urne’s house in
Vingaardsstraede, a young girl sat with her sewing under a Norway
maple. Her tall, slender figure was almost frail, yet her breast was
deep and full. Luxuriant waves of black hair and almost startlingly
large dark eyes accented the pallor of her skin. The nose was sharp,
but finely cut, the mouth wide, though not full, and with a morbid
sweetness in its smile. The lips were scarlet, the chin somewhat
pointed, but firm and well rounded. Her dress was slovenly: an old
black velvet robe embroidered in gold that had become tarnished, a new
green felt hat from which fell a snowy plume, and leather shoes that
were worn to redness on the pointed toes. There was lint in her hair,
and neither her collar nor her long, white hands were immaculately
clean.
The girl was Christoffer Urne’s niece, Sofie. Her father, Jorgen Urne
of Alslev, Councillor of the Realm, Lord High Constable, and Knight of
the Elephant, had died when she was yet a child, and a few years ago
her mother, Mistress Margrethe Marsvin, had followed him. The elderly
uncle with whom she lived was a widower, and she was therefore, at
least nominally, the mistress of his household.
She hummed a song as she worked and kept time by swinging one foot on
the point of her toe.
The leafy crowns over her head rustled and swayed in the boisterous
wind with a noise like the murmur of many waters. The tall hollyhocks,
swinging their flower-topped stems back and forth in unsteady circles,
seemed seized with a sudden tempestuous madness, while the raspberry
bushes, timidly ducking their heads, turned the pale inner side of
their leaves to the light and changed color at every breath. Dry
leaves sailed down through the air, the
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