Growth of the Soil Knut Hamsun (summer books .txt) đ
- Author: Knut Hamsun
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Isak went with him up over the hills; it was firm, good going on the higher ground, easier than below. Isak received a whole Daler.
In that manner was it Lensmand Geissler left the place, and he did not come back. No great loss, folk said, he being looked on as a doubtful personage, an adventurer. Not that he hadnât the knowledge; he was a learned man, and had studied this and that, but he lived too freely, and spent other peopleâs money. It came out later that he had left the place after a sharp reprimand from his superior, Amtmand Pleym; but nothing was done about his family officially, and they went on living there, a good while afterâ âhis wife and three children. And it was not long before the money unaccounted for was sent from Sweden, so that Geisslerâs wife and children could not be said to be held as hostages, but stayed on simply because it pleased them.
Isak and Inger had no cause to complain of Geisslerâs dealings with them, not by a long way. And there was no saying what sort of man his successor would beâ âperhaps they would have to go over the whole business again!
The Amtmand3 sent one of his clerks up to the village, to be the new Lensmand. He was a man about forty, son of a local magistrate, by name Heyerdahl. He had lacked the means to go to the university and enter the service that way; instead, he had been constrained to sit in an office, writing at a desk, for fifteen years. He was unmarried, having never been able to afford a wife. His chief, Amtmand Pleym, had inherited him from his predecessor, and paid him the same miserable wage that had been given before; Heyerdahl took it, and went on writing at his desk as before.
Isak plucked up his courage, and went to see him.
âDocuments in the Sellanraa caseâ ââ âŠâ? Here they are, just returned from the Department. They want to know all sorts of thingsâ âthe whole business is in a dreadful muddle, as Geissler left it,â said the official. âThe Department wishes to be informed as to whether any considerable crop of marketable berries is to be reckoned with on the estate. Whether there is any heavy timber. Whether possibly there may be ores or metals of value an the hills adjoining. Mention is made of water, but nothing stated as to any fishery in the same. This Geissler appears to have furnished certain information, but heâs not to be trusted, and here have I to go through the whole affair again after him. I shall have to come up to Sellanraa and make a thorough inspection and valuation. How many miles is it up there? The Department, of course, requires that adequate boundaries be drawn: yes, we shall have to beat the bounds in due order.â
âââTis no light business setting up boundaries this time of year,â said Isak. âNot till later on in the summer.â
âAnyhow, itâll have to be done. The Department canât wait all through the summer for an answer. Iâll come up myself as soon as I can get away. I shall have to be out that way in any case, thereâs another plot of land a manâs inquiring about.â
âWill that be him thatâs going to buy up between me and the village?â
âCanât say, Iâm sure. Very likely. As a matter of fact, itâs a man from the office here, my assistant in the office. He was here in Geisslerâs time. Asked Geissler about it, I understand, but Geissler put him off; said he couldnât cultivate a hundred yards of land. So he sent in an application to the Amtmand, and Iâm instructed to see the matter through. More of Geisslerâs muddling!â
Lensmand Heyerdahl came up to the farm, and brought with him his assistant, Brede. They had got thoroughly wet crossing the moors, and wetter still they were before theyâd finished tramping the boundary lines through melting snow and slush up and down the hills. The Lensmand set to work zealously the first day, but on the second he had had enough, and contented himself with standing still for the most part, pointing and shouting directions. There was no further talk about prospecting for ore in the âadjoining hills,â and as for marketable berriesâ âthey would have a look at the moors on the way back, he said.
The Department requested information on quite a number of pointsâ âthere were tables for all sorts of things, no doubt. The only thing that seemed reasonable was the question of timber. Certainly, there was some heavy timber, and that within the limits of Isakâs proposed holding, but not enough to reckon with for sale; no more than would be required to keep up the place. Even if there had been timber in plenty, who was to carry it all the many miles to where it could be sold? Only Isak, trundling like a tub-wheel through the forest in wintertime carting some few heavy sticks down to the village, to bring back planks and boards for his building.
Geissler, the incomprehensible, had, it seemed, sent in a report which was not easily upset. Here was his successor going through the whole thing again, trying to find mistakes and blatant inaccuraciesâ âbut all in vain. It was noticeable that he consulted his assistant at every turn, and paid heed to what he said, which was not Geisslerâs way at all. That same assistant, moreover, must presumably have altered his own opinion, since he was now a would-be purchaser himself of lands from the common ground held by the State.
âWhat about the price?â asked the Lensmand.
âFifty Daler is the most they can fairly ask of any
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