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Title:  The Great Hunger

Author:  Johan Bojer

Translators:  W. J. Alexander Worster and C. Archer

Release Date:  December, 2001  [Etext #2943]

Edition:  10

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THE GREAT HUNGER

by JOHAN BOJER




Translated from the Norwegian by

W. J. ALEXANDER WORSTER and C. ARCHER




THE GREAT HUNGER


Book I


Chapter I


For sheer havoc, there is no gale like a good northwester, when it 
roars in, through the long winter evenings, driving the spindrift 
before it between the rocky walls of the fjord.  It churns the 
water to a froth of rushing wave crests, while the boats along the 
beach are flung in somersaults up to the doors of the grey fisher 
huts, and solid old barn gangways are lifted and sent flying like 
unwieldy birds over the fields.  "Mercy on us!" cry the maids, for 
it is milking-time, and they have to fight their way on hands and 
knees across the yard to the cowshed, dragging a lantern that WILL 
go out and a milk-pail that WON'T be held.  And "Lord preserve us!" 
mutter the old wives seated round the stove within doors--and their 
thoughts are far away in the north with the Lofoten fishermen, out 
at sea, maybe, this very night.

But on a calm spring day, the fjord just steals in smooth and 
shining by ness and bay.  And at low water there is a whole 
wonderland of strange little islands, sand-banks, and weed-fringed 
rocks left high and dry, with clear pools between, where bare-
legged urchins splash about, and tiny flat-fish as big as a 
halfpenny dart away to every side.  The air is filled with a smell 
of salt sea-water and warm, wet beach-waste, and the sea-pie, see-
sawing about on a big stone in the water, lifts his red beak 
cheerily sunwards and pipes:  "Kluip, kluip! the spring has come!"

On just such a day, two boys of fourteen or thereabouts came 
hurrying out from one of the fishermen's huts down towards the 
beach.  Boys are never so busy as when they are up to some piece of 
mischief, and evidently the pair had business of this sort in hand.  
Peer Troen, fair-haired and sallow-faced, was pushing a wheelbarrow;
his companion, Martin Bruvold, a dark youth with freckles, carried 
a tub.  And both talked mysteriously in whispers, casting anxious 
glances out over the water.

Peer Troen was, of course, the ringleader.  That he always was: the 
forest fire of last year was laid at his door.  And now he had made 
it clear to some of his friends that boys had just as much right to 
lay out deep-sea lines as men.  All through the winter they had 
been kept at grown-up work, cutting peat and carrying wood; why 
should they be left now to fool about with the inshore fishing, and 
bring home nothing better than flounders and coal-fish and silly 
codlings?  The big deep-sea line they were forbidden to touch--that 
was so--but the Lofoten fishery was at its height, and none of the 
men would be back till it was over.  So the boys had baited up the 
line on the sly down at the boathouse the day before, and laid it 
out across the deepest part of the fjord.

Now the thing about a deep-sea line is that it may bring to the 
surface fish so big and so fearsome that the like has never been 
seen before.  Yesterday, however, there had been trouble of a 
different sort.  To their dismay, the boys had found that they had 
not sinkers enough to weight the shore end of the line; and it 
looked as if they might have to give up the whole thing.  But Peer, 
ever ready, had hit on the novel idea of making one end fast to the 
trunk of a small fir growing at the outermost point of the ness, 
and carrying the line from there out over the open fjord.  Then a 
stone at the farther end, and with the magic words, "Fie, fish!" it 
was paid out overboard, vanishing into the green depths.  The deed 
was done.  True, there were a couple of hooks dangling in mid-air 
at the shore end, between the tree and the water, and, while they 
might serve to catch an eider duck, or a guillemot, if any one 
should chance to come rowing past in the dark and get hung up--why, 
the boys might find they had made a human catch.  No wonder, then, 
that they whispered eagerly and hurried down to the boat.

"Here comes Peter Ronningen," cried Martin suddenly.

This was the third member of the crew, a lanky youth with whitish 
eyebrows and a foolish face.  He stammered, and made a queer noise 
when he laughed:  "Chee-hee-hee."  Twice he had been turned down in 
the confirmation classes; after all, what was the use of learning 
lessons out of a book when nobody ever had patience to wait while 
he said them?

Together they ran the boat down to the water's edge, got it afloat, 
and scrambled in, with much waving of patched trouser legs.  "Hi!" 
cried a voice up on the beach, "let me come too!"

"There's Klaus," said Martin.  "Shall we take him along?"

"No," said Peter Ronningen.

"Oh yes, let's," said Peer.

Klaus Brock, the son of the district doctor, was a blue-eyed 
youngster in knickerbockers and a sailor blouse.  He was playing 
truant, no doubt--Klaus had his lessons at home with a private 
tutor--and would certainly get a thrashing from his father when he 
got home.

"Hurry up," called Peer, getting out an oar.  Klaus clambered in, 
and the white-straked four-oar surged across the bay, rocking a 
little as the boys pulled out of stroke.  Martin was rowing at the 
bow, his eyes fixed on Peer, who sat in the stern in command with 
his eyes dancing, full of great things to be done.  Martin, poor 
fellow, was half afraid already; he never could understand why 
Peer, who was to be a parson when he grew up, was always hitting 
upon things to do that were evidently sinful in the sight of the 
Lord.

Peer was a town boy, who had been put out to board with a fisherman 
in the village.  His mother had been no better than she should be, 
so people said, but she was dead now, and the father at any rate 
must be a rich gentleman, for he sent the boy a present of ten 
whole crowns every Christmas, so that Peer always had money in his 
pocket.  Naturally, then, he was looked up to by the other boys, 
and took the lead in all things as a chieftain by right.

The boat moved on past the grey rocks, the beach and the huts above 
it growing blue and faint in the distance.  Up among the distant 
hills a red wooden farm-house on its white foundation wall stood 
out clear.

Here was the ness at last, and there stood the fir.  Peer climbed 
up and loosed the end of the line, while the others leaned over the 
side, watching the cord where it vanished in the depths.  What 
would it bring to light when it came up?

"Row!" ordered Peer, and began hauling in.

The boat was headed straight out across the fjord, and the long 
line with its trailing hooks hauled in and coiled up neatly in the 
bottom of a shallow tub.  Peer's heart was beating.  There came a 
tug--the first--and the faint shimmer of a fish deep down in the 
water.  Pooh! only a big cod.  Peer heaved it in with a careless 
swing over the gunwale.  Next came a ling--a deep water fish at any 
rate this time.  Then a tusk, and another, and another; these would 
please the women, being good eating, and perhaps make them hold 
their tongues when the men came home.  Now the line jerks heavily; 
what is coming?  A grey shadow comes in sight.  "Here with the 
gaff!" cries Peer, and Peter throws it across to him.  "What is it, 
what is it?" shriek the other three.  "Steady! don't upset the 
boat; a catfish."  A stroke of the gaff over the side, and a clumsy 
grey body is heaved into the boat, where it rolls about, hissing 
and biting at the bottom-boards and baler, the splinters crackling 
under its teeth.  "Mind, mind!" cries Klaus--he was always nervous 
in a boat.

But Peer was hauling in again.  They were nearly half-way across 
the fjord by now, and the line came up from mysterious depths, 
which no fisherman had ever sounded.  The strain on Peer began to 
show in his looks; the others sat watching his face.  "Is the line 
heavy?" asked Klaus.  "Keep still, can't you?" put in Martin, 
glancing along the slanting line to where it vanished far below.  
Peer was still hauling.  A sense of something uncanny seemed to be 
thrilling up into his hands from the deep sea.  The feel of the 
line was strange.  There was no great weight, not even the clean 
tug-tug of an ordinary fish; it was as if a giant hand were pulling 
gently, very gently, to draw him overboard and down into the 
depths.  Then suddenly a violent jerk almost dragged him over the 
side.

"Look out!  What is it?" cried the three together.

"Sit down in the boat," shouted Peer.  And with the true fisherman's
sense of discipline they obeyed.

Peer was gripping the line firmly with one hand, the other 
clutching one of the thwarts.  "Have we another gaff?" he jerked 
out breathlessly.

"Here's one."  Peter Ronningen pulled out a second iron-hooked 
cudgel.

"You take it, Martin, and stand by."

"But what--what is it?"

"Don't know what it is.  But it's something big."

"Cut the line, and row for your lives!" wailed the doctor's son.  
Strange he should be such a coward at sea, a fellow who'd tackle a 
man twice his size on dry land.

Once more Peer was jerked almost overboard.  He thought of the 
forest fire the year before--it would never do to have another such 
mishap on his shoulders.  Suppose the great monster did come up and 
capsize them--they were ever so far from land.  What a to do there 
would be if they were all drowned, and it came out that it was his 
fault.  Involuntarily he felt for his knife to cut the line--then 
thrust it back again, and went on hauling.

Here it comes--a great shadow heaving up through the water.  The 
huge beast flings itself round, sending a flurry of bubbles to the 
surface.  And there!--a gleam of white; a row of great white teeth 
on the underside.  Aha! now he knows what it is!  The Greenland 
shark is the fiercest monster of the northern seas, quite able to 
make short work of a few boys or so.

"Steady now, Martin--ready with the gaff."

The brute was wallowing on the surface now, the water boiling 
around him.  His tail lashed the sea to foam, a big, pointed head 
showed up, squirming under the hook.  "Now!" cried Peer, and two 
gaffs struck at the same moment, the boat heeled over, letting in a 
rush of water, and Klaus, dropping his oars, sprang into the bow, 
with a cry of "Jesus, save us!"

Next second a heavy body, big as a grown man, was heaved in over 
the gunwale, and two boys were all but shot out the other way.  And 
now the fun began.  The boys loosed their hold of the gaffs, and 
sprang apart to give the creature room.  There it lay raging, the 
great black beast of prey, with its sharp threatening snout and 
wicked red eyes ablaze.  The strong tail lashed out, hurling oars 
and balers overboard, the long teeth snapped at the bottom-boards 
and thwarts.  Now and again it would leap high up in the air, only 
to fall back again, writhing furiously, hissing and spitting and 
frothing at the mouth, its red eyes glaring from one to another of 
the terrified captors, as if saying:  "Come on--just a little 
nearer!"

Meanwhile, Martin Bruvold was in terror that the shark would smash 
the boat to pieces.  He drew his knife and took a step forward--a 
flash in the air, and the steel went in deep between the back fins, 
sending up a spurt of blood.  "Look out!" cried the others, but 
Martin had already sprung back out of reach of the black tail.  And 
now the dance of death began anew.  The knife was fixed to the grip 
in the creature's back; one gaff had buried its hook between the 
eyes, and another hung on the flank--the wooden shafts were flung 
this way and that at every bound, and the boat's frame shook and 
groaned under the blows.

"She'll smash the boat and we'll go to the bottom," cried Peer.

And now HIS knife flashed out and sent a stream of blood spouting 
from between the shoulders, but the blow cost him his foothold--and 
in a moment the two bodies were rolling over and over together in 
the bottom of the boat.

"Oh, Lord Jesus!" shrieked Klaus, clinging to the stempost.  
"She'll kill him!  She'll kill him!"

Peer was half up now, on his knees, but as he reached out a hand to 
grasp the side, the brute's jaws seized on his arm.  The boy's face 
was contorted with pain--another moment and the sharp teeth would 
have bitten through, when, swift as thought, Peter Ronningen 
dropped his oars and sent his knife straight in between the beast's 
eyes.  The blade pierced through to the brain, and the grip of the 
teeth relaxed.

"C-c-cursed d-d-devil!" stammered Peter, as he scrambled back to 
his oars.  Another moment, and Peer had dragged himself clear and 
was kneeling by the forward thwart, holding the ragged sleeve of 
his wounded arm, while the blood trickled through his fingers.

When at last they were pulling homeward, the little boat overloaded 
with the weight of the great carcase, all at once they stopped 
rowing.

"Where is Klaus?" asked Peer--for the doctor's son was gone from 
where he had sat, clinging to the stem.

"Why--there he is--in the bottom!"

There lay the big lout of fifteen, who already boasted of his love-
affairs, learned German, and was to be a gentleman like his father--
there he lay on the bottom-boards in the bow in a dead faint.

The others were frightened at first, but Peer, who was sitting 
washing his wounded arm, took a dipper full of water and flung it 
in the unconscious one's face.  The next instant Klaus had started 
up sitting, caught wildly at the gunwale, and shrieked out:

"Cut the line, and row for your lives!"

A roar of laughter went up from the rest; they dropped their oars 
and sat doubled up and gasping.  But on the beach, before going 
home, they agreed to say nothing about Klaus's fainting fit.  And 
for weeks afterwards the four scamps' exploit was the talk of the 
village, so that they felt there was not much fear of their getting 
the thrashing they deserved when the men came home.



Chapter II


When Peer, as quite a little fellow, had been sent to live with the 
old couple at Troen, he had already passed several times from one 
adopted home to another, though this he did not remember.  He was 
one of the madcaps of the village now, but it was not long since he 
had been a solitary child, moping apart from the rest.  Why did 
people always say "Poor child!" whenever they were speaking about 
his real mother?  Why did they do it?  Why, even Peter Ronningen, 
when he was angry, would stammer out:  "You ba-ba-bastard!"  But 
Peer called the pock-marked good-wife at Troen "mother" and her 
bandy-legged husband "father," and lent the old man a hand wherever 
he was wanted--in the smithy or in the boats at the fishing.

His childhood was passed among folk who counted it sinful to smile, 
and whose minds were gloomy as the grey sea-fog with poverty, 
psalm-singing, and the fear of hell.

One day, coming home from his work at the peat bog, he found the 
elders snuffling and sighing over their afternoon meal.  Peer wiped 
the sweat from his forehead, and asked what was the matter.

The eldest son shoved a spoonful of porridge into his mouth, wiped his 
eyes, swallowed, and said:  "Poor Peer!"

"Aye, poor little chap," sighed the old man, thrusting his horn 
spoon into a crack in the wall that served as a rack.

"Neither father nor mother now," whimpered the eldest daughter, 
looking over to the window.

"Mother?  Is she--"

"Ay, dearie, yes," sighed the old woman.  "She's gone for sure--
gone to meet her Judge."

Later, as the day went on, Peer tried to cry too.  The worst thing 
of all was that every one in the house seemed so perfectly certain 
where his mother had gone to.  And to heaven it certainly was not.  
But how could they be so sure about it?

Peer had seen her only once, one summer's day when she had come out 
to see the place.  She wore a light dress and a big straw hat, and 
he thought he had never seen anything so beautiful before.  She 
made no secret of it among the neighbours that Peer was not her 
only child; there was a little girl, too, named Louise, who was 
with some folks away up in the inland parishes.  She was in high 
spirits, and told risky stories and sang songs by no means sacred.  
The old people shook their heads over her--the younger ones watched 
her with sidelong glances.  And when she left, she kissed Peer, and 
turned round more than once to look back at him, flushed under her 
big hat, and smiling; and it seemed to Peer that she must surely be 
the loveliest creature in all the world.

But now--now she had gone to a place where the ungodly dwell in 
such frightful torment, and no hope of salvation for her through 
all eternity--and Peer all the while could only think of her in a 
light dress and a big straw hat, all song and happy laughter.

Then came the question:  Who was to pay for the boy now?  True, his 
baptismal certificate said that he had a father--his name was Holm, 
and he lived in Christiania--but, from what the mother had said, it 
was understood that he had disappeared long ago.  What was to be 
done with the boy?

Never till now had Peer rightly understood that he was a stranger 
here, for all that he called the old couple father and mother.

He lay awake night after night up in the loft, listening to the 
talk about him going on in the room below--the good-wife crying and 
saying:  "No, no!", the others saying how hard the times were, and 
that Peer was quite old enough now to be put to service as a goat-
herd on some up-country farm.

Then Peer would draw the skin-rug up over his head.  But often, 
when one of the elders chanced to be awake at night, he could hear 
some one in the loft sobbing in his sleep.  In the daytime he took 
up as little room as he could at the table, and ate as little as 
humanly possible; but every morning he woke up in fear that to-day--
to-day he would have to bid the old foster-mother farewell and go 
out among strangers.

Then something new and unheard of plumped down into the little 
cottage by the fjord.

There came a registered letter with great dabs of sealing-wax all 
over it, and a handwriting so gentlemanly as to be almost 
unreadable.  Every one crowded round the eldest son to see it 
opened--and out fell five ten-crown notes.  "Mercy on us!" they 
cried in amazement, and "Can it be for us?"  The next thing was to 
puzzle out what was written in the letter.  And who should that 
turn out to be from but--no other than Peer's father, though he did 
not say it in so many words.  "Be good to the boy," the letter 
said.  "You will receive fifty crowns from me every half-year.  See 
that he gets plenty to eat and goes dry and well shod.  Faithfully 
your, P. Holm, Captain."

"Why, Peer--he's--he's--  Your father's a captain, an officer," 
stammered the eldest girl, and fell back a step to stare at the 
boy.

"And we're to get twice as much for him as before," said the son, 
holding the notes fast and gazing up at the ceiling, as if he were 
informing Heaven of the fact.

But the old wife was thinking of something else as she folded her 
hands in thankfulness--now she needn't lose the boy.

"Properly fed!"  No need to fear for that.  Peer had treacle with 
his porridge that very day, though it was only a week-day.  And the 
eldest son gave him a pair of stockings, and made him sit down and 
put them on then and there; and the same night, when he went to 
bed, the eldest girl came and tucked him up in a new skin-rug, not 
quite so hairless as the old one.  His father a captain!  It seemed 
too wonderful to be true.

From that day times were changed for Peer.  People looked at him 
with very different eyes.  No one said "Poor boy" of him now.  The 
other boys left off calling him bad names; the grown-ups said he 
had a future before him.  "You'll see," they would say, "that 
father of yours will get you on; you'll be a parson yet, ay, maybe 
a bishop, too."  At Christmas, there came a ten-crown note all for 
himself, to do just as he liked with.  Peer changed it into silver, 
so that his purse was near bursting with prosperity.  No wonder he 
began to go about with his nose in the air, and play the little 
prince and chieftain among the boys.  Even Klaus Brock, the 
doctor's son, made up to him, and taught him to play cards.  But--
"You surely don't mean to go and be a parson," he would say.

For all this, no one could say that Peer was too proud to help with 
the fishing, or make himself useful in the smithy.  But when the 
sparks flew showering from the glowing iron, he could not help 
seeing visions of his own--visions that flew out into the future.  
Aye, he WOULD be a priest.  He might be a sinner now, and a wild 
young scamp; he certainly did curse and swear like a trooper at 
times, if only to show the other boys that it was all nonsense 
about the earth opening and swallowing you up.  But a priest he 
would be, all the same.  None of your parsons with spectacles and a 
pot belly: no, but a sort of heavenly messenger with snowy white 
robes and a face of glory.  Perhaps some day he might even come so 
far that he could go down into that place of torment where his 
mother lay, and bring her up again, up to salvation.  And when, in 
autumn evenings, he stood outside his palace, a white-haired 
bishop, he would lift up his finger, and all the stars should break 
into song.

Clang, clang, sang the anvil under the hammer's beat.

In the still summer evenings a troop of boys go climbing up the 
naked slopes towards the high wooded ranges to fetch home the cows 
for the milking.  The higher they climb, the farther and farther 
their sight can travel out over the sea.  And an hour or two later, 
as the sun goes down, here comes a long string of red-flanked 
cattle trailing down, with a faint jangle of bells, over the far-
off ridges.  The boys halloo them on--"Ohoo-oo-oo!"--and swing 
their ringed rowan staves, and spit red juice of the alder bark 
that they are chewing as men chew tobacco.  Far below them they see 
the farm lands, grey in shadow, and, beyond, the waters of the 
fjord, yellow in the evening light, a mirror where red clouds and 
white sails and hills of liquid blue are shining.  And away out on 
the farthest headland, the lonely star of the coast light over the 
grey sea.

On such an evening Peer came down from the hills just in time to 
see a gentleman in a carriole turn off from the highway and take 
the by-road down towards Troen.  The horse balked suddenly at a 
small bridge, and when the driver reined him in and gave him a cut 
with his whip, the beast reared, swung about, and sent the cart 
fairly dancing round on its high wheels.  "Oh, well, then, I'll 
have to walk," cried the gentleman angrily, and, flinging the reins 
to the lad behind him, he jumped down.  Just at this moment Peer 
came up.

"Here, boy," began the traveller, "just take this bag, will you?  
And--"  He broke off suddenly, took a step backward, and looked 
hard at the boy.  "What--surely it can't be--  Is it you, Peer?"

"Ye-es," said Peer, gaping a little, and took off his cap.

"Well, now, that's funny.  My name is Holm.  Well, well--well, 
well!"

The lad in the cart had driven off, and the gentleman from the city 
and the pale country boy with the patched trousers stood looking at 
each other.

The newcomer was a man of fifty or so, but still straight and 
active, though his hair and close-trimmed beard were sprinkled with 
grey.  His eyes twinkled gaily under the brim of his black felt 
hat; his long overcoat was open, showing a gold chain across his 
waistcoat.  With a pair of gloves and an umbrella in one hand, a 
light travelling bag in the other, and his beautifully polished 
shoes--a grand gentleman, thought Peer, if ever there was one.  And 
this was his father!

"So that's how you look, my boy?  Not very big for your age--nearly 
sixteen now, aren't you?  Do they give you enough to eat?"

"Yes," said Peer, with conviction.

The pair walked down together, towards the grey cottage by the 
fjord.  Suddenly the man stopped, and looked at it through half-
shut eyes.

"Is that where you've been living all these years?"

"Yes."

"In that little hut there?"

"Yes.  That's the place--Troen they call it."

"Why, that wall there bulges so, I should think the whole affair 
would collapse soon."

Peer tried to laugh at this, but felt something like a lump in his 
throat.  It hurt to hear fine folks talk like that of father and 
mother's little house.

There was a great flurry when the strange gentleman appeared in the 
doorway.  The old wife was kneading away at the dough for a cake, 
the front of her all white with flour; the old man sat with his 
spectacles on, patching a shoe, and the two girls sprang up from 
their spinning wheels.  "Well, here I am.  My name's Holm," said 
the traveller, looking round and smiling.  "Mercy on us! the 
Captain his own self," murmured the old woman, wiping her hands on 
her skirt.

He was an affable gentleman, and soon set them all at their ease.  
He sat down in the seat of honour, drumming with his fingers on the 
table, and talking easily as if quite at home.  One of the girls 
had been in service for a while in a Consul's family in the town, 
and knew the ways of gentlefolk, and she fetched a bowl of milk and 
offered it with a curtsy and a:  "Will the Captain please to take 
some milk?"  "Thanks, thanks," said the visitor.  "And what is your 
name, my dear?  Come, there's nothing to blush about.  Nicoline?  
First-rate!  And you?  Lusiana?  That's right."  He looked at the 
red-rimmed basin, and, taking it up, all but emptied it at a 
draught, then, wiping his beard, took breath.  "Phu!--that was 
good.  Well, so here I am."  And he looked around the room and at 
each of them in turn, and smiled, and drummed with his fingers, and 
said, "Well, well--well, well," and seemed much amused with 
everything in general.  "By the way, Nicoline," he said suddenly, 
"since you're so well up in titles, I'm not 'Captain' any more now; 
they've sent me up this way as Lieutenant-Colonel, and my wife has 
just had a house left her in your town here, so we may be coming to 
settle down in these parts.  And perhaps you'd better send letters 
to me through a friend in future.  But we can talk about all that 
by and by.  Well, well--well, well."  And all the time he was 
drumming with his fingers on the table and smiling.  Peer noticed 
that he wore gold sleeve-links and a fine gold stud in his broad 
white shirt-front.

And then a little packet was produced.  "Hi, Peer, come and look; 
here's something for you."  And the "something" was nothing less 
than a real silver watch--and Peer was quite unhappy for the moment 
because he couldn't dash off at once and show it to all the other 
boys.  "There's a father for you," said the old wife, clapping her 
hands, and almost in tears.  But the visitor patted her on the 
shoulder.  "Father? father?  H'm--that's not a thing any one can be 
so sure about.  Hahaha!"  And "hahaha" echoed the old man, still 
sitting with the awl in his hand.  This was the sort of joke he 
could appreciate.

Then the visitor went out and strolled about the place, with his 
hands under his coat tails, and looked at the sky, and the fjord, 
and murmured, "Well, well--well, well," and Peer followed him about 
all the while, and gazed at him as he might have gazed at a star.  
He was to sleep in a neighbour's house, where there was a room that 
had a bed with sheets on it, and Peer went across with him and 
carried his bag.  It was Martin Bruvold's parents who were to house 
the traveller, and people stood round staring at the place.  Martin 
himself was waiting outside.  "This a friend of yours, Peer?  Here, 
then, my boy, here's something to buy a big farm with."  This time 
it was a five-crown note, and Martin stood fingering it, hardly 
able to believe his eyes.  Peer's father was something like a 
father.

It was a fine thing, too, to see a grand gentleman undress.  "I'll 
have things like that some day," thought Peer, watching each new 
wonder that came out of the bag.  There was a silver-backed brush, 
that he brushed his hair and beard with, walking up and down in his 
underclothes and humming to himself.  And then there was another 
shirt, with red stripes round the collar, just to wear in bed.  
Peer nodded to himself, taking it all in.  And when the stranger 
was in bed he took out a flask with a silver cork, that screwed off 
and turned into a cup, and had a dram for a nightcap; and then he 
reached for a long pipe with a beaded cord, and when it was drawing 
well he stretched himself out comfortably and smiled at Peer.

"Well, now, my boy--are you getting on well at school?"

Peer put his hands behind him and set one foot forward.  "Yes--he 
says so--teacher does."

"How much is twelve times twelve?"

That was a stumper!  Peer hadn't got beyond ten times ten.

"Do they teach you gymnastics at the school?"

"Gym--?  What's that?"

"Jumping and vaulting and climbing ropes and drilling in squads--
what?"

"But isn't it--isn't that wicked?"

"Wicked!  Hahaha!  Wicked, did you say?  So that's the way they 
look at things here, is it?  Well, well--well, well!  Hahaha!  Hand 
me that matchbox, my boy.  H'm!"  He puffed away for a while in 
silence.  Then, suddenly:

"See here, boy.  Did you know you'd a little sister?"

"Yes, I know."

"Half-sister, that is to say.  I didn't quite know how it was 
myself.  But I may as well tell you, my boy, that I paid the same 
for you all along, the same as now.  Only I sent the money by your 
mother, and she--well, she, poor girl, had another one to look 
after, and no father to pay for it.  So she made my money do for 
both.  Hahaha!  Well, poor girl, we can't blame her for that.  
Anyhow, we'll have to look after that little half-sister of yours 
now, I suppose, till she grows up.  Don't you think so yourself?"

Peer felt the tears coming.  Think so!--indeed he did.

Next day Peer's father went away.  He stood there, ready to start, 
in the living-room at Troen, stiff felt hat and overcoat and all, 
and said, in a tone like the sheriff's when he gives out a public 
notice at the church door:

"And, by the way, you're to have the boy confirmed this year."

"Yes, to be sure we will," the old mother hastened to say.

"Then I wish him to be properly dressed, like the best of the other 
youngsters.  And there's fifty crowns for him to give the school-
teacher and the parson as a parting gift."  He handed over some 
more notes.

"Afterwards," he went on, "I mean, of course, to look after him 
until he can make his own way in a respectable position.  But first 
we must see what he has a turn for, and what he'd like to be 
himself.  He'd better come to town and talk it over with me--but 
I'll write and arrange all that after he's confirmed.  Then in case 
anything unexpected should happen to me, there's some money laid by 
for him in a savings bank account; he can apply to a friend of 
mine, who knows all about it.  Well, good-bye, and very many 
thanks!"

And the great man smiled to right and left, and shook them all by 
the hand, and waved his hat and was gone.

For the next few days Peer walked on air, and found it hard to keep 
his footing at all on the common earth.  People were for ever 
filling his head with talk about that savings bank account--it 
might be only a few thousands of crowns--but then again, it might 
run up to a million.  A million! and here he was, eating herrings 
for dinner, and talking to Tom, Dick, and Harry just like any one 
else.  A million crowns!

Late in the autumn came the confirmation, and the old wooden 
church, with its tarred walls, nestled among its mighty tree-tops, 
sent its chimes ringing and ringing out into the blue autumn air.  
It seemed to Peer like some kindly old grandmother, calling so 
lovingly:  "Come, come--old and young--old and young--from fjord 
and valley--northways and southways; come, come--this day of all 
days--this day of all days--come, come, come!"  So it had stood, 
ringing out the chimes for one generation after another through 
hundreds of years, and now it is calling to us.  And the young 
folks are there, looking at one another in their new clothes, and 
blowing their noses on clean white handkerchiefs, so carefully 
folded.  There comes Peter Ronningen, passed by good luck this 
year, but forced to turn out in a jacket borrowed from Peer, as the 
tailor wasn't ready with his own new things.  The boys say "how-do-
you-do" and try to smile like grown-up folks.  One or two of them 
may have some little account dating from old school-fights waiting 
to be settled--but, never mind--just as well to forget old scores 
now.  Peer caught sight of Johan Koja, who stole a pencil from him 
last summer, but, after all, even that didn't seem worth making a 
fuss about.  "Well, how've you been getting on since last summer?" 
they ask each other, as they move together up the stone steps to 
the big church door, through which the peal of the organ comes 
rolling out to meet them.

How good it seems, and how kind, the little church, where all you 
see bids you welcome!  Through the stained-glass windows with their 
tiny leaded panes falls a light so soft that even poor ugly faces 
seem beautiful.  The organ tones are the very light itself turned 
into sweet sound.  On one side of the nave you can see all the 
boys' heads, sleek with water; on the other the little mothers to 
be, in grown-up dress to-day for the first time, kerchief on head 
and hymn-book in hand, and with careful faces.  And now they all 
sing.  The elder folks have taken their places farther back to-day, 
but they join in, looking up now and again from the book to those 
young heads in front, and wondering how they will fare in life.  
And the young folk themselves are thinking as they sing, "To-day is 
the beginning of new things.  Play and frolic are over and done 
with; from today we're grown-up."  But the church and all in it 
seemed to say:  "If ever you are in heavy trouble, come hither to 
me."  Just look at that altar-piece there--the wood-carvings are a 
whole Bible in themselves--but Moses with the Tables of the Law is 
gentle of face to-day; you can see he means no harm after all.  St. 
Peter, with the keys, pointing upwards, looks like a kind old 
uncle, bringing something good home from market.  And then the 
angels on the walls, pictured or carved in wood, have borrowed the 
voice of the organ and the tones of the hymn, and they widen out 
the vaulted roof into the dome of heaven; while light and song and 
worshippers melt together and soar upwards toward the infinite 
spaces.

Peer was thinking all the time: I don't care if I'm rich as rich, I 
WILL be a priest.  And then perhaps with all my money I can build a 
church that no one ever saw the like of.  And the first couple I'll 
marry there shall be Martin Bruvold and little sister Louise--if 
only he'll have her.  Just wait and see!

A few days later he wrote to his father, asking if he might come 
into town now and go to school.  A long time passed, and then at 
last a letter came in a strange hand-writing, and all the grown 
folks at Troen came together again to read it.  But what was their 
amazement when they read:

"You will possibly have learned by now from the newspapers that 
your benefactor, Colonel Holm, has met his death by a fall from a 
horse.  I must therefore request you to call on me personally at 
your earliest convenience, as I have several matters to settle with 
you.  Yours faithfully, J. Grundt, Senior Master."

They stood and looked at one another.

Peer was crying--chiefly, it must be admitted, at the thought of 
having to bid good-bye to all the Troen folks and the two cows, and 
the calf, and the grey cat.  He might have to go right on to 
Christiania, no later than to-morrow--to go to school there; and 
when he came back--why, very likely the old mother might not be 
there any more.

So all three of them were heavy-hearted, when the pock-marked good-
wife, and the bow-legged old man, came down with him to the pier.  
And soon he was standing on the deck of the fjord steamer, gazing 
at the two figures growing smaller and smaller on the shore.  And 
then one hut after another in the little hamlet disappeared behind 
the ness--Troen itself was gone now--and the hills and the woods 
where he had cut ring staves and searched for stray cattle--swiftly 
all known things drew away and vanished, until at last the whole 
parish was gone, and his childhood over.



Chapter III


As evening fell, he saw a multitude of lights spread out on every 
side far ahead in the darkness.  And next, with his little wooden 
chest on his shoulder, he was finding his way up through the 
streets by the quay to a lodging-house for country folk, which he 
knew from former visits, when he had come to the town with the 
Lofoten boats.

Next morning, clad in his country homespun, he marched up along 
River Street, over the bridge, and up the hill to the villa 
quarter, where he had to ask the way.  At last he arrived outside a 
white-painted wooden house standing back in a garden.  Here was the 
place--the place where his fate was to be decided.  After the 
country fashion he walked in at the kitchen door.

A stout servant maid in a big white apron was rattling the rings of 
the kitchen range into place; there was a pleasing smell of coffee 
and good things to eat.  Suddenly a door opened, and a figure in a 
dressing-gown appeared--a tall red-haired man with gold spectacles 
astride on a long red nose, his thick hair and scrubby little 
moustaches touched with grey.  He gasped once or twice and then 
started sneezing--hoc-hoc-put-putsch!--wiped his nose with a large 
pocket-handkerchief, and grumbled out:  "Ugh!--this wretched cold--
can't get rid of it.  How about my socks, Bertha, my good girl; do 
you think they are quite dry now?"

"I've had them hung up ever since I lit the fire this morning," 
said the girl, tossing her head.

"But who is this young gentleman, may I ask?"  The gold spectacles 
were turned full on Peer, who rose and bowed.

"Said he wanted to speak to you, sir," put in the maid.

"Ah.  From the country, I see.  Have you anything to sell, my lad?"

"No," said Peer.  He had had a letter. . . .

The red head seemed positively frightened at this--and the 
dressing-gown faltered backwards, as if to find support.  He cast a 
hurried glance at the girl, and then beckoned with a long fore-
finger to Peer.  "Yes, yes, perfectly so.  Be so good as to come 
this way, my lad."

Peer found himself in a room with rows of books all round the 
walls, and a big writing-table in the centre.  "Sit down, my boy."  
The schoolmaster went and picked out a long pipe, and filled it, 
clearing his throat nervously, with an occasional glance at the 
boy.  "H'm--so this is you.  This is Peer--h'm."  He lit his pipe 
and puffed a little, found himself again obliged to sneeze--but at 
last settled down in a chair at the writing-table, stretched out 
his long legs, and puffed away again.

"So that's what you look like?"  With a quick movement he reached 
for a photograph in a frame.  Peer caught a glimpse of his father 
in uniform.  The schoolmaster lifted his spectacles, stared at the 
picture, then let down his spectacles again and fell to 
scrutinising Peer's face.  There was a silence for a while, and 
then he said:  "Ah, indeed--I see--h'm."  Then turning to Peer:

"Well, my lad, it was very sudden--your benefactor's end--most 
unexpected.  He is to be buried to-day."

"Benefactor?" thought Peer.  "Why doesn't he say 'your father'?"

The schoolmaster was gazing at the window.  "He informed me some 
time ago of--h'm--of all the--all the benefits he had conferred on 
you--h'm!  And he begged me to keep an eye on you myself in case 
anything happened to him.  And now"--the spectacles swung round 
towards Peer--"now you are starting out in life by yourself, hey?"

"Yes," said Peer, shifting a little in his seat.

"You will have to decide now what walk in life you are to--er--
devote yourself to."

"Yes," said Peer again, sitting up straighter.

"You would perhaps like to be a fisherman--like the good people 
you've been brought up among?"

"No."  Peer shook his head disdainfully.  Was this man trying to 
make a fool of him?

"Some trade, then, perhaps?"

"No!"

"Oh, then I suppose it's to be America.  Well, you will easily find 
company to go with.  Such numbers are going nowadays--I am sorry to 
say. . . ."

Peer pulled himself together.  "Oh, no, not that at all."  Better 
get it out at once.  "I wish to be a priest," he said, speaking 
with a careful town accent.

The schoolmaster rose from his seat, holding his long pipe up in 
the air in one hand, and pressing his ear forward with the other, 
as though to hear better.  "What?--what did you say?"

"A priest," repeated Peer, but he moved behind his chair as he 
spoke, for it looked as if the schoolmaster might fling the pipe at 
his head.

But suddenly the red face broke into a smile, exposing such an 
array of greenish teeth as Peer had never seen before.  Then he 
said in a sort of singsong, nodding:  "A priest?  Oh, indeed!  
Quite a small matter!"  He rose and wandered once or twice up and 
down the room, then stopped, nodded, and said in a fatherly tone--
to one of the bookshelves:  "H'm--really--really--we're a little 
ambitious, are we not?"

He turned on Peer suddenly.  "Look here, my young friend--don't you 
think your benefactor has been quite generous enough to you 
already?"

"Yes, indeed he has," said Peer, his voice beginning to tremble a 
little.

"There are thousands of boys in your position who are thrown out in 
the world after confirmation and left to shift for themselves, 
without a soul to lend them a helping hand."

"Yes," gasped Peer, looking round involuntarily towards the door.

"I can't understand--who can have put these wild ideas into your 
head?"

With an effort Peer managed to get out:  "It's always been what I 
wanted.  And he--father--"

"Who?  Father--?  Do you mean your benefactor?"

"Well, he was my father, wasn't he?" burst out Peer.

The schoolmaster tottered back and sank into a chair, staring at 
Peer as if he thought him a quite hopeless subject.  At last he 
recovered so far as to say:  "Look here, my lad, don't you think 
you might be content to call him--now and for the future--just your 
benefactor?  Don't you think he deserves it?"

"Oh, yes," whispered Peer, almost in tears.

"You are thinking, of course--you and those who have put all this 
nonsense into your head--of the money which he--h'm--"

"Yes--isn't there a savings bank account--?"

"Aha!  There we are!  Yes, indeed.  There is a savings bank 
account--in my care."  He rose, and hunted out from a drawer a 
small green-covered book.  Peer could not take his eyes from it.  
"Here it is.  The sum entered here to your account amounts to 
eighteen hundred crowns."

Crash!  Peer felt as if he had fallen through the floor into the 
cellarage.  All his dreams vanished into thin air--the million 
crowns--priest and bishop--Christiania--and all the rest.

"On the day when you are in a fair way to set up independently as 
an artisan, a farmer, or a fisherman--and when you seem to me, to 
the best of my judgment, to deserve such help--then and not till 
then I place this book at your disposal.  Do you understand what I 
say?"

"Yes."

"I am perfectly sure that I am in full agreement with the wishes of 
the donor in deciding that the money must remain untouched in my 
safe keeping until then."

"Yes," whispered Peer.

"What?--are you crying?"

"N-no.  Good-morning--"

"No, pray don't go yet.  Sit down.  There are one or two things we 
must get settled at once.  First of all--you must trust me, my good 
boy.  Do you believe that I wish you well, or do you not?"

"Yes, sir."

"Then it is agreed that all these fancies about going to college 
and so forth must be driven out of your head once for all?"

"Y-yes, sir."

"You can see yourself that, even supposing you had the mental 
qualifications, such a sum, generous as it is in itself, would not 
suffice to carry you far."

"No-no, sir."

"On the other hand, if you wish it, I will gladly arrange to get 
you an apprentice's place with a good handicraftsman here.  You 
would have free board there, and--well, if you should want clothes 
the first year or so, I dare say we could manage that.  You will be 
better without pocket-money to fling about until you can earn it 
for yourself."

Peer sighed, and drooped as he stood.  When he saw the green-backed 
book locked into its drawer again, and heard the keys rattle as 
they went back into a pocket under the dressing-gown, he felt as if 
some one were pointing a jeering finger at him, and saying, "Yah!"

"Then there's another thing.  About your name.  What name have you 
thought of taking, my lad--surname, I mean?"

"My name is Peer Holm!" said the boy, instinctively drawing himself 
up as he had done when the bishop had patted his head at the 
confirmation and asked his name.

The schoolmaster pursed up his lips, took off his spectacles and 
wiped them, put them on again, and turned to the bookshelves with a 
sigh.  "Ah, indeed!--yes--yes--I almost thought as much."

Then he came forward and laid a hand kindly on Peer's shoulder.

"My dear boy--that is out of the question."

A shiver went through Peer.  Had he done something wrong again?

"See here, my boy--have you considered that there may be others of 
that name in this same place?"

"Yes--but--"

"Wait a minute--and that you would occasion these--others--the 
deepest pain and distress if it should become known that--well, how 
matters stand.  You see, I am treating you as a grown-up man--a 
gentleman.  And I feel sure you would not wish to inflict a great 
sorrow--a crushing blow--upon a widow and her innocent children.  
There, there, my boy, there's nothing to cry about.  Life, my young 
friend, life has troubles that must be faced.  What is the name of 
the farm, or house, where you have lived up to now?"

"T--Troen."

"Troen--a very good name indeed.  Then from to-day on you will call 
yourself Peer Troen."

"Y-yes, sir."

"And if any one should ask about your father, remember that you are 
bound in honour and conscience not to mention your benefactor's 
name."

"Y-yes."

"Well, then, as soon as you have made up your mind, come at once 
and let me know.  We shall be great friends yet, you will see.  
You're sure you wouldn't like to try America?  Well, well, come 
along out to the kitchen and see if we can find you some 
breakfast."

Peer found himself a moment after sitting on a chair in the 
kitchen, where there was such a good smell of coffee.  "Bertha," 
said the schoolmaster coaxingly, "you'll find something good for 
breakfast for my young friend here, won't you?"  He waved a 
farewell with his hand, took down his socks from a string above the 
stove, and disappeared through the door again.



Chapter IV


When a country boy in blue homespun, with a peaked cap on his blond 
head, goes wandering at random through the streets of a town, it is 
no particular concern of any one else.  He moves along, gazing in 
at shop windows, hands deep in his pockets, whistling, looking at 
everything around him--or at nothing at all.  And yet--perhaps in 
the head under that peaked cap it seems as if a whole little world 
had suddenly collapsed, and he may be whistling hard to keep from 
crying in the streets for people to see.  He steps aside to avoid 
a cart, and runs into a man, who drops his cigar in the gutter.  
"Confounded country lout!" says the man angrily, but passes on and 
has forgotten boy and all the next moment.  But a little farther on 
a big dog comes dashing out of a yard and unluckily upsets a fat 
old woman on the pavement, and the boy with the peaked cap, for all 
his troubles, cannot help doubling up and roaring with laughter.

That afternoon, Peer sat on one of the ramparts below the fortress, 
biting at a stalk of grass, and twirling the end in his fingers.  
Below him lay town and fjord in the mild October sunlight; the 
rumble of traffic, the noises from workshops and harbour, came up 
to him through the rust-brown luminous haze.  There he sat, while 
the sentry on the wall above marched back and forth, with his rifle 
on his shoulder, left--right--left.

You may climb very high up indeed, and fall down very deep, and no 
such terrible harm done after all, as long as you don't absolutely 
break your neck.  And gradually Peer began to realise that he was 
still alive, after all.  It is a bad business when the world goes 
against you, even though you may have some one to turn to for 
advice and sympathy.  But when all the people round you are utter 
strangers, there is nothing to be done but sit down and twirl a 
straw, and think things out a bit for yourself.  Peer's thoughts 
were of a thing in a long dressing-gown that had taken his bank 
book and locked it up and rattled the keys at him and said "Yah!" 
and deposed him from his bishopric and tried to sneeze and squeeze 
him into a trade, where he'd have to carry a pressing-iron all his 
life and be Peer Troen, Tailor.  But he wouldn't have that.  He sat 
there bracing himself up, and trying to gather together from 
somewhere a thing he had never had much need of before--to wit, a 
will of his own, something to set up against the whole wide world.  
What was he to do now?  He felt he would like to go back to Troen 
first of all, and talk things over with the old father and mother; 
they would be sorry for him there, and say "Poor boy," and pray for 
him--but after a day or two, he knew, they would begin to glance at 
him at meals, and remember that there was no one to pay for him 
now, and that times were hard.  No, that was no refuge for him now.  
But what could he do, then?  Clearly it was not such a simple 
matter to be all alone in the world.

A little later he found himself on a hillside by the Cathedral 
churchyard, sitting under the yellowing trees, and wondering 
dreamily where his father was to be buried.  What a difference 
between him and that schoolmaster man!  No preaching with him; no 
whining about what his boy might call himself or might not.  Why 
must he go and die?

It was strange to think of that fine strong man, who had brushed 
his hair and beard so carefully with his silver-backed brush--to 
think that he was lying still in a coffin now, and would soon be 
covered up with earth.

People were coming up the hill now, and passing in to the 
churchyard.  The men wore black clothes and tall shiny hats--but 
there were some officers too, with plumes and sashes.  And then a 
regimental band--with its brass instruments.  Peer slipped into the 
churchyard with the crowd, but kept apart from the rest, and took 
up his stand a little way off, beside a big monument.  "It must be 
father's funeral," he thought to himself, and was broad awake at 
once.

This, he guessed, must be the Cadet School, that came marching in, 
and formed up in two lines from the mortuary chapel to the open 
grave.  The place was nearly full of people now; there were women 
holding handkerchiefs to their eyes, and an elderly lady in black 
went into the chapel, on the arm of a tall man in uniform.  "That 
must be father's wife," thought Peer, "and the young ladies there 
in black are--my half-sisters, and that young lieutenant--my half-
brother."  How strange it all was!  A sound of singing came from 
the chapel.  And a little later six sergeants came out, carrying a 
coffin all heaped with flowers.  "Present arms!"  And the soldiers 
presented, and the band played a slow march and moved off in front 
of the coffin, between the two lines of soldiers.  And then came a 
great following of mourners.  The lady in black came out again, 
sobbing behind her handkerchief, and hardly able to follow, though 
she clung to the tall officer's arm.  But in front of the pair, 
just behind the coffin itself, walked a tall man in splendid 
uniform, with gold epaulettes, plumed hat, and sword, bearing a 
cushion with two jewelled stars.  And the long, long train of 
mourners moved slowly, gently on, and there--there by the grave, 
stood the priest, holding a spade.

Peer was anxious to hear what the priest would have to say about 
his father.  Involuntarily he stole a little nearer, though he felt 
somehow that it would not do to come too close.

A hymn was sung at the graveside, the band accompanying.  Peer 
took off his cap.  He was too taken up to notice that one of the 
mourners was watching him intently, and presently left the group 
and came towards him.  The man wore spectacles, and a shiny tall 
hat, and it was not until he began to sneeze that Peer recognised 
him.  It was the schoolmaster, glaring at him now with a face so 
full of horror and fury that the spectacles almost seemed to be 
spitting fire.

"You--you--  Are you mad?" he whispered in Peer's face, clenching 
his black gloved hands.  "What are you doing here?  Do you want to 
cause a catastrophe to-day of all days?  Go--get away at once, do 
you hear me?  Go!  For heaven's sake, get away from here before any 
one sees."  Peer turned and fled, hearing behind him as he went a 
threatening "If ever you dare--again--," while the voices and the 
band, swelling higher in the hymn, seemed to strike him in the back 
and drive him on.

He was far down in the town before he could stop and pull himself 
together.  One thing was clear--after this he could never face that 
schoolmaster again.  All was lost.  Could he even be sure that what 
he had done wasn't so frightfully wrong that he would have to go to 
prison for it?

Next day the Troen folk were sitting at their dinner when the 
eldest son looked out of the window and said:  "There's Peer 
coming."

"Mercy on us!" cried the good-wife, as he came in.  "What is the 
matter, Peer?  Are you ill?"

Ah, it was good that night to creep in under the old familiar skin-
rug once more.  And the old mother sat on the bedside and talked to 
him of the Lord, by way of comfort.  Peer clenched his hands under 
the clothes--somehow he thought now of the Lord as a sort of 
schoolmaster in a dressing-gown.  Yet it was some comfort all the 
same to have the old soul sit there and talk to him.

Peer had much to put up with in the days that followed--much 
tittering and whispers of "Look! there goes the priest," as he went 
by.  At table, he felt ashamed of every mouthful he took; he hunted 
for jobs as day-labourer on distant farms so as to earn a little to 
help pay for his keep.  And when the winter came he would have to 
do as the others did--hire himself out, young and small as he was, 
for the Lofoten fishing.

But one day after church Klaus Brock drew him aside and got him to 
talk things over at length.  First, Klaus told him that he himself 
was going away--he was to begin in one of the mechanical workshops 
in town, and go from there to the Technical College, to qualify for 
an engineer.  And next he wanted to hear the whole truth about what 
had happened to Peer that day in town.  For when people went 
slapping their thighs and sniggering about the young would-be 
priest that had turned out a beggar, Klaus felt he would like to 
give the lot of them a darned good hammering.

So the two sixteen-year-old boys wandered up and down talking, and 
in the days to come Peer never forgot how his old accomplice in the 
shark-fishing had stood by him now.  "Do like me," urged Klaus.  
"You're a bit of a smith already, man; go to the workshops, and 
read up in your spare time for the entrance exam to the Technical.  
Then three years at the College--the eighteen hundred crowns will 
cover that--and there you are, an engineer--and needn't even owe 
any one a halfpenny."

Peer shook his head; he was sure he would never dare to show his 
face before that schoolmaster again, much less ask for the money in 
the bank.  No; the whole thing was over and done with for him.

"But devil take it, man, surely you can see that this ape of a 
schoolmaster dare not keep you out of your money.  Let me come with 
you; we'll go up and tackle him together, and then--then you'll 
see."  And Klaus clenched his fists and thrust out one shoulder 
fiercely.

But when January came, there was Peer in oil-skins, in the foc's'le 
of a Lofoten fishing-smack, ploughing the long sea-road north to 
the fishing-grounds, in frost and snow-storms.  All through that 
winter he lived the fisherman's life: on land, in one of the tiny 
fisher-booths where a five-man crew is packed like sardines in an 
air so thick you can cut it with a knife; at sea, where in a fair 
wind you stand half the day doing nothing and freezing stiff the 
while--and a foul wind means out oars, and row, row, row, over an 
endless plain of rolling icy combers; row, row, till one's hands 
are lumps of bleeding flesh.  Peer lived through it all, thinking 
now and then, when he could think at all, how the grand gentlefolk 
had driven him out to this life because he was impertinent enough 
to exist.  And when the fourteen weeks were past, and the Lofoten 
boats stood into the fjord again on a mild spring day, it was easy 
for Peer to reckon out his earnings, which were just nothing at 
all.  He had had to borrow money for his outfit and food, and he 
would be lucky if his boy's share was enough to cover what he owed.

A few weeks later a boy stood by the yard gate of an engineering 
works in the town just as the bell was ringing and the men came 
streaming out, and asked for Klaus Brock.

"Hullo, Peer--that you?  Been to Lofoten and made your fortune?"

The two boys stood a moment taking stock of one another: Klaus 
grimy-faced and in working-clothes--Peer weather-beaten and tanned 
by storm and spray.

The manager of the factory was Klaus's uncle, and the same 
afternoon his nephew came into the office with a new hand wanting 
to be taken on as apprentice.  He had done some smithy work before, 
he said; and he was taken on forthwith, at a wage of twopence an 
hour.

"And what's your name?"

"Peer--er"--the rest stuck in his throat.

"Holm," put in Klaus.

"Peer Holm?  Very well, that'll do."

The two boys went out with a feeling of having done something 
rather daring.  And anyway, if trouble should come along, there 
would be two of them now to tackle it.



Chapter V


In a narrow alley off Sea Street lived Gorseth the job-master, with 
a household consisting of a lean and skinny wife, two half-starved 
horses, and a few ramshackle flies and sledges.  The job-master 
himself was a hulking toper with red nose and beery-yellow eyes, 
who spent his nights in drinking and got home in the small hours of 
the morning when his wife was just about getting up.  All through 
the morning she went about the place scolding and storming at him 
for a drunken ne'er-do-well, while Gorseth himself lay comfortably 
snoring.

When Peer arrived on the scene with his box on his shoulder, 
Gorseth was on his knees in the yard, greasing a pair of leather 
carriage-aprons, while his wife, sunken-lipped and fierce-eyed, 
stood in the kitchen doorway, abusing him for a profligate, a 
swine, and the scum of the earth.  Gorseth lay there on all-fours, 
with the sun shining on his bald head, smearing on the grease; but 
every now and then he would lift his head and snarl out, "Hold your 
jaw, you damned old jade!"

"Haven't you a room to let?" Peer asked.

A beery nose was turned towards him, and the man dragged himself up 
and wiped his hands on his trousers.  "Right you are," said he, and 
led the way across the yard, up some stairs, and into a little room 
with two panes of glass looking on to the street and a half-window 
on the yard.  The room had a bed with sheets, a couple of chairs, 
and a table in front of the half-window.  Six and six a month.  
Agreed.  Peer took it on the spot, paid down the first month's 
rent, and having got rid of the man sat down on his chest and 
looked about him.  Many people have never a roof to their heads, 
but here was he, Peer, with a home of his own.  Outside in the yard 
the woman had begun yelping her abuse again, the horses in the 
stable beneath were stamping and whinnying, but Peer had lodged in 
fisher-booths and peasants' quarters and was not too particular.  
Here he was for the first time in a place of his own, and within 
its walls was master of the house and his own master.

Food was the next thing.  He went out and bought in supplies, 
stocking his chest with plain country fare.  At dinner time he sat 
on the lid, as fishermen do, and made a good solid meal of flat 
bannocks and cold bacon.

And now he fell-to at his new work.  There was no question of 
whether it was what he wanted or not; here was a chance of getting 
up in the world, and that without having to beg any one's leave.  
He meant to get on.  And it was not long before his dreams began to 
take a new shape from his new life.  He stood at the bottom of a 
ladder, a blacksmith's boy--but up at the top sat a mighty Chief 
Engineer, with gold spectacles and white waistcoat.  That was where 
he would be one day.  And if any schoolmaster came along and tried 
to keep him back this time--well, just let him try it.  They had 
turned him out of a churchyard once--he would have his revenge for 
that some day.  It might take him years and years to do it, but one 
fine day he would be as good as the best of them, and would pay 
them back in full.

In the misty mornings, as he tramped in to his work, dinner-pail in 
hand, his footsteps on the plank bridge seemed hammering out with 
concentrated will:  "To-day I shall learn something new--new--new!"

The great works down at the harbour--shipyard, foundry, and machine 
shops--were a whole city in themselves.  And into this world of 
fire and smoke and glowing iron, steam-hammers, racing wheels, and 
bustle and noise, he was thrusting his way, intent upon one thing, 
to learn and learn and ever learn.  There were plenty of those by 
him who were content to know their way about the little corner 
where they stood--but they would never get any farther.  They would 
end their days broken-down workmen--HE would carve his way through 
till he stood among the masters.  He had first to put in some 
months' work in the smithy, then he would be passed on to the 
machine shops, then to work with the carpenters and painters, and 
finally in the shipyard.  The whole thing would take a couple of 
years.  But the works and all therein were already a kind of new 
Bible to him; a book of books, which he must learn by heart.  Only 
wait!

And what a place it was for new adventures!  Many times a day he 
would find himself gazing at some new wonder; sheer miracle and 
revelation--yet withal no creation of God's grace, but an invention 
of men.  Press a button, and behold, a miracle springs to life.  He 
would stare at the things, and the strain of understanding them 
would sometimes keep him awake at night.  There was something 
behind this, something that must be--spirit, even though it did not 
come from God.  These engineers were priests of a sort, albeit they 
did not preach nor pray.  It was a new world.

One day he was put to riveting work on an enormous boiler, and for 
the first time found himself working with a power that was not the 
power of his own hands.  It was a tube, full of compressed air, 
that drove home the rivets in quick succession with a clashing wail 
from the boiler that sounded all over the town.  Peer's head and 
ears ached with the noise, but he smiled all the same.  He was used 
to toil himself, in weariness of body; now he stood here master, 
was mind and soul and directing will.  He felt it now for the first 
time, and it sent a thrill of triumph through every nerve of his 
body.

But all through the long evenings he sat alone, reading, reading, 
and heard the horses stamping in the stable below.  And when he 
crept into bed, well after midnight, there was only one thing that 
troubled him--his utter loneliness.  Klaus Brock lived with his 
uncle, in a fine house, and went to parties.  And he lay here all 
by himself.  If he were to die that very night, there would be 
hardly a soul to care.  So utterly alone he was--in a strange and 
indifferent world.

Sometimes it helped him a little to think of the old mother at 
Troen, or of the church at home, where the vaulted roof had soared 
so high over the swelling organ-notes, and all the faces had looked 
so beautiful.  But the evening prayer was no longer what it had 
been for him.  There was no grey-haired bishop any more sitting at 
the top of the ladder he was to climb.  The Chief Engineer that was 
there now had nothing to do with Our Lord, or with life in the 
world to come.  He would never come so far now that he could go 
down into the place of torment where his mother lay, and bring her 
up with him, up to salvation.  And whatever power and might he 
gained, he could never stand in autumn evenings and lift up his 
finger and make all the stars break into song.

Something was past and gone for Peer.  It was as if he were rowing 
away from a coast where red clouds hung in the sky and dream-
visions filled the air--rowing farther and farther away, towards 
something quite new.  A power stronger than himself had willed it 
so.

One Sunday, as he sat reading, the door opened, and Klaus Brock 
entered whistling, with his cap on the back of his head.

"Hullo, old boy!  So this is where you live?"

"Yes, it is--and that's a chair over there."

But Klaus remained standing, with his hands in his pockets and his 
cap on, staring about the room.  "Well, I'm blest!" he said at 
last.  "If he hasn't stuck up a photograph of himself on his 
table!"

"Well, did you never see one before?  Don't you know everybody has 
them?"

"Not their own photos, you ass!  If anybody sees that, you'll never 
hear the last of it."

Peer took up the photograph and flung it under the bed.  "Well, it 
was a rubbishy thing," he muttered.  Evidently he had made a 
mistake.  "But what about this?"--pointing to a coloured picture he 
had nailed up on the wall.

Klaus put on his most manly air and bit off a piece of tobacco 
plug.  "Ah! that!" he said, trying not to laugh too soon.

"Yes; it's a fine painting, isn't it?  I got it for fourpence."

"Painting!  Ha-ha! that's good!  Why, you silly cow, can't you see 
it's only an oleograph?"

"Oh, of course you know all about it.  You always do."

"I'll take you along one day to the Art Gallery," said Klaus.  
"Then you can see what a real painting looks like.  What's that 
you've got there--English reader?"

"Yes," put in Peer eagerly; "hear me say a poem."  And before Klaus 
could protest, he had begun to recite.

When he had finished, Klaus sat for a while in silence, chewing his 
quid.  "H'm!" he said at last, "if our last teacher, Froken 
Zebbelin, could have heard that English of yours, we'd have had to 
send for a nurse for her, hanged if we wouldn't!"

This was too much.  Peer flung the book against the wall and told 
the other to clear out to the devil.  When Klaus at last managed to 
get a word in, he said:

"If you are to pass your entrance at the Technical you'll have to 
have lessons--surely you can see that.  You must get hold of a 
teacher."

"Easy for you to talk about teachers!  Let me tell you my pay is 
twopence an hour."

"I'll find you one who can take you twice a week or so in languages 
and history and mathematics.  I daresay some broken-down sot of a 
student would take you on for sevenpence a lesson.  You could run 
to that, surely?"

Peer was quiet now and a little pensive.  "Well, if I give up 
butter, and drink water instead of coffee--"

Klaus laughed, but his eyes were moist.  Hard luck that he couldn't 
offer to lend his comrade a few shillings--but it wouldn't do.

So the summer passed.  On Sundays Peer would watch the young folks 
setting out in the morning for the country, to spend the whole day 
wandering in the fields and woods, while he sat indoors over his 
books.  And in the evening he would stick his head out of his two-
paned window that looked on to the street, and would see the lads 
and girls coming back, flushed and noisy, with flowers and green 
boughs in their hats, crazy with sunshine and fresh air.  And still 
he must sit and read on.  But in the autumn, when the long nights 
set in, he would go for a walk through the streets before going to 
bed, as often as not up to the white wooden house where the manager 
lived.  This was Klaus's home.  Lights in the windows, and often 
music; the happy people that lived here knew and could do all sorts 
of things that could never be learned from books.  No mistake: he 
had a goodish way to go--a long, long way.  But get there he would.

One day Klaus happened to mention, quite casually, where Colonel 
Holm's widow lived, and late one evening Peer made his way out 
there, and cautiously approached the house.  It was in River 
Street, almost hidden in a cluster of great trees, and Peer stood 
there, leaning against the garden fence, trembling with some 
obscure emotion.  The long rows of windows on both floors were 
lighted up; he could hear youthful laughter within, and then a 
young girl's voice singing--doubtless they were having a party.  
Peer turned up his collar against the wind, and tramped back 
through the town to his lodging above the carter's stable.

For the lonely working boy Saturday evening is a sort of festival.  
He treats himself to an extra wash, gets out his clean underclothes 
from his chest, and changes.  And the smell of the newly-washed 
underclothing calls up keenly the thought of a pock-marked old 
woman who sewed and patched it all, and laid it away so neatly 
folded.  He puts it on carefully, feeling almost as if it were 
Sunday already.

Now and again, when a Sunday seemed too long, Peer would drift into 
the nearest church.  What the parson said was all very good, no 
doubt, but Peer did not listen; for him there were only the hymns, 
the organ, the lofty vaulted roof, the coloured windows.  Here, 
too, the faces of the people looked otherwise than in the street 
without; touched, as it were, by some reflection from all that 
their thoughts aspired to reach.  And it was so homelike here.  
Peer even felt a sort of kinship with them all, though every soul 
there was a total stranger.

But at last one day, to his surprise, in the middle of a hymn, a 
voice within him whispered suddenly:  "You should write to your 
sister.  She's as much alone in the world as you are."

And one evening Peer sat down and wrote.  He took quite a lordly 
tone, saying that if she wanted help in any way, she need only let 
him know.  And if she would care to move in to town, she could come 
and live with him.  After which he remained, her affectionate 
brother, Peer Holm, engineer apprentice.

A few days later there came a letter addressed in a fine slanting 
hand.  Louise had just been confirmed.  The farmer she was with 
wished to keep her on as dairymaid through the winter, but she was 
afraid the work would be too heavy for her.  So she was coming in 
to town by the boat arriving on Sunday evening.  With kind regards, 
his sister, Louise Hagen.

Peer was rather startled.  He seemed to have taken a good deal on 
his shoulders.

On Sunday evening he put on his blue suit and stiff felt hat, and 
walked down to the quay.  For the first time in his life he had 
some one else to look after--he was to be a father and benefactor 
from now on to some one worse off than himself.  This was something 
new.  The thought came back to him of the jolly gentleman who had 
come driving down one day to Troen to look after his little son.  
Yes, that was the way to do things; that was the sort of man he 
would be.  And involuntarily he fell into something of his father's 
look and step, his smile, his lavish, careless air.  "Well, well--
well, well--well, well," he seemed saying to himself.  He might 
almost, in his fancy, have had a neat iron-grey beard on his chin.

The little green steamboat rounded the point and lay in to the 
quay, the gangways were run out, porters jumped aboard, and all the 
passengers came bundling ashore.  Peer wondered how he was to know 
her, this sister whom he had never seen.

The crowd on deck soon thinned, and people began moving off from 
the quay into the town.

Then Peer was aware of a young peasant-girl, with a box in one hand 
and a violin-case in the other.  She wore a grey dress, with a 
black kerchief over her fair hair; her face was pale, and finely 
cut.  It was his mother's face; his mother as a girl of sixteen.  
Now she was looking about her, and now her eyes rested on him, half 
afraid, half inquiring.

"Is it you, Louise?"

"Is that you, Peer?"

They stood for a moment, smiling and measuring each other with 
their eyes, and then shook hands.

Together they carried the box up through the town, and Peer was so 
much of a townsman already that he felt a little ashamed to find 
himself walking through the streets, holding one end of a trunk, 
with a peasant-girl at the other.  And what a clatter her thick 
shoes made on the pavement!  But all the time he was ashamed to 
feel ashamed.  Those blue arch eyes of hers, constantly glancing up 
at him, what were they saying?  "Yes, I have come," they said--"and 
I've no one but you in all the world--and here I am," they kept on 
saying.

"Can you play that?" he asked, with a glance at her violin-case.

"Oh well; my playing's only nonsense," she laughed.  And she told 
how the old sexton she had been living with last had not been able 
to afford a new dress for her confirmation, and had given her the 
violin instead.

"Then didn't you have a new dress to be confirmed in?"

"No."

"But wasn't it--didn't you feel horrible, with the other girls 
standing by you all dressed up fine?"

She shut her eyes for a moment.  "Oh, yes--it WAS horrid," she 
said.

A little farther on she asked:  "Were you boarded out at a lot of 
places?"

"Five, I think."

"Pooh--why, that's nothing.  I was at nine, I was."  The girl was 
smiling again.

When they came up to his room she stood for a moment looking round 
the place.  It was hardly what she had expected to find.  And she 
had not been in town lodgings before, and her nose wrinkled up a 
little as she smelt the close air.  It seemed so stuffy, and so 
dark.

"We'll light the lamp," he said.

Presently she laughed a little shyly, and asked where she was to 
sleep.

"Lord bless us, you may well ask!" Peer scratched his head.  
"There's only one bed, you see."  At that they both burst out 
laughing.

"The one of us'll have to sleep on the floor," suggested the girl.

"Right.  The very thing," said he, delighted.  "I've two pillows; 
you can have one.  And two rugs--anyway, you won't be cold."

"And then I can put on my other dress over," she said.  "And maybe 
you'll have an old overcoat--"

"Splendid!  So we needn't bother any more about that."

"But where do you get your food from?"  She evidently meant to have 
everything cleared up at once.

Peer felt rather ashamed that he hadn't money enough to invite her 
to a meal at an eating-house then and there.  But he had to pay his 
teacher's fees the next day; and his store-box wanted refilling 
too.

"I boil the coffee on the stove there overnight," he said, "so that 
it's all ready in the morning.  And the dry food I keep in that box 
there.  We'll see about some supper now."  He opened the box, 
fished out a loaf and some butter, and put the kettle on the stove.  
She helped him to clear the papers off the table, and spread the 
feast on it.  There was only one knife, but it was really much 
better fun that way than if he had had two.  And soon they were 
seated on their chairs--they had a chair each--having their first 
meal in their own home, he and she together.

It was settled that Louise should sleep on the floor, and they both 
laughed a great deal as he tucked her in carefully so that she 
shouldn't feel cold.  It was not till afterwards, when the lamp was 
out, that they noticed that the autumn gales had set in, and there 
was a loud north-wester howling over the housetops.  And there they 
lay, chatting to each other in the dark, before falling asleep.

It seemed a strange and new thing to Peer, this really having a 
relation of his own--and a girl, too--a young woman.  There she lay 
on the floor near by him, and from now on he was responsible for 
what was to become of her in the world.  How should he put that job 
through?

He could hear her turning over.  The floor was hard, very likely.

"Louise?"

"Yes."

"Did you ever see mother?"

"No."

"Or your father?"

"My father?"  She gave a little laugh.

"Yes, haven't you ever seen him either?"

"Why, how should I, silly?  Who says that mother knew herself who 
it was?"

There was a pause.  Then Peer brought out, rather awkwardly:  
"We're all alone, then--you and I."

"Yes--we are that."

"Louise!  What are you thinking of taking to now?"

"What are you?"

So Peer told her all his plans.  She said nothing for a little 
while--no doubt she was lying thinking of the grand things he had 
before him.

At last she spoke.  "Do you think--does it cost very much to learn 
to be a midwife?"

"A midwife--is that what you want to be, girl?"  Peer couldn't help 
laughing.  So this was what she had been planning in these days--
since he had offered to help her on in the world.

"Do you think my hands are too big?" she ventured presently--he 
could just hear the whisper.

Peer felt a pang of pity.  He had noticed already how ill the red 
swollen hands matched her pale clear-cut face, and he knew that in 
the country, when any one has small, fine hands, people call them 
"midwife's hands."

"We'll manage it somehow, I daresay," said Peer, turning round to 
the wall.  He had heard that it cost several hundred crowns to go 
through the course at the midwifery school.  It would be years 
before he could get together anything like that sum.  Poor girl, 
it looked as if she would have a long time to wait.

After that they fell silent.  The north-wester roared over the 
housetops, and presently brother and sister were asleep.

When Peer awoke the next morning, Louise was about already, making 
coffee over the little stove.  Then she opened her box, took out a 
yellow petticoat and hung it on a nail, placed a pair of new shoes 
against the wall, lifted out some under-linen and woollen 
stockings, looked at them, and put them back again.  The little 
box held all her worldly goods.

As Peer was getting up:  "Gracious mercy!" she cried suddenly, 
"what is that awful noise down in the yard?"

"Oh, that's nothing to worry about," said Peer.  "It's only the 
job-master and his wife.  They carry on like that every blessed 
morning; you'll soon get used to it."

Soon they were seated once more at the little table, drinking 
coffee and laughing and looking at each other.  Louise had found 
time to do her hair--the two fair plaits hung down over her 
shoulders.

It was time for Peer to be off, and, warning the girl not to go too 
far from home and get lost, he ran down the stairs.

At the works he met Klaus Brock, and told him that his sister had 
come to town.

"But what are you going to do with her?" asked Klaus.

"Oh, she'll stay with me for the present."

"Stay with you?  But you've only got one room and one bed, man!"

"Well--she can sleep on the floor."

"She?  Your sister?  She's to sleep on the floor--and you in the 
bed!" gasped Klaus.

Peer saw he had made a mistake again.  "Of course I was only 
fooling," he hastened to say.  "Of course it's Louise that's to 
have the bed."

When he came home he found she had borrowed a frying-pan from the 
carter's wife, and had fried some bacon and boiled potatoes; so 
that they sat down to a dinner fit for a prince.

But when the girl's eyes fell on the coloured print on the wall, 
and she asked if it was a painting, Peer became very grand at once.  
"That--a painting?  Why, that's only an oleograph, silly!  No, I'll 
take you along to the Art Gallery one day, and show you what real 
paintings are like."  And he sat drumming with his fingers on the 
table, and saying:  "Well, well--well, well, well!"

They agreed that Louise had better look out at once for some work 
to help things along.  And at the first eating-house they tried, 
she was taken on at once in the kitchen to wash the floor and peel 
potatoes.

When bedtime came he insisted on Louise taking the bed.  "Of course 
all that was only a joke last night," he explained.  "Here in town 
women always have the best of everything--that's what's called 
manners."  As he stretched himself on the hard floor, he had a 
strange new feeling.  The narrow little garret seemed to have 
widened out now that he had to find room in it for a guest.  There 
was something not unpleasant even in lying on the hard floor, since 
he had chosen to do it for some one else's sake.

After the lamp was out he lay for a while, listening to her 
breathing.  Then at last:

"Louise."

"Yes?"

"Is your father--was his name Hagen?"

"Yes.  It says so on the certificate."

"Then you're Froken Hagen.  Sounds quite fine, doesn't it?"

"Uf!  Now you're making fun of me."

"And when you're a midwife, Froken Hagen might quite well marry a 
doctor, you know."

"Silly!  There's no chance--with hands like mine."

"Do you think your hands are too big for you to marry a doctor?"

"Uf! you ARE a crazy thing.  Ha-ha-ha!"

"Ha-ha-ha!"

They both snuggled down under the clothes, with the sense of ease 
and peace that comes from sharing a room with a good friend in a 
happy humour.

"Well, good-night, Louise."

"Good-night, Peer."



Chapter VI


So things went on till winter was far spent.  Now that Louise, too, 
was a wage-earner, and could help with the expenses, they could 
dine luxuriously at an eating-house every day, if they pleased, on 
meat-cakes at fourpence a portion.  They managed to get a bed for 
Peer that could be folded up during the day, and soon learned, too, 
that good manners required they should hang up Louise's big woollen 
shawl between them as a modest screen while they were dressing and 
undressing.  And Louise began to drop her country speech and talk 
city-fashion like her brother.

One thought often came to Peer as he lay awake.  "The girl is the 
very image of mother, that's certain--what if she were to go the 
same way?  Well, no, that she shall not.  You're surely man enough 
to see to that.  Nothing of that sort shall happen, my dear Froken 
Hagen."

They saw but little of each other during the day, though, for they 
were apart from early in the morning till he came home in the 
evening.  And when he lectured her, and warned her to be careful 
and take no notice of men who tried to speak to her, Louise only 
laughed.  When Klaus Brock came up one day to visit them, and made 
great play with his eyes while he talked to her, Peer felt much 
inclined to take him by the scruff of the neck and throw him 
downstairs.

When Christmas-time was near they would wander in the long evenings 
through the streets and look in at the dazzlingly lit shop-windows, 
with their tempting, glittering show of gold and finery.  Louise 
kept asking continually how much he thought this thing or that 
cost--that lace, or the cloak, or the stockings, or those gold 
brooches.  "Wait till you marry that doctor," Peer would say, "then 
you can buy all those things."  So far neither of them had an 
overcoat, but Peer turned up his coat-collar when he felt cold, and 
Louise made the most of her thick woollen dress and a pair of good 
country gloves that kept her quite warm.  And she had adventured on 
a hat now, in place of her kerchief, and couldn't help glancing 
round, thinking people must notice how fine she was.

On Christmas Eve he carried up buckets of water from the yard, and 
she had a great scrubbing-out of the whole room.  And then they in 
their turn had a good wash, helping each other in country fashion 
to scrub shoulders and back.

Peer was enough of a townsman now to have laid in a few little 
presents to give his sister; but the girl, who had not been used to 
such doings, had nothing for him, and wept a good deal when she 
realised it.  They ate cakes from the confectioner's with syrup 
over them, and drank chocolate, and then Louise played a hymn-tune, 
in her best style, on her violin, and Peer read the Christmas 
lessons from the prayer-book--it was all just like what they used 
to do at Troen on Christmas Eve.  And that night, after the lamp 
was put out, they lay awake talking over plans for the future.  
They promised each other that when they had got well on in the 
world, he in his line and she in hers, they would manage to live 
near each other, so that their children could play together and 
grow up good friends.  Didn't she think that was a good idea?  Yes, 
indeed she did.  And did he really mean it?  Yes, of course he 
meant it, really.

But later on in the winter, when she sat at home in the evenings 
waiting for him--he often worked overtime--she was sometimes almost 
afraid.  There was his step on the stairs!  If it was hurried and 
eager she would tremble a little.  For the moment he was inside the 
door he would burst out:  "Hurrah, my girl!  I've learnt something 
new to-day, I tell you!"  "Have you, Peer?"  And then out would 
pour a torrent of talk about motors and power and pressures and 
cylinders and cranes and screws, and such-like.  She would sit and 
listen and smile, but of course understood not a word of it all, 
and as soon as Peer discovered this he would get perfectly furious, 
and call her a little blockhead.

Then there were the long evenings when he sat at home reading, by 
himself or with his teacher and she had to sit so desperately still 
that she hardly dared take a stitch with her needle.  But one day 
he took it into his head that his sister ought to be studying too; 
so he set her a piece of history to learn by the next evening.  But 
time to learn it--where was that to come from?  And then he started 
her writing to his dictation, to improve her spelling--and all the 
time she kept dropping off to sleep.  She had washed so many floors 
and peeled so many potatoes in the daytime that now her body felt 
like lead.

"Look here, my fine girl!" he would storm at her, raging up and 
down the room, "if you think you can get on in the world without 
education, you're most infernally mistaken."  He succeeded in 
reducing her to tears--but it wasn't long before her head had 
fallen forward on the table again and she was fast asleep.  So he 
realised there was nothing for it but to help her to bed--as 
quietly as possible, so as not to wake her up.

Some way on in the spring Peer fell sick.  When the doctor came, he 
looked round the room, sniffed, and frowned.  "Do you call this a 
place for human beings to live in?" he asked Louise, who had taken 
the day off.  "How can you expect to keep well?"

He examined Peer, who lay coughing, his face a burning red.  "Yes, 
yes--just as I expected.  Inflammation of the lungs."  He glanced 
round the room once more.  "Better get him off to the hospital at 
once," he said.

Louise sat there in terror at the idea that Peer was to be taken 
away.  And then, as the doctor was going, he looked at her more 
closely, and said:  "You'd do well to be a bit careful yourself, my 
good girl.  You look as if you wanted a change to a decent room, 
with a little more light and air, pretty badly.  Good-morning."

Soon after he was gone the hospital ambulance arrived.  Peer was 
carried down the stairs on a stretcher, and the green-painted box 
on wheels opened its door and swallowed him up; and they would not 
even let her go with him.  All through the evening she sat in their 
room alone, sobbing.

The hospital was one of the good old-fashioned kind that people 
don't come near if they can help it, because the walls seem to reek 
of the discomfort and wretchedness that reign inside.  The general 
wards--where the poor folks went--were always so overcrowded that 
patients with all sorts of different diseases had to be packed into 
the same rooms, and often infected each other.  When an operation 
was to be performed, things were managed in the most cheerfully 
casual way: the patient was laid on a stretcher and carried across 
the open yard, often in the depth of winter, and as he was always 
covered up with a rug, the others usually thought he was being 
taken off to the dead-house.

When Peer opened his eyes, he was aware of a man in a white blouse 
standing by the foot of his bed.  "Why, I believe he's coming-to," 
said the man, who seemed to be a doctor.  Peer found out afterwards 
from a nurse that he had been unconscious for more than twenty-four 
hours.

He lay there, day after day, conscious of nothing but the stabbing 
of a red-hot iron boring through his chest and cutting off his 
breathing.  Some one would come every now and then and pour port 
wine and naphtha into his mouth; and morning and evening he was 
washed carefully with warm water by gentle hands.  But little by 
little the room grew lighter, and his gruel began to have some 
taste.  And at last he began to distinguish the people in the beds 
near by, and to chat with them.

On his right lay a black-haired, yellow-faced dock labourer with a 
broken nose.  His disease, whatever it might be, was clearly 
different from Peer's.  He plagued the nurse with foul-mouthed 
complaints of the food, swearing he would report about it.  On the 
other side lay an emaciated cobbler with a soft brown beard like 
the Christ pictures, and cheeks glowing with fever.  He was dying 
of cancer.  At right angles with him lay a man with the face and 
figure of a prophet--a Moses--all bushy white hair and beard; he 
was in the last stage of consumption, and his cough was like a 
riveting machine.  "Huh!" he would groan, "if only I could get 
across to Germany there'd be a chance for me yet."  Beside him was 
a fellow with short beard and piercing eyes, who was a little off 
his head, and imagined himself a corporal of the Guards.  Often at 
night the others would be wakened by his springing upright in bed 
and calling out:  "Attention!"

One man lay moaning and groaning all the time, turning from side to 
side of a body covered with sores.  But one day he managed to 
swallow some of the alcohol they used as lotion, and after that lay 
singing and weeping alternately.  And there was a red-bearded man 
with glasses, a commercial traveller; he had put a bullet into his 
head, but the doctors had managed to get it out again, and now he 
lay and praised the Lord for his miraculous deliverance.

It was strange to Peer to lie awake at night in this great room in 
the dim light of the night-lamp; it seemed as if beings from the 
land of the dead were stirring in those beds round about him.  But 
in the daytime, when friends and relations of the patients came a-
visiting, Peer could hardly keep from crying.  The cobbler had a 
wife and a little girl who came and sat beside him, gazing at him 
as if they could never let him go.  The prophet, too, had a wife, 
who wept inconsolably--and all the rest seemed to have some one or 
other to care for them.  But where was Louise--why did Louise never 
come?

The man on the right had a sister, who came sweeping in, gorgeous 
in her trailing soiled silk dress.  Her shoes were down at heel, 
but her hat was a wonder, with enormous plumes.  "Hallo, Ugly! how 
goes it?" she said; and sat down and crossed her legs.  Then the 
pair would talk mysteriously of people with strange names:  "The 
Flea," "Cockroach," "The Galliot," "King Ring," and the like, 
evidently friends of theirs.  One day she managed to bring in a 
small bottle of brandy, a present from "The Hedgehog," and smuggle 
it under the bedclothes.  As soon as she had gone, and the coast 
was clear, Peer's neighbour drew out the bottle, managed to work 
the cork out, and offered him a drink.  "Here's luck, sonny; do you 
good."  No--Peer would rather not.  Then followed a gurgling sound 
from the docker's bed, and soon he too was lying singing at the top 
of his voice.

At last one day Louise came.  She was wearing her neat hat, and had 
a little bundle in her hand, and as she came in, looking round the 
room, the close air of the sick-ward seemed to turn her a little 
faint.  But then she caught sight of Peer, and smiled, and came 
cautiously to him, holding out her hand.  She was astonished to 
find him so changed.  But as she sat down by his pillow she was 
still smiling, though her eyes were full of tears.

"So you've come at last, then?" said Peer.

"They wouldn't let me in before," she said with a sob.  And then 
Peer learned that she had come there every single day, but only to 
be told that he was too ill to see visitors.

The man with the broken nose craned his head forward to get a 
better view of the modest young girl.  And meanwhile she was 
pulling out of the bundle the offering she had brought--a bottle of 
lemonade and some oranges.

But it was a day or two later that something happened which Peer 
was often to remember in the days to come.

He had been dozing through the afternoon, and when he woke the lamp 
was lit, and a dull yellow half-light lay over the ward.  The 
others seemed to be sleeping; all was very quiet, only the man with 
the sores was whimpering softly.  Then the door opened, and Peer 
saw Louise glide in, softly and cautiously, with her violin-case 
under her arm.  She did not come over to where her brother lay, but 
stood in the middle of the ward, and, taking out her violin, began 
to play the Easter hymn:  "The mighty host in white array."*


* "Den store hvide Flok vi se."


The man with the sores ceased whimpering; the patients in the beds 
round about opened their eyes.  The docker with the broken nose sat 
up in bed, and the cobbler, roused from his feverish dream, lifted 
himself on his elbow and whispered:  "It is the Redeemer.  I knew 
Thou wouldst come."  Then there was silence.  Louise stood there 
with eyes fixed on her violin, playing her simple best.  The 
consumptive raised his head and forgot to cough; the corporal 
slowly stiffened his body to attention; the commercial traveller 
folded his hands and stared before him.  The simple tones of the 
hymn seemed to be giving new life to all these unfortunates; the 
light of it was in their faces.  But to Peer, watching his sister 
as she stood there in the half-light, it seemed as if she grew to 
be one with the hymn itself, and that wings to soar were given her.

When she had finished, she came softly over to his bed, stroked his 
forehead with her swollen hand, then glided out and disappeared as 
silently as she had come.

For a long time all was silent in the dismal ward, until at last 
the dying cobbler murmured:  "I thank Thee.  I knew--I knew Thou 
wert not far away."

When Peer left the hospital, the doctor said he had better not 
begin work again at once; he should take a holiday in the country 
and pick up his strength.  "Easy enough for you to talk," thought 
Peer, and a couple of days later he was at the workshop again.

But his ways with his sister were more considerate than before, and 
he searched about until he had found her a place as seamstress, and 
saved her from her heavy floor-scrubbing.

And soon Louise began to notice with delight that her hands were 
much less red and swollen than they had been; they were actually 
getting soft and pretty by degrees.

Next winter she sat at home in the evenings while he read, and made 
herself a dress and cloak and trimmed a new hat, so that Peer soon 
had quite an elegant young lady to walk out with.  But when men 
turned round to look at her as she passed, he would scowl and 
clench his fists.  At last one day this was too much for Louise, 
and she rebelled.  "Now, Peer, I tell you plainly I won't go out 
with you if you go on like that."

"All right, my girl," he growled.  "I'll look after you, though, 
never fear.  We're not going to have mother's story over again with 
you."

"Well, but, after all, I'm a grown-up-girl, and you can't prevent 
people looking at me, idiot!"

Klaus Brock had been entered at the Technical College that autumn, 
and went about now with the College badge in his cap, and sported a 
walking-stick and a cigarette.  He had grown into a big, broad-
shouldered fellow, and walked with a little swing in his step; a 
thick shock of black hair fell over his forehead, and he had a way 
of looking about him as if to say:  "Anything the matter?  All 
right, I'm ready!"

One evening he came in and asked Louise to go with him to the 
theatre.  The young girl blushed red with joy, and Peer could not 
refuse; but he was waiting for them outside the yard gate when they 
came back.  On a Sunday soon after Klaus was there again, asking 
her to come out for a drive.  This time she did not even look to 
Peer for leave, but said "yes" at once.  "Just you wait," said Peer 
to himself.  And when she came back that evening he read her a 
terrific lecture.

Soon he could not help seeing that the girl was going about with 
half-shut eyes, dreaming dreams of which she would never speak to 
him.  And as the days went on her hands grew whiter, and she moved 
more lightly, as if to the rhythm of unheard music.  Always as she 
went about the room on her household tasks she was crooning some 
song; it seemed that there was some joy in her soul that must find 
an outlet.

One Saturday in the late spring she had just come home, and was 
getting the supper, when Peer came tramping in, dressed in his best 
and carrying a parcel.

"Hi, girl!  Here you are!  We're going to have a rare old feast to-
night."

"Why--what is it all about?"

"I've passed my entrance exam for the Technical--hurrah!  Next 
autumn--next autumn--I'll be a student!"

"Oh, splendid!  I AM so glad!"  And she dried her hand and grasped 
his.

"Here you are--sausages, anchovies--and here's a bottle of brandy--
the first I ever bought in my life.  Klaus is coming up later on to 
have a glass of toddy.  And here's cheese.  We'll make things hum 
to-night."

Klaus came, and the two youths drank toddy and smoked and made 
speeches, and Louise played patriotic songs on her violin, and 
Klaus gazed at her and asked for "more--more."

When he left, Peer went with him, and as the two walked down the 
street, Klaus took his friend's arm, and pointed to the pale moon 
riding high above the fjord, and vowed never to give him up, till 
he stood at the very top of the tree--never, never!  Besides, he 
was a Socialist now, he said, and meant to raise a revolt against 
all class distinctions.  And Louise--Louise was the most glorious 
girl in all the world--and now--and now--Peer might just as well 
know it sooner as later--they were as good as engaged to be 
married, he and Louise.

Peer pushed him away, and stood staring at him.  "Go home now, and 
go to bed," he said.

"Ha! You think I'm not man enough to defy my people--to defy the 
whole world!"

"Good-night," said Peer.

Next morning, as Louise lay in bed--she had asked to have her 
breakfast there for once in a way--she suddenly began to laugh.  
"What ARE you about now?" she asked teasingly.

"Shaving," said Peer, beginning operations.

"Shaving!  Are you so desperate to be grand to-day that you must 
scrape all your skin off?  You know there's nothing else to shave."

"You hold your tongue.  Little do you know what I've got in front 
of me to-day."

"What can it be?  You're not going courting an old widow with 
twelve children, are you?"

"If you want to know, I'm going to that schoolmaster fellow, and 
going to wring my savings-bank book out of him."

Louise sat up at this.  "My great goodness!" she said.

Yes; he had been working himself up to this for a year or more, and 
now he was going to do it.  To-day he would show what he was made 
of--whether he was a snivelling child, or a man that could stand up 
to any dressing-gown in the world.  He was shaving for the first 
time--quite true.  And the reason was that it was no ordinary day, 
but a great occasion.

His toilet over, he put on his best hat with a flourish, and set 
out.

Louise stayed at home all the morning, waiting for his return.  And 
at last she heard him on the stairs.

"Puh!" he said, and stood still in the middle of the room.

"Well?  Did you get it?"

He laughed, wiped his forehead, and drew a green-covered book from 
his coat-pocket.  "Here we are, my girl--there's fifty crowns a 
month for three years.  It's going to be a bit of a pinch, with 
fees and books, and living and clothes into the bargain.  But we'll 
do it.  Father was one of the right sort, I don't care what they 
say."

"But how did you manage it?  What did the schoolmaster say?"

"'Do you suppose that you--you with your antecedents--could ever 
pass into the Technical College?' he said.  And I told him I HAD 
passed.  'Good heavens!  How could you possibly qualify?' and he 
shifted his glasses down his nose.  And then:  'Oh, no! it's no 
good coming here with tales of that sort, my lad.'  Well, then I 
showed him the certificate, and he got much meeker.  'Really!' he 
said, and 'Dear me!' and all that.  But I say, Louise--there's 
another Holm entered for the autumn term."

"Peer, you don't mean--your half-brother?"

"And old Dressing-gown said it would never do--never!  But I said 
it seemed to me there must be room in the world for me as well, and 
I'd like that bank book now, I said.  'You seem to fancy you have 
some legal right to it,' he said, and got perfectly furious.  Then 
I hinted that I'd rather ask a lawyer about it and make sure, and 
at that he regularly boiled with rage and waved his arms all about.  
But he gave in pretty soon all the same--said he washed his hands 
of the whole thing.  'And besides,' he said, 'your name's Troen, 
you know--Peer Troen.'  Ho-ho-ho--Peer Troen!  Wouldn't he like it!  
Tra-la-la-la!--I say, let's go out and get a little fresh air."

Peer said nothing then or after about Klaus Brock, and Klaus 
himself was going off home for the summer holidays.  As the summer 
wore on the town lay baking in the heat, reeking of drains, and the 
air from the stable came up to the couple in the garret so heavy 
and foul that they were sometimes nearly stifled.

"I'll tell you what," said Peer one day, "we really must spend a 
few shillings more on house rent and get a decent place to live 
in."

And Louise agreed.  For till the time came for him to join the 
College in the autumn, Peer was obliged to stick to the workshops; 
he could not afford a holiday just now.

One morning he was just starting with a working gang down to 
Stenkjaer to repair some damage in the engine-room of a big Russian 
grain boat, when Louise came and asked him to look at her throat.  
"It hurts so here," she said.

Peer took a spoon and pressed down her tongue, but could not see 
anything wrong.  "Better go and see the doctor, and make sure," he 
said.

But the girl made light of it.  "Oh, nonsense!" she said; "it's not 
worth troubling about."

Peer was away for over a week, sleeping on board with the rest.  
When he came back, he hurried home, suddenly thinking of Louise and 
her sore throat.  He found the job-master greasing the wheels of a 
carriage, while his wife leaned out of a window scolding at him.  
"Your sister," repeated the carter, turning round his face with its 
great red lump of nose--"she's gone to hospital--diphtheria 
hospital--she has.  Doctor was here over a week ago and took her 
off.  They've been here since poking round and asking who she was 
and where she belonged--well, we didn't know.  And asking where you 
were, too--and we didn't know either.  She was real bad, if you ask 
me--"

Peer hastened off.  It was a hot day, and the air was close and 
heavy.  On he went--all down the whole length of Sea Street, 
through the fishermen's quarter, and a good way further out round 
the bay.  And then he saw a cart coming towards him, an ordinary 
work-cart, with a coffin on it.  The driver sat on the cart, and 
another man walked behind, hat in hand.  Peer ran on, and at last 
came in sight of the long yellow building at the far end of the 
bay.  He remembered all the horrible stories he had heard about the 
treatment of diphtheria patients--how their throats had to be cut 
open to give them air, or something burned out of them with red-hot 
irons--oh!  When at last he had reached the high fence and rung the 
bell, he stood breathless and dripping with sweat, leaning against 
the gate.

There was a sound of steps within, a key was turned, and a porter 
with a red moustache and freckles about his hard blue eyes thrust 
out his head.

"What d'you want to go ringing like that for?"

"Froken Hagen--Louise Hagen--is she better?  How--how is she?"

"Lou--Louise Hagen?  A girl called Louise Hagen?  Is it her you've 
come to ask about?"

"Yes.  She's my sister.  Tell me--or--let me in to see her."

"Wait a bit.  You don't mean a girl that was brought in here about 
a week ago?"

"Yes, yes--but let me in."

"We've had no end of bother and trouble about that girl, trying to 
find out where she came from, and if she had people here.  But, of 
course, this weather, we couldn't possibly keep her any longer.  
Didn't you meet a coffin on a cart as you came along?"

"What--what--you don't mean--?"

"Well, you should have come before, you know.  She did ask a lot 
for some one called Peer.  And she got the matron to write 
somewhere--wasn't it to Levanger?  Were you the fellow she was 
asking for?  So you came at last!  Oh, well--she died four or five 
days ago.  And they're just gone now to bury her, in St. Mary's 
Churchyard."

Peer turned round and looked out over the bay at the town, that lay 
sunlit and smoke-wreathed beyond.  Towards the town he began to 
walk, but his step grew quicker and quicker, and at last he took 
off his cap and ran, panting and sobbing as he went.  Have I been 
drinking? was the thought that whirled through his brain, or why 
can't I wake?  What is it?  What is it?  And still he ran.  There 
was no cart in sight as yet; the little streets of the fisher-
quarter were all twists and turns.  At last he reached Sea Street 
once more, and there--there far ahead was the slow-moving cart.  
Almost at once it turned off to the right and disappeared, and when 
Peer reached the turning, it was not to be seen.  Still he ran on 
at haphazard.  There seemed to be other people in the streets--
children flying red balloons, women with baskets, men with straw 
hats and walking-sticks.  But Peer marked his line, and ran 
forward, thrusting people aside, upsetting those in his way, and 
dashing on again.  In King Street he came in sight of the cart once 
more, nearer this time.  The man walking behind it with his hat in 
his hand had red curling hair, and walked with a curtsying gait, 
giving at the knees and turning out his toes.  No doubt he made his 
living as mourner at funerals to which no other mourners came.  As 
the cart turned into the churchyard Peer came up with it, and tried 
to follow at a walk, but stumbled and could hardly keep his feet.  
The man behind the cart looked at him.  "What's the matter with 
you?" he asked.  The driver looked round, but drove on again at 
once.

The cart stopped, and Peer stood by, leaning against a tree for 
support.  A third man came up--he seemed to be the gravedigger--and 
he heard the three discussing how long they might have to wait for 
the parson.  "The time's just about up, isn't it?" said the driver, 
taking out his watch.  "Ay, the clerk said he'd be here by now," 
agreed the gravedigger, and blew his nose.

Soon the priest came in sight, wearing his black robe and white 
ruff; there were doubtless to be other funerals that day.  Peer 
sank down on a bench and looked stupidly on while the coffin was 
lifted from the cart, carried to the grave, and lowered down.  A 
man with spectacles and a red nose came up with a hymn-book, and 
sang something over the grave.  The priest lifted the spade--and at 
the sound of the first spadeful of earth falling on Louise's 
coffin, Peer started as if struck, and all but fell from his seat.

When he looked up again, the place was deserted.  The bell was 
ringing, and a crowd was collecting in another part of the 
churchyard.  Peer sat where he was, quite still.

In the evening, when the gravedigger came to lock the gates, he had 
to take the young man by the shoulder and shake him to his senses.  
"Locking-up time," he said.  "You must go now."

Peer rose and tried to walk, and by and by he was stumbling blindly 
out through the gate and down the street.  And after a time he 
found himself climbing a flight of stairs above a stable-yard.  
Once in his room, he flung himself down on the bed as he was, and 
lay there still.

The close heat of the day had broken in a downpour of rain, which 
drummed upon the roof above his head, and poured in torrents 
through the gutters.  Instinctively Peer started up: Louise was out 
in the rain--she would need her cloak.  He was on his feet in a 
moment, as if to find it--then he stopped short, and sank slowly 
back upon the bed.

He drew up his feet under him, and buried his head in his arms.  
His brain was full of changing, hurrying visions, of storm and 
death, of human beings helpless in a universe coldly and 
indifferently ruled by a will that knows no pity.

Then for the first time it was as if he lifted up his head against 
Heaven itself and cried:  "There is no sense in all this.  I will 
not bear it."

Later in the night, when he found himself mechanically folding his 
hands for the evening prayer he had learnt to say as a child, he 
suddenly burst out laughing, and clenched his fists, and cried 
aloud:  "No, no, no--never--never again."

Once more it came to him that there was something in God like the 
schoolmaster--He took the side of those who were well off already.  
"Yes, they who have parents and home and brothers and sisters and 
worldly goods--them I protect and care for.  But here's a boy alone 
in the world, struggling and fighting his way on as best he can--
from him I will take the only thing he has.  That boy is nothing to 
any one.  Let him be punished because he is poor, and cast down to 
the earth, for there is none to care for him.  That boy is nothing 
to any one--nothing."  Oh, oh, oh!--he clenched his fists and beat 
them against the wall.

His whole little world was broken to pieces.  Either God did not 
exist at all, or He was cold and pitiless--one way of it was as bad 
as the other.  The heavenly country dissolved into cloud and melted 
away, and above was nothing but empty space.  No more folding of 
your hands, like a fool!  Walk on the earth, and lift up your head, 
and defy Heaven and fate, as you defied the schoolmaster.  Your 
mother has no need of you to save her--she is not anywhere any 
more.  She is dead--dead and turned to clay; and more than that 
there is not, for her or for you or any other being in this world.

Still he lay there.  He would fain have slept, but seemed instead 
to sink into a vague far-away twilight that rocked him--rocked him 
on its dark and golden waves.  And now he heard a sound--what was 
it?  A violin.  "The mighty host in white array."  Louise--is it 
you--and playing?  He could see her now, out there in the twilight.  
How pale she was!  But still she played.  And now he understood 
what that twilight was.

It was a world beyond the consciousness of daily life--and that 
world belonged to him.  "Peer, let me stay here."  And something in 
him answered:  "Yes, you shall stay, Louise.  Even though there is 
no God and no immortality, you shall stay here."  And then she 
smiled.  And still she played.  And it was as though he were 
building a little vaulted chapel for her in defiance of Heaven and 
of God--as though he were ringing out with his own hands a great 
eternal chime for her sake.  What was happening to him?  There was 
none to comfort him, yet it ended, as he lay there, with his 
pouring out something of his innermost being, as an offering to all 
that lives, to the earth and the stars, until all seemed rocking, 
rocking with him on the stately waves of the psalm.  He lay there 
with fast-closed eyes, stretching out his hands as though afraid to 
wake, and find it all nothing but a beautiful dream.



Chapter VII


The two-o'clock bell at the Technical College had just begun to 
ring, and a stream of students appeared out of the long straggling 
buildings and poured through the gate, breaking up then into little 
knots and groups that went their several ways into the town.

It was a motley crowd of young men of all ages from seventeen to 
thirty or more.  Students of the everlasting type, sent here by 
their parents as a last resource, for--"he can always be an 
engineer"; young sparks who paid more attention to their toilet 
than their books, and hoped to "get through somehow" without 
troubling to work; and stiff youths of soldierly bearing, who had 
been ploughed for the Army, but who likewise could "always be 
engineers."  There were peasant-lads who had crammed themselves 
through their Intermediate at a spurt, and now wore the College cap 
above their rough grey homespun, and dreamed of getting through in 
no time, and turning into great men with starched cuffs and pince-
nez.  There were pale young enthusiasts, too, who would probably 
end as actors; and there were also quondam actors, killed by the 
critics, but still sufficiently alive, it seemed, "to be 
engineers."  And as the young fellows hurried on their gay and 
careless way through the town, an older man here and there might 
look round after them with a smile of some sadness.  It was easy to 
say what fate awaited most of them.  College ended, they would be 
scattered like birds of passage throughout the wide world, some to 
fall by sunstroke in Africa, or be murdered by natives in China, 
others to become mining kings in the mountains of Peru, or heads of 
great factories in Siberia, thousands of miles from home and 
friends.  The whole planet was their home.  Only a few of them--not 
always the shining lights--would stay at home, with a post on the 
State railways, to sit in an office and watch their salaries mount 
by increments of L12 every fifth year.

"That's a devil of a fellow, that brother of yours that's here," 
said Klaus Brock to Peer one day, as they were walking into town 
together with their books under their arms.

"Now, look here, Klaus, once for all, be good enough to stop 
calling him my brother.  And another thing--you're never to say a 
word to any one about my father having been anything but a farmer.  
My name's Holm, and I'm called so after my father's farm.  Just 
remember that, will you?"

"Oh, all right.  Don't excite yourself."

"Do you suppose I'd give that coxcomb the triumph of thinking I 
want to make up to him?"

"No, no, of course not."  Klaus shrugged his shoulders and walked 
on, whistling.

"Or that I want to make trouble for that fine family of his?  No, I 
may find a way to take it out of him some day, but it won't be that 
way."

"Well, but, damn it, man! you can surely stand hearing what people 
say about him."  And Klaus went on to tell his story.  Ferdinand 
Holm, it seemed, was the despair of his family.  He had thrown up 
his studies at the Military Academy, because he thought soldiers 
and soldiering ridiculous.  Then he had made a short experiment 
with theology, but found that worse still; and finally, having 
discovered that engineering was at any rate an honest trade, he had 
come to anchor at the Technical College.  "What do you say to 
that?" asked Klaus.

"I don't see anything so remarkable about it."

"Wait a bit, the cream of the story's to come.  A few weeks ago he 
thrashed a policeman in the street--said he'd insulted a child, or 
something.  There was a fearful scandal--arrest, the police-court, 
fine, and so forth.  And last winter what must he do but get 
engaged, formally and publicly engaged, to one of his mother's 
maids.  And when his mother sent the girl off behind his back, he 
raised the standard of revolt and left home altogether.  And now he 
does nothing but breathe fire and slaughter against the upper 
classes and all their works.  What do you say to that?"

"My good man, what the deuce has all this got to do with me?"

"Well, I think it's confoundedly plucky of him, anyhow," said 
Klaus.  "And for my part I shall get to know him if I can.  He's 
read an awful lot, they say, and has a damned clever head on his 
shoulders."

On his very first day at the College, Peer had learned who 
Ferdinand Holm was, and had studied him with interest.  He was a 
tall, straight-built fellow with reddish-blond hair and freckled 
face, and wore a dark tortoiseshell pince-nez.  He did not wear the 
usual College cap, but a stiff grey felt hat, and he looked about 
four or five and twenty.

"Wait!" thought Peer to himself--"wait, my fine fellow!  Yes, you 
were there, no doubt, when they turned me out of the churchyard 
that day.  But all that won't help you here.  You may have got the 
start of me at first, and learned this, that, and the other, but--
you just wait."

But one morning, out in the quadrangle, he noticed that Ferdinand 
Holm in his turn was looking at him, in fact was putting his 
glasses straight to get a better view of him--and Peer turned round 
at once and walked away.

Ferdinand, however, had been put into a higher class almost at 
once, on the strength of his matriculation.  Also he was going in 
for a different branch of the work--roads and railway construction--
so that it was only in the quadrangle and the passages that the 
two ever met.

But one afternoon, soon after Christmas, Peer was standing at work 
in the big designing-room, when he heard steps behind him, and, 
turning round, saw Klaus Brock and--Ferdinand Holm.

"I wanted to make your acquaintance," said Holm, and when Klaus had 
introduced them, he held out a large white hand with a red seal-
ring on the first finger.  "We're namesakes, I understand, and 
Brock here tells me you take your name from a country place called 
Holm."

"Yes.  My father was a plain country farmer," said Peer, and at 
once felt annoyed with himself for the ring of humility the words 
seemed to have.

"Well, the best is good enough," said the other with a smile.  "I 
say, though, has the first-term class gone as far as this in 
projection drawing?  Excuse my asking.  You see, we had a good deal 
of this sort of thing at the Military Academy, so that I know a 
little about it."

Thought Peer:  "Oh, you'd like to give me a little good advice, 
would you, if you dared?"  Aloud he said:  "No, the drawing was on 
the blackboard--the senior class left it there--and I thought I'd 
like to see what I could make out of it."

The other sent him a sidelong glance.  Then he nodded, said, "Good-
bye--hope we shall meet again," and walked off, his boots creaking 
slightly as he went.  His easy manners, his gait, the tone of his 
voice, all seemed to irritate and humiliate Peer.  Never mind--just 
let him wait!

Days passed, and weeks.  Peer soon found another object to work for 
than getting the better of Ferdinand Holm.  Louise's dresses hung 
still untouched in his room, her shoes stood under the bed; it 
still seemed to him that some day she must open the door and walk 
in.  And when he lay there alone at night, the riddle was always 
with him:  Where is she now?--why should she have died?--would he 
never meet her again?  He saw her always as she had stood that day 
playing to the sick folks in the hospital ward.  But now she was 
dressed in white.  And it seemed quite natural now that she had 
wings.  He heard her music too--it cradled and rocked him.  And all 
this came to be a little world apart, where he could take refuge 
for Sunday peace and devotion.  It had nothing to do with faith or 
religion, but it was there.  And sometimes in the midst of his work 
in the daytime he would divine, as in a quite separate consciousness,
the tones of a fiddle-bow drawn across the strings, like reddish
waves coming to him from far off, filling him with harmony, till he
smiled without knowing it.

Often, though, a sort of hunger would come upon him to let his 
being unfold in a great wide wave of organ music in the church.  
But to church he never went any more.  He would stride by a church 
door with a kind of defiance.  It might indeed be an Almighty Will 
that had taken Louise from him, but if so he did not mean to give 
thanks to such a Will or bow down before it.  It was as though he 
had in view a coming reckoning--his reckoning with something far 
out in eternity--and he must see to it that when that time came he 
could feel free--free.

On Sunday mornings, when the church bells began to ring, he would 
turn hastily to his books, as if to find peace in them.  Knowledge--
knowledge--could it stay his hunger for the music of the hymn?  
When he had first started work at the shops, he had often and often 
stood wide-eyed before some miracle--now he was gathering the power 
to work miracles himself.  And so he read and read, and drank in 
all that he could draw from teacher or book, and thought and 
thought things out for himself.  Fixed lessons and set tasks were 
all well enough, but Peer was for ever looking farther; for him 
there were questions and more questions, riddles and new riddles--
always new, always farther and farther on, towards the unknown.  He 
had made as yet but one step forward in physics, mathematics, 
chemistry; he divined that there were worlds still before him, and 
he must hasten on, on, on.  Would the day ever come when he should 
reach the end?  What is knowledge?  What use do men make of all 
that they have learned?  Look at the teachers, who knew so much--
were they greater, richer, brighter beings than the rest?  Could 
much study bring a man so far that some night he could lift up a 
finger and make the stars themselves break into song?  Best drive 
ahead, at any rate.  But, again, could knowledge lead on to that 
ecstasy of the Sunday psalm, that makes all riddles clear, that 
bears a man upwards in nameless happiness, in which his soul 
expands till it can enfold the infinite spaces?  Well, at any rate 
the best thing was to drive ahead, drive ahead both early and late.

One day that spring, when the trees in the city avenues were 
beginning to bud, Klaus Brock and Ferdinand Holm were sitting in a 
cafe in North Street.  "There goes your friend," said Ferdinand; 
and looking from the window they saw Peer Holm passing the post-
office on the other side of the road.  His clothes were shabby, his 
shoes had not been cleaned, he walked slowly, his fair head with 
its College cap bent forward, but seemed nevertheless to notice all 
that was going on in the street.

"Wonder what he's going pondering over now," said Klaus.

"Look there--I suppose that's a type of carriage he's never seen 
before.  Why, he has got the driver to stop--"

"I wouldn't mind betting he'll crawl in between the wheels to find 
out whatever he's after," laughed Klaus, drawing back from the 
window so as not to be seen.

"He looks pale and fagged out," said Ferdinand, shifting his 
glasses.  "I suppose his people aren't very well off?"

Klaus opened his eyes and looked at the other.  "He's not 
overburdened with cash, I fancy."

They drank off their beer, and sat smoking and talking of other 
things, until Ferdinand remarked casually:  "By the way--about your 
friend--are his parents still alive?"

Klaus was by no means anxious to go into Peer's family affairs, and 
answered briefly--No, he thought not.

"I'm afraid I'm boring you with questions, but the fact is the 
fellow interests me rather.  There is something in his face, 
something--arresting.  Even the way he walks--where is it I've seen 
some one walk like that before?  And he works like a steam-engine, 
I hear?"

"Works!" repeated Klaus.  "He'll ruin his health before long, the 
way he goes on grinding.  I believe he's got an idea that by much 
learning he can learn at last to--  Ha-ha-ha!"

"To do what?"

"Why--to understand God!"

Ferdinand was staring out of the window.  "Funny enough," he said.

"I ran across him last Sunday, up among the hills.  He was out 
studying geology, if you please.  And if there's a lecture anywhere 
about anything--whether it's astronomy or a French poet--you can 
safely swear he'll be sitting there, taking notes.  You can't 
compete with a fellow like that!  He'll run across a new name 
somewhere--Aristotle, for instance.  It's something new, and off he 
must go to the library to look it up.  And then he'll lie awake for 
nights after, stuffing his head with translations from the Greek.  
How the deuce can any one keep up with a man who goes at things 
that way?  There's one thing, though, that he knows nothing about."

"And that is?"

"Well, wine and women, we'll say--and fun in general.  One thing he 
isn't, by Jove!--and that's YOUNG."

"Perhaps he's not been able to afford that sort of thing," said 
Ferdinand, with something like a sigh.

The two sat on for some time, and every now and then, when Klaus 
was off his guard, Ferdinand would slip in another little question 
about Peer.  And by the time they had finished their second glass, 
Klaus had admitted that people said Peer's mother had been a--well--
no better than she should be.

"And what about his father?" Ferdinand let fall casually.

Klaus flushed uncomfortably at this.  "Nobody--no--nobody knows 
much about him," he stammered.  "I'd tell you if I knew, hanged if 
I wouldn't.  No one has an idea who it was.  He--he's very likely 
in America."

"You're always mighty mysterious when you get on the subject of his 
family, I've noticed," said Ferdinand with a laugh.  But Klaus 
thought his companion looked a little pale.

A few days later Peer was sitting alone in his room above the 
stables, when he heard a step on the stairs, the door opened, and 
Ferdinand Holm walked in.

Peer rose involuntarily and grasped at the back of his chair as if 
to steady himself.  If this young coxcomb had come--from the 
schoolmaster, for instance--or to take away his name--why, he'd 
just throw him downstairs, that was all.

"I thought I'd like to look you up, and see where you lived," began 
the visitor, laying down his hat and taking a seat.  "I've taken 
you unawares, I see.  Sorry to disturb you.  But the fact is 
there's something I wanted to speak to you about."

"Oh, is there?" and Peer sat down as far as conveniently possible 
from the other.

"I've noticed, even in the few times we've happened to meet, that 
you don't like me.  Well, you know, that's a thing I'm not going to 
put up with."

"What do you mean?" asked Peer, hardly knowing whether to laugh or 
not.

"I want to be friends with you, that's all.  You probably know a 
good deal more about me than I do about you, but that need not 
matter.  Hullo--do you always drum with your fingers on the table 
like that?  Ha-ha-ha!  Why, that was a habit of my father's, too."

Peer stared at the other in silence.  But his fingers stopped 
drumming.

"I rather envy you, you know, living as you do.  When you come to 
be a millionaire, you'll have an effective background for your 
millions.  And then, you must know a great deal more about life 
than we do; and the knowledge that comes out of books must have 
quite another spiritual value for you than for the rest of us, 
who've been stuffed mechanically with 'lessons' and 'education' and 
so forth since we were kids.  And now you're going in for 
engineering?"

"Yes," said Peer.  His face added pretty clearly, "And what concern 
is it of yours?"

"Well, it does seem to me that the modern technician is a priest in 
his way--or no, perhaps I should rather call him a descendant of 
old Prometheus.  Quite a respectable ancestry, too, don't you 
think?  But has it ever struck you that with every victory over 
nature won by the human spirit, a fragment of their omnipotence is 
wrested from the hands of the gods?  I always feel as if we were 
using fire and steel, mechanical energy and human thought, as 
weapons of revolt against the Heavenly tyranny.  The day will come 
when we shall no longer need to pray.  The hour will strike when 
the Heavenly potentates will be forced to capitulate, and in their 
turn bend the knee to us.  What do you think yourself?  Jehovah 
doesn't like engineers--that's MY opinion."

"Sounds very well," said Peer briefly.  But he had to admit to 
himself that the other had put into words something that had been 
struggling for expression in his own mind.

"Of course for the present we two must be content with smaller 
things," Ferdinand went on.  "And I don't mind admitting that 
laying out a bit of road, or a bit of railway, or bridging a ditch 
or so, isn't work that appeals to me tremendously.  But if a man 
can get out into the wide world, there are things enough to be done 
that give him plenty of chance to develop what's in him--if there 
happens to be anything.  I used to envy the great soldiers, who 
went about to the ends of the earth, conquering wild tribes and 
founding empires, organising and civilising where they went.  But 
in our day an engineer can find big jobs too, once he gets out in 
the world--draining thousands of square miles of swamp, or 
regulating the Nile, or linking two oceans together.  That's the 
sort of thing I'm going to take a hand in some day.  As soon as 
I've finished here, I'm off.  And we'll leave it to the engineers 
to come, say in a couple of hundred years or so, to start in 
arranging tourist routes between the stars.  Do you mind my 
smoking?"

"No, please do," said Peer.  "But I'm sorry I haven't--"

"I have--thanks all the same."  Ferdinand took out his cigar-case, 
and when Peer had declined the offered cigar, lit one himself.

"Look here," he said, "won't you come out and have dinner with me 
somewhere?"

Peer started at his visitor.  What did all this mean?

"I'm a regular Spartan, as a rule, but they've just finished 
dividing up my father's estate, so I'm in funds for the moment, and 
why shouldn't we have a little dinner to celebrate?  If you want to 
change, I can wait outside--but come just as you are, of course, if 
you prefer."

Peer was more and more perplexed.  Was there something behind all 
this?  Or was the fellow simply an astonishingly good sort?  Giving 
it up at last, he changed his collar and put on his best suit and 
went.

For the first time in his life he found himself in a first-class 
restaurant, with small tables covered with snow-white tablecloths, 
flowers in vases, napkins folded sugar-loaf shape, cut-glass bowls, 
and coloured wine-glasses.  Ferdinand seemed thoroughly at home, 
and treated his companion with a friendly politeness.  And during 
the meal he managed to make the talk turn most of the time on 
Peer's childhood and early days.

When they had come to the coffee and cigars, Ferdinand leaned 
across the table towards him, and said:  "Look here, don't you 
think we two ought to say thee and thou* to each other?"


* "Tutoyer," the mode of address of intimate friendship or 
relationship.


"Oh, yes!" said Peer, really touched now.

"We're both Holms, you know."

"Yes.  So we are."

"And, after all, who knows that there mayn't be some sort of 
connection?  Come, now, don't look like that!  I only want you to 
look on me as your good friend, and to come to me if ever there's 
anything I can do.  We needn't live in each other's pockets, of 
course, when other people are by--but we must take in Klaus Brock 
along with us, don't you think?"

Peer felt a strong impulse to run away.  Did the other know 
everything?  If so, why didn't he speak straight out?

As the two walked home in the clear light of the spring evening, 
Ferdinand took his companion's arm, and said:  "I don't know if 
you've heard that I'm not on good terms with my people at home.  
But the very first time I saw you, I had a sort of feeling that we 
two belonged together.  Somehow you seemed to remind me so of--
well, to tell the truth, of my father.  And he, let me tell you, 
was a gallant gentleman--"

Peer did not answer, and the matter went no farther then.

But the next few days were an exciting time for Peer.  He could not 
quite make out how much Ferdinand knew, and nothing on earth would 
have induced him to say anything more himself.  And the other asked 
no questions, but was just a first-rate comrade, behaving as if 
they had been friends for years.  He did not even ask Peer any more 
about his childhood, and never again referred to his own family.  
Peer was always reminding himself to be on his guard, but could not 
help feeling glad all the same whenever they were to meet.

He was invited one evening, with Klaus, to a wine-party at 
Ferdinand's lodging, and found himself in a handsomely furnished 
room, with pictures on the walls, and photographs of his host's 
parents.  There was one of his father as a young man, in uniform; 
another of his grandfather, who had been a Judge of the Supreme 
Court.  "It's very good of you to be so interested in my people," 
said Ferdinand with a smile.  Klaus Brock looked from one to the 
other, wondering to himself how things really stood between the 
two.

The summer vacation came round, and the students prepared to break 
up and go their various ways.  Klaus was to go home.  And one day 
Ferdinand came to Peer and said:  "Look here, old man.  I want you 
to do me a great favour.  I'd arranged to go to the seaside this 
summer, but I've a chance of going up to the hills, too.  Well, I 
can't be in two places at once--couldn't you take on one of them 
for me?  Of course I'd pay all expenses."  "No, thank you!" said 
Peer, with a laugh.  But when Klaus Brock came just before leaving 
and said:  "See here, Peer.  Don't you think you and I might club 
together and put a marble slab over--Louise's grave?", Peer was 
touched, and clapped him on the shoulder.  "What a good old fellow 
you are, Klaus," he said.

Later in the summer Peer set out alone on a tramp through the 
country, and whenever he saw a chance, he would go up to one of the 
farms and say:  "Would you like to have a good map of the farm?  
It'll cost ten crowns and my lodging while I'm at it."  It made a 
very pleasant holiday for him, and he came home with a little money 
in his pocket to boot.

His second year at the school was much like the first.  He plodded 
along at his work.  And now and then his two friends would come and 
drag him off for an evening's jollification.  But after he had been 
racketing about with the others, singing and shouting through the 
sleeping town--and at last was alone and in his bed in the 
darkness, another and a very different life began for him, face to 
face with his innermost self.  Where are you heading for, Peer?  
What are you aiming at in all your labours?  And he would try to 
answer devoutly, as at evening prayers:  Where?  Why, of course, I 
am going to be a great engineer.  And then?  I will be one of the 
Sons of Prometheus, that head the revolt against the tyranny of 
Heaven.  And then?  I will help to raise the great ladder on which 
men can climb aloft--higher and higher, up towards the light, and 
the spirit, and mastery over nature.  And then?  Live happily, 
marry and have children, and a rich and beautiful home.  And then?  
Oh, well, one fine day, of course, one must grow old and die.  And 
then?  And then?  Aye, what then?

At these times he found a shadowy comfort in taking refuge in the 
world where Louise stood--playing, as he always saw her--and 
cradling himself on the smooth red billows of her music.  But why 
was it that here most of all he felt that hunger for--for something 
more?

Ferdinand finished his College course, and went out, as he had 
said, into the great world, and Klaus went with him.  And so 
throughout his third year Peer was mostly to be seen alone, always 
with books under his arm, and head bent forward.

Just as he was getting ready to go up for his final examination, a 
letter from Ferdinand arrived, written from Egypt.  "Come over 
here, young fellow," he wrote.  "We have got good billets at last 
with a big British firm--Brown Bros., of London--a firm that's 
building railways in Canada, bridges in India, harbour works in 
Argentina, and canals and barrages here in Egypt.  We can get you a 
nice little post as draughtsman to begin with, and I enclose funds 
for the passage out.  So come along."

But Peer did not go at once.  He stayed on another year at the 
College, as assistant to the lecturer on mechanics, while himself 
going through the road and railway construction course, as his 
half-brother had done.  Some secret instinct urged him not to be 
left behind even in this.

As the year went on the letters from his two comrades became more 
and more pressing and tempting.  "Out here," wrote Klaus, "the 
engineer is a missionary, proclaimer, not Jehovah, but the power 
and culture of Europe.  You're bound to take a hand in that, my 
boy.  There's work worthy of a great general waiting for you here."

At last, one autumn day, when the woods stood yellow all around the 
town, Peer drove away from his home with a big new travelling-trunk 
strapped to the driver's seat.  He had been up to the churchyard 
before starting, with a little bunch of flowers for Louise's grave.  
Who could say if he would ever see it again?

At the station he stood for a moment looking back over the old city 
with its cathedral, and the ancient fortress, where the sentry was 
pacing back and forth against the skyline.  Was this the end of his 
youth?  Louise--the room above the stables--the hospital, the 
lazarette, the College. . . .  And there lay the fjord, and far out 
somewhere on the coast there stood no doubt a little grey fisher-
hut, where a pock-marked goodwife and her bow-legged goodman had 
perhaps even now received the parcel of coffee and tobacco sent 
them as a parting gift.

And so Peer journeyed to the capital, and from there out into the 
wide world.



BOOK II


Chapter I


Some years had passed--a good many years--and once more summer 
had come, and June.  A passenger steamer, bound from Antwerp to
Christiania, was ploughing her way one evening over a sea so
motionlessly calm that it seemed a single vast mirror filled with a
sky of grey and pink-tinged clouds.  There were plenty of passengers
on board, and no one felt inclined for bed; it was so warm, so
beautiful on deck.  Some artists, on their way home from Paris or
Munich, cast about for amusements to pass the time; some ordered
wine, others had unearthed a concertina, and very soon, no one knew
how, a dance was in full swing.  "No, my dear," said one or two
cautious mothers to their girls, "certainly not."  But before long
the mothers were dancing themselves.  Then there was a doctor in
spectacles, who stood up on a barrel and made a speech; and
presently two of the artists caught hold of the grey-bearded captain
and chaired him round the deck.  The night was so clear, the skies
so ruddily beautiful, the air so soft, and out here on the open sea
all hearts were light and happy.

"Who's that wooden-faced beggar over there that's too high and 
mighty for a little fun?" asked Storaker the painter, of his friend 
the sculptor Praas.

"That fellow?  Oh, he's the one that was so infernally instructive 
at dinner, when we were talking about Egyptian vases."

"So it is, by Jove!  Schoolmaster abroad, I should think.  When we 
got on to Athens and Greek sculpture he condescended to set us 
right about that, too."

"I heard him this morning holding forth to the doctor on 
Assyriology.  No wonder he doesn't dance!"

The passenger they were speaking of was a man of middle height, 
between thirty and forty apparently, who lay stretched in a deck-
chair a little way off.  He was dressed in grey throughout, from 
his travelling-cap to the spats above his brown shoes.  His face 
was sallow, and the short brown beard was flecked with grey.  But 
his eyes had gay little gleams in them as they followed the 
dancers.  It was Peer Holm.

As he sat there watching, it annoyed him to feel that he could not 
let himself go like the others.  But it was so long since he had 
mixed with his own countrymen, that he felt insecure of his footing 
and almost like a foreigner among them.  Besides, in a few hours 
now they should sight the skerries on the Norwegian coast; and the 
thought awoke in him a strange excitement--it was a moment he had 
dreamed of many and many a time out there in the wide world.

After a while stillness fell on the decks around him, and he too 
went below, but lay down in his cabin without undressing.  He 
thought of the time when he had passed that way on the outward 
voyage, poor and unknown, and had watched the last island of his 
native land sink below the sea-rim.  Much had happened since then--
and now that he had at last come home, what life awaited him there?

A little after two in the morning he came on deck again, but stood 
still in astonishment at finding that the vessel was now boring her 
way through a thick woolly fog.  The devil! thought he, beginning 
to tramp up and down the deck impatiently.  It seemed that his 
great moment was to be lost--spoiled for him!  But suddenly he 
stopped by the railing, and stood gazing out into the east.

What was that?  Far out in the depths of the woolly fog a glowing 
spot appeared; the grey mass around grew alive, began to move, to 
redden, to thin out as if it were streaming up in flames.  Ah! now 
he knew!  It was the globe of the sun, rising out of the sea.  On 
board, every point where the night's moisture had lodged began to 
shine in gold.  Each moment it grew clearer and lighter, and the 
eye reached farther.  And before he could take in what was 
happening, the grey darkness had rolled itself up into mounds, into 
mountains, that grew buoyant and floated aloft and melted away.  
And there, all revealed, lay the fresh bright morning, with a clear 
sun-filled sky over the blue sea.

It was time now to get out his field-glasses.  For a long time he 
stood motionless, gazing intently through them.

There!  Was it his fancy?  No, there far ahead he can see clearly 
now a darker strip between sky and sea.  It's the first skerry.  It 
is Norway, at last!

Peer felt a sudden catch in his breath; he could hardly stand 
still, but he stopped again and again in his walk to look once more 
at the far-off strip of grey.  And now there were seabirds too, 
with long necks and swiftly-beating wings.  Welcome home!

And now the steamer is ploughing in among the skerries, and a world 
of rocks and islets unfolds on every side.  There is the first red 
fisher-hut.  And then the entrance to Christiansand, between wooded 
hills and islands, where white cottages shine out, each with its 
patch of green grassland and its flagstaff before it.

Peer watched it all, drinking it in like nourishment.  How good it 
all tasted--he felt it would be long before he had drunk his fill.

Then came the voyage up along the coast, all through a day of 
brilliant sunshine and a luminous night.  He saw the blue sounds 
with swarms of white gulls hovering above them, the little coast-
towns with their long white-painted wooden houses, and flowers in 
the windows.  He had never passed this way before, and yet 
something in him seemed to nod and say:  "I know myself again 
here."  All the way up the Christiania Fjord there was the scent of 
leaves and meadows; big farms stood by the shore shining in the 
sun.  This was what a great farm looked like.  He nodded again.  So 
warm and fruitful it all seemed, and dear to him as home--though he 
knew that, after all, he would be little better than a tourist in 
his own country.  There was no one waiting for him, no one to take 
him in.  Still, some day things might be very different.

As the ship drew alongside the quay at Christiania, the other 
passengers lined the rail, friends and relations came aboard, there 
were tears and laughter and kisses and embraces.  Peer lifted his 
hat as he passed down the gangway, but no one had time to notice 
him just now.  And when he had found a hotel porter to look after 
his luggage, he walked up alone through the town, as if he were a 
stranger.

The light nights made it difficult to sleep--he had actually 
forgotten that it was light all night long.  And this was a capital 
city--yet so touchingly small, it seemed but a few steps wherever 
he went.  These were his countrymen, but he knew no one among them; 
there was no one to greet him.  Still, he thought again, some day 
all this might be very different.

At last, one day as he stood looking at the window of a 
bookseller's shop, he heard a voice behind him:  "Why, bless me! 
surely it's Peer Holm!"  It was one of his fellow-students at the 
Technical College, Reidar Langberg, pale and thin now as ever.  He 
had been a shining light at the College, but now--now he looked 
shabby, worn and aged.

"I hardly knew you again," said Peer, grasping the other's hand.

"And you're a millionaire, so they say--and famous, out in the big 
world?"

"Not quite so bad as that, old fellow.  But what about you?"

"I?  Oh, don't talk about me."  And as they walked down the street 
together, Langberg poured out his tale, of how times were 
desperately bad, and conditions at home here simply strangled a 
man.  He had started ten or twelve years ago as a draughtsman in 
the offices of the State Railways, and was still there, with a 
growing family--and "such pay--such pay, my dear fellow!"  He threw 
up his eyes and clasped his hands despairingly.

"Look here," said Peer, interrupting him.  "Where is the best place 
in Christiania to go and have a good time in the evening?"

"Well, St. Hans Hill, for instance.  There's music there."

"Right--will you come and dine with me there, to-night--shall we 
say eight o'clock?"

"Thanks.  I should think I would!"

Peer arrived in good time, and engaged a table on a verandah.  
Langberg made his appearance shortly after, dressed in his well-
saved Sunday best--faded frock-coat, light trousers bagged at the 
knees, and a straw hat yellow with age.

"It's a pleasure to have someone to talk to again," said Peer.  
"For the last year or so I've been knocking about pretty much by 
myself."

"Is it as long as that since you left Egypt?"

"Yes; longer.  I've been in Abyssinia since then."

"Oh, of course, I remember now.  It was in the papers.  Building a 
railway for King Menelik, weren't you?"

"Oh, yes.  But the last eighteen months or so I've been idling--
running about to theatres and museums and so forth.  I began at 
Athens and finished up with London.  I remember one day sitting on 
the steps of the Parthenon declaiming the Antigone--and a moment 
with some meaning in it seemed to have come at last."

"But, dash it, man, you're surely not comparing such trifles with a 
thing like the great Nile Barrage?  You were on that for some 
years, weren't you?  Do let's hear something about that.  Up by the 
first cataract, wasn't it?  And hadn't you enormous quarries there 
on the spot?  You see, even sitting at home here, I haven't quite 
lost touch.  But you--good Lord! what things you must have seen!  
Fancy living at--what was the name of the town again?"

"Assuan," answered Peer indifferently, looking out over the 
gardens, where more and more visitors kept arriving.

"They say the barrage is as great a miracle as the Pyramids.  How 
many sluice-gates are there again--a hundred and . . . ?"

"Two hundred and sixteen," said Peer.  "Look!" he broke off.  "Do 
you know those girls over there?"  He nodded towards a party of 
girls in light dresses who were sitting down at a table close by.

Langberg shook his head.  He was greedy for news from the great 
world without, which he had never had the luck to see.

"I've often wondered," he went on, "how you managed to come to the 
front so in that sort of work--railways and barrages, and so forth--
when, your original line was mechanical engineering.  Of course 
you did do an extra year on the roads and railway side; but . . ."

Oh, this shining light of the schools!

"What do you say to a glass of champagne?" said Peer.  "How do you 
like it?  Sweet or dry?"

"Why, is there any difference?  I really didn't know.  But when 
one's a millionaire, of course . . ."

"I'm not a millionaire," said Peer with a smile, and beckoned to a 
waiter.

"Oh! I heard you were.  Didn't you invent a new motor-pump that 
drove all the other types out of the field?  And besides--that 
Abyssinian railway.  Oh well, well!" he sighed, "it's a good thing 
somebody's lucky.  The rest of us shouldn't complain.  But how 
about the other two--Klaus Brock and Ferdinand Holm?  What are they 
doing now?"

"Klaus is looking after the Khedive's estates at Edfina.  
Agriculture by steam power; his own railway lines to bring in the 
produce, and so on.  Yes, Klaus has ended up in a nice little place 
of his own.  His district's bigger than the kingdom of Denmark."

"Good heavens!"  Langberg nearly fell off his chair.  "And 
Ferdinand Holm; what about him?"

"Oh, he's got bigger things on hand.  Went nosing about the Libyan 
desert, and found that considerable tracts of it have water-veins 
only a few yards beneath the surface.  If so, of course, it's only 
a question of proper plant to turn an enormous area into a paradise 
for corn-growing."

"Good gracious!  What a discovery!" gasped the other, almost 
breathless now.

Peer looked out over the fjord, and went on:  "Last year he managed 
at last to get the Khedive interested, and they've started a joint-
stock company now, with a capital of some millions.  Ferdinand is 
chief engineer."

"And what's his salary?  As much as fifty thousand crowns?"

"His pay is two hundred thousand francs a year," said Peer, not 
without some fear that his companion might faint.  "Yes, he's an 
able fellow, is Ferdinand."

It took Langberg some time to get his breath again.  At last he 
asked, with a sidelong glance:

"And you and Klaus Brock--I suppose you've put your millions in his 
company?"

Peer smiled as he sat looking out over the garden.  Lifting his 
glass, "Your good health," he said, for all answer.

"Have you been in America, too?" went on the other.  "No, I suppose 
not!"

"America?  Yes, a few years back, when I was with Brown Bros., they 
sent me over one time to buy plant.  Nothing so surprising in that, 
is there?"

"No, no, of course not.  I was only thinking--you went about there, 
I daresay, and saw all the wonderful things--the miracles of 
science they're always producing."

"My dear fellow, if you only knew how deadly sick I am of miracles 
of science!  What I'm longing for is a country watermill that takes 
twenty-four hours to grind a sack of corn."

"What?  What do you say?"  Langberg bounced in his chair.  "Ha-ha-
ha!  You're the same old man, I can see."

"I'm perfectly serious," said Peer, lifting his glass towards the 
other.  "Come.  Here's to our old days together!"

"Aye--thanks, a thousand thanks--to our old days together!--Ah, 
delicious!  Well, then, I suppose you've fallen in love away down 
there in the land of the barbarians?  Haven't you?  Ha-ha-ha!"

"Do you call Egypt a land of barbarians?"

"Well, don't the fellahs still yoke their wives to their ploughs?"

"A fellah will sit all night long outside his hut and gaze up at 
the stars and give himself time to dream.  And a merchant prince in 
Vienna will dictate business letters in his automobile as he's 
driving to the theatre, and write telegrams as he sits in the 
stalls.  One fine day he'll be sitting in his private box with a 
telephone at one ear and listening to the opera with the other.  
That's what the miracles of science are doing for us.  Awe-
inspiring, isn't it?"

"And you talk like that--a man that's helped to harness the Nile, 
and has built railways through the desert?"

Peer shrugged his shoulders, and offered the other a cigar from his 
case.  A waiter appeared with coffee.

"To help mankind to make quicker progress--is that nothing?"

"Lord!  What I'd like to know is, where mankind are making for, 
that they're in such a hurry."

"That the Nile Barrage has doubled the production of corn in Egypt--
created the possibilities of life for millions of human beings--is 
that nothing?"

"My good fellow, do you really think there aren't enough fools on 
this earth already?  Have we too little wailing and misery and 
discontent and class-hatred as it is?  Why must we go about to 
double it?"

"But hang it all, man--what about European culture?  Surely you 
felt yourself a sort of missionary of civilisation, where you have 
been."

"The spread of European civilisation in the East simply means that 
half a dozen big financiers in London or Paris take a fancy to a 
certain strip of Africa or Asia.  They press a button, and out come 
all the ministers and generals and missionaries and engineers with 
a bow:  At your service, gentlemen!

"Culture!  One wheel begets ten new ones.  Brr-rrr!  And the ten 
again another hundred.  Brr-rr-rrr--more speed, more competition--
and all for what?  For culture?  No, my friend, for money.  
Missionary!  I tell you, as long as Western Europe with all its 
wonders of modern science and its Christianity and its political 
reforms hasn't turned out a better type of humanity than the mean 
ruck of men we have now--we'd do best to stay at home and hold our 
counfounded jaw.  Here's ourselves!" and Peer emptied his glass.

This was a sad hearing for poor Langberg.  For he had been used to 
comfort himself in his daily round with the thought that even he, 
in his modest sphere, was doing his share in the great work of 
civilising the world.

At last he leaned back, watching the smoke from his cigar, and 
smiling a little.

"I remember a young fellow at the College," he said, "who used to 
talk a good deal about Prometheus, and the grand work of liberating 
humanity, by stealing new and ever new fire from Olympus."

"That was me--yes," said Peer with a laugh.  "As a matter of fact, 
I was only quoting Ferdinand Holm."

"You don't believe in all that now?"

"It strikes me that fire and steel are rapidly turning men into 
beasts.  Machinery is killing more and more of what we call the 
godlike in us."

"But, good heavens, man!  Surely a man can be a Christian even 
if . . ."

"Christian as much as you like.  But don't you think it might soon 
be time we found something better to worship than an ascetic on a 
cross?  Are we to keep on for ever singing Hallelujah because we've 
saved our own skins and yet can haggle ourselves into heaven?  Is 
that religion?"

"No, no, perhaps not.  But I don't know . . ."

"Neither do I.  But it's all the same; for anyhow no such thing as 
religious feeling exists any longer.  Machinery is killing our 
longings for eternity, too.  Ask the good people in the great 
cities.  They spend Christmas Eve playing tunes from The Dollar 
Princess on the gramophone."

Langberg sat for a while watching the other attentively.  Peer sat 
smoking slowly; his face was flushed with the wine, but from time 
to time his eyes half-closed, and his thoughts seemed to be 
wandering in other fields than these.

"And what do you think of doing now you are home again?" asked his 
companion at last.

Peer opened his eyes.  "Doing?  Oh, I don't know.  Look about me 
first of all.  Then perhaps I may find a cottar's croft somewhere 
and settle down and marry a dairymaid.  Here's luck!"

The gardens were full now of people in light summer dress, and in 
the luminous evening a constant ripple of laughter and gay voices 
came up to them.  Peer looked curiously at the crowd, all strangers 
to him, and asked his companion the names of some of the people.  
Langberg pointed out one or two celebrities--a Cabinet Minister 
sitting near by, a famous explorer a little farther off.  "But I 
don't know them personally," he added.  "Can't afford society on 
that scale, of course."

"How beautiful it is here!" said Peer, looking out once more at the 
yellow shimmer of light above the fjord.  "And how good it is to be 
home again!"



Chapter II


He sat in the train on his way up-country, and from the carriage 
window watched farms and meadows and tree-lined roads slide past.  
Where was he going?  He did not know himself.  Why should not a man 
start off at haphazard, and get out when the mood takes him?  At 
last he was able to travel through his own country without having 
to think of half-pennies.  He could let the days pass over his head 
without care or trouble, and give himself good leisure to enjoy any 
beauty that came in his way.

There is Mjosen, the broad lake with the rich farmlands and long 
wooded ridges on either side.  He had never been here before, yet 
it seemed as if something in him nodded a recognition to it all.  
Once more he sat drinking in the rich, fruitful landscape--the 
wooded hills, the fields and meadows seemed to spread themselves 
out over empty places in his mind.

But later in the day the landscape narrowed and they were in 
Gudbrandsdalen, where the sunburned farms are set on green slopes 
between the river and the mountains.  Peer's head was full of 
pictures from abroad, from the desert sands with their scorched 
palm-trees to the canals of Venice.  But here--he nodded again.  
Here he was at home, though he had never seen the place before; 
just this it was which had been calling to him all through his long 
years of exile.

At last on a sudden he gathered up his traps and got out, without 
the least idea even of the name of the station.  A meal at the 
hotel, a knapsack on his back, and hey!--there before him lies the 
road, up into the hills.

Alone?  What matter, when there are endless things that greet him 
from every side with "Welcome home!"  The road is steep, the air 
grows lighter, the homesteads smaller.  At last the huts look like 
little matchboxes--from the valley, no doubt, it must seem as if 
the people up here were living among the clouds.  But many and many 
a youth must have followed this road in the evenings, going up to 
court his Mari or his Kari at the saeter-hut, the same road and the 
same errand one generation after another.  To Peer it seemed as if 
all those lads now bore him company--aye, as if he discovered in 
himself something of wanton youth that had managed to get free at 
last.

Puh!  His coat must come off and his cap go into the knapsack.  
Now, as the valley sinks and sinks farther beneath him, the view 
across it widens farther and farther out over the uplands beyond.  
Brown hills and blue, ridges livid or mossy-grey in the setting 
sun, rising and falling wave behind wave, and beyond all a great 
snowfield, like a sea of white breakers foaming against the sky.  
But surely he had seen all this before?

Ah! now he knew; it was the Lofoten Sea over again--with its white 
foam-crested combers and long-drawn, heavy-breathing swell--a 
rolling ocean turned to rock.  Peer halted a moment leaning on his 
stick, and his eyes half-closed.  Could he not feel that same 
ocean-swell rising and sinking in his own being?  Did not the same 
waves surge through the centuries, carrying the generations away 
with them upon great wanderings?  And in daily life the wave rolls 
us along in the old familiar rhythm, and not one in ten thousand 
lifts his head above it to ask: whither and why!  Even now just 
such a little wave has hold of him, taking him--whither and why?  
Well, the coming days might show; meanwhile, there beyond was the 
sea of stone rolling its eternal cadence under the endless sky.

He wiped his forehead and turned and went his way.

But what is that far off in the north-east? three sisters in white 
shawls, lifting their heads to heaven--that must be Rondane.  And 
see how the evening sun is kindling the white peaks to purple and 
gold.

Puh!--only one more hill now, and here is the top at last.  And 
there ahead lie the great uplands, with marsh and mound and 
gleaming tarns.  Ah, what a relief!  What wonder that his step 
grows lighter and quicker?  Before he knows it he is singing aloud 
in mere gaiety of heart.  Ah, dear God, what if after all it were 
not too late to be young!

A saeter.  A little hut, standing on a patch of green, with split-
stick fence and a long cow-house of rough planks--it must be a 
saeter!  And listen--isn't that a girl singing?  Peer slipped 
softly through the gate and stood listening against the wall of the 
byre.  "Shap, shap, shap," went the streams of milk against the 
pail.  It must be a fairy sitting milking in there.  Then came the 
voice:


      Oh, Sunday eve, oh, Sunday eve,
      Ever wast thou my dearest eve!


"Shap, shap, shap!" went the milk once more in the pail--and 
suddenly Peer joined in:


      Oh bright, oh gentle Sunday eve--
      Wilt ever be my dearest eve!


The milking stopped, a cowbell tinkled as the cow turned her 
inquiring face, and a girl's light-brown head of hair was thrust 
out of the doorway--soon followed by the girl herself, slender, 
eighteen, red-cheeked, fresh and smiling.

"Good evening," said Peer, stretching out his hand.

The girl looked at him for a moment, then cast a glance at her own 
clothes--as women will when they see a man who takes their fancy.

"An' who may you be?" she asked.

"Can you cook me some cream-porridge?"

"A' must finish milking first, then."

Here was a job that Peer could help with.  He took off his 
knapsack, washed his hands, and was soon seated on a stool in the 
close sweet air of the shed, milking busily.  Then he fetched 
water, and chopped some wood for the fire, the girl gazing at him 
all the time, no doubt wondering who this crazy person could be.  
When the porridge stood ready on the table, he insisted on her 
sitting down close to him and sharing the meal.  They ate a little, 
and then laughed a little, and then chatted, and then ate and then 
laughed again.  When he asked what he had to pay, the girl said:  
"Whatever you like"--and he gave her two crowns and then bent her 
head back and kissed her lips.  "What's the man up to?" he heard 
her gasp behind him as he passed out; when he had gone a good way 
and turned to look back, there she was in the doorway, shading her 
eyes and watching him.

Whither away now?  Well, he was pretty sure to reach some other 
inhabited place before night.  This, he felt, was not his abiding-
place.  No, it was not here.

It was nearly midnight when he stood by the shore of a broad 
mountain lake, beneath a snow-flecked hill-side.  Here were a 
couple of saeters, and across the lake, on a wooded island, stood a 
small frame house that looked like some city people's summer 
cottage.  And see--over the lake, that still mirrored the evening 
red, a boat appeared moving towards the island, and two white-
sleeved girls sat at the oars, singing as they rowed.  A strange 
feeling came over him.  Here--here he would stay.

In the saeter-hut stood an enormously fat woman, with a rope round 
her middle, evidently ready to go to bed.  Could she put him up for 
the night?  Why, yes, she supposed so--and she rolled off into 
another room.  And soon he was lying in a tiny chamber, in a bed 
with a mountainous mattress and a quilt.  There was a fresh smell 
from the juniper twigs strewed about the newly-washed floor, and 
the cheeses, which stood in rows all round the shelf-lined walls.  
Ah! he had slept in many places and fashions--at sea in a Lofoten 
boat; on the swaying back of a camel; in tents out in the moonlit 
desert; and in palaces of the Arabian Nights, where dwarfs fanned 
him with palm-leaves to drive away the heat, and called him pasha.  
But here, at last, he had found a place where it was good to be.  
And he closed his eyes, and lay listening to the murmur of a little 
stream outside in the light summer night, till he fell asleep.

Late in the forenoon of the next day he was awakened by the entry 
of the old woman with coffee.  Then a plunge into the blue-green 
water of the mountain lake, a short swim, and back to find grilled 
trout and new-baked waffles and thick cream for lunch.

Yes, said the old woman, if he could get along with the sort of 
victuals she could cook, he might stay here a few days and welcome.  
The bed was standing there empty, anyway.



Chapter III


So Peer stays on and goes fishing.  He catches little; but time 
goes leisurely here, and the summer lies soft and warm over the 
brown and blue hillsides.  He has soon learned that a merchant 
named Uthoug, from Ringeby, is living in the house on the island, 
with his wife and daughter.  And what of it?

Often he would lie in his boat, smoking his pipe, and giving 
himself up to quiet dreams that came and passed.  A young girl in a 
white boat, moving over red waters in the evening--a secret meeting 
on an island--no one must know just yet. . . .  Would it ever 
happen to him?  Ah, no.

The sun goes down, there come sounds of cow-bells nearing the 
saeters, the musical cries and calls of the saeter-girls, the 
lowing of the cattle.  The mountains stand silent in the distance, 
their snow-clad tops grown golden; the stream slides rippling by, 
murmuring on through the luminous nights.

Then at last came the day of all days.

He had gone out for a long tramp at random over the hills, making 
his way by compass, and noting landmarks to guide him back.  Here 
was a marsh covered with cloud-berries--the taste brought back his 
own childhood.  He wandered on up a pale-brown ridge flecked with 
red heather--and what was that ahead?  Smoke?  He made towards it.  
Yes, it was smoke.  A ptarmigan fluttered out in front of him, with 
a brood of tiny youngsters at her heels--Lord, what a shave!--he 
stopped short to avoid treading on them.  The smoke meant someone 
near--possibly a camp of Lapps.  Let's go and see.

He topped the last mound, and there was the fire just below.  Two 
girls jumped to their feet; there was a bright coffee-kettle on the 
fire, and on the moss-covered ground close by bread and butter and 
sandwiches laid out on a paper tablecloth.

Peer stopped short in surprise.  The girls gazed at him for a 
moment, and he at them, all three with a hesitating smile.

At last Peer lifted his hat and asked the way to Rustad saeter.  It 
took them some time to explain this, and then they asked him the 
time.  He told them exactly to the minute, and then showed them his 
watch so that they might see for themselves.  All this took more 
time.  Meanwhile, they had inspected each other, and found no 
reason to part company just yet.  One of the girls was tall, 
slender of figure, with a warm-coloured oval face and dark brown 
hair.  Her eyebrows were thick and met above the nose, delightful 
to look at.  She wore a blue serge dress, with the skirt kilted up 
a little, leaving her ankles visible.  The other was a blonde, 
smaller of stature, and with a melancholy face, though she smiled 
constantly.  "Oh," she said suddenly, "have you a pocket-knife by 
any chance?"

"Oh yes!"  Peer was just moving off, but gladly seized the 
opportunity to stay a while.

"We've a tin of sardines here, and nothing to open it with," said 
the dark one.

"Let me try," said Peer.  As luck would have it, he managed to cut 
himself a little, and the two girls tumbled over each other to tie 
up the wound.  It ended, of course, with their asking him to join 
their coffee-party.

"My name is Merle Uthoug," said the dark one, with a curtsy.

"Oh, then, it's your father who has the place on the island in the 
lake?"

"My name's only Mork--Thea Mork.  My father is a lawyer, and we 
have a little cottage farther up the lake," said the blonde.

Peer was about to introduce himself, when the dark girl interrupted:
"Oh, we know you already," she said.  "We've seen you out rowing 
on the lake so often.  And we had to find out who you were.  
We have a good pair of glasses . . ."

"Merle!" broke in her companion warningly.

". . . and then, yesterday, we sent one of the maids over 
reconnoitring, to make inquiries and bring us a full report."

"Merle!  How can you say such things?"

It was a cheery little feast.  Ah! how young they were, these two 
girls, and how they laughed at a joke, and what quantities of bread 
and butter and coffee they all three disposed of!  Merle now and 
again would give their companion a sidelong glance, while Thea 
laughed at all the wild things her friend said, and scolded her, 
and looked anxiously at Peer.

And now the sun was nearing the shoulder of a hill far in the west, 
and evening was falling.  They packed up their things, and Peer was 
loaded up with a big bag of cloud-berries on his back, and a tin 
pail to carry in his hand.  "Give him some more," said Merle.  
"It'll do him good to work for a change."

"Merle, you really are too bad!"

"Here you are," said the girl, and slid the handle of a basket into 
his other hand.

Then they set out down the hill.  Merle sang and yodelled as they 
went; then Peer sang, and then they all three sang together.  And 
when they came to a heather-tussock or a puddle, they did not 
trouble to go round, but just jumped over it, and then gave another 
jump for the fun of the thing.

They passed the saeter and went on down to the water's edge, and 
Peer proposed to row them home.  And so they rowed across.  And the 
whole time they sat talking and laughing together as if they had 
known each other for years.

The boat touched land just below the cottage, and a broad-
shouldered man with a grey beard and a straw hat came down to meet 
them.  "Oh, father, are you back again?" cried Merle, and, 
springing ashore, she flung her arms round his neck.  The two 
exchanged some whispered words, and the father glanced at Peer.  
Then, taking off his hat, he came towards him and said politely, 
"It was very kind of you to help the girls down."

"This is Herr Holm, engineer and Egyptian," said Merle, "and this 
is father."

"I hear we are neighbours," said Uthoug.  "We're just going to have 
tea, so if you have nothing better to do, perhaps you will join 
us."

Outside the cottage stood a grey-haired lady with a pale face, 
wearing spectacles.  She had a thick white woollen shawl over her 
shoulders, but even so she seemed to feel cold.  "Welcome," she 
said, and Peer thought there was a tremor in her voice.

There were two small low rooms with an open fireplace in the one, 
and in it there stood a table ready laid.  But from the moment 
Merle entered the house, she took command of everything, and 
whisked in and out.  Soon there was the sound of fish cooking in 
the kitchen, and a moment later she came in with a plate full of 
lettuce, and said:  "Mr. Egyptian--you can make us an Arabian 
salad, can't you?"

Peer was delighted.  "I should think so," he said.

"You'll find salt and pepper and vinegar and oil on the table 
there, and that's all we possess in the way of condiments.  But it 
must be a real Arabian salad all the same, if you please!"  And out 
she went again, while Peer busied himself with the salad.

"I hope you will excuse my daughter," said Fru Uthoug, turning her 
pale face towards him and looking through her spectacles.  "She is 
not really so wild as she seems."

Uthoug himself walked up and down the room, chatting to Peer and 
asking a great many questions about conditions in Egypt.  He knew 
something about the Mahdi, and General Gordon, and Khartoum, and 
the strained relations between the Khedive and the Sultan.  He was 
evidently a diligent reader of the newspapers, and Peer gathered 
that he was a Radical, and a man of some weight in his party.  And 
he looked as if there was plenty of fire smouldering under his 
reddish eyelids:  "A bad man to fall out with," thought Peer.

They sat down to supper, and Peer noticed that Fru Uthoug grew less 
pale and anxious as her daughter laughed and joked and chattered.  
There even came a slight glow at last into the faded cheeks; the 
eyes behind the spectacles seemed to shine with a light borrowed 
from her daughter's.  But her husband seemed not to notice 
anything, and tried all the time to go on talking about the Mahdi 
and the Khedive and the Sultan.

So for the first time for many years Peer sat down to table in a 
Norwegian home--and how good it was!  Would he ever have a home of 
his own, he wondered.

After the meal, a mandolin was brought out, and they sat round the 
fire in the great fireplace and had some music.  Until at last 
Merle rose and said:  "Now, mother, it's time you went to bed."

"Yes, dear," came the answer submissively, and Fru Uthoug said 
good-night, and Merle led her off.

Peer had risen to take leave, when Merle came in again.  "Why," she 
said, "you're surely not going off before you've rowed Thea home?"

"Oh, Merle, please . . ." put in the other.

But when the two had taken their places in the boat and were just 
about to start up the lake, Merle came running down and said she 
might just as well come too.

Half an hour later, having seen the young girl safely ashore at her 
father's place, Merle and Peer were alone, rowing back through the 
still night over the waters of the lake, golden in the light and 
dark blue in the shadows.  Merle leaned back in the stern, silent, 
trailing a small branch along the surface of the water behind.  
After a while Peer laid in his oars and let the boat drift.

"How beautiful it is!" he said.

The girl lifted her head and looked round.  "Yes," she answered, 
and Peer fancied her voice had taken a new tone.

It was past midnight.  Heights and woods and saeters lay lifeless 
in the soft suffused reddish light.  The lake-trout were not rising 
any more, but now and again the screech of a cock-ptarmigan could 
be heard among the withies.

"What made you come just here for your holiday, I wonder," she 
asked suddenly.

"I leave everything to chance, Froken Uthoug.  It just happened so.  
It's all so homelike here, wherever one goes.  And it is so 
wonderful to be home in Norway again."

"But haven't you been to see your people--your father and mother--
since you came home?"

"I--!  Do you suppose I have a father and mother?"

"But near relations--surely you must have a brother or sister 
somewhere in the world?"

"Ah, if one only had!  Though, after all, one can get on without."

She looked at him searchingly, as if trying to see whether he spoke 
in earnest.  Then she said:

"Do you know that mother dreamed of you before you came?"

"Of me?"  Peer's eyes opened wide.  "What did she dream about me?"

A sudden flush came to the girl's face, and she shook her head.  
"It's foolish of me to sit here and tell you all this.  But you see 
that was why we wanted so much to find out about you when you came.  
And it gives me a sort of feeling of our having known each other a 
long time."

"You appear to have a very constant flow of high spirits, Froken 
Uthoug!"

"I?  Why do you think--?  Oh, well, yes.  One can come by most 
things, you know, if one has to have them."

"Even high spirits?"

She turned her head and looked towards the shore.  "Some day 
perhaps--if we should come to be friends--I'll tell you more about 
it."

Peer bent to his oars and rowed on.  The stillness of the night 
drew them nearer and nearer together, and made them silent; only 
now and then they would look at each other and smile.

"What mysterious creature is this I have come upon?" thought Peer.  
She might be about one-or two-and-twenty.  She sat there with bowed 
head, and in this soft glow the oval face had a strange light of 
dreams upon it.  But suddenly her glance came back and rested on 
him again, and then she smiled, and he saw that her mouth was large 
and her lips full and red.

"I wish I had been all over the world, like you," she said.

"Have you never been abroad, Froken Uthoug?" he asked.

"I spent a winter in Berlin, once, and a few months in South 
Germany.  I played the violin a little, you see; and I hoped to 
take it up seriously abroad and make something of it--but--"

"Well, why shouldn't you?"

She was silent for a little, then at last she said:  "I suppose you 
are sure to know about it some day, so I may just as well tell you 
now.  Mother has been out of her mind."

"My dear Froken--"

"And when she's at home my--high spirits are needed to help her to 
be more or less herself."

He felt an impulse to rise and go to the girl, and take her head 
between his hands.  But she looked up, with a melancholy smile; 
their eyes met in a long look, and she forgot to withdraw her 
glance.

"I must go ashore now," she said at last.

"Oh, so soon!  Why, we have hardly begun our talk!"

"I must go ashore now," she repeated; and her voice, though still 
gentle, was not to be gainsaid.

At last Peer was alone, rowing back to his saeter.  As he rowed he 
watched the girl going slowly up towards the cottage.  When she 
reached the door she turned for the first time and waved to him.  
Then she stood for a moment looking after him, and then opened the 
door and disappeared.  He gazed at the door some time longer, as if 
expecting to see it open again, but no sign of life was to be seen.

The sun's rim was showing now above the distant ranges in the east, 
and the white peaks in the north and west kindled in the morning 
glow.  Peer laid in his oars again, and rested, with his elbows on 
his knees and his head in his hands.  What could this thing be that 
had befallen him today?

How could those peaks stand round so aloof and indifferent, and 
leave him here disconsolate and alone?

What was it, this new rushing in his ears; this new rhythm of his 
pulse?  He lay back at last in the bottom of the boat, with hands 
clasped behind his head, and let boat and all things drift.

And when the glare of the rising sun came slanting into the boat 
and beat dazzlingly in his face, he only turned his head a little 
and let it shine full upon him.

Now she is lying asleep over there, the morning streaming red 
through her window--of whom is she dreaming as she sleeps?

Have you ever seen such eyebrows before?  To press one's lips to 
them--to take her head between one's hand . . . and so it is to 
save your mother that you give up your own dreams, and to warm her 
soul that you keep that flame of gladness burning in you?  Is that 
the sort you are?

Merle--was ever such a name?  Are you called Merle?

Day spreads over the heavens, kindling all the night-clouds, great 
and small, to gold and scarlet.  And here he lies, rocking, 
rocking, on no lake, but on a red stately-heaving ocean swell.

Ah! till now your mind has been so filled with cold mechanics, with 
calculations, with steel and fire.  More and more knowledge, ever 
more striving to understand all things, to know all, to master all.  
But meanwhile, the tones of the hymn died within you, and the 
hunger for that which lies beyond all things grew ever fiercer and 
fiercer.  You thought it was Norway that you needed--and now you 
are here.  But is it enough?

Merle--is your name Merle?

There is nothing that can be likened to the first day of love.  All 
your learning, your travel, and deeds and dreams--all has been 
nothing but dry firewood that you have dragged and heaped together.  
And now has come a spark, and the whole heap blazes up, casting its 
red glow over earth and heaven, and you stretch out your cold 
hands, and warm them, and shiver with joy that a new bliss has come 
upon the earth.

And all that you could not understand--the relation between the 
spark of eternity in your soul and the Power above, and the whole 
of endless space--has all of a sudden become so clear that you lie 
here trembling with joy at seeing to the very bottom of the 
infinite enigma.

You have but to take her by the hand, and "Here are we two," you 
say to the powers of life and death.  "Here is she and here am I--
we two"--and you send the anthem rolling aloft--a strain from 
little Louise's fiddle-bow mingling with it--not to the vaultings 
of any church, but into endless space itself.  And Thou, Power 
above, now I understand Thee.  How could I ever take seriously a 
Power that sat on high playing with Sin and Grace--but now I see 
Thee, not the bloodthirsty Jehovah, but a golden-haired youth, the 
Light itself.  We two worship Thee; not with a wail of prayer, but 
with a great anthem, that has the World-All in it.  All our powers, 
our knowledge, our dreams--all are there.  And each has its own 
instrument, its own voice in the mighty chorus.  The dawn reddening 
over the hills is with us.  The goat grazing on that northern 
hillside, dazzled with sun-gold when it turns its head to the east--
it is with us, too.  The waking birds are with us.  A frog, 
crawling up out of a puddle and stopping to wonder at the morning--
it is there.  Even the little insect with diamonds on its wings--
and the grass-blade with its pearl of dew, trying to mirror as much 
of the sky as it can--it is there, it is there, it is there.  We 
are standing amid Love's first day, and there is no more talk of 
grace or doubt or faith or need of aid; only a rushing sound of 
music rising to heaven from all the golden rivers in our hearts.

The saeters were beginning to wake.  Musical cries came echoing as 
the saeter-girls chid on the cattle, that moved slowly up to the 
northern heights, with lowings and tinkling of bells.  But Peer lay 
still where he was--and presently the dairy-maid at the saeter 
caught sight of what seemed an empty boat drifting on the lake, and 
was afraid some accident had happened.

"Merle," thought Peer, still lying motionless.  "Is your name 
Merle?"

The dairy-maid was down by the waterside now, calling across toward 
the boat.  And at last she saw a man sit up, rubbing his eyes.

"Mercy on us!" she cried.  "Lord be thanked that you're there.  And 
you haven't been in the whole blessed night!"

A goat with a broken leg, set in splints, had been left to stray at 
will about the cattle-pens and in and out of the house, while its 
leg-bones were setting.  Peer must needs pick up the creature and 
carry it round for a while in his arms, though it at once began 
chewing at his beard.  When he sat down to the breakfast-table, he 
found something so touching in the look of the cream and butter, 
the bread and the coffee, that it seemed a man would need a heart 
of stone to be willing to eat such things.  And when the old woman 
said he really ought to get some food into him, he sprang up and 
embraced her, as far as his arms would go round.  "Nice carryings 
on!" she cried, struggling to free herself.  But when he went so 
far as to imprint a sounding kiss on her forehead, she fetched him 
a mighty push.  "Lord!" she said, "if the gomeril hasn't gone clean 
out of his wits this last night!"



Chapter IV


Ringeby lay on the shore of a great lake; and was one of those busy 
commercial towns which have sprung up in the last fifty years from 
a nucleus consisting of a saw-mill and a flour-mill by the side of 
a waterfall.  Now quite a number of modern factories had spread 
upwards along the river, and the place was a town with some four 
thousand inhabitants, with a church of its own, a monster of a 
school building, and numbers of yellow workmen's dwellings 
scattered about at random in every direction.  Otherwise Ringeby 
was much like any other little town.  There were two lawyers, who 
fought for scraps of legal business, and the editors of two local 
papers, who were constantly at loggerheads before the Conciliation 
Board.  There was a temperance lodge and Workers' Union and a 
chapel and a picture palace.  And every Sunday afternoon the good 
citizens of Ringeby walked out along the fjord, with their wives on 
their arms.  On these occasions most of the men wore frock coats 
and grey felt hats; but Enebak, the tanner, being hunchbacked, 
preferred a tall silk hat, as better suited to eke out his height.

On Saturday evenings, when twilight began to fall, the younger men 
would meet at the corner outside Hammer's store, to discuss the 
events of the week.

"Have you heard the latest news?" asked Lovli, the bank cashier, of 
his friend the telegraphist, who came up.

"News?  Do you tell me that there's ever any news in this accursed 
hole?"

"Merle Uthoug has come back from the mountains--engaged to be 
married."

"The devil she is!  What does the old man say to that?"

"Oh, well, the old man will want an engineer if he's to get the new 
timber-mills into his clutches."

"Is the man an engineer?"

"From Egypt.  A Muhammadan, I daresay.  Brown as a coffee-berry, 
and rolling in money."

"Do you hear that, Froken Bull?  Stop a minute, here's some news 
for you."

The girl addressed turned aside and joined them.  "Oh, the same 
piece of news that's all over the town, I suppose.  Well, I can 
tell you, he's most tremendously nice."

"Sh!" whispered the telegraphist.  Peer Holm was just coming out of 
the Grand Hotel, dressed in a grey suit, and with a dark coat over 
his arm.  He was trying to get a newly-lit cigar to draw, as he 
walked with a light elastic step past the group at the corner.  A 
little farther up the street he encountered Merle, and took her 
arm, and the two walked off together, the young people at the 
corner watching them as they went.

"And when is it to be?" asked the telegraphist.

"He wanted to be married immediately, I believe," said Froken Bull, 
"but I suppose they'll have to wait till the banns are called, like 
other people."

Lorentz D. Uthoug's long, yellow-painted wooden house stood facing 
the market square; the office and the big ironmonger's shop were on 
the ground floor, and the family lived in the upper storeys.  
"That's where he lives," people would say.  Or "There he goes," as 
the broad, grey-bearded man passed down the street.  Was he such a 
big man, then?  He could hardly be called really rich, though he 
had a saw-mill and a machine-shop and a flour-mill, and owned a 
country place some way out of the town.  But there was something of 
the chieftain, something of the prophet, about him.  He hated 
priests.  He read deep philosophical works, forbade his family to 
go to church, and had been visited by Bjornson himself.  It was 
good to have him on your side; to have him against you was fatal--
you might just as well clear out of the town altogether.  He had a 
finger in everything that went on; it was as if he owned the whole 
town.  He had been known to meet a youth he had never spoken to 
before in the street and accost him with a peremptory "Understand 
me, young man; you will marry that girl."  Yet for all this, 
Lorentz Uthoug was not altogether content.  True, he was head and 
shoulders above all the Ringeby folks, but what he really wanted 
was to be the biggest man in a place a hundred times as large.

And now that he had found a son-in-law, he seemed as it were to be 
walking quietly round this stranger from the great world, taking 
his measure, and asking in his thoughts:  "Who are you at bottom?  
What have you seen?  What have you read?  Are you progressive or 
reactionary?  Have you any proper respect for what I have 
accomplished here, or are you going about laughing in your sleeve 
and calling me a whale among the minnows?"

Every morning when Peer woke in his room at the hotel he rubbed his 
eyes.  On the table beside his bed stood a photograph of a young 
girl.  What?  Is it really you, Peer, that have found someone to 
stand close to you at last?  Someone in the world who cares about 
you.  When you have a cold, there'll be people to come round and be 
anxious about you, and ask how you are getting on.  And this to 
happen to you!

He dined at the Uthougs' every day, and there were always flowers 
beside his plate.  Often there would be some little surprise--a 
silver spoon or fork, or a napkin-ring with his initials on.  It 
was like gathering the first straws to make his new nest.  And the 
pale woman with the spectacles looked kindly at him, as if to say:  
"You are taking her from me, but I forgive you."

One day he was sitting in the hotel, reading, when Merle came in.

"Will you come for a walk?" she asked.

"Good idea.  Where shall we go to-day?"

"Well, we haven't been to see Aunt Marit at Bruseth yet.  We really 
ought to go, you know.  I'll take you there to-day."

Peer found these ceremonial visits to his new relatives quite 
amusing; he went round, as it were, collecting uncles and aunts.  
And to-day there was a new one.  Well, why not?

"But--my dear girl, have you been crying?" he asked suddenly, 
taking her head in his hands.

"Oh, it's nothing.  Come--let's go now."  And she thrust him gently 
away as he tried to kiss her.  But the next moment she dropped into 
a chair, and sat looking thoughtfully at him through half-closed 
eyes, nodding her head very slightly.  She seemed to be asking 
herself:  "Who is this man?  What is this I am taking on me?  A 
fortnight ago he was an utter stranger--"

She passed her hand across her brow.  "It's mother--you know," she 
said.

"Is anything special wrong to-day?"

"She's so afraid you're going to carry me off into the wide world 
at a moment's notice."

"But I've told her we're going to live here for the present."

The girl drew up one side of her mouth in a smile, and her eyelids 
almost closed.  "And what about me, then?  After living here all 
these years crazy to get out into the world?"

"And I, who am crazy to stay at home!" said Peer with a laugh.  
"How delicious it will be to have a house and a family at last--and 
peace and quiet!"

"But what about me?"

"You'll be there, too.  I'll let you live with me."

"Oh! how stupid you are to-day.  If you only knew what it means, to 
throw away the best years of one's youth in a hole like this!  And 
besides--I could have done something worth while in music--"

"Why, then, let's go abroad, by all means," said Peer, wrinkling up 
his forehead as if to laugh.

"Oh, nonsense! you know it's quite impossible to go off and leave 
mother now.  But you certainly came at a very critical time.  For 
anyway I was longing and longing just then for someone to come and 
carry me off."

"Aha! so I was only a sort of ticket for the tour."  He stepped 
over and pinched her nose.

"Oh! you'd better be careful.  I haven't really promised yet to 
have you, you know."

"Haven't promised?  When you practically asked me yourself."

She clapped her hands together.  "Why, what shameless impudence!  
After my saying No, No, No, for days together.  I won't, I won't, I 
won't--I said it ever so many times.  And you said it didn't 
matter--for YOU WOULD.  Yes, you took me most unfairly off my 
guard; but now look out for yourself."

The next moment she flung her arms round his neck.  But when he 
tried to kiss her, she pushed him away again.  "No," she said, "you 
mustn't think I did it for that!"

Soon they were walking arm-in-arm along the country road, on their 
way to Aunt Marit at Bruseth.  It was September, and all about the 
wooded hills stood yellow, and the cornfields were golden and the 
rowan berries blood-red.  But there was still summer in the air.

"Ugh! how impossibly fast you walk," exclaimed Merle, stopping out 
of breath.

And when they came to a gate they sat down in the grass by the 
wayside.  Below them was the town, with its many roofs and chimneys 
standing out against the shining lake, that lay framed in broad 
stretches of farm and field.

"Do you know how it came about that mother is--as she is?" asked 
Merle suddenly.

"No.  I didn't like to ask you about it."

She drew a stalk of grass between her lips.

"Well, you see--mother's father was a clergyman.  And when--when 
father forbade her to go to church, she obeyed him.  But she 
couldn't sleep after that.  She felt--as if she had sold her soul."

"And what did your father say to that?"

"Said it was hysteria.  But, hysteria or not, mother couldn't 
sleep.  And at last they had to take her away to a home."

"Poor soul!" said Peer, taking the girl's hand.

"And when she came back from there she was so changed, one would 
hardly have known her.  And father gave way a little--more than he 
ever used to do--and said:  'Well, well, I suppose you must go to 
church if you wish, but you mustn't mind if I don't go with you.'  
And so one Sunday she took my hand and we went together, but as we 
reached the church door, and heard the organ playing inside, she 
turned back.  'No--it's too late now,' she said.  'It's too late, 
Merle.'  And she has never been since."

"And she has always been--strange--since then?"

Merle sighed.  "The worst of it is she sees so many evil things 
compassing her about.  She says the only thing to do is to laugh 
them away.  But she can't laugh herself.  And so I have to.  But 
when I go away from her--oh! I can't bear to think of it."

She hid her face against his shoulder, and he began stroking her 
hair.

"Tell me, Peer"--she looked up with her one-sided smile--"who is 
right--mother or father?"

"Have you been trying to puzzle that out?"

"Yes.  But it's so hopeless--so impossible to come to any sort of 
certainty.  What do you think?  Tell me what you think, Peer."

They sat there alone in the golden autumn day, her head pressed 
against his shoulder.  Why should he play the superior person and 
try to put her off with vague phrases?

"Dear Merle, I know, of course, no more than you do.  There was a 
time when I saw God standing with a rod in one hand and a sugar-
cake in the other--just punishment and rewards to all eternity.  
Then I thrust Him from me, because He seemed to me so unjust--and 
at last He vanished, melting into the solar systems on high, and 
all the infinitesimal growths here on the earth below.  What was my 
life, what were my dreams, my joy or sorrow, to these?  Where was I 
making for?  Ever and always there was something in me saying:  He 
IS!  But where?  Somewhere beyond and behind the things you know--
it is there He is.  And so I determined to know more things, more 
and more and more--and what wiser was I?  A steam-hammer crushes my 
skull one day--and what has become of my part in progress and 
culture and science?  Am I as much of an accident as a fly on an 
ant?  Do I mean no more?  Do I vanish and leave as little trace?  
Answer me that, little Merle--what do YOU think?"

The girl sat motionless, breathing softly, with closed eyes.  Then 
she began to smile--and her lips were full and red, and at last 
they shaped themselves to a kiss.


Bruseth was a large farm lying high above the town, with its garden 
and avenues and long verandahs round the white dwelling-house.  And 
what a view out over the lake and the country far around!  The two 
stood for a moment at the gate, looking back.

Merle's aunt--her father's sister--was a widow, rich and a notable 
manager, but capricious to a degree, capable of being generous one 
day and grasping the next.  It was the sorrow of her life that she 
had no children of her own, but she had not yet decided who was to 
be her heir.

She came sailing into the room where the two young people were 
waiting, and Peer saw her coming towards them, a tall, full-bosomed 
woman with grey hair and florid colour.  Oho! here's an aunt for 
you with a vengeance, he thought.  She pulled off a blue apron she 
was wearing and appeared dressed in a black woollen gown, with a 
gold chain about her neck and long gold earrings.

"So you thought you'd come over at last," she said.  "Actually 
remembered my existence, after all, did you, Merle?"  She turned 
towards Peer, and stood examining him, with her hands on her hips.  
"So that's what you look like, is it, Peer?  And you're the man 
that was to catch Merle?  Well, you see I call you Peer at once, 
even though you HAVE come all the way from--Arabia, is it?  Sit 
down, sit down."

Wine was brought in, and Aunt Marit of Bruseth lifted a 
congratulatory glass toward the pair with the following words:

"You'll fight, of course.  But don't overdo it, that's all.  And 
mark my words, Peer Holm, if you aren't good to her, I'll come 
round one fine day and warm your ears for you.  Your healths, 
children!"

The two went homewards arm-in-arm, dancing down the hillsides, and 
singing gaily as they went.  But suddenly, when they were still 
some way from the town, Merle stopped and pointed.  "There," she 
whispered--"there's mother!"

A solitary woman was walking slowly in the twilight over a wide 
field of stubble, looking around her.  It was as if she were 
lingering here to search out the meaning of something--of many 
things.  From time to time she would glance up at the sky, or at 
the town below, or at people passing on the road, and then she 
would nod her head.  How infinitely far off she seemed, how utterly 
a stranger to all the noisy doings of men!  What was she seeing 
now?  What were her thoughts?

"Let us go on," whispered Merle, drawing him with her.  And the 
young girl suddenly began to sing, loudly, as if in an overflow of 
spirits; and Peer guessed that it was for her mother's sake.  
Perhaps the lonely woman stood there now in the twilight smiling 
after them.


One Sunday morning Merle drove up to the hotel in a light cart with 
a big brown horse; Peer came out and climbed in, leaving the reins 
to her.  They were going out along the fjord to look at her 
father's big estate which in olden days had been the County 
Governors' official residence.

It is the end of September.  The sun is still warm, but the waters 
of the lake are grey and all the fields are reaped.  Here and there 
a strip of yellowing potato-stalks lies waiting to be dug up.  Up 
on the hillsides horses tethered for grazing stand nodding their 
heads slowly, as if they knew that it was Sunday.  And a faint mist 
left by the damps of the night floats about here and there over the 
broad landscape.

They passed through a wood, and came on the other side to an avenue 
of old ash trees, that turned up from the road and ran uphill to a 
big house where a flag was flying.  The great white dwelling-house 
stood high, as if to look out far over the world; the red farm-
buildings enclosed the wide courtyard on three sides, and below 
were gardens and broad lands, sloping down towards the lake.  
Something like an estate!

"What's the name of that place?" cried Peer, gazing at it.

"Loreng."

"And who owns it?"

"Don't know," answered the girl, cracking her whip.

Next moment the horse turned in to the avenue, and Peer caught 
involuntarily at the reins.  "Hei! Brownie--where are you going?" 
he cried.

"Why not go up and have a look?" said Merle.

"But we were going out to look at your father's place."

"Well, that is father's place."

Peer stared at her face and let go the reins.  "What?  What?  You 
don't mean to say your father owns that place there?"

A few minutes later they were strolling through the great, low-
ceiled rooms.  The whole house was empty now, the farm-bailiff 
living in the servants' quarters.  Peer grew more and more 
enthusiastic.  Here, in these great rooms, there had been festive 
gatherings enough in the days of the old Governors, where cavaliers 
in uniform or with elegant shirt-frills and golden spurs had kissed 
the hands of ladies in sweeping silk robes.  Old mahogany, pot-
pourri, convivial song, wit, grace--Peer saw it all in his mind's 
eye, and again and again he had to give vent to his feelings by 
seizing Merle and embracing her.

"Oh, but look here, Merle--you know, this is a fairy-tale."

They passed out into the old neglected garden with its grass-grown 
paths and well-filled carp-ponds and tumble-down pavilions.  Peer 
rushed about it in all directions.  Here, too, there had been 
fetes, with coloured lamps festooned around, and couples whispering 
in the shade of every bush.  "Merle, did you say your father was 
going to sell all this to the State?"

"Yes, that's what it will come to, I expect," she answered.  "The 
place doesn't pay, he says, when he can't live here himself to look 
after it."

"But what use can the State make of it?"

"Oh, a Home for Imbeciles, I believe."

"Good Lord!  I might have guessed it!  An idiot asylum--to be 
sure."  He tramped about, fairly jumping with excitement.  "Merle, 
look here--will you come and live here?"

She threw back her head and looked at him.  "I ask you, Merle.  
Will you come and live here?"

"Do you want me to answer this moment, on the spot?"

"Yes.  For I want to buy it this moment, on the spot."

"Well, aren't you--"

"Look, Merle, just look at it all.  That long balcony there, with 
the doric columns--nothing shoddy about that--it's the real thing.  
Empire.  I know something about it."

"But it'll cost a great deal, Peer."  There was some reluctance in 
her voice.  Was she thinking of her violin?  Was she loth to take 
root too firmly?

"A great deal?" he said.  "What did your father give for it?"

"The place was sold by auction, and he got it cheap.  Fifty 
thousand crowns, I think it was."

Peer strode off towards the house again.  "We'll buy it.  It's the 
very place to make into a home. . . .  Horses, cattle, sheep, 
goats, cottars--ah! it'll be grand."

Merle followed him more slowly.  "But, Peer, remember you've just 
taken over father's machine-shops in town."

"Pooh!" said Peer scornfully.  "Do you think I can't manage to run 
that village smithy and live here too!  Come along, Merle."  And he 
took her hand and drew her into the house again.

It was useless to try to resist.  He dragged her from room to room, 
furnishing as he went along.  "This room here is the dining-room--
and that's the big reception-room; this will be the study--that's a 
boudoir for you. . . .  Come now; to-morrow we'll go into 
Christiania and buy the furniture."

Merle gasped for breath.  He had got so far by this time that the 
furnishing was complete and they were installed.  They had a 
governess already, and he was giving parties too.  Here was the 
ballroom.  He slipped an arm round her waist and danced round the 
room with her, till she was carried away by his enthusiasm, and 
stood flushed and beaming, while all she had dreamed of finding 
some day out in the wide world seemed suddenly to unfold around her 
here in these empty rooms.  Was this really to be her home?  She 
stopped to take breath and to look around her.

Late that evening Peer sat at the hotel with a note-book, working 
the thing out.  He had bought Loreng; his father-in-law had been 
reasonable, and had let him have the place, lands and woods and 
all, for the ridiculous price he had paid himself.  There was a 
mortgage of thirty thousand crowns on the estate.  Well, that might 
stand as it was, for the bulk of Peer's money was tied up in 
Ferdinand Holm's company.

A few days after he carried Merle off to the capital, leaving the 
carpenters and painters hard at work at Loreng.

One day he was sitting alone at the hotel in Christiania--Merle was 
out shopping--when there was a very discreet knock at the door.

"Come in," called Peer.  And in walked a middle-sized man, of 
thirty or more, dressed in a black frock-coat with a large-
patterned vest, and his dark hair carefully combed over a bald 
patch on the crown.  He had a red, cheery face; his eyes were of 
the brightest blue, and the whole man breathed and shone with good 
humour.

"I am Uthoug junior," said the new-comer, with a bow and a laugh.

"Oh--that's capital."

"Just come across from Manchester--beastly voyage.  Thanks, thanks--
I'll find a seat."  He sat down, and flung one striped trouser-leg 
over the other.

Peer sent for some wine, and in half an hour the two were firm 
allies.  Uthoug junior's life-story to date was quickly told.  He 
had run away from home because his father had refused to let him go 
on the stage--had found on trial that in these days there weren't 
enough theatres to go round--then had set up in business for 
himself, and now had a general agency for the sale of English 
tweeds.  "Freedom, freedom," was his idea; "lots of elbow-room--
room to turn about in--without with your leave or by your leave to 
father or anyone!  Your health!"


A week later the street outside Lorentz D. Uthoug's house in 
Ringeby was densely crowded with people, all gazing up at the long 
rows of lighted windows.  There was feasting to-night in the great 
man's house.  About midnight a carriage drove up to the door.  
"That's the bridegroom's," whispered a bystander.  "He got those 
horses from Denmark!"

The street door opened, and a white figure, thickly cloaked, 
appeared on the steps.  "The bride!" whispered the crowd.  Then a 
slender man in a dark overcoat and silk hat.  "The bridegroom!"  
And as the pair passed out, "Hip-hip-hip--" went the voice of the 
general agent for English tweeds, and the hurrahs came with a will.

The carriage moved off, and Peer sat, with his arm round his bride, 
driving his horses at a sharp trot out along the fjord.  Out 
towards his home, towards his palace, towards a new and untried 
future.



Chapter V


A little shaggy, grey-bearded old man stood chopping and sawing in 
the wood-shed at Loreng.  He had been there longer than anyone 
could remember.  One master left, another took his place--what was 
that to the little man?  Didn't the one need firewood--and didn't 
the other need firewood just the same?  In the evening he crept up 
to his den in the loft of the servants' wing; at meal-times he sat 
himself down in the last seat at the kitchen-table, and it seemed 
to him that there was always food to be had.  Nowadays the master's 
name was Holm--an engineer he was--and the little man blinked at 
him with his eyes, and went on chopping in the shed.  If they came 
and told him he was not wanted and must go--why, thank heaven, he 
was stone deaf, as everyone knew.  Thud, thud, went his axe in the 
shed; and the others about the place were so used to it that they 
heeded it no more than the ticking of a clock upon the wall.

In the kitchen of the big house two girls stood by the window 
peeping out into the garden and giggling.

"There he is again," said Laura.  "Sh! don't laugh so loud.  There! 
now he's stopping again!"

"He's whistling to a bird," said Oliana.  "Or talking to himself 
perhaps.  Do you think he's quite right in his head?"

"Sh!  The mistress'll hear."

It was no less a person than the master of Loreng himself whose 
proceedings struck them as so comic.

Peer it was, wandering about in the great neglected garden, with 
his hands in the pockets of his knickerbockers and his cap on the 
back of his head, stopping here and there, and moving on again as 
the fancy took him.  Sometimes he would hum a snatch of a song, and 
again fall to whistling; here he would pick up a twig and look at 
it, or again it might be a bird, or perhaps an old neglected apple-
tree that seemed worth stopping to talk to.  The best of it was 
that these were his own lands and his own woods that lay there in 
the rusty October sunshine.  Was all that nothing?  And the hill 
over on the farther shore, standing on its head in the dark lake-
mirror, clothed in a whole world of colour--yellow leaves and green 
leaves, and light red and dark red, and golden and blood-red 
patches, with the dark green of the pines between.  His eyes had 
all this to rest on.  Did he really live here?  What abundant 
fruitfulness all around him!  What a sky, so wide, so golden that 
it seemed to ring again.  The potato-stalks lay uprooted, scattered 
on the fields; the corn was safely housed.  And here he stood.  He 
seemed again to be drawing in nourishment from all he saw, drinking 
it greedily.  The empty places in his mind were filled; the sight 
of the rich soft landscape worked on his being, giving it something 
of its own abundant fruitfulness, its own wide repose.

And--what next?

"What next?" he mimicked in his thoughts, and started again 
tramping up and down the garden paths.  What next--what next?  
Could he not afford now to take his time--to rest a little?  Every 
man must have an end in view--must strive to reach this goal or 
that.  And what was his object now?  What was it he had so toiled 
for, from those hard years in the loft above the stable even until 
now?  What was it?  Often it seemed as if everything were going 
smoothly, going of itself; as if one day, surely, he would find his 
part in a great, happy world-harmony.  But had he not already found 
it?  What more would he have?  Of course he had found it.

But is this all, then?  What is there behind and beyond?  Hush! 
have done with questioning.  Look at the beauty around you.  Here 
is peace, peace and rest.

He hurried up to the house, and in--it might help matters if he 
could take his wife in his arms; perhaps get her to come out with 
him a while.

Merle was in the pantry, with a big apron on, ranging jars of 
preserves on the shelves.

"Here, dearest little wife," cried Peer, throwing his arms about 
her, "what do you say to a little run?"

"Now?  Do you suppose a housewife has nothing better to do than gad 
about?  Uf! my hair! you'll make it come down."

Peer took her arm and led her over to a window looking out on the 
lake.  "There, dearest!  Isn't it lovely here?"

"Peer, you've asked me that twenty times a day ever since we came."

"Yes, and you never answer.  And you've never once yet run and 
thrown your arms round my neck and said how happy you were.  And 
it's never yet come to pass that you've given me a single kiss of 
your own accord."

"I should think not, when you steal such a lot."  And she pushed 
him aside, and slipped under his arm, and ran out of the room.  "I 
must go in and see mother again to-day," she said as she went.

"Huit!  Of course!"  He paced up and down the room, his step 
growing more and more impatient.  "In to mother--in to mother!  
Always and everlastingly mother and mother and nothing else.  
Huit!" and he began to whistle.

Merle put her head in at the door.  "Peer--have you such a terrible 
lot of spare time?"

"Well, yes and no.  I'm busy enough looking about in every corner 
here for something or another.  But I can't find it, and I don't 
even know exactly what it is.  Oh well, yes--I have plenty of time 
to spare."

"But what about the farm?"

"Well, there's the dairy-woman in the cow-house, and the groom in 
the stables, and the bailiff to worry the tenants and workpeople.  
What am I to do--poke around making improvements?"

"But what about the machine-shop?"

"Don't I go in twice a day--cycle over to see how things are going?  
But with Rode for manager--that excellent and high-principled 
engineer--"

"Surely you could help him in some way?"

"He's got to go on running along the line of rails he's used to--
nothing else for it, my darling.  And four or five thousand crowns 
a year, net profit--why, it's magnificent!"

"But couldn't you extend the business?"

He raised his eyebrows, and his mouth pursed itself up.

"Extend--did you say extend?  Extend a--a doll's house!"

"Oh, Peer, you shouldn't laugh at it--a thing that father took so 
much pains to set going!"

"And YOU shouldn't go worrying me to get to work again in earnest, 
Merle.  You shouldn't really.  One of these days I might discover 
that there's no way to be happy in the world but to drag a plough 
and look straight ahead and forget that there's anything else in 
existence.  It may come to that one day--but give me a little 
breathing-space first, and you love me.  Well, good-bye for a 
while."

Merle, busying herself again in her pantry, glanced out of the 
window and saw him disappear into the stables.  At first she had 
gone with him when he wandered about like this, touching and 
feeling all his possessions.  In the cattle-stalls, it might be, 
stroking and patting, getting himself covered with hairs, and 
chattering away in childish glee.  "Look, Merle--this cow is mine, 
child!  Dagros her name is--and she's mine.  We have forty of them--
and they're all mine.  And that nag there--what a sight he is!  We 
have eight of them.  They're mine.  Yours too, of course.  But you 
don't care a bit about it.  You haven't even hugged any of them 
yet.  But when a man's been as poor as I've been--and suddenly 
wakened up one day and found he owned all this--  No, wait a 
minute, Merle--come and kiss old Brownie."  She knew the ritual 
now--he could go over it all again and again, and each time with 
the same happy wonder.  Was it odious of her that she was beginning 
to find it a little comic?  And how did it come about that often, 
when she might be filled with the deepest longing for him, and he 
burst in upon her boisterously, hungry for her caresses, she would 
grow suddenly cold, and put him aside?  What was the matter?  Why 
did she behave like this?

Perhaps it was because he was so much the stronger, so overwhelming 
in his effect on her that she had to keep a tight hold on herself 
to avoid being swept clean away and losing her identity.  At one 
moment they might be sitting in the lamplight, chatting easily 
together, and so near in heart and mind; and the next it would be 
over--he would suddenly have started up and be pacing up and down 
the room, delivering a sort of lecture.  Merle--isn't it marvellous,
the spiritual life of plants?  And then would come a torrent of talk
about strange plant-growths in the north and in the south, plants
whose names she had never even heard--their struggle for existence,
their loves and longings, their heroism in disease, the divine
marvel of their death.  Their inventions, their wisdom, aye, their
religious sense--is it not marvellous, Merle?  From this it was only
a step to the earth's strata, fossils, crystals--a fresh lecture.
And finally he would sum up the whole into one great harmony of
development, from the primary cell-life to the laws of gravitation
that rule the courses of the stars.  Was it not marvellous?  One
common rhythm beating through the universe--a symphony of worlds!--
And then he must have a kiss!

But she could only draw back and put him gently aside.  It was as 
if he came with all his stored-up knowledge--his lore of plants and 
fossils, crystals and stars--and poured it all out in a caress.  
She could almost have cried out for help.  And after hurrying her 
through the wonders of the universe in this fashion, he would 
suddenly catch her up in his arms, and whirl her off in a 
passionate intoxication of the senses till she woke at last like a 
castaway on an island, hardly knowing where or what she was.  She 
laughed, but she could have found it in her heart to weep.  Could 
this be love?  In this strong man, whose life till now had been all 
study and work, the stored-up feeling burst vehemently forth, now 
that it had found an outlet.  But why did it leave her so cold?

When Peer came in from the stables, humming a tune, he found her in 
the sitting-room, dressed in a dark woollen dress with a red ribbon 
round her throat.

He stopped short:  "By Jove--how that suits you, Merle!"

She let her eyes linger on him for a moment, and then came up and 
threw her arms round his neck.

"Did he have to go to the stables all alone today?"

"Yes; I've been having a chat with the young colt."

"Am I unkind to you, Peer?"

"You?--you!"

"Not even if I ask you to drive me in to see mother?"

"Why, that's the very thing.  The new horse I bought yesterday from 
Captain Myhre should be here any minute--I'm just waiting for it."

"A new horse--to ride?"

"Yes.  Hang it--I must get some riding.  I had to handle Arab 
horses for years.  But we'll try this one in the gig first."

Merle was still standing with her arms round his neck, and now she 
pressed her warm rich lips to his, close and closer.  It was at 
such moments that she loved him--when he stood trembling with a joy 
unexpected, that took him unawares.  She too trembled, with a 
blissful thrill through soul and body; for once and at last it was 
she who gave.

"Ah!" he breathed at last, pale with emotion.  "I--I'd be glad to 
die like that."

A little later they stood on the balcony looking over the courtyard,
when a bearded farm-hand came up with a big light-maned chestnut
horse prancing in a halter.  The beast stood still in the middle of
the yard, flung up its head, and neighed, and the horses in the
stable neighed in answer.

"Oh, what a beauty!" exclaimed Merle, clapping her hands.

"Put him into the gig," called Peer to the stable-boy who had come 
out to take the horse.

The man touched his cap.  "Horse has never been driven before, sir, 
I was to say."

"Everything must have a beginning," said Peer.

Merle glanced at him.  But they were both dressed to go out when 
the chestnut came dancing up before the door with the gig.  The 
white hoofs pawed impatiently, the head was high in the air, and 
the eyes flashed fire--he wasn't used to having shafts pressing on 
his sides and wheels rumbling just behind him.  Peer lit a cigar.

"You're not going to smoke?" Merle burst out.

"Just to show him I'm not excited," said Peer.  No sooner had they 
taken their seats in the gig than the beast began to snort and 
rear, but the long lash flicked out over its neck, and a minute 
later they were tearing off in a cloud of dust towards the town.


Winter came--and a real winter it was.  Peer moved about from one 
window to another, calling all the time to Merle to come and look.  
He had been away so long--the winter of Eastern Norway was all 
new to him.  Look--look!  A world of white--a frozen white 
tranquillity--woods, plains, lakes all in white, a fairy-tale in 
sunlight, a dreamland at night under the great bright moon.  There 
was a ringing of sleigh-bells out on the lake, and up in the snow-
powdered forest; the frost stood thick on the horses' manes and the 
men's beards were hung with icicles.  And in the middle of the 
night loud reports of splitting ice would come from the lake--
sounds to make one sit up in bed with a start.

Driving's worth while in weather like this--come, Merle.  The new 
stallion from Gudbrandsdal wants breaking in--we'll take him.  
Hallo! and away they go in their furs, swinging out over the frozen 
lake, whirling on to the bare glassy ice, where they skid and come 
near capsizing, and Merle screams--but they get on to snow, and 
hoofs and runners grip again.  None of your galloping--trot now, 
trot!  And Peer cracks his whip.  The black, long-maned 
Gudbrandsdaler lifts his head and trots out.  And the evening 
comes, and under the wide and starry sky they dash up again to 
Loreng--Loreng that lies there lighting them home with its long 
rows of glowing windows.  A glorious day, wife!

Or they would go out on ski over the hills to the woodmen's huts in 
the forest, and make a blazing fire in the big chimney and drink 
steaming coffee.  Then home again through one of those pale winter 
evenings with a violet twilight over woods and fields and lake, 
over white snow and blue.  Far away on the brown hillside in the 
west stands a farmhouse, with all its windows flaming with the 
reflection from a golden cloud.  Here they come rushing, the wind 
of their passing shaking the snow from the pines; on, on, over 
deep-rutted woodcutters' roads, over stumps and stones--falling, 
bruising themselves, burying their faces deep in the snow, but 
dragging themselves up again, smiling to each other and rushing on 
again.  Then, reaching home red and dripping, they lean the ski up 
against the wall, and stamp the snow off their boots.

"Merle," said Peer, picking the ice from his beard, "we must have a 
bottle of Burgundy at dinner to-night."

"Yes--and shall we ring up and ask someone to come over?"

"Someone--from outside?  Can't we two have a little jollification 
all to ourselves?"

"Yes, yes, of course, if you like."

A shower-bath--a change of underclothes--how delicious!  And--an 
idea!  He'll appear at dinner in evening dress, just for a 
surprise.  But as he entered the room he stopped short.  For there 
stood Merle herself in evening dress--a dress of dark red velvet, 
with his locket round her neck and the big plaits of hair rolled 
into a generous knot low on her neck.  Flowers on the table--the 
wine set to warm--the finest glass, the best silver--ptarmigan--how 
splendid!  They lift their glasses filled with the red wine and 
drink to each other.

The frozen winter landscape still lingered in their thoughts, but 
the sun had warmed their souls; they laughed and jested, held each 
other's hands long, and sat smiling at each other in long silences.

"A glorious day to-day, Merle.  And to-morrow we die."

"What do you say!--to-morrow!"

"Or fifty years hence.  It comes to the same thing."  He pressed 
her hand and his eyes half closed.

"But this evening we're together--and what could we want more?"

Then he fell to talking of his Egyptian experiences.  He had once 
spent a month's holiday in visiting ruined cities with Maspero, the 
great Maspero himself, going with him to Luxor, to Karnak, with its 
great avenues of sphinxes, to El Amarna and Shubra.  They had 
looked on ancient cities of temples and king's mausoleums, where 
men thousands of years dead lay as if lost in thought, with eyes 
wide open, ready at any moment to rise and call out:  Slave, is the 
bath ready?  There in the middle of a cornfield rises an obelisk.  
You ask what it is--it is all that is left of a royal city.  There, 
too, a hundred thousand years ago maybe, young couples have sat 
together, drinking to each other in wine, revelling in all the 
delights of love--and where are they now?  Aye, where are they, can 
you tell me?

"When that journey was over, Merle, I began to think that it was 
not mere slime of the Nile that fertilised the fields; it was the 
mouldered bodies of the dead.  I rode over dust that had been human 
fingers, lips that had clung in kisses.  Millions and millions of 
men and women have lived on those river-banks, and what has become 
of them now?  Geology.  And I thought of the millions of prayers 
wailed out there to the sun and stars, to stone idols in the 
temples, to crocodiles and snakes and the river itself, the sacred 
river.  And the air, Merle--the air received them, and vibrated for 
a second--and that was all.  And even so our prayers go up, to this 
very day.  We press our warm lips to a cold stone, and think to 
leave an impression.  Skaal!"

But Merle did not touch her glass; she sat still, with her eyes on 
the yellow lampshade.  She had not yet given up all her dreams of 
going forth and conquering the world with her music--and he sat 
there rolling out eternity itself before her, while he and she 
herself, her parents, all, all became as chaff blown before the 
wind and vanished.

"What, won't you drink with me?  Well, well--then I must pledge you 
by myself.  Skaal!"

And being well started on his travellers' tales he went on with 
them, but now in a more cheerful vein, so that she found it 
possible to smile.  He told of the great lake-swamps, with their 
legions of birds, ibis, pelicans, swans, flamingos, herons, and 
storks--a world of long beaks and curved breasts and stilt-like 
legs and shrieking and beating of wings.  Most wonderful of all it 
was to stand and watch and be left behind when the birds of passage 
flew northward in their thousands in the spring.  My love to 
Norway, he would say, as they passed.  And in the autumn to see 
them return, grey goose, starling, wagtail, and all the rest.  "How 
goes it now at home?" he would think--and "Next time I'll go with 
you," he would promise himself year after year.

"And here I am at last!  Skaal!"

"Welcome home," said Merle, lifting her glass with a smile.

He rang the bell.  "What do you want?" her eyes asked.

"Champagne," said Peer to the maid, who appeared and vanished 
again.

"Are you crazy, Peer?"

He leaned back, flushed and in happy mood, lit a cigarette and told 
of his greatest triumph out there; it was after he had finished his 
work at the cataracts, and had started again with a branch of the 
English firm in Alexandria.  One morning in walked the Chief and 
said:  "Now, gentlemen, here's a chance for a man that has the 
stuff in him to win his spurs--who's ready?"  And half a score of 
voices answered "I."  "Well, here's the King of Abyssinia suddenly 
finds he must be in the fashion and have a railway--couple of 
hundred miles of it--what do you say to that?"  "Splendid," we 
cried in chorus.  "Well, but we've got to compete with Germans, and 
Swiss, and Americans--and we've got to win."  "Of course"--a louder 
chorus still.  "Now, I'm going to take two men and give them a free 
hand.  They'll go up there and survey and lay out lines, and work 
out the whole project thoroughly, both from the technical and the 
financial side--and a project that's better and cheaper than the 
opposition ones.  Eight months' work for a good man, but I must 
have it done in four.  Take along assistants and equipment--all you 
need--and a thousand pounds premium to the man who puts it through 
so that we get the job."

"Peer--were you sent?"  Merle half rose from her seat in her 
excitement.

"I--and one other."

"Who was that?"

"His name was Ferdinand Holm."

Merle smiled her one-sided smile, and looked at him through her 
long lashes.  She knew it had been the dream of his life to beat 
that half-brother of his in fair fight.  And now!

"And what came of it?" she asked, with a seeming careless glance at 
the lamp.

Peer flung away his cigarette.  "First an expedition up the Nile, 
then a caravan journey, camels and mules and assistants and 
provisions and instruments and tents and quinine--heaps of quinine.  
Have you any idea, I wonder, what a job like that means?  The line 
was to run through forests and tunnels, over swamps and torrents 
and chasms, and everything had to be planned and estimated at top 
speed--material, labour, time, cost and all.  It was all very well 
to provide for the proper spans and girders for a viaduct, and 
estimate for thoroughly sound work in casting and erecting--but 
even then it would be no good if the Germans could come along and 
say their bridge looked handsomer than ours.  It was a job that 
would take a good man eight months, and I had to get it done in 
four.  There are just twelve hours in a day, it's true--but then 
there are twelve more hours in the night.  Fever?  Well, yes.  And 
sunstroke--yes, both men and beasts went down with that.  Maps got 
washed out by the rain.  I lost my best assistant by snakebite.  
But such things didn't count as hindrances, they couldn't be 
allowed to delay the work.  If I lost a man, it simply meant so 
much more work for me.  After a couple of months a blacksmith's 
hammer started thumping in the back of my head, and when I closed 
my eyes for a couple of hours at night, little fiery snakes went 
wriggling about in my brain.  Tired out?  When I looked in the 
glass, my eyes were just two red balls in my head.  But when the 
four months were up, I was back in the Chief's office."

"And--and Ferdinand Holm?"

"Had got in the day before."

Merle shifted a little in her seat.  "And so--he won?"

Peer lit another cigarette.  "No," he said--the cigarette seemed to 
draw rather badly--"I won.  And that's how I came to be building 
railways in Abyssinia."

"Here's the champagne," said Merle.  And as the wine foamed in the 
glasses, she rose and drank to him.  She said nothing, only looked 
at him with eyes half veiled, and smiled.  But a wave of fire went 
through him from head to foot.

"I feel like playing to-night," she said.

It was rarely that she played, though he had often begged her to.  
Since they had been married she had seemed loth to touch her 
violin, feeling perhaps some vague fear that it would disturb her 
peace and awaken old longings.

Peer sat on the sofa, leaning forward with his head in his hands, 
listening.  And there she stood, at the music-stand, in her red 
dress, flushed and warm, and shining in the yellow lamplight, 
playing.

Then suddenly the thought of her mother came to her, and she went 
to the telephone.  "Mother--are you there, mother?  Oh, we've had 
such a glorious day."  And the girl ran on, as if trying to light 
up her mother's heart with some rays of the happiness her own happy 
day had brought her.

A little later Peer lay in bed, while Merle flitted about the room, 
lingering over her toilet.

He watched her as she stood in her long white gown before the 
toilet-table with the little green-shaded lamps, doing her hair for 
the night in a long plait.  Neither of them spoke.  He could see 
her face in the glass, and saw that her eyes were watching him, 
with a soft, mysterious glance--the scent of her hair seemed to 
fill the place with youth.

She turned round towards him and smiled.  And he lay still, 
beckoning her towards him with shining eyes.  All that had passed 
that evening--their outing, and the homeward journey in the violet 
dusk, their little feast, and his story, the wine--all had turned 
to love in their hearts, and shone out now in their smile.

It may be that some touch of the cold breath of the eternities was 
still in their minds, the remembrance of the millions on millions 
that die, the flight of the aeons towards endless darkness; yet in 
spite of all, the minutes now to come, their warm embrace, held a 
whole world of bliss, that out-weighed all, and made Peer, as he 
lay there, long to send out a hymn of praise into the universe, 
because it was so wonderful to live.

He began to understand why she lingered and took so long.  It was a 
sign that she wanted to surprise him, that her heart was kind.  And 
her light breathing seemed even now to fill the room with love.

Outside in the night the lake-ice, splitting into new crevices, 
sent up loud reports; and the winter sky above the roof that 
sheltered them was lit with all its stars.  



Chapter VI


For the next few years Peer managed his estate and his workshop, 
without giving too much of his time to either.  He had his bailiff 
and his works-manager, and the work went on well enough in its 
accustomed grooves.  If anyone had asked him what he actually did 
himself all the time, he would have found it hard to answer.  He 
seemed to be going round gathering up something not clearly 
defined.  There was something wanting--something missed that now 
had to be made good.  It was not knowledge now, but life--life in 
his native land, the life of youth, that he reached out to grasp.  
The youth in him, that had never had free play in the years of 
early manhood, lay still dammed up, and had to find an outlet.

There were festive gatherings at Loreng.  Long rows of sleighs 
drove in the winter evenings up from the town and back again.  
Tables were spread and decked with glass and flowers, the rooms 
were brightly lit, and the wine was good.  And sometimes in the 
long moonlit nights respectable citizens would be awakened by noisy 
mirth in the streets of the little town, and, going to the window 
in their night-shirts, would see sleighs come galloping down, with 
a jangle of bells, full of laughing, singing young people, 
returning from some excursion far up in the hills, where there had 
been feasting and dancing.  Here a young lawyer--newly married and 
something of a privileged buffoon--was sitting on the lap of 
somebody else's wife, playing a concertina, and singing at the top 
of his voice.  "Some of that Loreng man's doings again," people 
would say.  "The place has never been the same since he came here."  
And they would get back to bed again, shaking their heads and 
wondering what things were coming to.

Peer drove out, too, on occasion, to parties at the big country 
houses round, where they would play cards all night and have 
champagne sent up to their rooms next morning, the hosts being men 
who knew how to do things in style.  This was glorious.  Not 
mathematics or religion any more--what he needed now was to 
assimilate something of the country life of his native land.  He 
was not going to be a stranger in his own country.  He wanted to 
take firm root and be able to feel, like others, that he had a spot 
in the world where he was at home.

Then came the sunny day in June when he stood by Merle's bed, and 
she lay there smiling faintly her one-sided smile, with a newborn 
girl on her arm.  

"What are we to call her, Peer?"

"Why, we settled that long ago.  After your mother, of course."

"Of course her name's to be Louise," said Merle, turning the tiny 
red face towards her breast.

This came as a fresh surprise.  She had been planning it for weeks 
perhaps, and now it took him unawares like one of her spontaneous 
caresses, but this time a caress to his inmost soul.

He made a faint attempt at a joke.  "Oh well, I never have any say 
in my own house.  I suppose you must have it your own way."  He 
stroked her forehead; and when she saw how deeply moved he was, she 
smiled up at him with her most radiant smile.

On one of the first days of the hay-harvest, Peer lay out on a 
sunny hillside with his head resting on a haycock, watching his 
people at work.  The mowing machine was buzzing down by the lake, 
the spreader at work on the hill-slopes, the horses straining in 
front, the men sitting behind driving.  The whole landscape lay 
around him breathing summer and fruitfulness.  And he himself lay 
there sunk in his own restful quiet.

A woman in a light dress and a yellow straw hat came down the field 
road, pushing a child's cart before her.  It was Merle, and Merle 
was looking round her, and humming as she came.  Since the birth of 
her child her mind was at peace; it was clear that she was scarcely 
dreaming now of conquering the world with her music--there was a 
tiny being in the little cart that claimed all her dreams.  Never 
before had her skin been so dazzling, her smile so red; it was as 
if her youth now first blossomed out in all its fullness; her eyes 
seemed opened wide in a dear surprise.

After a while Peer went down and drove the mowing machine himself.  
He felt as if he must get to work somehow or other to provide for 
his wife and child.

But suddenly he stopped, got down, and began to walk round the 
machine and examine it closely.  His face was all alert now, his 
eyes keen and piercing.  He stared at the mechanism of the blades, 
and stood awhile thinking.

What was this?  A happy idea was beginning to work in his mind.  
Vague only as yet--there was still time to thrust it aside.  
Should he?


Warm mild days and luminous nights.  Sometimes he could not sleep 
for thinking how delicious it was to lie awake and see the sun come 
up.

On one such night he got up and dressed.  A few minutes later there 
was a trampling of hoofs in the stable-yard and the chestnut 
stallion appeared, with Peer leading him.  He swung himself into 
the saddle, and trotted off down the road, a white figure in his 
drill suit and cork helmet.

Where was he going?  Nowhere.  It was a change, to be up at an 
unusual hour and see the day break on a July morning.

He trotted along at an easy pace, rising lightly in the stirrups, 
and enjoying the pleasant warmth the rider feels.  All was quiet 
around him, the homesteads still asleep.  The sky was a pearly 
white, with here and there a few golden clouds, reflected in the 
lake below.  And the broad meadows still spread their many-coloured 
flower-carpet abroad; there was a scent in the air of leaf and 
meadow-grass and pine, he drew in deep breaths of it and could have 
sung aloud.

He turned into the by-road up the hill, dismounting now and again 
to open a gate; past farms and little cottages, ever higher and 
higher, till at last he reached the topmost ridge, and halted in a 
clearing.  The chestnut threw up his head and sniffed the air; 
horse and rider were wet with the dew-drip from the trees, that 
were now just flushing in the first glow of the coming sun.  Far 
below was the lake, reflecting sky and hills and farmsteads, all 
asleep.  And there in the east were the red flames--the sun--the 
day.

The horse pawed impatiently at the ground, eager to go on, but Peer 
held him back.  He sat there gazing under the brim of his helmet at 
the sunrise, and felt a wave of strange feeling passing through his 
mind.

It seemed to him impossible that he should ever reach a higher 
pitch of sheer delight in life.  He was still young and strong; all 
the organs of his body worked together in happy harmony.  No cares 
to weigh upon his mind, no crushing responsibilities; the future 
lying calm and clear in the light of day, free from dizzy dreams.  
His hunger after knowledge was appeased; he felt that what he had 
learned and seen and gathered was beginning to take living organic 
form in his mind.

But then--what then?

The great human type of which you dreamed--have you succeeded in 
giving it life in yourself?

You know what is common knowledge about the progress of humanity; 
its struggle towards higher forms, its gropings up by many ways 
toward the infinite which it calls God.

You know something of the life of plants; the nest of a bird is a 
mystery before which you could kneel in worship.  A rock shows you 
the marks of a glacier that scraped over it thousands of years ago, 
and looking on it you have a glimpse of the gigantic workings of 
the solar system.  And on autumn evenings you look up at the stars, 
and the light and the death and the dizzy abysses of space above 
you send a solemn thrill through your soul.

And this has become a part of yourself.  The joy of life for you is 
to grasp all you can compass of the universe, and let it permeate 
your thought and sense on every side.

But what then?  Is this enough?  Is it enough to rest thus in 
yourself?

Have you as yet raised one stepping-stone upon which other men can 
climb and say:  Now we can see farther than before?

What is your inner being worth, unless it be mirrored in action?

If the world one day came to be peopled with none but supermen--
what profit in that, as long as they must die?

What is your faith?

Ah, this sense of exile, of religious homelessness!  How many times 
have you and Merle lain clasping each other's hands, your thoughts 
wandering together hand in hand, seeking over earth or among the 
stars for some being to whom you might send up a prayer; no slavish 
begging cry for grace and favour, but a jubilant thanksgiving for 
the gift of life.

But where was He?

He is not.  And yet--He is.

But the ascetic on the cross is a God for the sick and aged.  What 
of us others?  When shall the modern man, strong, scientifically 
schooled, find a temple for the sacred music, the anthem of 
eternity in his soul?

The sun rose up from behind a distant hill-crest, scattering gold 
over the million spires of the pine-forest.  Peer bent forward, 
with red-gleaming dewdrops on his hand and his white sleeve, and 
patted the neck of his restless beast.

It was two o'clock.  The fires of morning were lit in the clouds 
and in all the waters over the earth.  The dew in the meadows and 
the pearls on the wings of butterflies began to glisten.

"Now then, Bijou!--now for home!"

And he dashed off down the grass-grown forest paths, the chestnut 
snorting as he galloped.



Chapter VII


"Hei, Merle;  We're going to have distinguished visitors--where in 
the world have you got to!"  Peer hurried through the rooms with an 
open telegram in his hand, and at last came upon his wife in the 
nursery.  "Oh, is it here you are?"

"Yes--but you shout so, I could hear you all through the house.  
Who is it that's coming?"

"Ferdinand Holm and Klaus Brock.  Coming to the christening after 
all.  Great Caesar!--what do you say to that, Merle?"

Merle was pale, and her cheeks a little sunken.  Two years more had 
passed, and she had her second child now on her knee--a little boy 
with big wondering eyes.

"How fine for you, Peer!" she said, and went on undressing the 
child.

"Yes; but isn't it splendid of them to set off and come all that 
way, just because I asked them?  By Jove, we must look sharp and 
get the place smartened up a bit."

And sure enough the whole place was soon turned upside-down--
cartloads of sand coming in for the garden walks and the courtyard, 
and painters hard at work repainting the houses.  And poor Merle 
knew very well that there would be serious trouble if anything 
should be amiss with the entertainment indoors.

At last came the hot August day when the flags were hoisted in 
honour of the expected guests.  Once more the hum of mowing 
machines and hay-rakes came from the hill-slopes, and the air was 
so still that the columns of smoke from the chimneys of the town 
rose straight into the air.  Peer had risen early, to have a last 
look round, inspecting everything critically, from the summer dress 
Merle was to wear down to the horses in the stable, groomed till 
their coats shone again.  Merle understood.  He had been a fisher-
boy beside the well-dressed son of the doctor, and something meaner 
yet in relation to the distinguished Holm family.  And there was 
still so much of the boy in him that he wanted to show now at his 
very best.

A crowd of inquisitive idlers had gathered down on the steamboat 
landing when the boat swung in and lay by the pier.  The pair of 
bays in the Loreng carriage stood tossing their heads and twitching 
and stamping as the flies tormented them; but at last they got 
their passengers and were given their heads, setting off with a 
wild bound or two that scattered those who had pressed too near.  
But in the carriage they could see the two strangers and the 
engineer, all three laughing and gesticulating, and talking all at 
once.  And in a few moments they vanished in a cloud of dust, 
whirling away beside the calm waters of the fjord.

Some way behind them a cart followed, driven by one of the stable-
boys from Loreng, and loaded with big brass-bound leather trunks 
and a huge chest, apparently of wood, but evidently containing 
something frightfully heavy.

Merle had finished dressing, and stood looking at herself in the 
glass.  The light summer dress was pretty, she thought, and the red 
bows at neck and waist sat to her satisfaction.  Then came the roll 
of wheels outside, and she went out to receive her guests.

"Here they are," cried Peer, jumping down.  "This is Ferdinand 
Pasha, Governor-General of the new Kingdom of Sahara--and this is 
His Highness the Khedive's chief pipe-cleaner and body-eunuch."

A tall, stooping man with white hair and a clean-shaven, dried-up 
face advanced towards Merle.  It was Ferdinand Holm.  "How do you 
do, Madam?" he said, giving her a dry, bony hand.

"Why, this is quite a baronial seat you have here," he added, 
looking round and settling his pince-nez.

His companion was a round, plump gentleman, with a little black 
goatee beard and dark eyes that blinked continually.  But his smile 
was full of mirth, and the grip of his hand felt true.  So this was 
Klaus Brock.

Peer led his two friends in through the rooms, showing them the 
view from the various windows.  Klaus broke into a laugh at last, 
and turned to Merle:  "He's just the same as ever," he said--"a 
little stouter, to be sure--it's clear you've been treating him 
well, madam."  And he bowed and kissed her hand.

There was hock and seltzer ready for them--this was Merle's idea, 
as suitable for a hot day--and when the two visitors had each drunk 
off a couple of glasses, with an:  "Ah! delicious!", Peer came 
behind her, stroked her hand lightly and whispered, "Thanks, Merle--
first-rate idea of yours."

"By the way," exclaimed Ferdinand Holm suddenly, "I must send off a 
telegram.  May I use the telephone a moment?"

"There he goes--can't contain himself any longer!" burst out Klaus 
Brock with a laugh.  "He's had the telegraph wires going hard all 
the way across Europe--but you might let us get inside and sit down 
before you begin again here."

"Come along," said Peer.  "Here's the telephone."

When the two had left the room, Klaus turned to Merle with a smile.  
"Well, well--so I'm really in the presence of Peer's wife--his wife 
in flesh and blood.  And this is what she looks like!  That fellow 
always had all the luck."  And he took her hand again and kissed 
it.  Merle drew it away and blushed.

"You are not married, then, Mr. Brock?"

"I?  Well, yes and no.  I did marry a Greek girl once, but she ran 
away.  Just my luck."  And he blinked his eyes and sighed with an 
expression so comically sad that Merle burst out laughing.

"And your friend, Ferdinand Holm?" she asked.

"He, dear lady--he--why, saving your presence, I have an idea 
there's a select little harem attached to that palace of his."

Merle turned towards the window and shook her head with a smile.

An hour later the visitors came down from their rooms after a wash 
and a change of clothes, and after a light luncheon Peer carried 
them off to show them round the place.  He had added a number of 
new buildings, and had broken new land.  The farm had forty cows 
when he came, now he had over sixty.  "Of course, all this is a 
mere nothing for fellows like you, who bring your harvest home in 
railway trains," he said.  "But, you see, I have my home here."  
And he waved his hand towards the house and the farmstead round.

Later they drove over in the light trap to look at the workshop, 
and here he made no excuses for its being small.  He showed off the 
little foundry as if it had been a world-famous seat of industry, 
and maintained his serious air while his companions glanced 
sideways at him, trying hard not to smile.

The workmen touched their caps respectfully, and sent curious 
glances at the strangers.

"Quite a treat to see things on the Norwegian scale again," 
Ferdinand Holm couldn't resist saying at last.

"Yes, isn't it charming!" cried Peer, putting on an air of 
ingenuous delight.  "This is just the size a foundry should be, if 
its owner is to have a good time and possess his soul in peace."

Ferdinand Holm and Brock exchanged glances.  But next moment Peer 
led them through into a side-room, with tools and machinery 
evidently having no connection with the rest.

"Now look out," said Klaus.  "This is the holy of holies, you'll 
see.  He's hard at it working out some new devilry here, or I'm a 
Dutchman."

Peer drew aside a couple of tarpaulins, and showed them a mowing 
machine of the ordinary type, and beside it another, the model of a 
new type he had himself devised.

"It's not quite finished yet," he said.  "But I've solved the main 
problem.  The old single knife-blade principle was clumsy; dragged, 
you know.  But with two blades--a pair of shears, so to speak--
it'll work much quicker."  And he gave them a little lecture, 
showing how much simpler his mechanism was, and how much lighter 
the machine would be.

"And there you are," said Klaus.  "It's Columbus's egg over again."

"The patent ought to be worth a million," said Ferdinand Holm, 
slowly, looking out of the window.

"Of course the main thing is, to make the work easier and cheaper 
for the farmers," said Peer, with a rather sly glance at Ferdinand.

Dinner that evening was a festive meal.  When the liqueur brandy 
went round, Klaus greeted it with enthusiasm.  "Why, here's an old 
friend, as I live!  Real Lysholmer!--well, well; and so you're 
still in the land of the living?  You remember the days when we 
were boys together?"  He lifted the little glass and watched the 
light play in the pale spirit.  And the three old friends drank 
together, singing "The first full glass," and then "The second 
little nip," with the proper ceremonial observances, just as they 
had done in the old days, at their student wine-parties.

The talk went merrily, one good story calling up another.  But 
Merle could not help noticing the steely gleam of Ferdinand Holm's 
eyes, even when he laughed.

The talk fell on new doings in Egypt, and as Peer heard more and 
more of these, it seemed to her that his look changed.  His glance, 
too, seemed to have that glint of steel, there was something 
strange and absent in his face; was he feeling, perhaps, that wife 
and children were but a drag on a man, after all?  He seemed like 
an old war-horse waking suddenly at the sound of trumpets.

"There's a nice little job waiting for you, by the way," said 
Ferdinand Holm, lifting his glass to Peer.

"Very kind of you, I'm sure.  A sub-directorship under you?"

"You're no good under any one.  You belong on top."  Ferdinand 
illustrated his words with a downward and an upward pointing of the 
finger.  "The harnessing of the Tigris and Euphrates will have to 
be taken in hand.  It's only a question of time."

"Thanks very much!" said Peer, his eyes wide open now.

"The plan's simply lying waiting for the right man.  It will be 
carried out, it may be next year, it may be in ten years--whenever 
the man comes along.  I would think about it, if I were you."

All looked at Peer; Merle fastened her eyes on him, too.  But he 
laughed.  "Now, what on earth would be the satisfaction to me of 
binding in bands those two ancient and honourable rivers?"

"Well, in the first place, it would mean an increase of many 
millions of bushels in the corn production of the world.  Wouldn't 
you have any satisfaction in that?"

"No," said Peer, with a touch of scorn.

"Or regular lines of communication over hundreds of thousands of 
square miles of the most fertile country on the globe?"

"Don't interest me," said Peer.

"Ah!"  Ferdinand Holm lifted his glass to Merle.  "Tell me, dear 
lady, how does it feel to be married to an anachronism?"

"To--to what?" stammered Merle.

"Yes, your husband's an anachronism.  He might, if he chose, be one 
of the kings, the prophets, who lead the van in the fight for 
civilisation.  But he will not; he despises his own powers, and one 
day he will start a revolution against himself.  Mark my words.  
Your health, dear lady!"

Merle laughed, and lifted her glass, but hesitatingly, and with a 
side-glance towards Peer.

"Yes, your husband is no better now than an egoist, a collector of 
happy days."

"Well, and is that so very wicked?"

"He sits ravelling out his life into a multitude of golden 
threads," went on Ferdinand with a bow, his steely eyes trying to 
look gentle.

"But what is wrong in that?" said the young wife stoutly.

"It is wrong.  It is wasting his immortal soul.  A man has no right 
to ravel out his life, even though the threads are of gold.  A 
man's days of personal happiness are forgotten--his work endures.  
And your husband in particular--why the deuce should HE be so 
happy?  The world-evolution uses us inexorably, either for light or 
for fuel.  And Peer--your husband, dear lady--is too good for 
fuel."

Merle glanced again at her husband.  Peer laughed, but then 
suddenly compressed his lips and looked down at his plate.

Then the nurse came in with little Louise, to say good-night, and 
the child was handed round from one to the other.  But when the 
little fair-haired girl came to Ferdinand Holm, he seemed loth to 
touch her, and Merle read his glance at Peer as meaning:  "Here is 
another of the bonds you've tied yourself up with."

"Excuse me," he said suddenly, looking at his watch, "I'm afraid I 
must ask for the use of the telephone again.  Pardon me, Fru Holm."  
And he rose and left the room.  Klaus looked at the others and 
shook his head.  "That man would simply expire if he couldn't send 
a telegram once an hour," he said with a laugh.

Coffee was served out on the balcony, and the men sat and smoked.  
It was a dusky twilight of early autumn; the hills were dark blue 
now and distant; there was a scent of hay and garden flowers.  
After a while Merle rose and said good-night.  And in her thoughts, 
when she found herself alone in her bedroom, she hardly knew 
whether to be displeased or not.  These strange men were drawing 
Peer far away from all that had been his chief delight since she 
had known him.  But it was interesting to see how different his 
manner was towards the two friends.  Klaus Brock he could jest and 
laugh with, but with Ferdinand Holm he seemed always on his guard, 
ready to assert himself, and whenever he contradicted him it was 
always with a certain deference.

The great yellow disc of the moon came up over the hills in the 
east, drawing a broad pillar of gold across the dark water.  And 
the three comrades on the balcony sat watching it for a while in 
silence.

"So you're really going to go on idling here?" asked Ferdinand at 
last, sipping his liqueur.

"Is it me you mean?" asked Peer, bending slightly forward.

"Well, I gather you're going round here simply being happy from 
morning to night.  I call that idling."

"Thanks."

"Of course, you're very unhappy in reality.  Everyone is, as long 
as he's neglecting his powers and aptitudes."

"Very many thanks," said Peer, with a laugh.  Klaus sat up in his 
chair, a little anxious as to what was coming.

Ferdinand was still looking out over the lake.  "You seem to 
despise your own trade--as engineer?"

"Yes," said Peer.

"And why?"

"Why, I feel the lack of some touch of beauty in our ceaseless 
craving to create something new, something new, always something 
new.  More gold, more speed, more food--are these things not all we 
are driving at?"

"My dear fellow, gold means freedom.  And food means life.  And 
speed carries us over the dead moments.  Double the possibilities 
of life for men, and you double their numbers."

"And what good will it do to double their numbers?  Two thousand 
million machine-made souls--is that what you want?"

"But hang it all, man," put in Klaus Brock eagerly, "think of our 
dear Norway at least.  Surely you don't think it would be a 
misfortune if our population increased so far that the world could 
recognise our existence."

"I do," said Peer, looking away over the lake.

"Ah, you're a fanatic for the small in size and in numbers."

"I am loth to see all Norway polluted with factories and 
proletariat armies.  Why the devil can't we be left in peace?"

"The steel will not have it," said Ferdinand Holm, as if speaking 
to the pillar of moonlight on the water.

"What?  Who did you say?"  Peer looked at him with wide eyes.

Ferdinand went on undisturbed:  "The steel will not have peace.  
And the fire will not.  And Prometheus will not.  The human spirit 
has still too many steps to climb before it reaches the top.  
Peace?  No, my friend--there are powers outside you and me that 
determine these things."

Peer smiled, and lit a new cigar.  Ferdinand Holm leaned back in 
his chair and went on, addressing himself apparently to the moon.  
"Tigris and Euphrates--Indus and Ganges--and all the rest of this 
planet--regulate and cultivate the whole, and what is it after all?  
It's only a question of a few years.  It is only a humble 
beginning.  In a couple of centuries or so there will be nothing 
left to occupy us any more on this little globe of ours.  And then 
we'll have to set about colonising other worlds."

There was silence for a moment.  Then Peer spoke.

"And what do we gain by it all?" he asked.

"Gain?  Do you imagine there will ever be any 'thus far and no 
farther' for the spirit of man?  Half a million years hence, all 
the solar systems we know of now will be regulated and ordered by 
the human spirit.  There will be difficulties, of course.  
Interplanetary wars will arise, planetary patriotism, groups of 
planetary powers in alliances and coalitions against other groups.  
Little worlds will be subjugated by the bigger ones, and so on.  Is 
there anything in all this to grow dizzy over?  Great heavens--can 
anyone doubt that man must go on conquering and to conquer for 
millions of years to come?  The world-will goes its way.  We cannot 
resist.  Nobody asks whether we are happy.  The will that works 
towards the infinite asks only whom it can use for its ends, and 
who is useless.  Viola tout."

"And when I die," asked Peer--"what then?"

"You!  Are you still going about feeling your own pulse and wanting 
to live for ever?  My dear fellow, YOU don't exist.  There is just 
one person on our side--the world-will.  And that includes us all.  
That's what I mean by 'we.'  And we are working towards the day 
when we can make God respect us in good earnest.  The spirit of man 
will hold a Day of Judgment, and settle accounts with Olympus--
with the riddle, the almighty power beyond.  It will be a great 
reckoning.  And mark my words--that is the one single religious 
idea that lives and works in each and every one of us--the thing 
that makes us hold up our heads and walk upright, forgetting that 
we are slaves and things that die."

Suddenly he looked at his watch.  "Excuse me a moment.  If the 
telegraph office is open . . ." and he rose and went in.

When he returned, Klaus and Peer were talking of the home of their 
boyhood and their early days together.

"Remember that time we went shark-fishing?" asked Klaus.

"Oh yes--that shark.  Let me see--you were a hero, weren't you, and 
beat it to death with your bare fists--wasn't that it?"  And then 
"Cut the line, cut the line, and row for your lives," he mimicked, 
and burst out laughing.

"Oh, shut up now and don't be so witty," said Klaus.  "But tell me, 
have you ever been back there since you came home?"

Peer told him that he had been to the village last year.  His old 
foster-parents were dead, and Peter Ronningen too; but Martin 
Bruvold was there still, living in a tiny cottage with eight 
children.

"Poor devil!" said Klaus.

Ferdinand Holm had sat down again, and now he nodded towards the 
moon.  "An old chum of yours?  Well, why don't we send him a 
thousand crowns?"

There was a little pause.  "I hope you'll let me join you," went on 
Ferdinand, taking a note for five hundred crowns from his waistcoat 
pocket.  "You don't mind, do you?"

Peer glanced at him and took the note.  "I'm delighted for poor old 
Martin's sake," he said, putting the note in his waistcoat pocket.  
"That'll make fifteen hundred for him."

Klaus Brock looked from one to the other and smiled a little.  The 
talk turned on other things for a while, and then he asked:

"By the way, Peer, have you seen that advertisement of the British 
Carbide Company's?"

"No, what about?"

"They want tenders for the damming and harnessing of the Besna 
River, with its lake system and falls.  That should be something in 
your line."

"No," said Ferdinand sharply.  "I told you before--that job's too 
small for him.  Peer's going to the Euphrates."

"What would it amount to, roughly?" said Peer, addressing no one in 
particular.

"As far as I could make out, it should be a matter of a couple of 
million crowns or thereabout," said Klaus.

"That's not a thing for Peer," said Ferdinand, rising and lifting 
his hand to hide a yawn.  "Leave trifles like that to the trifling 
souls.  Good-night, gentlemen."

A couple of hours later, when all was silent throughout the house, 
Peer was still up, wandering to and fro in soft felt slippers in 
the great hall.  Now and again he would stop, and look out of the 
window.  Why could he not sleep?  The moon was paling, the day 
beginning to dawn.



Chapter VIII


The next morning Merle was alone in the pantry when she heard steps 
behind her, and turned her head.  It was Klaus Brock.

"Good-morning, madam--ah! so this is what you look like in morning 
dress.  Why, morning neglige might have been invented for you, if I 
may say so.  You might be a Ghirlandajo.  Or no, better still, 
Aspasia herself."

"You are up early," said Merle drily.

"Am I?  What about Ferdinand Holm then?  He has been up since 
sunrise, sitting over his letters and accounts.  Anything I can 
help you with?  May I move that cheese for you?--Well, well! you 
are strong.  But there, I'm always de trop where women are 
concerned."

"Always de trop?" repeated Merle, watching him through her long 
lashes.

"Yes--my first and only love--do you know who she was?"

"No, indeed.  How should I?"

"Well, it was Louise--Peer's little sister.  I wish you could have 
known her."

"And since then?"  Merle let her eyes rest on this flourishing 
gentleman, who looked as if he could never have had a trouble in 
the world.

"Since then, dear lady?--since then?  Let me see.  Why, at this 
moment I really can't remember ever having met any other woman 
except . . ."

"Except . . . ?"

"Except yourself, madam."  And he bowed.

"You are TOO kind!"

"And, that being so, don't you think it's your plain duty, as a 
hospitable hostess, to grant me . . ."

"Grant you--what?  A piece of cheese?"

"Why, no, thanks.  Something better.  Something much better than 
that."

"What, then?"

"A kiss.  I might as well have it now."  As he took a step nearer, 
she looked laughingly round for a way of escape, but he was between 
her and the door.

"Well," said Merle, "but you must do something to make yourself 
useful first.  Suppose you ran up that step-ladder for me."

"Delighted.  Why, this is great fun!"  The slight wooden ladder 
creaked under the weight of his solid form as he climbed.  "How 
high am I to go?"

"To reach the top shelf--that's it.  Now, you see that big brown 
jar?  Careful--it's cranberries."

"Splendid--I do believe we're to have cranberry preserve at 
dinner."  By standing on tiptoe he managed to reach and lift the 
heavy jar, and stood holding it, his face flushed with his 
exertions.

"And now, little lady?"

"Just stay there a moment and hold it carefully; I have to fetch 
something."  And she hurried out.

Klaus stood at the top of the ladder, holding the heavy jar.  He 
looked round.  What was he to do with it?  He waited for Merle to 
return--but she did not appear.  Someone was playing the piano in 
the next room.  Should he call for help?  He waited on, getting 
redder and redder in the face.  And still no Merle came.

With another mighty effort he set the jar back in its place, and 
then climbed down the ladder and walked into the drawing-room, very 
red and out of breath.  In the doorway he stopped short and stared.

"What--well, I'll--  And she's sitting here playing the piano!"

"Yes.  Aren't you fond of music, Herr Brock?"

"I'll pay you out for this," he said, shaking a finger at her.  
"Just you wait and see, little lady, if I don't pay you out, with 
interest!"  And he turned and went upstairs, chuckling as he went.

Peer was sitting at the writing-table in his study when Klaus came 
in.  "I'm just sealing up the letter with the money for Martin 
Bruvold," he said, setting the taper to a stick of sealing wax.  
"I've signed it:  'From the shark fishers.'"

"Yes, it was a capital idea of Ferdinand's.  What d'you think the 
poor old fellow'll say when he opens it and the big notes tumble 
out?"

"I'd like to see his face," said Peer, as he wrote the address on 
the envelope.

Klaus dropped into a leather armchair and leaned back comfortably.  
"I've been downstairs flirting a little with your wife," he said.  
"Your wife's a wonder, Peer."

Peer looked at him, and thought of the old days when the heavy-
built, clumsy doctor's son had run about after the servant-girls in 
the town.  He had still something of his old lurching walk, but 
intercourse with the ladies of many lands had polished him and 
given lightness and ease to his manner.

"What was I going to say?" Klaus went on.  "Oh yes--our friend 
Ferdinand's a fine fellow, isn't he?"

"Yes, indeed."

"I felt yesterday exactly as I used to feel when we three were 
together in the old days.  When I listen to his talk I can't help 
agreeing with him--and then you begin to speak, and what you say, 
too, seems to be just what I've been thinking in my inmost soul.  
Do you think I've become shallow, Peer?"

"Well, your steam ploughs look after themselves, I suppose, and the 
ladies of your harem don't trouble you overmuch.  Do you read at 
all?"

"Best not say too much about that," said Klaus with a sigh, and it 
suddenly struck Peer that his friend's face had grown older and 
more worn.

"No," said Klaus again.  "Better not say much about that.  But tell 
me, old fellow--you mustn't mind my asking--has Ferdinand ever 
spoken to you as his brother . . . or . . ."

Peer flushed hotly.  "No," he said after a pause.

"No?"

"I owe more to him than to anybody in the world.  But whether he 
regards me as a kinsman or simply as an object for his kindness to 
wreak itself on is a matter he's always left quite vague."

"It's just like him.  He's a queer fellow.  But there's another 
thing. . . ."

"Well?" said Peer, looking up.

"It's--er--again it's rather a delicate matter to touch on.  I 
know, of course, that you're in the enviable position of having 
your fortune invested in the best joint-stock company in the 
world--"

"Yes; and so are you."

"Oh, mine's a trifle compared with yours.  Have you still the whole 
of your money in Ferdinand's company?"

"Yes.  I've been thinking of selling a few shares, by the way.  As 
you may suppose, I've been spending a good deal just lately--more 
than my income."

"You mustn't sell just now, Peer.  They're--I daresay you've seen 
that they're down--below par, in fact."

"What--below par!  No, I had no idea of that."

"Oh, only for the time being, of course.  Just a temporary drop.  
There's sure to be another run on them soon, and they'll go up 
again.  But the Khedive has the controlling interest, you know, and 
he's rather a ticklish customer.  Ferdinand is all for extension--
wants to keep on buying up new land--new desert, that is.  
Irrigation there's just a question of power--that's how he looks at 
it.  And of course the bigger the scale of the work the cheaper the 
power will work out.  But the Khedive's holding back.  It may be 
just a temporary whim--may be all right again to-morrow.  But you 
never know.  And if you think Ferdinand's the man to give in to a 
cranky Khedive, you're much mistaken.  His idea now is to raise all 
the capital he can lay hands on, and buy him out!  What do you say 
to that?  Buy the Khedive clean out of the company.  It's a large 
order.  And if I were you, old man, as soon as the shares go up 
again a bit, I'd sell out some of my holding, and put the money 
into something at home here.  After all, there must be plenty of 
quite useful things to be had here."

Peer frowned, and sat for a while looking straight before him.  
"No," he said at last.  "As things stand between Ferdinand Holm and 
me--well, if either of us goes back on the other, it's not going to 
be me."

"Ah, in that case--I beg your pardon," said Klaus, and he rose and 
departed.

The christening was a great occasion, with a houseful of guests, 
and a great deal of speechmaking.  The host was the youngest and 
gayest of the party.  The birth of his son should be celebrated in 
true Ethiopian fashion, he declared--with bonfires and boating 
parties.

The moon was hidden that evening behind thick dark clouds, but the 
boats full of guests glided over the black water to the accompaniment
of music and laughter.  The young madcap of a lawyer was there,
again sitting on the lap of someone else's wife, and playing a
concertina, till people in the farms on shore opened their windows
and put their heads out to listen.

Later on the bonfires blazed up all along the lake shore and shone 
like great flaming suns in the water below.  The guests lay on the 
grass in little groups round picnic suppers, and here and there a 
couple wandered by themselves, talking in whispers.

Merle and Peer stood together for a moment beside one of the 
bonfires.  Their faces and figures were lit by the red glow; they 
looked at each other and exchanged a smile.  He took her hand and 
led her outside the circle of light from the fire, and pointed over 
to their home, with all its windows glowing against the dark.

"Suppose this should be the last party we give, Merle."

"Peer, what makes you say that?"

"Oh, nothing--only I have a sort of feeling, as if something had 
just ended and something new was to begin.  I feel like it, 
somehow.  But I wanted to thank you, too, for all the happy times 
we've had."

"But Peer--what--"  She got no farther, for Peer had already left 
her and joined a group of guests, where he was soon as gay as the 
rest.

Then came the day when the two visitors were to leave.  Their 
birthday gift to the young gentleman so lately christened Lorentz 
Uthoug stood in the drawing-room; it was a bust in red granite, the 
height of a man, of the Sun-god Re Hormachis, brought with them by 
the godfathers from Alexandria.  And now it sat in the drawing-room 
between palms in pots, pressing its elbows against its sides and 
gazing with great dead eyes out into endless space.

Peer stood on the quay waving farewell to his old comrades as the 
steamer ploughed through the water, drawing after it a fan-shaped 
trail of little waves.

And when he came home, he walked about the place, looking at farms 
and woods, at Merle and the children, with eyes that seemed to her 
strange and new.

Next night he stayed up once more alone, pacing to and fro in the 
great hall, and looking out of the windows into the dark.

Was he ravelling out his life into golden threads that vanished and 
were forgotten?

Was he content to be fuel instead of light?

What was he seeking?  Happiness?  And beyond it?  As a boy he had 
called it the anthem, the universal hymn.  What was it now?  God?  
But he would hardly find Him in idleness.

You have drawn such nourishment as you could from joy in your home, 
from your marriage, your fatherhood, nature, and the fellowmen 
around you here.  There are unused faculties in you that hunger for 
exercise; that long to be set free to work, to strive, to act.

You should take up the barrage on the Besna, Peer.  But could you 
get the contract?  If you once buckle-to in earnest, no one is 
likely to beat you--you'll get it, sure enough.  But do you really 
want it?

Are you not working away at a mowing-machine as it is?  Better own 
up that you can't get on without your old craft, after all--that 
you must for ever be messing and meddling with steel and fire.  You 
can't help yourself.

All the things your eyes have been fixed on in these last years 
have been only golden visions in a mist.  The steel has its own 
will.  The steel is beginning to wake in you--singing--singing--
bent on pressing onward.  You have no choice.

The world-will goes on its way.  Go with it or be cast overboard as 
useless.

And still Peer walked up and down, up and down.

Next morning he set off for the capital.  Merle watched the 
carriage as it drove away, and thought to herself:  "He was right.  
Something new is beginning."



Chapter IX


There came a card from Peer, with a brief message:  "Off to inspect 
the ground."  A fortnight later he came home, loaded with maps and 
plans.  "Of course I'm late for the fair, as usual," he said.  "But 
wait a bit."

He locked himself into his room.  At last Merle knew what it was 
like to have him at work.  She could hear him in the mornings, 
walking up and down and whistling.  Then silence--he would be 
standing over his table, busy with notes and figures.  Then steps 
again.  Now he was singing--and this was a novelty to himself.  It 
was as if he carried in him a store of happiness, a treasure laid 
by of love, and the beauty of nature, and happy hours, and now it 
found its way out in song.  Why should he not sing over the plans 
for a great barrage?  Mathematics are dry work enough, but at times 
they can be as living visions, soaring up into the light.  Peer 
sang louder.  Then silence again.  Merle never knew now when he 
stopped work and came to bed.  She would fall asleep to the sound 
of his singing in his own room, and when she woke he would already 
be tramping up and down again in there; and to her his steps seemed 
like the imperious tread of a great commander.  He was alight with 
new visions, new themes, and his voice had a lordly ring.  Merle 
looked at him through half-closed eyes with a lingering glance.  
Once more he was new to her: she had never seen him like this.

At last the work was finished, and he sent in his tender.  And now 
he was more restless than ever.  For a week he waited for an 
answer, tramping in and out of the place, going off for rides on 
Bijou, and coming back with his horse dripping with sweat.  An 
impatient man cannot possibly ride at any pace but a gallop.  The 
days passed; Peer was sleepless, and ate nothing.  More days 
passed.  At last he came bursting into the nursery one morning:  
"Trunk call, Merle; summons to a meeting of the Company Directors.  
Quick's the word.  Come and help me pack--sharp."  And in no time 
he was off again to the city.

Now it was Merle's turn to walk up and down in suspense.  It 
mattered little to her in itself whether he got the work or not, 
but she was keenly anxious that he should win.

A couple of days later a telegram came:  "Hurrah, wife!"  And Merle 
danced round the room, waving the telegram above her head.

The next day he was back home again and tramping up and down the 
room.  "What do you think your father will say to it, Merle--ha!"

"Father?  Say to what?"

"When I ask him to be my surety for a couple of hundred thousand 
crowns?"

"Is father to be in it, too?"  Merle looked at him open-eyed.

"Oh, if he doesn't want to, we'll let him off.  But at any rate 
I'll ask him first.  Goodbye."  And Peer drove off into town.

In Lorentz Uthoug's big house you had to pass through the hardware 
shop to get to his office, which lay behind.  Peer knocked at the 
door, with a portfolio under his arm.  Herr Uthoug had just lit the 
gas, and was on the point of sitting down at his American roll-top 
desk, when Peer entered.  The grey-bearded head with the close 
thick hair turned towards him, darkened by the shadow from the 
green shade of the burner.

"You, is it?" said he.  "Sit down.  You've been to Christiania, I 
hear.  And what are you busy with now?"

They sat down opposite each other.  Peer explained, calmly and with 
confidence.

"And what does the thing amount to?" asked Uthoug, his face coming 
out of the shadow and looking at Peer in the full light.

"Two million four hundred thousand."

The old man laid his hairy hands on the desk and rose to his feet, 
staring at the other and breathing deeply.  The sum half-stunned 
him.  Beside it he himself and his work seemed like dust in the 
balance.  Where were all his plans and achievements now, his 
greatness, his position, his authority in the town?  Compared with 
amounts like this, what were the paltry sums he had been used to 
handle?

"I--I didn't quite catch--" he stammered.  "Did you say two 
millions?"

"Yes.  I daresay it seems a trifle to you," said Peer.  "Indeed, 
I've handled contracts myself that ran to fifty million francs."

"What?  How much did you say?"  Uthoug began to move restlessly 
about the room.  He clutched his hair, and gazed at Peer as if 
doubting whether he was quite sober.

At the same time he felt it would never do to let himself be so 
easily thrown off his balance.  He tried to pull himself together.

"And what do you make out of it?" he asked.

"A couple of hundred thousand, I hope."

"Oh!"  A profit on this scale again rather startled the old man.  
No, he was nothing; he never had been anything in this world!

"How do you know that you will make so much?"

"I've calculated it all out."

"But if--but how can you be sure of it?  Suppose you've got your 
figures wrong?"  His head was thrust forward again into the full 
light.

"I'm in the habit of getting my figures right," said Peer.

When he broached the question of security, the old man was in the 
act of moving away from him across the room.  But he stopped short, 
and looked back over his shoulder.

"What?  Security?  You want me to stand security for two million 
crowns?"

"No; the Company asks for a guarantee for four hundred thousand."

After a pause the old man said:  "I see.  Yes, I see.  But--but I'm 
not worth as much as that altogether."

"I can put in three hundred thousand of the four myself, in shares.  
And then, of course, I have the Loreng property, and the works.  
But put it at a round figure--will you guarantee a hundred 
thousand?"

There was another pause, and then the reply came from the far end 
of the room to which Uthoug had drifted:  "Even that's a big sum."

"Of course if you would rather not, I could make other arrangements.
My two friends, who have just been here--"  He rose and began to
gather up his papers.

"No, no; you mustn't be in such a hurry.  Why, you come down on a 
man like an avalanche.  You must give me time to think it over--
till to-morrow at least.  And the papers--at any rate, I must have 
a look at them."

Uthoug passed a restless and troubled night.  The solid ground 
seemed to have failed him; his mind could find no firm foothold.  
His son-in-law must be a great man--he should be the last to doubt 
it.  But a hundred thousand--to be ventured, not in landed 
property, or a big trade deal, but on the success of a piece of 
construction work.  This was something new.  It seemed fantastic--
suited to the great world outside perhaps, or the future.  Had he 
courage enough to stand in?  Who could tell what accidents, what 
disasters might not happen?  No!  He shook his head.  He could not.  
He dared not.  But--the thing tempted him.  He had always wanted to 
be something more than a whale among the minnows.  Should he risk 
it?  Should he not?  It meant staking his whole fortune, his 
position, everything, upon the outcome of a piece of engineering 
that he understood nothing whatever about.  It was sheer 
speculation; it was gambling.  No, he must say:  No.  Then he was 
only a whale among the minnows, after all.  No, he must say:  Yes.  
Good God!  He clenched his hands together; they were clammy with 
sweat, and his brain was in a whirl.  It was a trial, a temptation.  
He felt an impulse to pray.  But what good could that do--since he 
had himself abolished God.

Next day Merle and Peer were rung up by telephone and asked to come 
in to dinner with the old folks.

But when they were all sitting at table, they found it impossible 
to keep the conversation going.  Everyone seemed shy of beginning 
on the subject they were all thinking about.  The old man's face 
was grey with want of sleep; his wife looked from one to the other 
through her spectacles.  Peer was calm and smiling.

At last, when the claret came round, Fru Uthoug lifted her glass 
and drank to Peer.  "Good fortune!" she said.  "We won't be the 
ones to stand in your way.  Since you think it is all right, of 
course it is.  And we all hope it will turn out well for you, 
Peer."

Merle looked at her parents; she had sat through the meal anxious 
and troubled, and now the tears rose into her eyes.

"Thanks," said Peer, lifting his glass and drinking to his host and 
hostess.  "Thanks," he repeated, bowing to old Uthoug.  The matter 
was arranged.  Evidently the two old folks had talked it over 
together and come to an agreement.

It was settled, but all four felt as if the solid ground were 
rocking a little under their feet.  All their future, their fate, 
seemed staked upon a throw.

A couple of days later, a day of mild October sunshine, Peer 
happened to go into the town, and, catching sight of his mother-in-
law at the window, he went off and bought some flowers, and took 
them up to her.

She was sitting looking out at the yellow sky in the west, and she 
hardly turned her head as she took the flowers.  "Thanks, Peer," 
she said, and continued gazing out at the sky.

"What are you thinking of, dear mother?" asked Peer.

"Ah! it isn't a good thing always to tell our thoughts," she said, 
and she turned her spectacled eyes so as to look out over the lake.

"I hope it was something pleasant?"

"I was thinking of you, Peer.  Of you and Merle."

"It is good of you to think of us."

"You see, Peer, there is trouble coming for you.  A great deal of 
trouble."  She nodded her head towards the yellow sky in the west.

"Trouble?  Why?  Why should trouble come to us?"

"Because you are happy, Peer."

"What?  Because I am--?"

"Because all things blossom and flourish about you.  Be sure that 
there are unseen powers enough that grudge you your happiness."

Peer smiled.  "You think so?" he asked.

"I know it," she answered with a sigh, gazing out into the 
distance.  "You have made enemies of late amongst all those envious 
shadows that none can see.  But they are all around us.  I see them 
every day; I have learned to know them, in all these years.  I have 
fought with them.  And it is well for Merle that she has learned to 
sing in a house so full of shadows.  God grant she may be able to 
sing them away from you too."

When Peer left the house he felt as if little shudders of cold were 
passing down his back.  "Pooh!" he exclaimed as he reached the 
street.  "She is not right in her head."  And he hurried to his 
carriole and drove off home.

"Old Rode will be pleased, anyhow," he thought.  "He'll be his own 
master in the workshop now--the dream of his life.  Well, everyone 
for himself.  And the bailiff will have things all his own way at 
Loreng for a year or two.  Well, well!  Come up, Brownie!"



Chapter X


"Peer, you're surely not going away just now?  Oh, Peer, you 
mustn't.  You won't leave me alone, Peer!"

"Merle, dear, now do be sensible.  No, no--do let go, dear."  He 
tried to disengage her hands that were clasped behind his neck.

"Peer, you have never been like this before.  Don't you care for me 
any more--or the children?"

"Merle, dearest, you don't imagine that I like going.  But you 
surely don't want me to have another big breach this year.  It 
would be sheer ruin, I do assure you.  Come, come now; let me go."

But she held him fast.  "And what happens to those dams up there is 
more to you now than what becomes of me!"

"You will be all right, dear.  The doctor and the nurse have 
promised to be on the spot the moment you send word.  And you 
managed so well before. . . .  I simply cannot stay now, Merle.  
There's too much at stake.  There, there, goodbye!  Be sure you 
telegraph--"  He kissed her over the eyes, put her gently down into 
a chair, and hurried out of the room, feeling her terrified glance 
follow him as he went.

The April sun had cleared away the snow from the lowlands, but when 
Peer stepped out of the train up in Espedal he found himself back 
in winter--farms and fields still covered, and ridges and peaks 
deep in white dazzling snow.  And soon he was sitting wrapped in 
his furs, driving a miserable dun pony up a side-valley that led 
out on to the uplands.

The road was a narrow track through the snow, yellow with horse-
dung, and a mass of holes and ruts, worn by his own teams that had 
hauled their heavy loads of cement this way all through that winter 
and the last, up to the plateau and across the frozen lakes to 
Besna.

The steel will on.  The steel cares nothing for human beings.  
Merle must come through it alone.

When a healthy, happy man is hampered and thwarted in a great work 
by annoyances and disasters, he behaves like an Arab horse on a 
heavy march.  At first it moves at a brisk trot, uphill and 
downhill, and it goes faster and faster as its strength begins to 
flag.  And when at last it is thoroughly out of breath and ready to 
drop, it breaks into an easy gallop.

This was not the work he had once dreamed of finding.  Now, as 
before, his hunger for eternal things seemed ever at the side of 
his accomplishment, asking continually:  Whither?  Why? and What 
then?

But by degrees the difficulties had multiplied and mounted, till at 
last his whole mind was taken up by the one thought--to put it 
through.  Good or bad in itself--he must make a success of it.  He 
had undertaken it, and he must see it through.  He must not be 
beaten.

And so he fought on.  It was merely a trial of strength; a fight 
with material difficulties.  Aye, but was that all it was?  Were 
there not times when he felt himself struggling with something 
greater, something worse?  A new motive force seemed to have come 
into his life--misfortune.  A power outside his own will had begun 
to play tricks with him.

Your calculations may be sound, correct in every detail, and yet 
things may go altogether wrong.

Who could include in his calculations the chance that a perfectly 
sober engineer will get drunk one day and give orders so crazy that 
it costs tens of thousands to repair the damage?  Who could foresee 
that against all probability a big vein of water would be tapped in 
tunnelling, and would burst out, flooding the workings and 
overwhelming the workmen--so that the next day a train of unpainted 
deal coffins goes winding out over the frozen lakes?

More than once there had been remarks and questions in the 
newspapers:  "Another disaster at the Besna Falls.  Who is to 
blame?"

It was because he himself was away on a business journey and 
Falkman had neglected to take elementary precautions that the big 
rock-fall occurred in the tunnel, killing four men, and destroying 
the new Belgian rock-drill, that had cost a good hundred thousand, 
before it had begun to work.  This sort of thing was not faulty 
calculation--it was malicious fate.

"Come up, boy!  We must get there to-night.  The flood mustn't have 
a chance this year to lay the blame on me because I wasn't on the 
spot."

And then, to cap the other misfortunes, his chief contractor for 
material had gone bankrupt, and now prices had risen far above the 
rates he had allowed for--adding fresh thousands to the extra 
expenditure.

But he would put the thing through, even if he lost money by it.  
His envious rivals who had lately begun to run down his projects in 
the technical papers--he would make them look foolish yet.

And then?

Well, it may be that the Promethean spirit is preparing a settling 
day for the universe somewhere out in infinity.  But what concern 
is that of mine?  What about my own immortal soul?

Silence--push on, push on.  There may be a snowstorm any minute.  
Come up--get along, you scarecrow.

The dun struggles on to the end of a twelve-mile stage, and then 
the valley ends and the full blast from the plateau meets them.  
Here lies the posting station, the last farm in the valley.  He 
swings into the yard and is soon sitting in the room over a cup of 
coffee and a pipe.

Merle?  How are things with Merle now?

Ah! here comes his own horse, the big black stallion from 
Gudbrandsdal.  This beast's trot is a different thing from the poor 
dun's--the sleigh flies up to the door.  And in a moment Peer is 
sitting in it again in his furs.

Ah! what a relief to have a fresh horse, and one that makes light 
of the load behind him.  Away he goes at a brisk trot, with lifted 
head and bells jingling, over the frozen lakes.  Here and there on 
the hillslopes a grey hut or two show out--saeters, which have lain 
there unchanged for perhaps a couple of thousand years.  But a new 
time is coming.  The saeter-horns will be heard no longer, and the 
song of the turbines will rise in their place.

An icy wind is blowing; the horse throws up its head and snorts.  
Big snowflakes come driving on the wind, and soon a regular 
snowstorm is raging, lashing the traveller's face till he gasps.  
First the horse's mane and tail grow white with snow, then its 
whole body.  The drifts grow bigger, the black has to make great 
bounds to clear them.  Bravo, old boy! we must get there before 
dark.  There are brushwood brooms set out across the ice to mark 
the way, but who could keep them in sight in a driving smother like 
this?  Peer's own face is plastered white now, and he feels stunned 
and dazed under the lash of the snow.

He has worked under the burning suns of Egypt--and now here.  But 
the steel will on.  The wave rolls on its way over all the world.

If this snow should turn to rain now, it will mean a flood.  And 
then the men will have to turn out to-night and work to save the 
dams.

One more disaster, and he would hardly be able to finish within the 
contract time.  And that once exceeded, each day's delay means a 
penalty of a thousand crowns.

It is getting darker.

At last there is nothing to be seen on the way but a shapeless mass 
of snow struggling with bowed head against the storm, wading deep 
in the loose drifts, wading seemingly at haphazard--and trailing 
after it an indefinable bundle of white--dead white.  Behind, a 
human being drags along, holding on for dear life to the rings on 
the sleigh.  It is the post-boy from the last stage.

At last they were groping their way in the darkness towards the 
shore, where the electric lights of the station showed faintly 
through the snow-fog.  And hardly had Peer got out of the sleigh 
before the snow stopped suddenly, and the dazzling electric suns 
shone over the place, with the workmen's barracks, the assistants' 
quarters, the offices, and his own little plank-built house.  Two 
of the engineers came out to meet him, and saluted respectfully.

"Well, how is everything getting on?"

The greybeard answered:  "The men have struck work to-day."

"Struck?  What for?"

"They want us to take back the machinist that was dismissed the 
other day for drunkenness."

Peer shook the snow from his fur coat, took his bag, and walked 
over to the building, the others following.  "Then we'll have to 
take him back," he said.  "We can't afford a strike now."


A couple of days later Peer was lying in bed, when the post-bag was 
brought in.  He shook the letters out over the coverlet, and caught 
sight of one from Klaus Brook.

What was this?  Why did his hand tremble as he took it up?  Of 
course it was only one of Klaus's ordinary friendly letters.


DEAR FRIEND,--This is a hard letter to write.  But I do hope you 
have taken my advice and got some of your money at any rate over to 
Norway.  Well, to be as brief as possible!  Ferdinand Holm has 
decamped, or is in prison, or possibly worse--you know well enough 
it's no good asking questions in a country like this when a big man 
suddenly disappears.  He had made enemies in the highest places; he 
was playing a dangerous game--and this is the end of it.

You know what it means when a business goes into liquidation out 
here, and no strong man on the spot to look after things.  We 
Europeans can whistle for our share.

You'll take it coolly, I know.  I've lost every penny I had--but 
you've still got your place over there and the workshops.  And 
you're the sort of fellow to make twice as much next time, or I 
don't know you.  I hope the Besna barrage is to be a success.

Yours ever,

KLAUS BROCK.

P.S.--Of course you'll understand that now my friend has been 
thrown overboard it will very likely be my turn next.  But I can't 
leave now--to try would rouse suspicion at once.  We foreigners 
have some difficult balancing to do, to escape a fall.  Well, if by 
chance you don't hear from me again, you'll know something has 
happened!


Outside, the water was streaming down the channels into the fall.  
Peer lay still for a while, only one knee moving up and down 
beneath the clothes.  He thought of his two friends.  And he 
thought that he was now a poor man--and that the greater part of 
the burden of the security would fall now on old Lorentz D. Uthoug.

Clearly, Fate has other business on hand than making things easy 
for you, Peer.  You must fight your fight out single-handed.



Chapter XI


One evening in the late autumn Merle was sitting at home waiting 
for her husband.  He had been away for several weeks, so it was 
only natural that she should make a little festivity of his return.  
The lamps were lit in all the rooms, wood fires were crackling in 
all the stoves, the cook was busy with his favourite dishes, and 
little Louise, now five years old, had on her blue velvet frock.  
She was sitting on the floor, nursing two dolls, and chattering to 
them.  "Mind you're a good girl now, Josephine.  Your grandpa will 
be here directly."  Merle looked in through the kitchen door:  
"Have you brought up the claret, Bertha?  That's right.  You'd 
better put it near the stove to warm."  Then she went round all the 
rooms again.  The two youngest children were in bed--was there 
anything more to be done?

It would be an hour at least before he could be here, yet she could 
not help listening all the time for the sound of wheels.  But she 
had not finished yet.  She hurried up to the bathroom, turned on 
the hot water, undressed, and put on an oilskin cap to keep her 
hair dry, and soon she was splashing about with soap and sponge.  
Why not make herself as attractive as she could, even if things did 
look dark for them just now?

A little stream of talk went on in her brain.  Strange that one's 
body could be so great a pleasure to another.  Here he kissed you--
and here--and here--and often he seemed beside himself with joy.  
And do you remember--that time?  You held back and were cold often--
perhaps too often--is it too late now?  Ah! he has other things to 
think of now.  The time is gone by when you could be comfort enough 
to him in all troubles.  But is it quite gone by?  Oh yes; last 
time he came home, he hardly seemed to notice that we had a new 
little girl, that he had never seen before.  Well, no doubt it must 
be so.  He did not complain, and he was calm and quiet, but his 
mind was full of a whole world of serious things, a world where 
there was no room for wife and children.  Will it be the same this 
evening again?  Will he notice that you have dressed so carefully 
to please him?  Will it be a joy to him any more to feel his arms 
around you?

She stood in front of the big, white-framed mirror, and looked 
critically at herself.  No, she was no longer young as she had 
been.  The red in her cheeks had faded a little these last few 
years, and there were one or two wrinkles that could not be hidden.  
But her eyebrows--he had loved to kiss them once--they were surely 
much as before.  And involuntarily she bent towards the glass, and 
stroked the dark growth above her eyes as if it were his hand 
caressing her.

She came down at last, dressed in a loose blue dress with a broad 
lace collar and blond lace in the wide sleeves.  And not to seem 
too much dressed, she had put on a red-flowered apron to give 
herself a housewifely look.

It was past seven now.  Louise came whimpering to her, and Merle 
sank down in a chair by the window, and took the child on her lap, 
and waited.

The sound of wheels in the night may mean the approach of fate 
itself.  Some decision, some final word that casts us down in a 
moment from wealth to ruin--who knows?  Peer had been to England 
now, trying to come to some arrangement with the Company.  Sh!--was 
that not wheels?  She rose, trembling, and listened.

No, it had passed on.

It was eight o'clock now, time for Louise to go to bed; and Merle 
began undressing her.  Soon the child was lying in her little white 
bed, with a doll on either side.  "Give Papa a tiss," she babbled, 
"and give him my love.  And Mama, do you think he'll let me come 
into his bed for a bit tomorrow morning?"

"Oh yes, I'm sure he will.  And now lie down and go to sleep, 
there's a good girl."

Merle sat down again in the room and waited.  But at last she rose, 
put on a cloak and went out.

The town lay down there in the autumn darkness under a milk-white 
mist of light.  And over the black hills all around rose a world of 
stars.  Somewhere out there was Peer, far out maybe upon some 
country road, the horse plodding on through the dark at its own 
will, its master sitting with bowed head, brooding.

"Help us, Thou above--and help him most, he has had so much 
adversity in these last days."

But the starry vault seems icy cold--it has heard the prayers of 
millions and millions before--the hearts of men are nothing to the 
universe.

Merle drooped her head and went in again to the house.

It was midnight when Peer drove up the hill towards his home.  The 
sight of the great house with its brilliantly lighted windows 
jarred so cruelly on his wearied mind that he involuntarily gave 
the horse a cut with his whip.

He flung the reins to the stable-boy who had come out with a 
lantern, and walked up the steps, moving almost with a feeling of 
awe in this great house, as if it already belonged to someone else.

He opened the door of the drawing-room--no one there, but light, 
light and comfort.  He passed through into the next room, and there 
sat Merle, alone, in an armchair, with her head resting on the arm, 
asleep.

Had she been waiting so long?

A wave of warmth passed through him; he stood still, looking at 
her; and presently her bowed figure slowly straightened; her pale 
face relaxed into a smile.  Without waking her, he went on into the 
nursery, where the lights were still burning.  But here the lights 
shone only on three little ones, lying in their clean night-
clothes, asleep.

He went back to the dining-room; more lights, and a table laid for 
two, a snowy cloth and flowers, and a single carnation stuck into 
his napkin--that must be from Louise--little Louise.

At last Merle was awakened by the touch of his hand on her 
shoulder.

"Oh, are you there?"

"Good-evening, Merle!"  They embraced, and he kissed her forehead.  
But she could see that his mind was busy with other things.

They sat down to table, and began their meal.  She could read the 
expression of his face, his voice, his calm air--she knew they 
meant bad news.

But she would not question him.  She would only try to show him 
that all things else could be endured, if only they two loved each 
other.

But the time had passed when an unexpected caress from her was 
enough to send him wild with joy.  She sat there now trembling 
inwardly with suspense, wondering if he would notice her--if he 
could find any comfort in having her with him, still young and with 
something of her beauty left.

He looked over to her with a far-away smile.  "Merle," he asked, 
"what do you think your father is worth altogether?"  The words 
came like a quiet order from a captain standing on the bridge, 
while his ship goes down.

"Oh, Peer, don't think about all that to-night.  Welcome home!"  
And she smiled and took his hand.

"Thanks," he said, and pressed her fingers; but his thoughts were 
still far off.  And he went on eating without knowing what he ate.

"And what do you think?  Louise has begun the violin.  You've no 
idea how the little thing takes to it."

"Oh?"

"And Asta's got another tooth--she had a wretched time, poor thing, 
while it was coming through."

It was as if she were drawing the children up to him, to show him 
that at least he still had them.

He looked at her for a moment.  "Merle, you ought never to have 
married me.  It would have been better for you and for your people 
too."

"Oh, nonsense, Peer--you know you'll be able to make it all right 
again."

They went up to bed, and undressed slowly.  "He hasn't noticed me 
yet," thought Merle.

And she laughed a little, and said, "I was sitting thinking this 
evening of the first day we met.  I suppose you never think of it 
now?"

He turned round, half undressed, and looked at her.  Her lively 
tone fell strangely on his ears.  "She does not ask how I have got 
on, or how things are going," he thought.  But as he went on 
looking at her he began at last to see through her smile to the 
anxious heart beneath.

Ah, yes; he remembered well that far-off summer when life had been 
a holiday in the hills, and a girl making coffee over a fire had 
smiled at him for the first time.  And he remembered the first sun-
red night of his love on the shining lake-mirror, when his heart 
was filled with the rush of a great anthem to heaven and earth.

She stood there still.  He had her yet.  But for the first time in 
their lives she came to him now humbly, begging him to make the 
best of her as she was.

An unspeakable warmth began to flow through his heavy heart.  But 
he did not rush to embrace her and whirl her off in a storm of 
passionate delight.  He stood still, staring before him, and, 
drawing himself up, swore to himself with fast-closed lips that he 
would, he WOULD trample a way through, and save things for them 
both, even yet.

The lights were put out, and soon they lay in their separate beds, 
breathing heavily in the dark.  Peer stretched himself out, with 
his face up, thinking, with closed eyes.  He was hunting in the 
dark for some way to save his dear ones.  And Merle lay so long 
waiting for one caress from him that at last she had to draw out 
her handkerchief and press it over her eyes, while her body shook 
with a noiseless sobbing.



Chapter XII


Old Lorentz D. Uthoug rarely visited his rich sister at Bruseth, 
but to-day he had taken his weary way up there, and the two 
masterful old folks sat now facing each other.

"So you've managed to find your way up here?" said Aunt Marit, 
throwing out her ample bosom and rubbing her knees like a man.

"Why, yes--I thought I'd like to see how you were getting on," said 
Uthoug, squaring his broad shoulders.

"Quite well, thanks.  Having no son-in-law, I'm not likely to go 
bankrupt, I daresay."

"I'm not bankrupt, either," said old Uthoug, fixing his red eyes on 
her face.

"Perhaps not.  But what about him?"

"Neither is he.  He'll be a rich man before very long."

"He!--rich!  Did you say rich?"

"Before a year's out," answered the old man calmly.  "But you'll 
have to help."

"I!"  Aunt Marit shifted her chair backwards, gaping.  "I, did you 
say?  Ha-ha-ha!  Just tell me, how many hundreds of thousands did 
he lose over that ditch or drain or whatever it was?"

"He was six months behind time in finishing it, I know.  But the 
Company agreed to halve the forfeit for delay when they'd seen what 
a masterpiece the work was."

"Ah, yes--and what about the contractors, whom he couldn't pay, I 
hear?"

"He's paid them all in full now.  The Bank arranged things."

"I see.  After you and he had mortaged every stick and rag you had 
in the world.  Yes, indeed--you deserve a good whipping, the pair 
of you!"

Uthoug stroked his beard.  "From a financial point of view the 
thing wasn't a success for him, I'll admit.  But I can show you 
here what the engineering people say about it in the technical 
papers.  Here's an article with pictures of him and of the 
barrage."

"Well! he'd better keep his family on pictures in the papers then," 
said the widow, paying no attention to the paper he offered.

"He'll soon be on top again," said her brother, putting the papers 
back in his pocket.  He sat there in front of her quite unruffled.  
He would let people see that he was not the man to be crushed by a 
reverse; that there were other things he valued more than money.

"Soon be on top?" repeated Aunt Marit.  "Has he got round you again 
with some nonsense?"

"He's invented a new mowing machine.  It's nearly finished.  And 
the experts say it will be worth a million."

"Ho! and you want to come over me with a tale like that?"  The 
widow shifted her chair a little farther back.

"You must help us to carry on through this year--both of us.  If 
you will stand security for thirty thousand, the bank . . ."

Aunt Marit of Bruseth slapped her knees emphatically.  "I'll do 
nothing of the sort!"

"For twenty thousand, then?"

"Not for twenty pence!"

Lorentz Uthoug fixed his gaze on his sister's face; his red eyes 
began to glow.

"You'll have to do it, Marit," he said calmly.  He took a pipe from 
his pocket and set to work to fill and light it.

The two sat for a while looking at each other, each on the alert 
for fear the other's will should prove the stronger.  They looked 
at each other so long that at last both smiled involuntarily.

"I suppose you've taken to going to church with your wife now?" 
asked the widow at last, her eyes blinking derision.

"If I put my trust in the Lord," he said, "I might just sit down 
and pray and let things go to ruin.  As it is, I've more faith in 
human works, and that's why I'm here now."

The answer pleased her.  The widow at Bruseth was no churchgoer 
herself.  She thought the Lord had made a bad mistake in not giving 
her any children.

"Will you have some coffee?" she asked, rising from her seat.

"Now you're talking sense," said her brother, and his eyes 
twinkled.  He knew his sister and her ways.  And now he lit his 
pipe and leaned back comfortably in his chair.



Chapter XIII


Once more Peer stood in his workroom down at the foundry, wrestling 
with fire and steel.

A working drawing is a useful thing; an idea in one's head is all 
very well.  But the men he employed to turn his plans into tangible 
models worked slowly; why not use his own hands for what had to be 
done?

When the workmen arrived at the foundry in the morning there was 
hammering going on already in the little room.  And when they left 
in the evening, the master had not stopped working yet.  When the 
good citizens of Ringeby went to bed, they would look out of their 
windows and see his light still burning.

Peer had had plenty to tire him out even before he began work here.  
But in the old days no one had ever asked if he felt strong enough 
to do this or that.  And he never asked himself.  Now, as before, 
it was a question of getting something done, at any cost.  And 
never before had there been so much at stake.

The wooden model of the new machine is finished already, and the 
castings put together.  The whole thing looks simple enough, and 
yet--what a distance from the first rough implement to this thing, 
which seems almost to live--a thing with a brain of metal at least.  
Have not these wheels and axles had their parents and ancestors--
their pedigree stretching back into the past?  The steel has 
brought forth, and its descendants again in turn, advancing always 
toward something finer, stronger, more efficient.  And here is the 
last stage reached by human invention in this particular work up to 
now--yet, after all, is it good enough?  An invention successful 
enough to bring money in to the inventor--that is not all.  It must 
be more; it must be a world-success, a thing to make its way across 
the prairies, across the enormous plains of India and Egypt--that 
is what is needed.  Sleep? rest? food?  What are such things when 
so much is at stake!

There was no longer that questioning in his ear:  Why?  Whither?  
What then?  Useless to ponder on these things.  His horizon was 
narrowed down to include nothing beyond this one problem.  Once he 
had dreamed of a work allied to his dreams of eternity.  This, 
certainly, was not it.  What does the gain amount to, after all, 
when humanity has one more machine added to it?  Does it kindle a 
single ray of dawn the more in a human soul?

Yet this work, such as it was, had now become his all.  It must and 
should be all.  He was fast bound to it.

When he looked up at the window, there seemed to be faces at each 
pane staring in.  "What?  Not finished yet?" they seemed to say.  
"Think what it means if you fail!"  Merle's face, and the 
children's:  "Must we be driven from Loreng, out into the cold?"  
The faces of old Uthoug and his wife:  "Was it for this you came 
into an honourable family?  To bring it to ruin?"  And behind them, 
swarming, all the town.  All knew what was at stake, and why he was 
toiling so.  All stared at him, waiting.  The Bank Manager was 
there too--waiting, like the rest.

One can seize one's neck in iron pincers, and say:  You shall!  
Tired? difficulties? time too short?--all that doesn't exist.  You 
shall!  Is this thing or that impossible?  Well, make it possible.  
It is your business to make it possible.

He spent but little time at home now; a sofa in the workshop was 
his bed.  Often Merle would come in with food for him, and seeing 
how pale and grey and worn out he was, she did not dare to question 
him.  She tried to jest instead.  She had trained herself long ago 
to be gay in a house where shadows had to be driven off with 
laughter.

But one day, as she was leaving, he held her back, and looked at 
her with a strange smile.

"Well, dear?" she said, with a questioning look.

He stood looking at her as before, with the same far-off smile.  He 
was looking through her into the little world she stood for.  This 
home, this family that he, a homeless man, had won through her, was 
it all to go down in shipwreck?

Then he kissed her eyes and let her go.

And as her footsteps died away, he stood a moment, moved by a 
sudden desire to turn to some Power above him with a prayer that he 
might succeed in this work.  But there was no such Power.  And in 
the end his eyes turned once more to the iron, the fire, his tools, 
and his own hands, and it was as though he sighed out a prayer to 
these:  "Help me--help me, that I may save my wife and children's 
happiness."

Sleep? rest? weariness?  He had only a year's grace.  The bank 
would only wait a year.

Winter and spring passed, and one day in July he came home and 
rushed in upon Merle crying, "To-morrow, Merle!  They will be here 
to-morrow!"

"Who?"

"The people to look at the machine.  We're going to try it 
to-morrow."

"Oh, Peer!" she said breathlessly, gazing at him.

"It's a good thing that I had connections abroad," he went on.  
"There's one man coming from an English firm, and another from 
America.  It ought to be a big business."

The morrow came.  Merle stood looking after her husband as he drove 
off, his hat on the back of his head, through the haze that 
followed the night's rain.  But there was no time to stand 
trembling; they were to have the strangers to dinner, and she must 
see to it.

Out in the field the machine stood ready, a slender, newly painted 
thing.  A boy was harnessing the horses.

Two men in soft hats and light overcoats came up; it was old 
Uthoug, and the Bank Manager.  They stopped and looked round, 
leaning on their sticks; the results of the day were not a matter 
of entire indifference to these two gentlemen.  Ah! here was the 
big carriage from Loreng, with the two strangers and Peer himself, 
who had been down to fetch them from the hotel.

He was a little pale as he took the reins and climbed to his seat 
on the machine, to drive it himself through the meadow of high, 
thick timothy-grass.

The horses pricked up their ears and tried to break into a gallop, 
the noise of the machine behind them startling them as usual at 
first, but they soon settled down to a steady pace, and the steel 
arm bearing the shears swept a broad swath through the meadow, 
where the grass stood shining after the rain.

The two strangers walked slowly in the rear, bending down now and 
again to look at the stubble, and see if the shears cut clean.  The 
tall man with the heavy beard and pince-nez was the agent for John 
Fowler of Leeds; the little clean-shaven one with the Jewish nose 
represented Harrow & Co. of Philadelphia.

Now and again they called to Peer to stop, while they investigated 
some part of the machine.

They asked him then to try it on different ground; on an uneven 
slope, over little tussocks; and at last the agent for Fowler's 
would have it that it should be tried on a patch of stony ground.  
But that would spoil the shears?  Very likely, but Fowler's would 
like to know exactly how the shears were affected by stones on the 
ground.

At last the trials were over, and the visitors nodded thoughtfully 
to each other.  Evidently they had come on something new here.  
There were possibilities in the thing that might drive most other 
types out of the field, even in the intense competition that rages 
all round the world in agricultural machinery.

Peer read the expression in their eyes--these cold-blooded 
specialists had seen the vision; they had seen gold.

But all the same there was a hitch--a little hitch.

Dinner was over, the visitors had left, and Merle and Peer were 
alone.  She lifted her eyes to his inquiringly.

"It went off well then?" she asked.

"Yes.  But there is just one little thing to put right."

"Still something to put right--after you have worked so hard all 
these months?"  She sat down, and her hands dropped into her lap.

"It's only a small detail," he said eagerly, pacing up and down.  
"When the grass is wet, it sticks between the steel fingers above 
the shears and accumulates there and gets in the way.  It's the 
devil and all that I never thought of testing it myself in wet 
weather.  But once I've got that right, my girl, the thing will be 
a world-success."

Once more the machine was set up in his workshop, and he walked 
around it, watching, spying, thinking, racking his brain to find 
the little device that should make all well.  All else was 
finished, all was right, but he still lacked the single happy 
thought, the flash of inspiration--that given, a moment's work 
would be enough to give this thing of steel life, and wings with 
which to fly out over the wide world.

It might come at any moment, that happy thought.  And he tramped 
round and round his machine, clenching his fists in desperation 
because it was so slow in coming.

The last touch only, the dot upon an i, was wanting.  A slight 
change in the shape or position of the fingers, or the length of 
the shears--what was it he wanted?  How could he sleep that night?

He felt that he stood face to face with a difficulty that could 
have been easily solved had he come fresh to the work, but that his 
tortured brain was too worn out to overcome.

But when an Arab horse is ready to drop with fatigue, then is the 
time when it breaks into a gallop.

He could not wait.  There were the faces at the window again, 
staring and asking:  "Not finished yet?"  Merle, the children, 
Uthoug and his wife, the Bank Manager.  And there were his 
competitors the world over.  To-day he was a length ahead of them, 
but by to-morrow he might be left behind.  Wait?  Rest?  No!

It was autumn now, and sleepless nights drove him to a doctor, who 
prescribed cold baths, perfect quiet, sleeping draughts, iron and 
arsenic.  Ah, yes.  Peer could swallow all the prescriptions--the 
one thing he could not do was rest or sleep.

He would sit late into the night, prostrate with exhaustion, 
watching the dying embers of the forge, the steel, the tools.  And 
innumerable sparks would begin to fly before his eyes, and masses 
of molten iron to creep about like living things over walls and 
floor.--And over by the forge was something more defined, a misty 
shape, that grew in size and clearness and stood at last a bearded, 
naked demigod, with fire in one hand and sledgehammer in the other.

"What?  Who is that?"

"Man, do you not know me?"

"Who are you, I ask?"

"I have a thing to tell you: it is vain for you to seek for any 
other faith than faith in the evolution of the universe.  It will 
do no good to pray.  You may dream yourself away from the steel and 
the fire, but you must offer yourself up to them at last.  You are 
bound fast to these things.  Outside them your soul is nothing.  
God? happiness? yourself? eternal life for you?  All these are 
nothing.  The will of the world rolls on towards its eternal goal, 
and the individual is but fuel for the fire."

Peer would spring up, believing for a moment that someone was 
really there.  But there was nothing, only the empty air.

Now and again he would go home to Loreng, but everything there 
seemed to pass in a mist.  He could see that Merle's eyes were red, 
though she sang cheerily as she went about the house.  It seemed to 
him that she had begged him to go to bed and rest, and he had gone 
to bed.  It would be delicious to sleep.  But in the middle of the 
night it was borne in upon him that the fault lay in the shape of 
the shears after all, and then there was no stopping him from 
getting up and hurrying in to the workshop.  Winter has come round 
again, and he fights his way in through a snow-storm.  And in the 
quiet night he lights his lamp, kindles the forge fire, screws off 
the blades of the shears once more.  But when he has altered them 
and fixed them in place again, he knows at once that the defect was 
not in them after all.

Coffee is a good thing for keeping the brain clear.  He took to 
making it in the workshop for himself--and at night especially a 
few cups did him good.  They were so satisfying too, that he felt 
no desire for food.  And when he came to the conclusion that the 
best thing would be to make each separate part of the machine over 
again anew, coffee was great help, keeping him awake through many a 
long night.

It began to dawn upon him that Merle and his father-in-law and the 
Bank Manager had taken to lurking about the place night and day, 
watching and spying to see if the work were not nearly done.  Why 
in the devil's name could they not leave him in peace--just one 
week more?  In any case, the machine could not be tried before next 
summer.  At times the workers at the foundry would be startled by 
their master suddenly rushing out from his inner room and crying 
fiercely:  "No one is to come in here.  I WILL be left in peace!"

And when he had gone in again, they would look at each other and 
shake their heads.

One morning Merle came down and walked through the outer shops, and 
knocked at the door of her husband's room.  There was no answer; 
and she opened the door and went in.

A moment after, the workmen heard a woman's shriek, and when they 
ran in she was bending over her husband, who was seated on the 
floor, staring up at her with blank, uncomprehending eyes.

"Peer," she cried, shaking his shoulder--"Peer, do you hear?  Oh, 
for God's sake--what is it, my darling--"

        .        .        .        .        .        .

One April day there was a stir in the little town of Ringeby, and a 
stream of people, all in their best clothes (though it was only 
Wednesday), was moving out along the fjord road to Loreng.  There 
were the two editors, who had just settled one of their everlasting 
disputes, and the two lawyers, each still intent on snatching any 
scraps of business that offered; there were tradesmen and artisans; 
and nearly everyone was wearing a long overcoat and a grey felt 
hat.  But the tanner had put on a high silk hat, so as to look a 
little taller.

Where the road left the wood most of them stopped for a moment to 
look up at Loreng.  The great white house seemed to have set itself 
high on its hill to look out far and wide over the lake and the 
country round.  And men talked of the great doings, the feasting 
and magnificence, the great house had seen in days gone by, from 
the time when the place had been a Governor's residence until a few 
years back, when Engineer Holm was in his glory.

But to-day the place was up to auction, with stock and furniture, 
and people had walked or driven over from far around.  For the bank 
management felt they would not be justified in giving any longer 
grace, now that Peer Holm was lying sick in hospital, and no doctor 
would undertake to say whether he would ever be fit to work again.

The courtyard was soon crowded.  Inside, in the great hall, the 
auctioneer was beginning to put up the lots already, but most 
people hung back a little, as if they felt a reluctance to go in.  
For the air in there seemed charged with lingering memories of 
splendour and hospitality, from the days when cavaliers with 
ruffles and golden spurs had done homage there to ladies in 
sweeping silk robes--down to the last gay banquets to which the 
famous engineer from Egypt had loved to gather all the gentry round 
in the days of his prosperity.

Most of the people stood on the steps and in the entrance-hall.  
And now and again they would catch a glimpse of a pale woman, 
dressed in black, with thick dark eyebrows, crossing the courtyard 
to a servant's house or a storehouse to give some order for moving 
the things.  It was Merle, now mistress here no longer.

Old Lorentz D. Uthoug met his sister, the mighty lady of Bruseth, 
on the steps.  She looked at him, and there was a gleam of derision 
in her narrowed eyes.  But he drew himself up, and said as he 
passed her, "You've nothing to be afraid of.  I've settled things 
so that I'm not bankrupt yet.  And you shall have your share--in 
full."

And he strode in, a broad-shouldered, upright figure, looking 
calmly at all men, that all might see he was not the man to be 
crushed by a reverse.

Late in the day the chestnut, Bijou, was put up for sale.  He was 
led across the courtyard in a halter, and as he came he stopped for 
a moment, and threw up his head, and neighed, and from the stables 
the other horses neighed in answer.  Was it a farewell?  Did he 
remember the day, years ago, when he had come there first, dancing 
on his white-stockinged feet, full of youth and strength?

But by the woodshed there stood as usual a little grey old man, 
busy sawing and chopping, as if nothing at all was the matter.  One 
master left, another took his place; one needed firewood, it seemed 
to him, as much as the other.  And if they came and gave him 
notice--why, thank the Lord, he was stone deaf.  Thud, thud, the 
sound of the axe went on.

A young man came driving up the hill, a florid-faced young man, 
with very blue eyes.  He took off his overcoat in the passage, 
revealing a long black frock coat beneath and a large-patterned 
waistcoat.  It was Uthoug junior, general agent for English tweeds.  
He had taken no part in his brother-in-law's business affairs, and 
so he was able to help his father in this crisis.

But the auction at Loreng went on for several days.



Book III


Chapter I


Once more a deep valley, with sun-steeped farms on the hillsides 
between the river and the mountain-range behind.

One day about midsummer it was old Raastad himself that came down 
to meet the train, driving a spring-cart, with a waggon following 
behind.  Was he expecting visitors? the people at the station asked 
him.  "Maybe I am," said old Raastad, stroking his heavy beard, and 
he limped about looking to his horses.  Was it the folk who had 
taken the Court-house?  "Ay, it's likely them," said the old man.

The train came in, and a pale man, with grey hair and beard, and 
blue spectacles, stepped out, and he had a wife and three children 
with him.  "Paul Raastad?" inquired the stranger.  "Ay, that's me," 
said the old man.  The stranger looked up at the great mountains to 
the north, rising dizzily into the sky.  "The air ought to be good 
here," said he.  "Ay, the air's good enough, by all accounts," said 
Raastad, and began loading up the carts.

They drove off up the hill road.  The man and his wife sat in the 
spring-cart, the woman with a child in her lap, but a boy and a 
girl were seated on the load in the baggage-waggon behind Raastad.  
"Can we see the farm from here?" asked the woman, turning her head.  
"There," said the old man, pointing.  And looking, they saw a big 
farmstead high up on a sunny hill-slope, close under the crest, 
and near by a long low house with a steep slate roof, the sort of 
place where the district officers used to live in old days.  "Is 
that the house we are to live in?" she asked again.  "Ay, that's 
it, right enough," said old Raastad, and chirruped to his horses.

The woman looked long at the farm and sighed.  So this was to be 
their new home.  They were to live here, far from all their 
friends.  And would it give him back his health, after all the 
doctors' medicines had failed?

A Lapland dog met them at the gate and barked at them; a couple of 
pigs came down the road, stopped and studied the new arrivals with 
profound attention, then wheeled suddenly and galloped off among 
the houses.

The farmer's wife herself was waiting outside the Court-house, a 
tall wrinkled woman with a black cap on her head.  "Welcome," she 
said, offering a rough and bony hand.

The house was one of large low-ceiled rooms, with big stoves that 
would need a deal of firewood in winter.  The furniture was a 
mixture of every possible sort and style: a mahogany sofa, 
cupboards with painted roses on the panels, chairs covered with 
"Old Norse" carving, and on the walls appalling pictures of foreign 
royal families and of the Crucifixion.  "Good Heavens!" said Merle, 
as they went round the rooms alone: "how shall we ever get used to 
all this?"

But just then Louise came rushing in, breathless with news.  
"Mother--father--there are goats here!"  And little Lorentz came 
toddling in after her:  "Goats, mother," he cried, stumbling over 
the doorstep.

The old house had stood empty and dead for years.  Now it seemed to 
have wakened up again.  Footsteps went in and out, and the stairs 
creaked once more under the tread of feet, small, pattering, 
exploring feet, and big feet going about on grown-up errands.  
There was movement in every corner: a rattle of pots and pans in 
the kitchen; fires blazed up, and smoke began to rise from the 
chimney; people passing by outside looked up at it and saw that the 
dead old house had come to life again.

Peer was weak still after his illness, but he could help a little 
with the unpacking.  It took very little, though, to make him out 
of breath and giddy, and there was a sledge-hammer continually 
thumping somewhere in the back of his head.  Suppose--suppose, 
after all, the change here does you no good?  You are at the last 
stage.  You've managed to borrow the money to keep you all here for 
a year.  And then?  Your wife and children?  Hush!--better not 
think of that.  Not that; think of anything else, only not that.

Clothes to be carried upstairs.  Yes, yes--and to think it was all 
to end in your living on other people's charity.  Even that can't 
go on long.  If you should be no better next summer--or two years 
hence?--what then?  For yourself--yes, there's always one way out 
for you.  But Merle and the children?  Hush, don't think of it!  
Once it was your whole duty to finish a certain piece of work in a 
certain time.  Now it is your duty to get well again, to be as 
strong as a horse by next year.  It is your duty.  If only the 
sledge-hammer would stop, that cursed sledge-hammer in the back of 
your head.

Merle, as she went out and in, was thinking perhaps of the same 
thing, but her head was full of so much else--getting things in 
order and the household set going.  Food had to be bought from the 
local shop; and how many litres of milk would she require in the 
morning?  Where could she get eggs?  She must go across at once to 
the Raastads' and ask.  So the pale woman in the dark dress walked 
slowly with bowed head across the courtyard.  But when she stopped 
to speak to people about the place, they would forget their manners 
and stare at her, she smiled so strangely.

"Father, there's a box of starlings on the wall here," said Louise 
as she lay in bed with her arms round Peer's neck saying good-
night.  "And there's a swallow's nest under the eaves too."

"Oh, yes, we'll have great fun at Raastad--just you wait and see."

Soon Merle and Peer too lay in their strange beds, looking out at 
the luminous summer night.

They were shipwrecked people washed ashore here.  But it was not so 
clear that they were saved.

Peer turned restlessly from side to side.  He was so worn to skin 
and bone that his nerves seemed laid bare, and he could not rest in 
any position.  Also there were three hundred wheels whirring in his 
head, and striking out sparks that flew up and turned to visions.

Rest? why had he never been content to rest in the days when all 
went well?

He had made his mark at the First Cataract, yes, and had made big 
sums of money out of his new pump; but all the time there were the 
gnawing questions:  Why? and whither? and what then?  He had been 
Chief Engineer and had built a railway, and could have had 
commissions to build more railways--but again the questions:  Why? 
and what then?  Home, then, home and strike root in his native 
land--well, and had that brought him rest?  What was it that drove 
him away again?  The steel, the steel and the fire.

Ah! that day when he had stepped down from the mowing machine and 
had been ensnared by the idea of improving it.  Why had he ever 
taken it up?  Did he need money?  No.  Or was the work at a 
standstill?  No.  But the steel would on; it had need of a man; 
it had taken him by the throat and said, "You shall!"

Happiness?  Rest?  Ah no!  For, you see, a stored-up mass of 
knowledge and experience turns one fine day into an army of evil 
powers, that lash you on and on, unceasingly.  You may stumble, you 
may fall--what does it matter?  The steel squeezes one man dry, and 
then grips the next.  The flame of the world has need of fuel--bow 
thy head, Man, and leap into the fire.

To-day you prosper--to-morrow you are cast down into a hell on 
earth.  What matter?  You are fuel for the fire.

But I will not, I will not be swallowed up in the flame of the 
world, even though it be the only godhead in the universe.  I will 
tear myself loose, be something in and for myself.  I will have an 
immortal soul.  The world-transformation that progress may have 
wrought a thousand years hence--what is it to me?

Your soul?  Just think of all your noble feelings towards that 
true-born half-brother of yours--ha-ha-ha!  Shakespeare was wrong.  
It's the bastard that gets cheated.

"Dearest Peer, do, for God's sake, try to get to sleep."

"Oh yes.  I'll get to sleep all right.  But it's so hot."  He threw 
off the clothes and lay breathing heavily.

"I'm sure you're lying thinking and brooding over things.  Can't 
you do what the Swedish doctor told you--just try to think that 
everything is dark all round you."

Peer turns round, and everything around him is dark.  But in the 
heart of that darkness waves arise, waves of melody, rolling 
nearer, nearer.  It is the sound of a hymn--it is Louise standing 
playing, his sister Louise.  And what peace--O God, what peace and 
rest!

But soon Louise fades away, she fades away, and vanishes like a 
flame blown out.  And there comes a roaring noise, nearer and 
nearer, grinding, crashing, rattling--and he knows now what it is 
only too well: it is the song of the steel.

The roar of steel from ships and from railway-trains, with their 
pairs of yellow evil eyes, rushing on, full of human captives, 
whither?  Faster, faster--driven by competition, by the steel demon 
that hunts men on without rest or respite--that hurries on the 
pulse of the world to fever, to hallucination, to madness.

Crashing of steel girders falling, the hum of wheels, the clash of 
cranes and winches and chains, the clang of steam-hammers at work--
all are in that roar.  The fire flares up with hellish eyes in 
every dark corner, and men swarm around in the red glow like evil 
angels.  They are the slaves of steel and fire, lashed onwards, 
never resting.

Is this the spirit of Prometheus?  Look, the will of steel is 
flinging men up into the air now.  It is conquering the heavens.  
Why?  That it may rush the faster.  It craves for yet more speed, 
quicker, quicker, dizzier yet, hurrying--wherefore?--whither?  
Alas! it knows not itself.

Are the children of the earth grown so homeless?  Do they fear to 
take a moment's rest?  Do they dread to look inward and see their 
own emptiness?  Are they longing for something they have lost--some 
hymn, some harmony, some God?

God?  They find a bloodthirsty Jehovah, and an ascetic on the 
cross.  What gods are these for modern men?  Religious history, not 
religion.

"Peer," says Merle again, "for God's sake try to sleep."

"Merle, do you think I shall get well here?"

"Why, don't you feel already how splendid the air is?  Of course 
you'll get well."

He twined his fingers into hers, and at last the sound of Louise's 
hymn came to him once more, lifting and rocking him gently till his 
eyes closed.



Chapter II


A little road winds in among the woods, two wheel-tracks only, with 
a carpet of brown pine-needles between; but there are trees and the 
sky, quiet and peace, so that it's a real blessing to walk there.  
It rises and falls so gently, that no one need get out of breath; 
indeed, it seems to go along with one all the time, in mere 
friendliness, whispering:  "Take it easy.  Take your time.  Have a 
good rest here."  And so on it goes, winding in among the tree-
trunks, slender and supple as a young girl.

Peer walked here every day.  He would stop and look up into the 
tops of the fir trees, and walk on again; then sit down for a 
moment on a mossy stone; but only for a moment--always he was up 
again soon and moving on, though he had nowhere to go.  But at 
least there was peace here.  He would linger watching an insect as 
it crept along a fir branch, or listening to the murmur of the 
river in the valley far below, or breathing in the health-giving 
scent of the resin, thick in the warm air.

This present life of his was one way of living.  As he lay, after a 
sleepless night, watching the window grow lighter with the dawn, he 
would think:  Yet another new day--and nothing that I can do in it.

And yet he had to get up, and dress, and go down and eat.  His 
bread had a slightly bitter taste to him--it tasted of charity and 
dependence, of the rich widow at Bruseth and the agent for English 
tweeds.  And he must remember to eat slowly, to masticate each 
mouthful carefully, to rest after meals, and above all not to 
think--not to think of anything in the wide world.  Afterwards, he 
could go out and in like other people, only that all his movements 
and actions were useless and meaningless in themselves; they were 
done only for the sake of health, or to keep thoughts away, or to 
make the time go by.

How had this come to pass?  He found it still impossible to grasp 
how such senseless things can happen and no Providence interfere to 
set them right.  Why should he have been so suddenly doomed to 
destruction?  Days, weeks and months of his best manhood oozing 
away into empty nothingness--why?  Sleeplessness and tortured 
nerves drove him to do things that his will disowned; he would 
storm at his wife and children if a heel so much as scraped on the 
floor, and the remorse that followed, sometimes ending in childish 
tears, did no good, for the next time the same thing, or worse, 
would happen again.  This was the burden of his days.  This was the 
life he was doomed to live.

But up here on the little forest track he harms no one; and no 
racking noises come thrusting sharp knives into his spine.  Here is 
a great peace; a peace that does a man good.  Down on the grassy 
slope below stands a tumble-down grey barn; it reminds him of an 
old worn-out horse, lifting its head from grazing to gaze at you--
a lonely forsaken creature it seems--to-morrow it will sink to the 
ground and rise no more--yet IT takes its lot calmly and patiently.

Ugh! how far he has got from Raastad.  A cold sweat breaks out over 
his body for fear he may not have strength to walk back again 
uphill.  Well, pull yourself together.  Rest a little.  And he lies 
down on his back in a field of clover, and stares up at the sky.

A stream of clean air, fresh from the snow, flows all day long down 
the valley; as if Jotunheim itself, where it lies in there beneath 
the sky, were breathing in easy well-being.  Peer fills his lungs 
again and again with long deep draughts, drinking in the air like a 
saving potion.  "Help me then, oh air, light, solitude! help me 
that I may be whole once more and fit to work, for this is the one 
and only religion left me to cling to."

High above, over the two mountain ranges, a blue flood stands 
immovable, and in its depths eternal rest is brooding.  But is 
there a will there too, that is concerned with men on earth?  You 
do not believe in it, and yet a little prayer mounts up to it as 
well!  Help me--thou too.  Who?  Thou that hearest.  If Thou care 
at all for the miserable things called men that crawl upon the 
earth--help me!  If I once prayed for a great work that could stay 
my hunger for things eternal, I repent me now and confess that it 
was pride and vanity.  Make me a slave, toiling at servile tasks 
for food, so that Merle and the children be not taken from me.  
Hearest Thou?

Does anyone in heaven find comfort in seeing men tortured by blind 
fortune?  Are my wife and my children slaves of an unmeaning 
chance--and yet can smile and laugh?  Answer me, if Thou hearest--
Thou of the many names.

A grasshopper is shrilling in the grass about him.  Suddenly he 
starts up sitting.  A railway-train goes screaming past below.

And so the days go on.

Each morning Merle would steal a glance at her husband's face, to 
see if he had slept; if his eyes were dull, or inflamed, or calm.  
Surely he must be better soon!  Surely their stay here must do him 
good.  She too had lost faith in medicines, but this air, the 
country life, the solitude--rest, rest--surely there must soon be 
some sign that these were helping him.

Many a time she rose in the morning without having closed her eyes 
all night.  But there were the children to look after, the house to 
see to, and she had made up her mind to get on without a maid if 
she possibly could.

"What has taken you over to the farm so much lately?" she asked one 
day.  "You have been sitting over there with old Raastad for hours 
together."

"I--I go over to amuse myself and pass the time," he said.

"Do you talk politics?"

"No--we play cards.  Why do you look at me like that?"

"You never cared for cards before."

"No; but what the devil am I to do?  I can't read, because of these 
cursed eyes of mine--and the hammering in my head. . . .  And I've 
counted all the farms up and down the valley now.  There are fifty 
in all.  And on the farm here there are just twenty-one houses, big 
and little.  What the devil am I to take to next?"

Merle sighed.  "It is hard," she said.  "But couldn't you wait till 
the evening to play cards--till the children are in bed--then I 
could play with you.  That would be better."

"Thank you very much.  But what about the rest of the day?  Do you 
know what it's like to go about from dawn to dark feeling that 
every minute is wasted, and wasted for nothing?  No, you can't know 
it.  What am I to do with myself all through one of these endless, 
deadly days?  Drink myself drunk?"

"Couldn't you try cutting firewood for a little?"

"Firewood?"  He whistled softly.  "Well, that's an idea.  Ye--yes.  
Let's try chopping firewood for a change."

Thud, thud, thud!

But as he straightened his back for a breathing-space, the whirr, 
whirr of Raastad's mowing machine came to him from the hill-slope 
near by where it was working, and he clenched his teeth as if they 
ached.  He was driving a mowing machine of his own invention, and 
it was raining continually, and the grass kept sticking, sticking--
and how to put it right--put it right?  It was as if blows were 
falling on festering wounds in his head, making him dance with 
pain.  Thud, thud, thud!--anything to drown the whirr of that 
machine.

But a man may use an axe with his hands, and yet have idiotic 
fancies all the time bubbling and seething in his head.  The power 
to hold in check the vagaries of imagination may be gone.  From all 
sides they come creeping out in swarms, they swoop down on him like 
birds of prey--as if in revenge for having been driven away so 
often before--they cry: here we are!  He stood once more as an 
apprentice in the mechanical works, riveting the plates of a 
gigantic boiler with a compressed-air tube--cling, clang!  The 
wailing clang of the boiler went out over the whole town.  And now 
that same boiler is set up inside his head--cling-clang--ugh!  A 
cold sweat breaks out upon his body; he throws down the axe; he 
must go--must fly, escape somewhere--where, he cannot tell.  Faces 
that he hates to think of peer out at him from every corner, 
yapping out:  "Heh!--what did we say?  To-day a beggar--to-morrow a 
madman in a cell."

But it may happen, too, that help comes in the night.  Things come 
back to a man that it is good to remember.  That time--and that 
other. . . .  A woman there--and the one you met in such a place.  
There is a picture in the Louvre, by Veronese: a young Venetian 
woman steps out upon the marble stairway of a palace holding a 
golden-haired boy by the hand; she is dressed in black velvet, she 
glows with youth and happiness.  A lovers' meeting in her garden?  
The first kiss!  Moonlight and mandolins!

A shudder of pleasure passes through his weary body.  Bright 
recollections and impressions flock towards him like spirits of 
light--he can hear the rushing sound of their wings--he calls to 
them for aid, and they encircle him round; they struggle with the 
spirits of darkness for his soul.  He has known much brightness, 
much beauty in his life--surely the bright angels are the stronger 
and must conquer.  Ah! why had he not lived royally, amidst women 
and flowers and wine?

One morning as he was getting up, he said:  "Merle, I must and will 
hit upon something that'll send me to bed thoroughly tired out."

"Yes dear," she answered.  "Do try."

"I'll try wheeling stones to begin with," he said.  "The devil's in 
it if a day at that doesn't make a man sleep."

So that day and for many days he wheeled stones from some newly 
broken land on the hillside down to a dyke that ran along the road.

Calm, golden autumn days; one farm above another rising up towards 
the crest of the range, all set in ripe yellow fields.  One little 
cottage stands right on the crest against the sky itself, and it, 
too, has its tiny patch of yellow corn.  And an eagle sails slowly 
across the deep valley from peak to peak.

People passing by stared at Peer as he went about bare-headed, in 
his shirt-sleeves, wheeling stones.  "Aye, gentlefolks have queer 
notions," they would say, shaking their heads.

"That's it--keep at it," a dry, hacking voice kept going in Peer's 
head.  "It is idiocy, but you are doomed to it.  Shove hard with 
those skinny legs of yours; many a jade before you has had to do 
the same.  You've got to get some sleep tonight.  Only ten months 
left now; and then we shall have Lucifer turning up at the cross-
roads once more.  Poor Merle--she's beginning to grow grey.  And 
the poor little children--dreaming of father beating them, maybe, 
they cry out so often in their sleep.  Off now, trundle away.  Now 
over with that load; and back for another.

"You, that once looked down on the soulless toil for bread, you 
have sunk now to something far more miserable.  You are dragging at 
a load of sheer stupidity.  You are a galley-slave, with calamity 
for your task-master.  As you move the chains rattle.  And that is 
your day."

He straightens himself up, wipes the sweat from his forehead, and 
begins heaving up stones into his barrow again.

How long must it last, this life in manacles?  Do you remember Job?  
Job?  Aye, doubtless Jehovah was sitting at some jovial feast when 
he conceived that fantasy of a drunken brain, to let Satan loose 
upon a happy man.  Job?  His seven sons and daughters, and his 
cattle, and his calves were restored unto him, but we read nothing 
of any compensation made him for the jest itself.  He was made to 
play court fool, with his boils and his tortures and his misery, 
and the gods had their bit of sport gratis.  Job had his actual 
outlay in cattle and offspring refunded, and that was all.  Ha-ha!

Prometheus!  Is it you after all that are the friend of man among 
the gods?  Have you indeed the power to free us all some day?  When 
will you come, then, to raise the great revolt?

Come, come--up with the barrow again--you see it is full.

"Father, it's dinner-time.  Come along home," cries little Louise, 
racing down the hill with her yellow plaits flying about her ears.  
But she stops cautiously a little distance off--there is no knowing 
what sort of temper father may be in.

"Thanks, little monkey.  Got anything good for dinner to-day?"

"Aha! that's a secret," said the girl in a teasing voice; she was 
beaming now, with delight at finding him approachable.  "Catch me, 
father!  I can run quicker than you can!"

"I'm afraid I'm too tired just now, my little girl."

"Oh, poor papa! are you tired?"  And she came up and took him by 
the hand.  Then she slipped her arm into his--it was just as good 
fun to walk up the hill on her father's arm like a grown-up young 
lady.

Then came the frosts.  And one morning the hilltops were turned 
into leaden grey clouds from which the snow came sweeping down.  
Merle stood at the window, her face grey in the clammy light.  She 
looked down the valley to where the mountains closed it in; it 
seemed still narrower than before; one's breath came heavily, and 
one's mind seemed stifled under cold damp wrappings.

Ugh!  Better go out into the kitchen and set to work again--work--
work and forget.

Then one day there came a letter telling her that her mother was 
dead.



Chapter III


DEAR KLAUS BROCK,--

Legendary being!  Cast down from Khedivial heights one day and up 
again on high with Kitchener the next.  But, in Heaven's name, what 
has taken you to the Soudan?  What made you go and risk your life 
at Omdurman?  The same old desperation, I suppose, that you're 
always complaining about.  And why, of all things, plant yourself 
away in an outpost on the edge of the wilderness, to lie awake at 
nights nursing suicidal thoughts over Schopenhauer?  You have lived 
without principles, you say.  And wasted your youth.  And are 
homeless now all round, with no morals, no country, no religion.  
But will you make all this better by making things much worse?

You've no reason to envy me my country life, by the way, and 
there's no sense in your going about longing for the little church 
of your childhood, with its Moses and hymns and God.  Well, longing 
does no harm, perhaps, but don't ever try to find it.  The fact is, 
old fellow, that such things are not to be found any more.

I take it that religion had the same power on you in your childhood 
as it had with me.  We were wild young scamps, both of us, but we 
liked going to church, not for the sake of the sermons, but to bow 
our heads when the hymn arose and join in singing it.  When the 
waves of the organ-music rolled through the church, it seemed--to 
me at least--as if something were set swelling in my own soul, 
bearing me away to lands and kingdoms where all at last was as it 
should be.  And when we went out into the world we went with some 
echo of the hymn in our hearts, and we might curse Jehovah, but in 
a corner of our minds the hymn lived on as a craving, a hunger for 
some world-harmony.  All through the busy day we might bear our 
part in the roaring song of the steel, but in the evenings, on our 
lonely couch, another power would come forth in our minds, the 
hunger for the infinite, the longing to be cradled and borne up on 
the waves of eternity, whose way is past all finding out.

Never believe, though, that you'll find the church of your 
childhood now in any of our country places.  We have electric light 
now everywhere, telephones, separators, labour unions and political 
meetings, but the church stands empty.  I have been there.  The 
organ wails as if it had the toothache, the precentor sneezes out a 
hymn, the congregation does not lift the roof off with its voice, 
for the very good reason that there is no congregation there.  And 
the priest, poor devil, stands up in his pulpit with his black 
moustache and pince-nez; he is an officer in the army reserve, and 
he reads out his highly rational remarks from a manuscript.  But 
his face says all the time--"You two paupers down there that make 
up my congregation, you don't believe a word I am saying; but never 
mind, I don't believe it either."  It's a tragic business when 
people have outgrown their own conception of the divine.  And we--
we are certainly better than Jehovah.  The dogma of the atonement, 
based on original sin and the bloodthirstiness of God, is revolting 
to us; we shrug our shoulders, and turn away with a smile, or in 
disgust.  We are not angels yet, but we are too good to worship 
such a God as that.

There is some excuse for the priest, of course.  He must preach of 
some God.  And he has no other.

Altogether, it's hardly surprising that even ignorant peasants 
shake their heads and give the church a wide berth.  What do they 
do on Sundays, then?  My dear fellow, they have no Sunday.  They 
sit nodding their heads over a long table, waiting for the day to 
pass.  They remind one of plough horses, that have filled their 
bellies, and stand snoring softly, because there's no work today.

The great evolutionary scheme, with its wonders of steel and 
miracles of science, goes marching on victoriously, I grant you, 
changing the face of the world, hurrying its pulse to a more and 
more feverish beat.  But what good will it do the peasant to be 
able to fly through the air on his wheelbarrow, while no temple, no 
holy day, is left him any more on earth?  What errand can he have 
up among the clouds, while yet no heaven arches above his soul?

This is the burning question with all of us, with you in the desert 
as with us up here under the Pole.  To me it seems that we need One 
who will make our religion new--not merely a new prophet, but a new 
God.

You ask about my health--well, I fancy it's too early yet to speak 
about it.  But so much I will say:  If you should ever be in pain 
and suffering, take it out on yourself--not on others.

Greetings from us all.

Yours,

PEER DALESMAN.



Chapter IV


Christmas was near, the days were all grey twilight, and there was 
a frost that set the wall-timbers cracking.  The children went 
about blue with cold.  When Merle scrubbed the floors, they turned 
into small skating-rinks, though there might be a big fire in the 
stove.  Peer waded and waded through deep snow to the well for 
water, and his beard hung like a wreath of icicles about his face.

Aye, this was a winter.

Old Raastad's two daughters were in the dairy making whey-cheese.  
The door was flung open, there was a rush of frosty air, and Peer 
stood there blinking his eyes.

"Huh! what smokers you two are!"

"Are we now?"  And the red-haired one and the fair-haired one both 
giggled, and they looked at each other and nodded.  This queer 
townsman-lodger of theirs never came near them that he didn't crack 
jokes.

"By the way, Else, I dreamed last night that we were going to be 
married."

Both the girls shrieked with delight at this.

"And Mari, you were married to the bailiff."

"Oh my!  That old creature down at Moen?"

"He was much older.  Ninety years old he was."

"Uf!--you're always at your nonsense," said the red-haired girl, 
stirring away at her huge, steaming cauldron.

Peer went out again.  The girls were hardly out of their teens, and 
yet their faces seemed set already and stiff with earnestness.  And 
whenever Peer had managed to set them laughing unawares, they 
seemed frightened the next minute at having been betrayed into 
doing something there was no profit in.

Peer strode about in the crackling snow with his fur cap drawn down 
over his ears.  Jotunheim itself lay there up north, breathing an 
icy-blue cold out over the world.

And he?  Was he to go on like this, growing hunchbacked under a 
burden that weighed and bowed him down continually?  Why the devil 
could he not shake it off, break away from it, and kick out bravely 
at his evil fate?

"Peer," asked Merle, standing in the kitchen, "what did you think 
of giving the children for a Christmas present?"

"Oh, a palace each, and a horse to ride, of course.  When you've 
more money than you know what to do with, the devil take economy.  
And what about you, my girl?  Any objection to a couple of thousand 
crowns' worth of furs?"

"No, but seriously.  The children haven't any ski--nor a hand-
sleigh."

"Well, have you the money to buy them?  I haven't."

"Suppose you tried making them yourself?"

"Ski?"  Peer turned over the notion, whistling.  "Well, why not?  
And a sleigh?  We might manage that.  But what about little Asta?--
she's too little for that sort of thing."

"She hasn't any bed for her doll."

Peer whistled again.  "There's something in that.  That's an idea.  
I'm not so handless yet that I couldn't--"

He was soon hard at it.  There were tools and a joiner's bench in 
an outhouse, and there he worked.  He grew easily tired; his feet 
tried constantly to take him to the door, but he forced himself to 
go on.  Is there anything in the notion that a man can get well by 
simply willing it?  I will, will, will.  The thought of others 
besides himself began to get the upper hand of those birds of prey 
ravening in his head.  Presents for the children, presents that 
father had made himself--the picture made light and warmth in his 
mind.  Drive ahead then.

When it came to making the iron ribbons for the sleigh runners he 
had to go across to the smithy; and there stood a cottar at work 
roughing horseshoes.  Red glowing iron once more, and steel.  The 
clang of hammer on anvil seemed to tear his ears; yet it drew him 
on too.  It was long since last he heard that sound.  And there 
were memories.

"Want this welded, Jens?  Where's the borax?  Look here, this is 
the way of it."

"Might ha' been born and bred a smith," said Jens, as he watched 
the deft and easy hammer-strokes.

Christmas Eve came, and the grey farm-pony dragged up a big wooden 
case to the door.  Peer opened it and carried in the things--a 
whole heap of good things for Christmas from the Ringeby relations.

He bit his lips when he saw all the bags piled up on the kitchen 
table.  There had been a time not long ago when Merle and he had 
loaded up a sledge at the Loreng storehouse and driven off with 
Christmas gifts to all the poor folk round.  It was part of the 
season's fun for them.  And now--now they must even be glad to 
receive presents themselves.

"Merle--have WE nothing we can give away this year?"

"I don't know.  What do you think?"

"A poor man's Christmas it'll be with a vengeance--if we're only to 
take presents, and haven't the least little thing to give away."

Merle sighed.  "We must hope it won't happen to us again," she 
said.

"I won't have it happen to us now," he said, pacing up and down.  
"There's that poor devil of a joiner down at Moen, with 
consumption.  I'm going down there with a bit of a parcel to chuck 
in at his door, if I have to take your shift and the shirt off my 
back.  You know yourself it won't be any Christmas at all, if we 
don't do something."

"Well--if you like.  I'll see if we can't find something among the 
children's clothes that they can do without."

The end of it was that Merle levied toll on all the parcels from 
home, both rice and raisins and cakes, and made up little packets 
of them to send round by him.  That was Merle's way; let her alone 
and she would hit upon something.

The snow creaked and crackled underfoot as Peer went off on his 
errand.  A starry sky and a biting wind, and light upon light from 
the windows of the farms scattered over the dark hillsides.  High 
above all, against the sky, there was one little gleam that might 
be a cottage window, or might be a star.

Peer was flushed and freshened up when he came back into the warmth 
of the room.  And a chorus of joyful shouts was raised when Merle 
announced to the children:  "Father's going to bath you all to-
night."

The sawed-off end of a barrel was the bathing-tub, and Peer stood 
in the kitchen with his sleeves rolled up, holding the naked little 
bodies as they sprawled about in the steaming water.

Mother was busy with something or other in the sitting-room.  But 
it was a great secret, and the children were very mysterious about 
it.  "No, no, you mustn't go in," they said to little Asta, who 
went whimpering for her mother to the door.

And later in the evening, when the Christmas-tree was lit up, and 
the windows shone white with frost, there were great doings all 
about the sitting room floor.  Louise got her ski on and 
immediately fell on her face; Lorentz, astride of the new sleigh, 
was shouting "Hi, hi!--clear the course there!", and over in a 
corner sat little Asta, busy putting her baby to bed and singing it 
to sleep.

Husband and wife looked at each other and smiled.

"What did I tell you?" said Merle.


Slowly, with torturing slowness, the leaden-grey winter days creep 
by.  For two hours in the middle of the day there is pale twilight--
for two hours--then darkness again.  Through the long nights the 
north wind howls funeral dirges--hu-u-u-u--and piles up the snow 
into great drifts across the road, deep enough, almost, to smother 
a sleigh and its driver.  The days and nights come and go, 
monotonous, unchanged; the same icy grey daylight, and never a 
human soul to speak to.  Across the valley a great solid mountain 
wall hems you in, and you gaze at it till it nearly drives you mad.  
If only one could bore a hole through it, and steal a glimpse of 
the world beyond, or could climb up to the topmost ridge and for a 
moment look far round to a wide horizon, and breathe freely once 
more.

At last one day the grey veil lifts a little.  A strip of blue sky 
appears--and hearts grow lighter at the sight.  The snow peaks to 
the south turn golden.  What?  Is it actually the sun?  And day by 
day now a belt of gold grows broader, comes lower and lower on the 
hillside, till the highest-lying farms are steeped in it and glow 
red.  And at last one day the red flame reaches the Courthouse, and 
shines in across the floor of the room where Merle is sitting by 
the window patching the seat of a tiny pair of trousers.

What life and cheer it brings with it!

"Mother--here's the sun," cries Louise joyfully from the doorway.

"Yes, child, I see it."

But Louise has only looked in for a moment to beg some cake for 
Lorentz and herself, and be off again on her ski to the hill-
slopes.  "Thank you, mother--you're a darling!"  And with a slice 
in each hand she dashes out, glowing with health and the cold air.

If only Peer could glow with health again!  But though one day they 
might persuade themselves that now--now at last he had turned the 
corner--the next he would be lying tossing about in misery, and it 
all seemed more hopeless than ever.  He had taken to the doctors' 
medicines again--arsenic and iron and so forth--and the quiet and 
fresh air they had prescribed were here in plenty; would nothing do 
him any good?  There were not so many months of their year left 
now.

And then?  Another winter here?  And living on charity--ah me!  
Merle shook her head and sighed.

The time had come, too, when Louise should go to school.

"Send the children over to me--all three of them, if you like," 
wrote Aunt Marit from Bruseth.  No, thanks; Merle knew what that 
meant.  Aunt Marit wanted to keep them for good.

Lose her children--give away her children to others?  Was the day 
to come when that burden, too, would be laid upon them?

But schooling they must have; they must learn enough at least to 
fit them to make a living when they grew up.  And if their own 
parents could not afford them schooling, why--why then perhaps they 
had no right to keep them?

Merle sewed and sewed on, lifting her head now and again, so that 
the sunlight fell on her face.

How the snow shone--like purple under the red flood of sunlight.  
After all, their troubles seemed a little easier to bear to-day.  
It was as if something frozen in her heart were beginning to thaw.

Louise was getting on well with her violin.  Perhaps one day the 
child might go out into the world, and win the triumphs that her 
mother had dreamed of in vain.

There was a sound of hurried steps in the passage, and she started 
and sat in suspense.  Would he come in raging, or in despair, or 
had the pains in his head come back?  The door opened.

"Merle!  I have it now.  By all the gods, little woman, something's 
happened at last!"

Merle half rose from her seat, but sank back again, gazing at his 
face.

"I've got it this time, Merle," he said again.  "And how on earth I 
never hit on it before--when it's as simple as shelling peas!"

He was stalking about the room now, with his hands in his pockets, 
whistling.

"But what is it, Peer?"

"Why, you see, I was standing there chopping wood.  And all the 
time swarms of mowing machines--nine million of them--were going in 
my head, all with the grass sticking fast to the shears and 
clogging them up.  I was in a cold sweat--I felt myself going 
straight to hell--and then, in a flash--a flash of steel--it came 
to me.  It means salvation for us, Merle, salvation."

"Oh, do talk so that I can understand a little of what you're 
saying."

"Why, don't you see--all that's wanted is a small movable steel 
brush above the shears, to flick away the grass and keep them 
clear.  Hang it all, a child could see it.  By Jove, little woman, 
it'll soon be changed times with us now."

Merle laid her work down in her lap and let her hands fall.  If 
this were true!

"I'll have the machine up here, Merle.  Making the brushes and 
fixing them on will be no trouble at all--I can do it in a day in 
the smithy here."

"What--you had better try!  You're just beginning to get a little 
better, and you want to spoil it all again!"

"I shall never get well, Merle, as long as I have that infernal 
machine in my head balancing between world-success and fiasco.  It 
presses on my brain like a leaden weight, I shall never have a 
decent night's sleep till I get rid of it.  Oh, my great God--if 
times were to change some day--even for us!  Well!  Do you think I 
wouldn't get well when that day came!"

This time she let him take her in his arms.  But when he had gone, 
she sat still, watching the sun sink behind the snow-ranges, till 
her eyes grew dim and her breath came heavily.

A week later, when the sun was flaming on the white roofs, the grey 
pony dragged a huge packing-case up to Raastad.  And the same day a 
noise of hammer and file at work was heard in the smithy.

What do a few sleepless nights matter now?  And they are sleepless 
not so much from anxiety--for this time things go well--as because 
of dreams.  And both of them dream.  They have bought back Loreng, 
and they wander about through the great light rooms once more, and 
all is peace and happiness.  All the evil days before are as a 
nightmare that is past.  Once more they will be young, go out on 
ski together, and dine together after, and drink champagne, and 
look at each other with love in their eyes.  Once more--and many 
times again.

"Good-night, Merle."

"Good-night, Peer, and sleep well."

Day after day the hammering went on in the smithy.

A few years back he could have finished the whole business in a 
couple of days.  But now, half an hour's work was enough to tire 
him out.  It is exhausting work to concentrate your thoughts upon a 
single point, when your brain has long been used to play idly with 
stray fancies as they came.  He found, too, that there were defects 
to be put right in the parts he thought were complete before, and 
he had no assistants now, no foundry to get castings from, he must 
forge out each piece with his own hands, and with sorry tools.

What did it matter?

He began to discipline his brain, denying himself every superfluous 
thought.  He drew dark curtains across every window in his 
consciousness, save one--the machine.  After half an hour's work he 
would go back to bed and rest--just close his eyes, and rest.  This 
too was discipline.  Again he flooded all his mind with darkness, 
darkness, to save his strength for the half-hour of work next day.

Was Merle fearful and anxious?  At all events she said no word 
about the work that so absorbed him.  He was excited enough as it 
was.  And now when he was irritable and angry with the children, 
she did not even look at him reproachfully.  They must bear it, 
both she and the children--it would soon be all over now.

In the clear moonlight nights, when the children were in bed, the 
two would sometimes be seen wandering about together.  They went 
with their arms about each other's waists, talking loudly, laughing 
a great deal, and sometimes singing.  People going by on the road 
would hear the laughter and singing, and think to themselves:  It's 
either someone that's been drinking, or else that couple from the 
Court-house.

The spring drew on and the days grew lighter.


But at the Hamar Agricultural Exhibition, where the machine was 
tried, an American competitor was found to be just a little better.  
Everyone thought it a queer business; for even if the idea hadn't 
been directly stolen from Peer, there could be no doubt that his 
machine had suggested it.  The principles adopted were the same in 
both cases, but in the American machine there was just enough 
improvement in carrying them out to make it doubtful whether it 
would be any use going to law over the patent rights.  And besides--
it's no light matter for a man with no money at his back to go to 
law with a rich American firm.

In the mighty race, with competitors the wide world over, to 
produce the best machine, Peer had been on the very point of 
winning.  Another man had climbed upon his chariot, and then, at 
the last moment, jumped a few feet ahead, and had thereby won the 
prize.

So that the achievement in itself be good, the world does not 
inquire too curiously whether it was honestly achieved.

And there is no use starting a joint-stock company to exploit a new 
machine when there is a better machine in the field.

The steel had seized on Peer, and used him as a springboard.  But 
the reward was destined for another.



Chapter V


Herr Uthoug Junior, Agent for English tweeds, stepped out of the 
train one warm day in July, and stood for a moment on the station 
platform looking about him.  Magnificent scenery, certainly.  And 
this beautiful valley was where his sister had been living for more 
than a year.  Splendid air--and yet somehow it didn't seem to have 
done his brother-in-law much good.  Well, well!  And the neatly 
dressed young gentleman set off on foot towards Raastad, asking his 
way from time to time.  He wanted to take them by surprise.  There 
had been a family council at Ringeby, and they had agreed that some 
definite arrangement must be made for the future of the sister and 
her husband, with whom things had gone so hopelessly wrong.

As he turned up the by-road that led to the farm, he was aware of a 
man in his shirt-sleeves, wheeling a barrow full of stones.  What?  
He thought--could he be mistaken?  No--sure enough it was Peer 
Holm--Peer Holm, loading up stones and wheeling them down the hill 
as zealously as if he were paid for every step.

The Agent was not the man for lamentations or condolences.  
"Hullo!" he cried.  "Hard at it, aren't you?  You've taken to 
farming, I see."

Peer stood up straight, wiped his hands on his trousers, and came 
towards him.  "Good heavens! how old he has grown!" thought Uthoug 
to himself.  But aloud he said, "Well, you do look fit.  I'd hardly 
have known you again."

Merle caught sight of the pair from the kitchen window.  "Why, I do 
believe--" she exclaimed, and came running out.  It was so long 
since she had seen any of her people, that she forgot her dignity 
and in a moment had her arms round her brother's neck, hugging him.

No, certainly Uthoug junior had not come with lamentations and 
condolences.  He had a bottle of good wine in his bag, and at 
supper he filled the glasses and drank with them both, and talked 
about theatres and variety shows, and gave imitations of well-known 
actors, till he had set the two poor harassed creatures laughing.  
They must need a little joy and laughter--ah! well he knew how they 
must need it.

But he knew, too, that Merle and Peer were on tenterhooks waiting 
to know what the family had decided about their future.  The days 
of their life here had been evil and sad, but they only hoped now 
that they might be able to stay on.  If the help they had received 
up to now were taken from them, they could neither afford to stay 
here nor to go elsewhere.  What then could they do?  No wonder they 
were anxious as they sat there.

After supper he went out for a stroll with Peer, while Merle waited 
at home in suspense.  She understood that their fate was being 
settled as she waited.

At last they returned--and to her astonishment they came in 
laughing.

Her brother said good-night, and kissed her on the forehead, and 
patted her arm and was kindness itself.  She took him up to his 
room, and would have liked to sit there a while and talk to him; 
but she knew Peer had waited till they were alone to tell her the 
news that concerned them so nearly.  "Good-night, then, Carsten," 
she said to her brother, and went downstairs.

And then at last she and Peer were sitting alone together, at her 
work-table by the window.

"Well?" said Merle.

"The thing is this, Merle.  If we have courage to live at all, we 
must look facts in the face as they are."

"Yes, dear, but tell me . . ."

"And the facts are that with my health as it now is I cannot 
possibly get any employment.  It is certain that I cannot.  And as 
that is the case, we may as well be here as anywhere else."

"But can we stay on here, Peer?"

"If you can bear to stay with a miserable bungler like me--that, of 
course, is a question."

"Answer me--can we stay here?"

"Yes.  But it may be years, Merle, before I'm fit to work again--
we've got to reckon with that.  And to live on charity year after 
year is what I cannot and will not endure."

"But what are we to do, then, Peer?  There seems to be no possible 
way for me to earn any money."

"I can try, at any rate," he answered, looking out of the window.

"You?  Oh no, Peer.  Even if you could get work as a draughtsman, 
you know quite well that your eyes would never stand . . ."

"I can do blacksmith's work," he said.

There was a pause.  Merle glanced at him involuntarily, as if she 
could hardly believe her ears.  Could he be in earnest?  Was the 
engineer of the Nile Barrage to sink into a country blacksmith?

She sighed.  But she felt she must not dishearten him.  And at last 
she said with an effort:  "It would help to pass the time, I 
daresay.  And perhaps you would get into the way of sleeping 
better."  She looked out of the window with tightly compressed 
lips.

"And if I do that, Merle, we can't stay on in this house.  In fact 
a great box of a place like this is too big for us in any case--
when you haven't even a maid to help you."

"But do you know of any smaller house we could take?"

"Yes, there's a little place for sale, with a rood or two of 
ground.  If we had a cow and a pig, Merle--and a few fowls--and 
could raise a bushel or two of corn--and if I could earn a few 
shillings a week in the smithy--we wouldn't come on the parish, at 
any rate.  I could manage the little jobs that I'd get--in fact, 
pottering about at them would do me good.  What do you say?"

Merle did not answer; her eyes were turned away, gazing fixedly out 
of the window.

"But there's another question--about you, Merle.  Are you willing 
to sink along with me into a life like that?  I shall be all right.  
I lived in just such a place when I was a boy.  But you!  Honestly, 
Merle, I don't think I should ask it of you."  His voice began to 
tremble; he pressed his lips together and his eyes avoided her 
face.

There was a pause.  "How about the money?" she said, at last.  "How 
will you buy the place?"

"Your brother has promised to arrange about a loan.  But I say 
again, Merle--I shall not blame you in the least if you would 
rather go and live with your aunt at Bruseth.  I fancy she'd be 
glad to have you, and the children too."

Again there was silence for a while.  Then she said:  "If there are 
two decent rooms in the cottage, we could be comfortable enough.  
And as you say, it would be easier to look after."

Peer waited a little.  There was something in his throat that 
prevented speech.  He understood now that it was to be taken for 
granted, without words, that they should not part company.  And it 
took him a little time to get over the discovery.

Merle sat facing him, but her eyes were turned to the window as 
before.  She had still the same beautiful dark eyebrows, but her 
face was faded and worn, and there were streaks of grey in her 
hair.

At last he spoke again.  "And about the children, Merle."

She started.  "The children--what about them?"  Had it come at 
last, the thing she had gone in fear of so long?

"Aunt Marit has sent word to ask if we will let your brother take 
Louise over to stay with her."

"No!" Merle flung out.  "No, Peer.  Surely you said no at once.  
Surely you wouldn't let her go.  You know what it means, their 
wanting to have her over there."

"I know," he nodded.  "But there's another question: in Louise's 
own interest, have we any right to say no?"

"Peer," she cried, springing up and wringing her hands, "you 
mustn't ask it of me.  You don't want to do it yourself.  Surely we 
have not come to that--to begin sending--giving away--no, no, no!" 
she moaned.  "Do you hear me, Peer?  I cannot do it."

"As you please, Merle," he said, rising, and forcing himself to 
speak calmly.  "We can think it over, at any rate, till your 
brother leaves tomorrow.  There are two sides to the thing: one way 
of it may hurt us now; the other way may be a very serious matter 
for Louise, poor thing."

Next morning, when it was time to wake the children, Peer and Merle 
went into the nursery together.  They stopped by Louise's bed, and 
stood looking down at her.  The child had grown a great deal since 
they came to Raastad; she lay now with her nose buried in the 
pillow and the fair hair hiding her cheek.  She slept so soundly 
and securely.  This was home to her still; she was safer with 
father and mother than anywhere else in the world.

"Louise," said Merle, shaking her.  "Time to get up, dear."

The child sat up, still half asleep, and looked wonderingly at the 
two faces.  What was it?

"Make haste and get dressed," said Peer.  "Fancy!  You're going off 
with Uncle Carsten today, to see Aunt Marit at Bruseth.  What do 
you say to that?"

The little girl was wide awake in a moment, and hopped out of bed 
at once to begin dressing.  But there was something in her parents' 
faces which a little subdued her joy.

That morning there was much whispering among the children.  The two 
youngest looked with wondering eyes at their elder sister, who was 
going away.  Little Lorentz gave her his horse as a keepsake, and 
Asta gave her youngest doll.  And Merle went about trying to make 
believe that Louise was only going on a short visit, and would soon 
be coming back.

By dinner-time they had packed a little trunk, and Louise, in her 
best dress, was rushing about saying goodbye all round the farm, 
the harvesters, whom she had helped to drive in the hay, coming in 
for a specially affectionate farewell.  Her last visit was to 
Musin, the grey horse, that was grazing tethered behind the smithy.  
Musin was busy cropping the turf, but he just lifted his head and 
looked at her--she plucked a handful of grass, and offered it, and 
when he had disposed of that, she patted his muzzle, and he let her 
cling round his neck for a moment.

"I'll be sure to write," she cried out to no one in particular, as 
she went back over the courtyard again.

The train moved out of the station, taking with it Uthoug junior 
and Louise, each waving from one of the windows of the compartment.

And Peer and Merle were left on the platform, holding their two 
youngest children by the hand.  They could still see a small hand 
with a white handkerchief waving from the carriage window.  Then 
the last carriage disappeared into the cutting, and the smoke and 
the rumble of the train were all that was left.

The four that were left behind stood still for a little while, but 
they seemed to have moved unconsciously closer together than 
before.



Chapter VI


Some way up from the high-road there stands a little one-storeyed 
house with three small windows in a row, a cowshed on one side of 
it and a smithy on the other.  When smoke rises from the smithy, 
the neighbours say:  "The engineer must be a bit better to-day, 
since he's at it in the smithy again.  If there's anything you want 
done, you'd better take it to him.  He doesn't charge any more than 
Jens up at Lia."

Merle and Peer had been living here a couple of years.  Their lives 
had gone on together, but there had come to be this difference 
between them: Merle still looked constantly at her husband's face, 
always hoping that he would get better, while he himself had no 
longer any hope.  Even when the thump, thumping in his head was 
quiet for a time, there was generally some trouble somewhere to 
keep him on the rack, only he did not talk about it any more.  He 
looked at his wife's face, and thought to himself:  "She is 
changing more and more; and it is you that are to blame.  You have 
poured out your own misery on her day and night.  It is time now 
you tried to make some amends."  So had begun a struggle to keep 
silence, to endure, if possible to laugh, even when he could have 
found it in his heart to weep.  It was difficult enough, especially 
at first, but each victory gained brought with it a certain 
satisfaction which strengthened him to take up the struggle again.

In this way, too, he learned to look on his fate more calmly.  His 
humour grew lighter; it was as if he drew himself up and looked 
misfortune in the eyes, saying:  "Yes, I know I am defenceless, and 
you can plunge me deeper and deeper yet; but for all that, if I 
choose to laugh you cannot hinder me."

How much easier all things seemed, now that he looked no longer for 
any good to come to him, and urged no claims against anyone either 
in heaven or on earth.  But when he was tired out with his work at 
the forge, there was a satisfaction in saying to his wife:  "No, 
Merle, didn't I tell you I wouldn't have you carrying the water up?  
Give me the bucket."  "You?--you look fit for it, don't you?"  
"Hang it all, am I a man, or am I not?  Get back to your kitchen--
that's the place for a woman."  So he carried water, and his mood 
was the brighter for it, though he might feel at times as if his 
back were breaking.  And sometimes, "I'm feeling lazy, to-day, 
Merle," he would say.  "If you don't mind I'll stay in bed a bit 
longer."  And she understood.  She knew from experience that these 
were the days when his nightmare headache was upon him, and that it 
was to spare her he called it laziness.

They had a cow now, and a pig and some fowls.  It was not exactly 
on the same scale as at Loreng, but it had the advantage that he 
could manage it all himself.  Last year they had raised so many 
potatoes that they had been able to sell a few bushels.  They did 
not buy eggs any more--they sold them.  Peer carried them down 
himself to the local dealer, sold them at market price, and bought 
things they might need with the money.  Why not?  Merle did not 
think it beneath her to wash and scrub and do the cooking.  True 
enough, things had been different with them once, but it was only 
Merle now who ever had moments of dreaming that the old days might 
come back.  Otherwise, for both him and her it was as if they had 
been washed ashore on a barren coast, and must try to live through 
the grey days as best they could.

It would happen once in a while that a mowing machine of the new 
American type would be sent in by some farmer to the smithy for 
repairs.  When this happened, Peer would shut his lips close, with 
a queer expression, look at the machine for a moment, and swallow 
something in his throat.  The man who had stolen this thing from 
him and bettered it by a hairsbreadth was doubtless a millionaire 
by now on the strength of it.

It cost him something of an effort to take these repairs in hand, 
but he bowed his head and set to.  Merle, poor girl, needed a pair 
of shoes.

At times, too, he would turn from the anvil and the darkness within 
and come out into the doorway for a breath of air; and here he 
would look out upon the day--the great broad empty day.

A man with a sledge-hammer in his hands instinctively looks up at 
the heavens.  He has inherited that instinct from his great 
ancestor, who brought down fire and thought to men, and taught them 
to rebel against God.

Peer looked at the sky, and at the clouds, sweeping across it in a 
meaningless turmoil.  Rebellion against someone up there?  But 
heaven is empty.  There is no one to rebel against.

But then all the injustice, the manifold iniquity!  Who is to sit 
in judgment on it at the great day?

Who?  No one.

What?  Think of the millions of all kinds of martyrs, who died 
under the bloodiest torments, yet innocent as babes at the breast--
is there to be no day of reparation for them?

None.

But there must be a whole world-full of victims of injustice, whose 
souls flit restlessly around, because they died under a weight of 
undeserved shame--because they lost a battle in which the right was 
theirs--because they suffered and strove for truth, but went down 
because falsehood was the stronger.  Truth?  Right?  Is there no 
one, then, who will one day give peace to the dead in their graves 
and set things in their right places?  Is there no one?

No one.

The world rolls on its way.  Fate is blind, and God smiles while 
Satan works his will upon Job.

Hold your peace and grip your sledge-hammer, idiot.  If ever your 
conscience should embrace the universe, that day the horror of it 
would strike you dead.  Remember that you are a vertebrate animal, 
and it is by mistake that you have developed a soul.

Cling, clang.  The red sparks fly from the anvil.  Live out your 
life as it is.

But there began to dawn in him a strange longing to be united to 
all those unfortunates whom fate had blindly crushed; to gather 
them together, not to a common lamentation, but to a common 
victory.  Not for vengeance, but for a song of praise.  Behold, 
Thou eternal Omnipotence, how we requite Thy cruelty--we praise 
life: see how much more godlike we are than Thou.

A temple, a temple for the modern spirit of man, hungry for 
eternity--not for the babbling of prayers, but for a hymn from 
man's munificent heart sent pealing up to heaven.  Will it come--
will it one day be built?


One evening Peer came home from the post-office apparently in high 
spirits.  "Hi, Merle, I've got a letter from the Bruseth lady."

Merle glanced at Lorentz, who had instinctively come close to her, 
and was looking at his father.

"From Bruseth?  How is Louise getting on?" she asked.

"You can see for yourself.  Here's the letter," said he.

Merle read it through hurriedly, and glanced at Lorentz once more.

That evening, after the children had gone to bed, the father and 
mother sat up talking together in a low voice.

And Merle had to admit that her husband was right.  It would be 
selfish of them to keep the boy here, when he might be heir to 
Bruseth some day if they let him go.

Suppose he stayed and worked here under his father and learned to 
be a smith?  The blacksmith's day is over--factories do all the 
work now.

And what schooling could he get away here in the country?  Aunt 
Marit offered to send him to a good school.--And so the die was 
cast for him too.

But when they went with the boy to see him off at the station, the 
mother's handkerchief was at her eyes all the time, do what she 
would.

And when they came home she had to lie down in bed, while Peer went 
about the place, humming to himself, while he got ready a little 
supper and brought it to her bedside.

"I can't understand how you can take it so easily," she burst out.

"No--no," he laughed a little oddly.  "The less said about that the 
better, perhaps."

But the next day it was Peer who said he felt lazy again and would 
lie still a bit.  Merle looked at him and stroked his forehead.

And the time went on.  They worked hard and constantly to make both 
ends meet without help, and they were content to take things as 
they came.  When the big dairy was started close by, he made a good 
deal of money setting up the plant, but he was not above sharpening 
a drill for the road-gangs either.  He was often to be seen going 
down to the country store in a sleeved waistcoat with a knapsack on 
his back.  He carried his head high, the close-trimmed beard was 
shading over into white, his face often had the strained look that 
comes from sleeplessness, but his step was light, and he still had 
a joke for the girls whom he met.

In summer, the neighbours would often see them shutting up the 
house and starting off up the hill with knapsack and coffee-kettle 
and with little Asta trotting between them.  They were gone, it 
might be, to try and recapture some memory of old days, with coffee 
in the open air by a picnic fire.

In the autumn, when the great fields yellowed all the hillsides, 
Peer and Merle had a little plot of their own that showed golden 
too.  The dimensions of things had shrunk not a little for these 
two.  A bushel of corn was much to them now.  It hit them hard if 
their potato-patch yielded a couple of measures less than they had 
reckoned on.  But the housewives from the farms near by would often 
look in on Merle to see how bright and clean she kept her little 
house; and now that she had no one to help her, she found time 
herself to teach the peasant girls something of cooking and sewing.

But one habit had grown upon her.  She would stand long and long by 
the window looking down the valley to where the hills closed it in.  
It was as if she were looking constantly for something to come in 
sight, something that should bring them better days.  It was a kind 
of Sunday for her to stand there and look and wait.

And the time went on.



Chapter VII


DEAR KLAUS BROCK,

I write to tell you of what has lately happened to us here, chiefly 
in the hope that it may be some comfort to yourself.  For I have 
discovered, dear friend, that this world-sorrow of ours is 
something a man can get over, if only he will learn to see with 
his own eyes and not with those of others.

Most men would say things have steadily gone from bad to worse 
with me, and certainly I shall not pretend to feel any love for 
suffering in itself.  On the contrary, it hurts.  It does not 
ennoble.  It rather brutalises, unless it becomes so great that it 
embraces all things.  I was once Engineer in charge at the First 
Cataract--now I am a blacksmith in a country parish.  And that 
hurts.  I am cut off from reading because of my eyes, and from 
intercourse with people whose society would be a pleasure because 
there are no such people here.  All this hurts, even when you've 
grown used to it--a good thing in itself it is not.  Many times I 
have thought that we must have reached the very bottom of the 
inclined plane of adversity, but always it proved to be only a 
break.  The deepest deep was still to come.  You work on even when 
your head feels like to split; you save up every pin, every match; 
and yet the bread you eat often tastes of charity.  That hurts.  
You give up hoping that things may be better some day; you give up 
all hope, all dreams, all faith, all illusions--surely you have 
come to the end of all things.  But no; the very roots of one's 
being are still left; the most precious thing of all is still left.  
What can that be, you ask?

That is what I was going to tell you.

The thing that happened came just when things were beginning to 
look a little brighter for us.  For some time past my head had been 
less troublesome, and I had got to work on a new harrow--steel 
again; it never lets one rest--and you know what endless 
possibilities a man sees in a thing like that.  Merle was working 
with fresh courage.  What do you think of a wife like that? taking 
up the cross of her own free will, to go on sharing the life of a 
ruined man?  I hope you may meet a woman of her sort one day.  
True, her hair is growing grey, and her face lined.  Her figure is 
not so straight as once it was; her hands are red and broken.  And 
yet all this has a soul of its own, a beauty of its own, in my 
eyes, because I know that each wrinkle is a mark left by the time 
when some new trouble came upon us, and found us together.  Then 
one day she smiles, and her smile has grown strained and full of 
sadness, but again it brings back to me times when both heaven and 
earth breathed cold upon us and we drew closer to each other for 
warmth.  Our happiness and our sufferings have moulded her into 
what she now is.  The world may think perhaps that she is growing 
old; to me she is only more beautiful than before.

And now I am coming to what I was going to tell you.  You will 
understand that it was not easy to send away the two children, and 
it doesn't make things better to get letters from them constantly 
begging us to let them come home again.  But we had still one 
little girl left, little Asta, who was just five.  I wish you could 
have seen her.  If you were a father and your tortured nerves had 
often made you harsh and unreasonable with the two elder ones, you 
would try--would you not?--to make it up in loving-kindness to the 
one that was left.  Asta--isn't it pretty?  Imagine a sunburnt 
little being with black hair, and her mother's beautiful eyebrows, 
always busy with her dolls, or fetching in wood, or baking little 
cakes of her own for father when mother's baking bread for us all, 
chattering to the birds on the roof, or singing now and then, just 
because some stray note of music has come into her head.  When 
mother is busy scrubbing the floor, little Asta must needs get hold 
of a wet rag behind her back and slop away at a chair, until she 
has got herself in a terrible mess, and then she gets smacked, and 
screams for a moment, but soon runs out and sings herself happy 
again.  When you're at work in the smithy, there comes a sound of 
little feet, and "Father, come to dinner"; and a little hand takes 
hold of you and leads you to the door.  "Are you going to bath me 
to-night, father?"  Or "Here's your napkin, father."  And though 
there might be only potatoes and milk for dinner, she would eat as 
if she were seated at the grandest banquet.  "Aren't potatoes and 
milk your favourite dish, father?"  And she makes faces at you in 
the eagerness of her questionings.  At night she slept in a box at 
the foot of our bed, and when I was lying sleepless, it would often 
happen that her light, peaceful breathing filled me too with peace; 
and it was as if her little hand took mine and led me on to sleep 
itself, to beautiful, divine sleep.

And now, as I come to the thing that happened, I find it a little 
hard to write--my hand begins to tremble.  But my hope is that 
there may be some comfort in it for you too, as there has proved to 
be for Merle and me in the end.

Our next neighbours here were a brazier and his wife--poor folks, 
like ourselves.  Soon after we first came I went over to have a 
talk with him.  I found him a poor wizened little creature, 
pottering about with his acids, and making a living as best as he 
could, soldering and tinning kettles and pans.  "What do you want?" 
he asked, looking askance at me; and as I went out, I heard him 
bolt the door behind me.  Alas! he was afraid--afraid that I was 
come to snatch his daily bread from him.  His wife was a big-boned 
fleshy lump of a woman, insolent enough in her ways, though she had 
just been in prison for criminal abetment in the case of a girl 
that had got into trouble.

One Sunday morning I was standing looking at some apple trees in 
bloom in his garden.  One of them grew so close to the fence that 
the branches hung over on my side, and I bent one down to smell the 
blossom.  Then suddenly I heard a cry:  "Hi, Tiger! catch him!" and 
the brazier's great wolf-dog came bounding down, ready to fly at my 
throat.  I was lucky enough to get hold of its collar before it 
could do me any harm, and I dragged it up to its owner, and told 
him that if anything of the sort happened again I'd have the 
sheriff's officer after him.  Then the music began.  He fairly let 
himself go and told me what he thought of me.  "You hold your jaw, 
you cursed pauper, coming here taking the bread out of honest 
working people's mouths," and so on.  He hissed it out, flourishing 
his arms about, and at last it seemed to me he was fumbling about 
for a knife or something to throw at my head.  I couldn't help 
laughing.  It was a scene in the grand style between two Great 
Powers in the world-competition.

A couple of days later I was standing at the forge, when I heard a 
shriek from my wife.  I rushed out--what could be the matter?  
Merle was down by the fence already, and all at once I saw what it 
was--there was Asta, lying on the ground under the body of a great 
beast.

And then--  Well, Merle tells me it was I that tore the thing away 
from the little bundle of clothes beneath it, and carried our 
little girl home.

A doctor is often a good refuge in trouble, but though he may sew 
up a ragged tear in a child's throat ever so neatly, it doesn't 
necessarily follow that it will help much.

There was a mother, though, that would not let him go--that cried 
and prayed and clung about him, begging him to try once more if 
nothing could be done.  And when at last he was gone, she was 
always for going after him again, and grovelled on the floor and 
tore her hair--could not, would not, believe what she knew was 
true.

And that night a father and mother sat up together, staring 
strangely in front of them.  The mother was quiet now.  The child 
was laid out, decked and ready.  The father sat by the window, 
looking out.  It was in May, and the night was grey.

Now it was that I began to realise how every great sorrow leads us 
farther and farther out on the promontory of existence.  I had come 
to the outermost point now--there was no more.

And I discovered too, dear friend, that these many years of 
adversity had shaped me not in one but in various moulds, for I had 
in me the stuff for several quite distinct persons, and now the 
work was done, and they could break free from my being and go their 
several ways.

I saw a man rush out into the night, shaking his fist at heaven and 
earth; a madman who refused to play his part in the farce any more, 
and so rushed down towards the river.

But I myself sat there still.

And I saw another, a puny creature, let loose; a humble, ashen-grey 
ascetic, that bent his head and bowed under the lash, and said:  
"Thy will be done.  The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away--"  A 
pitiful being this, that stole out into the night and disappeared.

But I myself sat there still.

I sat alone on the promontory of existence, with the sun and the 
stars gone out, and ice-cold emptiness above me, about me, and in 
me, on every side.

But then, my friend, by degrees it dawned on me that there was 
still something left.  There was one little indomitable spark in 
me, that began to glow all by itself--it was as if I were lifted 
back to the first day of existence, and an eternal will rose up in 
me, and said:  Let there be light!

This will it was that by and by grew and grew in me, and made me 
strong.

I began to feel an unspeakable compassion for all men upon earth, 
and yet in the last resort I was proud that I was one of them.

I understood how blind fate can strip and plunder us of all, and 
yet something will remain in us at the last, that nothing in heaven 
or earth can vanquish.  Our bodies are doomed to die, and our 
spirit to be extinguished, yet still we bear within us the spark, 
the germ of an eternity of harmony and light both for the world and 
for God.

And I knew now that what I had hungered after in my best years was 
neither knowledge, nor honour, nor riches; nor to be a priest or a 
great creator in steel; no, friend, but to build temples; not 
chapels for prayers or churches for wailing penitent sinners, but a 
temple for the human spirit in its grandeur, where we could lift up 
our souls in an anthem as a gift to heaven.

I could never do this now.  Perhaps there was nothing that I could 
do any more.  And yet it seemed to me as I sat there that I had 
conquered.

What happened then?  Well, there had been a terrible drought all 
that spring--it is often so in this valley.  The eternal north wind 
sent the dry mould sweeping in clouds over the whole countryside, 
and we were threatened with one of our worst years of scarcity if 
the rain didn't come.

At last people ventured to sow their corn, but then the frosts set 
in, and snow and sleet, and the seed froze in the earth.  My 
neighbour the brazier had his patch of ground sown with barley--but 
now he would have to sow it again, and where was he to get the 
seed?  He went from farm to farm begging for some, but people hated 
the sight of him after what had happened about Asta--no one would 
lend him any, and he had no money to buy.  The boys on the roads 
hooted after him, and some of the neighbours talked of driving him 
out of the parish.

I wasn't able to sleep much the next night either, and when the 
clock struck two I got up.  "Where are you going?" asked Merle.  "I 
want to see if we haven't a half-bushel of barley left," I said.  
"Barley--what do you want with barley in the middle of the night?"  
"I want to sow the brazier's plot with it," I said, "and it's best 
to do it now, so that nobody will know it was me."

She sat up and stared at me.  "What?  His--the--the brazier's?"

"Yes," said I.  "It won't do us any good, you know, to see his bit 
of field lying bare all summer."

"Peer--where are you going?"

"I've told you," said I, and went out.  But I knew that she was 
dressing and meant to come too.

It had rained during the night, and as I came out the air was soft 
and easy to breathe.  The morning still lay in a grey half-light 
with yellow gleams from the wind-clouds to the north.  The scent of 
the budding birches was in the air, the magpies and starlings were 
up and about, but not a human soul was to be seen; the farms were 
asleep, the whole countryside was asleep.

I took the grain in a basket, climbed over the neighbour's fence 
and began to sow.  No sign of life in the house; the sheriff's 
officer had come over and shot the dog the day before; no doubt the 
brazier and his wife were lying sleeping, dreaming maybe of enemies 
all around, trying their best to do them harm.

Dear friend, is there any need to tell the rest?  Just think, 
though, how one man may give away a kingdom, and it costs him 
nothing, and another may give up a few handfuls of corn, and it 
means to him not only all that he has, but a world of struggle and 
passion before he can bring his soul to make that gift.  Do you 
think that is nothing?  As for me--I did not do this for Christ's 
sake, or because I loved my enemy; but because, standing upon the 
ruins of my life, I felt a vast responsibility.  Mankind must 
arise, and be better than the blind powers that order its ways; in 
the midst of its sorrows it must take heed that the god-like does 
not die.  The spark of eternity was once more aglow in me, and 
said:  Let there be light.

And more and more it came home to me that it is man himself that 
must create the divine in heaven and on earth--that that is his 
triumph over the dead omnipotence of the universe.  Therefore I 
went out and sowed the corn in my enemy's field, that God might 
exist.

Ah, if you had known that moment!  It was as if the air about me 
grew alive with voices.  It was as though all the unfortunates I 
had seen and known were bearing me company; more and more they 
came; the dead too were joined to us, an army from times past and 
long ago.  Sister Louise was there, she played her hymn, and drew 
the voices all together into a choir, the choir of the living and 
the dead, the choir of all mankind.  See, here are we all, your 
sisters and brothers.  Your fate is ours.  We are flung by the 
indifferent law of the universe into a life that we cannot order as 
we would; we are ravaged by injustice, by sickness and sorrow, by 
fire and blood.  Even the happiest must die.  In his own home he is 
but on a visit.  He never knows but that he may be gone tomorrow.  
And yet man smiles and laughs in the face of his tragic fate.  In 
the midst of his thraldom he has created the beautiful on earth; in 
the midst of his torments he has had so much surplus energy of soul 
that he has sent it radiating forth into the cold deeps of space 
and warmed them with God.

So marvellous art thou, O spirit of man!  So godlike in thy very 
nature!  Thou dost reap death, and in return thou sowest the dream 
of everlasting life.  In revenge for thine evil fate thou dost fill 
the universe with an all-loving God.

We bore our part in his creation, all we who now are dust; we who 
sank down into the dark like flames gone out;--we wept, we exulted, 
we felt the ecstasy and the agony, but each of us brought our ray 
to the mighty sea of light, each of us, from the negro setting up 
the first mark above the grave of his dead to the genius raising 
the pillars of a temple towards heaven.  We bore our part, from the 
poor mother praying beside a cradle, to the hosts that lifted their 
songs of praise high up into boundless space.

Honour to thee, O spirit of man.  Thou givest a soul to the world, 
thou settest it a goal, thou art the hymn that lifts it into 
harmony; therefore turn back into thyself, lift high thy head and 
meet proudly the evil that comes to thee.  Adversity can crush 
thee, death can blot thee out, yet art thou still unconquerable and 
eternal.

Dear friend, it was thus I felt.  And when the corn was sown, and I 
went back, the sun was glancing over the shoulder of the hill.  
There by the fence stood Merle, looking at me.  She had drawn a 
kerchief forward over her brow, after the fashion of the peasant 
women, so that her face was in shadow; but she smiled to me--as if 
she, too, the stricken mother, had risen up from the ocean of her 
suffering that here, in the daybreak, she might take her share in 
the creating of God. . . .



TRANSLATOR'S NOTE


PRONUNCIATION OF PROPER NAMES


For the convenience of readers a few points in which Norwegian 
pronunciation differs from English are noted below:

The vowels a, e, and i in the middle of words are pronounced much 
as in Italian.

aa = long o, as in "post" or "pole."

e final is sounded, as in German; thus Louise, Merle, etc.

d final is nearly always elided; thus Raastad = Rosta'.

g before e or i is hard; thus Ringeby, not Rinjeby.

j = the English y; thus Bojer = Boyer, Jens = Yens.

l before another consonant is sounded; thus Holm, not Home.


CURRENCY


The unit of currency in Norway is the crown (krone), which in 
normal conditions is worth something over thirteen pence, so that 
about eighteen crowns go to the pound sterling.  Thus Peer Holm's 
fortune in the Savings Bank represented about L100 in English 
money, and a million crowns is equivalent to about $260,000 in 
American money.

To avoid encumbering the reader unnecessarily with the details of 
Norwegian currency, small amounts have been represented in this 
translation by their equivalents in English money.





End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of The Great Hunger, by Johan Bojer