THE PIPE OF WAR.
MANOR-HOUSE FARMER'S VEFELA.
NIP-CHEEKED TONEY.
GOOD GOVERNMENT.
THE HOSTILE BROTHERS.
IVO, THE GENTLEMAN.
FLORIAN AND CRESCENCE.
THE LAUTERBACHER.
"WISDOM IN THE FIELDS.
THE GAWK
I
see you now, my fine fellow, as large as life, with your yellow hair
cropped very short, except in the neck, where a long tail remains as
if you had cut yourself after the pattern of a plough-horse. You are
staring straight at me with your broad visage, your great blue goggle
eyes, and your mouth which is never shut. Do you remember the morning
we met in the hollow where the new houses stand now, when you cut me
a willow-twig to make a whistle of? We little thought then that I
should come to pipe the world a song about you when we should be
thousands of miles apart. I remember your costume perfectly, which is
not very surprising, as there is nothing to keep in mind but a shirt,
red suspenders, and a pair of linen pantaloons dyed black to guard
against all contingencies. On Sunday you were more stylish: then you
wore a fur cap with a gold tassel, a blue roundabout with broad
buttons, a scarlet waistcoat, yellow shorts, white stockings, and
buckled shoes, like any other villager; and, besides, you very
frequently had a fresh pink behind your ear. But you were never at
ease in all this glory; and I like you rather better in your plainer
garb, myself.But
now, friend gawk, go about your business; there's a good fellow. It
makes me nervous to tell your story to your face. You need not be
alarmed: I shall say nothing ill of you, though I do speak in the
third person.The
gawk not only had a real name, but a whole pedigree of them; in the
village he ought to have been called Bart's Bast's1
boy, and he had been christened Aloys. To please him, we shall stick
to this last designation. He will be glad of it, because, except his
mother Maria and a few of us children, hardly any one used it; all
had the impudence to say "Gawk." On this account he always
preferred our society, even after he was seventeen years old. In
out-of-the-way places he would play leap-frog with us, or let us
chase him over the fields; and when the gawk--I should say, when
Aloys--was with us, we were secure against the attacks of the
children at the lime-pit; for the rising generation of the village
was torn by incessant feuds between two hostile parties.Yet
the boys of Aloys' own age were already beginning to feel their
social position. They congregated every evening, like the grown men,
and marched through the village whistling and singing, or stood at
the tavern-door of the Eagle, by the great wood-yard, and passed
jokes with the girls who went by. But the surest test of a big boy
was the tobacco-pipe. There they would stand with their speckled
bone-pipe bowls, of Ulm manufacture, tipped with silver, and hung
with little silver chains. They generally had them in their mouths
unlit; but occasionally one or the other would beg a live coal from
the baker's maid, and then they smoked with the most joyful faces
they knew how to put on, while their stomachs moaned within them.Aloys
had begun the practice too, but only in secret. One evening he
mustered up courage to mingle with his fellows, with the point of his
pipe peeping forth from his breast-pocket. One of the boys pulled the
pipe out of his pocket with a yell; Aloys tried to seize it, but it
passed from hand to hand with shouts of laughter, and the more
impatiently he demanded it the less it was forthcoming, until it
disappeared altogether, and every one professed to know nothing of
what had become of it. Aloys began to whimper, which made them laugh
still more; so at last he snatched the cap of the first robber from
his head, and ran with it into the house of Jacob the blacksmith.
Then the capless one brought the pipe, which had been hidden in the
wood-yard.Jacob
Bomiller the blacksmith's house was what is called Aloys' "go-out."
He was always there when not at home, and never at home after his
work was done. Aunt Applon, (Apollonia,) Jacob's wife, was his
cousin; and; besides his own mother and us children, she and her
eldest daughter Mary Ann always called him by his right name. In the
morning he would get up early, and, after having fed and watered his
two cows and his heifer, he always went to Jacob's house and knocked
at the door until Mary Ann opened it. With a simple "Good-morning,"
he passed through the stable into the barn. The cattle knew his step,
and always welcomed him with a complacent growl and a turn of the
head: he never stopped to return the compliment, but went into the
barn and filled the cribs of the two oxen and the two cows. He was on
particularly good terms with the roan cow. He had raised her from a
calf; and, when he stood by her and watched her at her morning meal,
she often licked his hands, to the improvement of his toilet. Then he
would open the door of the stable and restore its neatness and good
order, often chatting cosily to the dumb beasts as he made them turn
to the right or left. Not a dunghill in the village was so broad and
smooth and with such clean edges as the one which Aloys built before
the house of Jacob the blacksmith; for a fine dunghill is the
greatest ornament to a villager's door-front in the Black Forest. The
next thing he did was to wash and curry the oxen and cows until you
might have seen your face in their sleek hides. This done, he ran to
the pump before the house and filled the trough with water: the
cattle, unchained, ran out to drink; while he spread fresh straw in
their stalls. Thus, by the time that Mary Ann came to the stable to
milk the cows, she found every thing neat and clean. Often, when a
cow was "skittish," and kicked, Aloys stood by her and laid
his hand on her back while Mary Ann milked; but generally he found
something else to do. And when Mary Ann said, "Aloys, you are a
good boy," he never looked up at her, but plied the stable-broom
so vehemently that it threatened to sweep the boulder-stones out of
the floor. In the barn he cut the feed needed for the day; and, after
all the work required in the lower story of the building--which, in
the Black Forest, as is well known, contains what in America is
consigned to the barn and outhouses--was finished, he mounted
up-stairs into the kitchen, carried water, split the kindling-wood,
and at last found his way into the room. Mary Ann brought the
soup-bowl, set it on the table, folded her hands, and, everybody
having done the same, spoke a prayer. All now seated themselves with
a "God's blessing." The bowl was the only dish upon the
table, into which every one dipped his spoon, Aloys often stealing a
mouthful from the place where Mary Ann's spoon usually entered. The
deep silence of a solemn rite prevailed at the table: very rarely was
a word spoken. After the meal and another prayer, Aloys trudged home.Thus
things went on till Aloys reached his nineteenth year, when, on
New-Year's day, Mary Ann made him a present of a shirt, the hemp of
which she had broken herself, and had spun, bleached, and sewed it.
He was overjoyed, and only regretted that it would not do to walk the
street in shirt-sleeves: though it was bitter cold, he would not have
cared for that in the least; but people would have laughed at him,
and Aloys was daily getting more and more sensitive to people's
laughter.The
main cause of this was the old squire's2
new hand who had come into the village last harvest. The old squire's
new hand.He was a tall, handsome fellow, with a bold, dare-devil face
appropriately set off with a reddish mustache. George (for such was
his name) was a cavalry soldier, and almost always wore the cap
belonging to his uniform. When he walked up the village of a Sunday,
straight as an arrow, turning out his toes and rattling his spurs,
every thing about him said, as plainly as words could speak, "I
know all the girls are in love with me;" and when he rode his
horses down to Jacob's pump to water them, poor Aloys' heart was
ready to burst as he saw Mary Ann look out of the window. He wished
that there were no such things as milk and butter in the world, so
that he too might be a horse-farmer.Inexperienced
as Aloys was, he knew all about the three classes or "standings"
into which the peasants of the Black Forest are divided. The
cow-farmers are the lowest in the scale: their draught-cattle, in
addition to their labor, must yield them milk and calves. Then come
the ox-farmers, whose beasts, after having served their time, may be
fattened and killed. The horse-farmers are still more fortunate:
their beasts of draught yield neither milk nor meat, and yet eat the
best food and bring the highest prices.Whether
Aloys took the trouble to compare this arrangement with the four
castes of Egypt, or the three estates of feudalism, is doubtful.On
this New-Year's day, George derived a great advantage from his
horses. After morning service, he took the squire's daughter and her
playmate Mary Ann sleighing to Impfingen; and, though the heart of
poor Aloys trembled within him, he could not refuse George's request
to help him hitch the horses and try them in the sleigh. He drove
about the village, quite forgetting the poor figure he cut beside the
showy soldier. When the girls were seated, Aloys led the horses a
little way, running beside them until they were fairly started, and
then let them go. George drove down the street, cracking his whip;
the horses jingled their bells; half the commune looked out of their
windows; and poor Aloys stared after them long after they were out of
sight; and then went sadly home, cursing the snow which brought the
water to his eyes. The village seemed to have died out when Mary Ann
was not to be in it for a whole day.All
this winter Aloys was often much cast down. At his mother's house the
girls frequently assembled to hold their spinning-frolics,--a custom
much resembling our quiltings. They always prefer to hold these
gatherings at the house of a comrade recently married or of a
good-natured widow; elder married men are rather in the way. So the
girls often came to Mother Maria, and the boys dropped in later,
without waiting to be invited. Hitherto Aloys had never troubled
himself about them so long as they left him undisturbed: he had sat
in a corner doing nothing. But now he often said to himself, "Aloys,
this is too bad: you are nineteen years old now, and must begin to
put yourself forward." And then again he would say, "I wish
the devil would carry that George away piecemeal!" George was
the object of his ill-humor, for he had soon obtained a perfect
control over the minds of all the boys, and made them dance to his
whistle. He could whistle and sing and warble and tell stories like a
wizard. He taught the boys and girls all sorts of new songs. The
first time he sang the verse,--"Do
thy cheeks with gladness tingleWhere the snows and scarlet
mingle?"--Aloys
suddenly rose: he seemed taller than usual; he clenched his fists and
gnashed his teeth with secret joy. He seemed to draw Mary Ann toward
him with his looks, and to see her for the first time as she truly
was; for, just as the song ran, so she looked.The
girls sat around in a ring, each having her distaff with the gilt top
before her, to which the hemp was fastened with a colored ribbon;
they moistened the thread with their lips, and twirled the spindle,
which tumbled merrily on the floor. Aloys was always glad to put "a
little moistening," in the shape of some pears or apples, on the
table, and never failed to put the plate near Mary Ann, so that she
might help herself freely.Early
in the winter Aloys took his first courageous step in right of his
adolescence. Mary Ann had received a fine new distaff set with
pewter. The first time she brought it into the spinning-room and sat
down to her work, Aloys came forward, took hold of it, and repeated
the old rhyme:--"Good
lassie, give me leave,Let me shake your luck out of this
sleeve;Great goodhap and little goodhapInto my lassie's
lap.Lassie, why are you so rude?Your distaff is only of
wood;If it had silver or gold on't,I'd have made a better
rhyme on't."His
voice trembled a little, but he got through without stammering. Mary
Ann first cast her eyes down with shame and fear lest he should
"balk;" but now she looked at him with beaming eyes.
According to custom, she dropped the spindle and the whirl,3
which Aloys picked up, and exacted for the spindle the promise of a
dumpling, and for the whirl that of a doughnut. But the best came
last. Aloys released the distaff and received as ransom a hearty
kiss. He smacked so loud that it sounded all over the room, and the
other boys envied him sorely. He sat down quietly in a corner, rubbed
his hands, and was contented with himself and with the world. And so
he might have remained to the end of time, if that marplot of a
George had not interfered again.Mary
Ann was the first voice in the church-choir. One evening George asked
her to sing the song of the "Dark-Brown Maid." She began
without much hesitation, and George fell in with the second voice so
finely and sonorously that all the others who had joined in also
lapsed into silence one by one, and contented themselves with
listening to the two who sang so well. Mary Ann, finding herself
unsupported by her companions, found her voice trembling a little,
and nudged her companions to go on singing; but, as they would not,
she took courage, and sang with much spirit, while George seemed to
uphold her as with strong arms. They sang:--"Oh,
to-morrow I must leave you,My
belovéd dark-brown maid:Out
at the upper gate we travel,My
belovéd dark-brown maid."When
I march in foreign countries,Think
of me, my dearest one;With
the sparkling glass before you,Often
think how I adore you;Drink
a health to him that's gone."Now
I load my brace of pistols,And
I fire and blaze away,For
my dark-brown lassie's pleasure;For
she chose me for her treasure,And
she sent the rest away."In
the blue sky two stars are shining:Brighter
than the moon they glow;This
looks on the dark-brown maiden,And
that looks where I must go."I've
bought a ribbon for my sabre,And
a nosegay for my hat,And
a kerchief in my keeping,To
restrain my eyes from weeping:From
my love I must depart."Now
I spur my horse's mettle,Now
I rein him in and wait:So
good-bye, dear dark-brown maiden;I
must ride out at the gate."When
each of the girls had filled four or five spindles, the table was
pushed into a corner, to clear a space of three or four paces in
length and breadth, on which they took turns in dancing, those who
sat singing the music. When George brought out Mary Ann, he sang his
own song, dancing to it like a spindle: indeed, he did not need much
more space than a spindle, for he used to say that no one was a good
waltzer who could not turn around quickly and safely on a plate. When
he stopped at last,--with a whirl which made the skirts of Mary Ann's
wadded dress rise high above her feet,--she suddenly left him alone,
as if afraid of him, and ran into a corner, where Aloys sat moodily
watching the sport. Taking his hand, she said,--"Come,
Aloys, you must dance.""Let
me alone: you know I can't dance. You only want to make game of me.""You
g----" said Mary Ann: she would have said, "you gawk,"
but suddenly checked herself on seeing that he was more ready to cry
than to laugh. So she said, gently, "No, indeed, I don't want to
make game of you. Come; if you can't dance you must learn it: there
is none I like to dance with better than you."They
tried to waltz; but Aloys threw his feet about as if he had wooden
shoes on them, so that the others could not sing for laughing."I
will teach you when nobody is by, Aloys," said Mary Ann,
soothingly.The
girls now lighted their lanterns and went home. Aloys insisted on
going with them: he would not for all the world have let Mary Ann go
home without him when George was of the company.In
the still, snowy night, the raillery and laughter of the party were
heard from end to end of the village. Mary Ann alone was silent, and
evidently kept out of George's way.When
the boys had left all the girls at their homes, George said to Aloys,
"Gawk, you ought to have stayed with Mary Ann to-night.""You're
a rascal," said Aloys, quickly, and ran away. The others
laughed. George went home alone, warbling so loud and clear that he
must have gladdened the hearts of all who were not sick or asleep.Next
morning, as Mary Ann was milking the cows, Aloys said to her, "Do
you see, I should just like to poison that George; and if you are a
good girl you must wish him dead ten times over."Mary
Ann agreed with him, but tried to convince him that he should
endeavor to become just as smart and ready as George was. A bright
idea suddenly struck Aloys. He laughed aloud, threw aside the stiff
old broom and took a more limber one, saying, "Yes: look sharp
and you'll see something." After much reluctance, he yielded to
Mary Ann's solicitations to be "good friends" with George:
he could not refuse her any thing.It
was for this reason alone that Aloys had helped George to get the
sleigh out, and that the snow made his eyes run over as he watched
the party till they disappeared.In
the twilight Aloys drove his cows to water at Jacob's well. A knot of
boys had collected there, including George and his old friend, a Jew,
commonly called "Long Hartz's Jake." Mary Ann was looking
out of the window. Aloys was imitating George's walk: he carried
himself as straight as if he had swallowed a ramrod, and kept his
arms hanging down his sides, as if they had been made of wood."Gawk,"
said Jake, "what will you allow me if I get Mary Ann to marry
you?""A
good smack on your chops," said Aloys, and drove his cows away.
Mary Ann closed the sash, while the boys set up a shout of laughter,
in which George's voice was heard above all the others.Aloys
wiped the sweat from his forehead with his sleeve, so great was the
exertion which the expression of his displeasure had cost him. He sat
for hours on the feed-box of his stable, maturing the plans he had
been meditating.Aloys
had entered his twentieth year, and it was time for him to pass the
inspection of the recruiting-officers. On the day on which he, with
the others of his age, was to present himself at Horb, the county
town, he came to Mary Ann's house in his Sunday gear, to ask if she
wished him to get any thing for her in town. As he went away, Mary
Ann followed him into the hall, and, turning aside a little, she drew
a bit of blue paper from her breast, which, on being unwrapped, was
found to contain a creutzer.4
"Take it," said she: "there are three crosses on it.
When the shooting stars come at night, there's always a silver bowl
on the ground, and out of those bowls they make this kind of
creutzers: if you have one of them in your pocket you are sure to be
in luck. Take it, and you will draw a high number."5Aloys
took the creutzer; but in crossing the bridge which leads over the
Necker he put his hand in his pocket, shut his eyes, and threw the
creutzer into the river. "I won't draw a high number: I want to
be a soldier and cut George out," he muttered, between his
teeth. His hand was clenched, and he drew himself up like a king.At
the Angel Hotel the squire waited for the recruits of his parish; and
when they had all assembled he went with them to the office. The
squire was equally stupid and pretentious. He had been a corporal
formerly, and plumed himself on his "commission:" he loved
to treat all farmers, old and young, as recruits. On the way he said
to Aloys, "Gawk, you will be sure to draw the highest number;
and even if you should draw No. 1 you need not be afraid, for they
never can want you for a soldier.""Who
knows?" said Aloys, saucily. "I may live to be a corporal
yet, as well as any one: I can read and write as well as another, and
the old corporals haven't swallowed all the wisdom in the world,
either."The
squire looked daggers at him.When
Aloys walked up to the wheel, his manner was bold almost to
provocation. Several papers met his fingers as he thrust his hand in.
He closed his eyes, as if determined not to see what he should draw,
and brought out a ticket. He handed it to the clerk, trembling with
fear of its being a high number. But, when "Number 17" was
called, he shouted so lustily that they had to call him to order.The
boys now bought themselves artificial flowers tied with red ribbons,
and, after another hearty drink, betook themselves homeward. Aloys
sang and shouted louder than all the others.At
the stile at the upper end of the village the mothers and many of the
sweethearts of the boys were waiting: Mary Ann was among them also.
Aloys, a little fuddled,--rather by the noise than by the
wine,--walked, not quite steadily, arm-in-arm with the others. This
familiarity had not occurred before; but on the present occasion they
were all brothers. When Aloys' mother saw No. 17 on his cap, she
cried, again and again, "O Lord a' mercy! Lord a' mercy!"
Mary Ann took Aloys aside, and asked, "What has become of my
creutzer?" "I have lost it," said Aloys; and the
falsehood smote him, half unconscious as he was.The
boys now walked down the village, singing, and the mothers and
sweethearts of those who had probably been "drawn" followed
them, weeping, and wiping their eyes with their aprons.The
"visitation," which was to decide every thing, was still
six weeks off. His mother took a large lump of butter and a basket
full of eggs, and went to the doctor's. The butter was found to
spread very well, notwithstanding the cold weather, and elicited the
assurance that Aloys would not be made a recruit of; "for,"
said the conscientious physician, "Aloys is incapable of
military service, at any rate: he cannot see well at a distance, and
that is what makes him so awkward sometimes."Aloys
gave himself no trouble about all these matters: he was quite
altered, and swaggered and whistled whenever he went out.On
the day of the visitation, the boys went to town a little more
soberly and quietly than when the lots were drawn.When
Aloys was called into the visitation-room and ordered to undress, he
said, saucily, "Spy me out all you can: you will find nothing
wrong about me. I have no blemish: I can be a soldier." His
measure being taken and found to be full, he was entered on the list
without delay: the doctor forgot the short-sightedness, the butter,
and the eggs, in his astonishment at the boldness of Aloys.But,
when the irrevocable step was fairly taken, Aloys experienced such a
sense of alarm that he could have cried. Still, when his mother met
him on the stone steps of the office, weeping bitterly, his pride
returned; and he said, "Mother, this is not right: you must not
cry. I shall be back in a year, and Xavier can keep things in order
very well while I am gone."On
being assured of their enlistment as soldiers, the boys began to
drink, sing, and royster more than ever, to make up for the time they
supposed themselves to have lost before.When
Aloys came home, Mary Ann, with tears in her eyes, gave him a bunch
of rosemary with red ribbons in it, and sewed it to his cap. Aloys
took out his pipe, smoked all the way up the village, and made a
night of it with his comrades.One
hard day more was to be passed,--the day when the recruits had to set
out for Stuttgart. Aloys went to Jacob's house early, and found Mary
Ann in the stable, where she now had to do all the hard work without
his assistance. Aloys said, "Mary Ann, shake hands." She
did so; and then he added "Promise me you won't get married till
I come back.""No,
indeed, I won't," said she; and then he replied, "There,
that's all: but stop! give me a kiss for good-bye." She kissed
him; and the cows and oxen looked on in astonishment, as if they knew
what was going on.Aloys
patted each of the cows and oxen on the back, and took leave of them:
they mumbled something indistinctly between their teeth.George
had hitched his horses to the wagon, to give the recruits a lift of a
few miles. They passed through the village, singing; the baker's son,
Conrad, who blew the clarionet, sat on the wagon with them and
accompanied; the horses walked. On all sides the recruits were
stopped by their friends, who came to shake hands or to share a
parting cup. Mary Ann was looking out of her window, and nodded,
smiling.When
they were fairly out of the village, Aloys suddenly stopped singing.
He looked around him with moistened eyes. Here, on the heath called
the "High Scrub," Mary Ann had bleached the linen of the
shirt he wore: every thread of it now seemed to scorch him. He bade a
sad farewell to every tree and every field. Over near the old
heath-turf was his best field: he had turned the soil so often that
he knew every clod in it. In the adjoining patch he had reaped barley
with Mary Ann that very summer. Farther down, in the Hen's Scratch,
was his clover-piece, which he had sown and was now denied the
pleasure of watching while it grew. Thus he looked around him. As
they passed the stile he was mute. In crossing the bridge he looked
down into the stream: would he have dropped the marked creutzer into
it now?In
the town the singing and shouting was resumed; but not till the
Bildechingen Hill was passed did Aloys breathe freely. His beloved
Nordstetten lay before him, apparently so near that his voice could
have been heard there. He saw the yellow house of George the
blacksmith, and knew that Mary Ann lived in the next house but one.
He swung his cap and began to sing again.At
Herrenberg George left the recruits to pursue their way on foot. At
parting he inquired of Aloys whether he had any message for Mary Ann.Aloys
reddened. George was the very last person he should have chosen for a
messenger; and yet a kind message would have escaped his lips if he
had not checked himself. Involuntarily he blurted out, "You
needn't talk to her at all: she can't bear the sight of you, anyhow."George
laughed and drove away.An
important adventure befell the recruits on the road. At the entrance
of the Boeblingen Forest, which is five miles long, they impressed a
wood-cutter with his team, and compelled him to carry them. Aloys was
the ringleader: he had heard George talk so much of soldiers' pranks
that he could not let an occasion slip of playing one. But when they
had passed through the wood he was also the first to open his
leathern pouch and reimburse the involuntary stage-proprietor.At
the Tuebingen gate of Stuttgart a corporal stood waiting to receive
them. Several soldiers from Nordstetten had come out to meet their
comrades; and Aloys clenched his teeth as every one of them greeted
him with, "Gawk, how are you?" There was an end of all
shouting and singing now: like dumb sheep the recruits were led into
the barracks. Aloys first expressed a wish to go into the cavalry, as
he desired to emulate George; but, on being told that in that case he
would have to go home again, as the cavalry-training would not begin
till fall, he changed his mind. "I won't go home again until I
am a different sort of a fellow," he said to himself; "and
then, if any one undertakes to call me gawk, I'll gawk him."So
he was enrolled in the fifth infantry regiment, and soon astonished
all by his intelligence and rapid progress. One misfortune befel him
here also; he received a gypsy for his bedfellow. This gypsy had a
peculiar aversion to soap and water. Aloys was ordered by the
drill-sergeant to take him to the pump every morning and wash him
thoroughly. This was sport at first; but it soon became very irksome:
he would rather have washed the tails of six oxen than the face of
the one gypsy.Another
member of the company was a broken-down painter. He scented the
spending-money with which Aloys' mother had fitted him out, and soon
undertook to paint him in full uniform, with musket and side-arms,
and with the flag behind him. This made up the whole resemblance: the
face was a face, and nothing more. Under it stood, however, in fine
Roman characters, "Aloys Schorer, Soldier in the Fifth Regiment
of Infantry."Aloys
had the picture framed under glass and sent it to his mother. In the
accompanying letter he wrote,--"DEAR
MOTHER:--Please hang up the picture in the front room, and let Mary
Ann see it: hang it over the table, but not too near the dovecote;
and, if Mary Ann would like to have the picture, make her a present
of it. And my comrade who painted it says you ought to send me a
little lump of butter and a few yards of hemp-linen for my corporal's
wife: we always call her Corporolla. My comrade also teaches me to
dance; and to-morrow I am going to dance at Haeslach. You needn't
pout, Mary Ann: I am only going to try. And I want Mary Ann to write
to me. Has Jacob all his oxen yet? and hasn't the roan cow calved by
this time? Soldiering isn't much of a business, after all: you get
catawampously tired, and there's no work done when it's over."The
butter came, and was more effective this time: the gypsy was saddled
upon somebody else. With the butter came a letter written by the
schoolmaster, in which he said,--"Our
Matthew has sent fifty florins from America. He also writes that if
you had not turned soldier you might have come to him and he would
make you a present of thirty acres of land. Keep yourself straight,
and let nobody lead you astray; for man is easily tempted. Mary Ann
seems to be out of sorts with you,--I don't know why: when she saw
your picture she said it didn't look like you at all."Aloys
smiled when he read this, and said to himself, "All right. I am
very different from what I was: didn't I say it, Mary Ann,--eh?"Months
passed, until Aloys knew that next Sunday was harvest-home at
Nordstetten. Through the corporal's intervention, he obtained a
furlough for four days, and permission to go in full uniform, with
his shako on his head and his sword at his side. Oh, with what joy
did he put his "fixings" into his shako and take leave of
his corporal!With
all his eagerness, he could not refrain from exchanging a word with
the sentry at the gate of the barracks and with the one at the
Tuebingen gate. He must needs inform them that he was going home, and
that they must rejoice with him; and his heart melted with pity for
his poor comrades, who were compelled to walk to and fro in a little
yard for two mortal hours, during which time he was cutting down,
step by step, the distance that lay between him and his home.He
never stopped till he got to Boeblingen. Here he ordered a pint of
wine at the "Waldburg;" but he could not sit quiet in his
chair, and walked away without emptying the glass.At
Nufringen he met Long Hartz's Jake,--the same who had teased him so.
They shook hands, and Aloys heard much news of home, but not a word
of Mary Ann; and he could not make up his mind to inquire after her.At
Bohndorf he forced himself to rest: it was high time to do so; for
his heart was beating furiously. Stretched upon a bench, he reflected
how they all would open their eyes on his arrival: then he stood
before the looking-glass, fixed the shako over his left ear, twisted
the curl at the right side of his forehead, and encouraged himself by
a nod of approbation.He
once more beheld his native villageIt
was dusk when he found himself on the heights of Bildechingen and
once more beheld his native village. He shouted no longer, but stood
calm and firm, laid his hand upon his shako, and greeted his home
with a military salute.He
walked slower and slower, wishing to arrive at night, so as to
astonish them all in the morning. His house was one of the first in
the village: there was a light in the room; and he tapped at the
window, saying,--"Isn't
Aloys here?""Lord
a'-mercy!" cried his mother: "a gens-d'armes!""No:
it's me, mother," said Aloys, taking off his shako as he
entered, and clasping her hand.After
the first words of welcome were spoken, his mother expressed her
regret that there was no supper left for him; nevertheless, she went
into the kitchen and fried him some eggs. Aloys stood by her near the
hearth, and told his story. He asked about Mary Ann, and why his
picture was still hanging in the room. His mother answered, "Don't
think any thing more of Mary Ann, I beg and beg of you: she is good
for nothing,--she is indeed!""Don't
talk anymore about it, mother," said Aloys; "I know what I
know." His face, tinted by the ruddy glow of the hearth-fire,
had a strange decision and ferocity. His mother was silent until they
had returned to the room, and then she saw with rapture what a fine
fellow her son had become. Every mouthful he swallowed seemed a
titbit to her own palate. Lifting up the shako, she complacently
bewailed its enormous weight.Aloys
rose early in the morning, brushed up his shako, burnished the
plating of his sword, and the buckler and buttons, more than if he
had been ordered on guard before the staff. At the first sound of the
church-bell he was completely dressed, and at the second bell he
walked into the village.Two
little boys were talking as they passed him."Why,
that's the gawk, a'n't it?" said one."No,
it a'n't," said the other."Yes,
it is," rejoined the first.Aloys
looked at them grimly, and they ran away with their hymn-books. Amid
the friendly greetings of the villagers he approached the church. He
passed Mary Ann's house; but no one looked out: he looked behind him
again and again as he walked up the hill. The third bell rang, and he
entered the church; Mary Ann was not there: he stood at the door; but
she was not among the late-comers. The singing began, but Mary Ann's
voice was not heard: he would have known it among a thousand. What
was the universal admiration to him now?
she
did not see him, for whom he had travelled the long road, and for
whom he now stood firm and straight as a statue. He heard little of
the sermon; but, when the minister pronounced the bans of Mary Ann
Bomiller, of Nordstetten, and George Melzer, of Wiesenstetten, poor
Aloys no longer stood like a statue. His knees knocked under him, and
his teeth chattered. He was the first who left the church. He ran
home like a crazy man, threw his sword and his shako on the floor,
hid himself in the hay-loft, and wept. More than once he thought of
hanging himself, but he could not rise for dejection: all his limbs
were palsied. Then he would remember his poor mother, and sob and cry
aloud.At
last his mother came and found him in the hay-loft, cried with him,
and tried to comfort him. "It was high time they were married,"
was the burden of her tale of Mary Ann. He wept long and loud; but at
last he followed his mother like a lamb into the room. Seeing his
picture, he tore it from the wall and dashed it to pieces on the
floor. For hours he sat behind the table and covered his face with
his hands. Then suddenly he rose, whistled a merry tune, and asked
for his dinner. He could not eat, however, but dressed himself, and
went into the village. From the Adler he heard the sound of music and
dancing. In passing Jacob's house, he cast down his eyes, as if he
had reason to be ashamed; but when it was behind him he looked as
proud as ever. Having reported himself and left his passport in the
squire's hands, he went to the ball-room. He looked everywhere for
Mary Ann, though he dreaded nothing more than to meet her. George was
there, however. He came up to Aloys and stretched out his hand,
saying, "Comrade, how are you?" Aloys looked at him as if
he would have poisoned him with his eyes, then turned on his heel
without a word of answer. It occurred to him that he ought to have
said, "Comrade! the devil is your comrade, not I;" but it
was too late now.All
the boys and girls now made him drink out of their glasses; but the
wine tasted of wormwood. He sat down at a table and called for a
"bottle of the best," and drank glass after glass, although
it gave him no pleasure. Mechtilde, the daughter of his cousin
Matthew of the Hill, stood near him, and he asked her to drink with
him. She complied very readily, and remained at his side. Nobody was
attentive to her: she had no sweetheart, and had not danced a round
that day, as every one was constantly dancing with his or her
sweetheart, or changing partners with some other."Mechtilde,
wouldn't you like to dance?" said Aloys."Yes:
come, let's try."She
took Aloys by the hand. He rose, put on his gloves, looked around the
floor as if he had lost something, and then danced to the amazement
of all the company. From politeness he took Mechtilde to a seat after
the dance: by this he imposed a burden on himself, for she did not
budge from his side all the evening. He cared but little for her
conversation, and only pushed the glass toward her occasionally by
way of invitation. His eyes were fixed fiercely on George, who sat
not far from him. When some one asked the latter where Mary Ann was,
he said, laughing, "She is poorly." Aloys bit his pipe till
the mouthpiece broke off, and then spat it out with a "Pah!"
which made George look at him furiously, thinking the exclamation
addressed to him. Seeing that Aloys was quiet, he shrugged his
shoulders in derision and began singing bad songs, which all had
pretty much the same burden:--"A
bright boy will run throughMany a shoe;An old fool will
tearNever a pair."At
midnight Aloys took his sword from the wall to go. George and his
party now began to sing the "teaser," keeping time with
their fists on the table:--"Hey,
Bob, 'ye goin' home?'Ye gettin' scared? 'Ye gettin' sick?Got
no money, and can't get tick?Hey, Bob, 'ye goin' home?"Aloys
turned back with some of his friends and called for two bottles more.
They now sang songs of their own, while George and his gang were
singing at the other table. George got up and cried, "Gawk, shut
up!" Then Aloys seized a full bottle and hurled it at his head,
sprang over the table, and caught him by the throat. The tables fell
down, the glasses chinked on the floor, the music stopped. For a
while all was still, as if the two were to throttle each other in
silence: then suddenly the room was filled with shouting, whistling,
scolding, and quarrelling. The bystanders interfered; but, according
to custom, each party only restrained the adversary of the party he
sided with, so as to give the latter a chance of drubbing his
opponent undisturbed. Mechtilde held George by the head until his
hair came out by handfuls. The legs of chairs were now broken off,
and all hands whacked each other to their hearts' content. Aloys and
George remained as if fastened together by their teeth. At length
Aloys gained his feet, and threw George down with such violence that
he seemed to have broken his neck, and then kneeled down on him, and
would have throttled him had not the watchman entered and put an end
to the row. The musicians were sent home and the two chief combatants
taken to the lock-up.With
his face black and blue, pale and haggard, Aloys left the village
next day. His furlough had another day to run; but what should he do
at home? He was glad enough to go soldiering again; and nothing would
have pleased him better than a war. The squire had endorsed the story
of the fracas on his passport, and a severe punishment awaited him on
his return. He looked neither to the right nor to the left, but
walked away almost without knowing it, and hoping never to return. At
Horb, on seeing the signpost to Freudenstadt, which is on the way to
Strasbourg, he stopped a long time and thought of deserting to
France. Unexpectedly he found himself addressed by Mechtilde, who
asked, "Why, Aloys, are you going back to Stuttgart already?""Yes,"
he answered, and went on his way. Mechtilde had come like an angel
from heaven. With a friendly good-bye, they parted.As
he walked, he found himself ever and anon humming the song he had
heard George sing so long ago, and which now, indeed, suited poor
Mary Ann's case:--"In
a day, in a day,Pride and beauty fade away.Do
thy checks with gladness tingleWhere the snows and roses mingle?Oh,
the roses all decay!"At
Stuttgart he never said a word to the sentry at the Tuebingen gate
nor to the one at the barrack-gate. Like a criminal, he hardly raised
his eyes. For eight days he did penance in a dark cell,--the "third
degree" of punishment. At times he became so impatient that he
could have dashed his head against the wall; and then again he would
lie for days and nights half asleep.When
released from prison, he was attached for six weeks to the class of
culprits who are never permitted to leave the barracks, but are bound
to answer the call at every moment. He now cursed his resolution to
become a soldier, which bound him for six years to the land of his
birth. He would have gone away, far as could be.One
morning his mother Maria came with a letter from Matthew, in America.
He had sent four hundred florins for Aloys to buy a field with, or,
if he wished to join him, to buy himself clear of the army.Aloys
and Matthew of the Hill, with his wife and eight children,--Mechtilde
among them,--left for America that same autumn.While
at sea he often hummed the curious but well-known old song, which he
had never understood before:--"Here,
here, here, and here,The
ship is on her way;There,
there, there, and there,The
skipper goes to stay;When
the winds do rave and roarAs
though the ship could swim no more,My
thoughts begin to ponderAnd
wander."In
his last letter from Ohio Aloys writes to his mother:--"...
My heart seems to ache at the thought that I must enjoy all these
good things alone. I often wish all Nordstetten was here,--old Zahn,
blind Conrad, Shacker of the stone quarry, Soges, Bat of the sour
well, and Maurice of the hungry spring: they ought to be here, all of
them, to eat their fill until they couldn't budge from their seats.
What good does it do me while I am alone here? And then you might all
see the gawk with his four horses in the stable and his ten colts in
the field. If Mary Ann has any trouble, let me know about it, and I
will send her something; but don't let her know from whom it comes.
Oh, how I pity her! Matthew of the Hill lives two miles away. His
Mechtilde is a good worker; but she is no Mary Ann, after all. I do
hope she is doing well. Has she any children? On the way across there
was a learned man with us on the ship,--Dr. Staeberle, of Ulm: he had
a globe with him, and he showed me that when it is day in America it
is night in Nordstetten, and so on. I never thought much about it
till now. But when I am in the field and think, 'What are they doing
now in Nordstetten?' I remember all at once that you are all fast
asleep, and Shackerle's John, the watchman, is singing out, 'Two
o'clock, and a cloudy morning.' On Sunday I can't bear to think that
it is Saturday night in Nordstetten. All ought to have one day at
once. Last Sunday was harvest-home in Nordstetten: I should never
forget that, if I were to live a hundred years. I should like to be
in Nordstetten for one hour, just to let the squire see what a free
citizen of America looks like."page
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