The Wonderful Adventures of Nils Selma Lagerlöf (i wanna iguana read aloud .txt) đ
- Author: Selma Lagerlöf
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âWe donât care to enter that place, because those who live there are stingy and cruel. It is their fault that we two must go out on the highways and beg.â
âThat may be so,â said the boy, âbut all the same you should go there. You shall see that it will be well for you.â
âWe can try, but it is doubtful that they will even let us enter,â observed the two little girls as they walked up to the house and knocked.
The master was standing by the fire thinking of the horse when he heard the knocking. He stepped to the door to see what was up, thinking all the while that he would not let himself be tempted into admitting any wayfarer. As he fumbled the lock, a gust of wind came along, wrenched the door from his hand and swung it open. To close it, he had to step out on the porch, and, when he stepped back into the house, the two little girls were standing within.
They were two poor beggar girls, ragged, dirty, and starvingâ âtwo little tots bent under the burden of their beggarâs packs, which were as large as themselves.
âWho are you that go prowling about at this hour of the night?â said the master gruffly.
The two children did not answer immediately, but first removed their packs. Then they walked up to the man and stretched forth their tiny hands in greeting.
âWe are Anna and Britta Maja from the EngĂ€rd,â said the elder, âand we were going to ask for a nightâs lodging.â
He did not take the outstretched hands and was just about to drive out the beggar children, when a fresh recollection faced him. EngĂ€rdâ âwas not that a little cabin where a poor widow with five children had lived? The widow had owed his father a few hundred kroner and in order to get back his money he had sold her cabin. After that the widow, with her three eldest children, went to Norrland to seek employment, and the two youngest became a charge on the parish.
As he called this to mind he grew bitter. He knew that his father had been severely censured for squeezing out that money, which by right belonged to him.
âWhat are you doing nowadays?â he asked in a cross tone. âDidnât the board of charities take charge of you? Why do you roam around and beg?â
âItâs not our fault,â replied the larger girl. âThe people with whom we are living have sent us out to beg.â
âWell, your packs are filled,â the farmer observed, âso you canât complain. Now youâd better take out some of the food you have with you and eat your fill, for here youâll get no food, as all the women folk are in bed. Later you may lie down in the corner by the hearth, so you wonât have to freeze.â
He waved his hand, as if to ward them off, and his eyes took on a hard look. He was thankful that he had had a father who had been careful of his property. Otherwise, he might perhaps have been forced in childhood to run about and beg, as these children now did.
No sooner had he thought this out to the end than the shrill, mocking voice he had heard once before that evening repeated it, word for word.
He listened, and at once understood that it was nothingâ âonly the wind roaring in the chimney. But the queer thing about it was, when the wind repeated his thoughts, they seemed so strangely stupid and hard and false!
The children meanwhile had stretched themselves, side by side, on the floor. They were not quiet, but lay there muttering.
âDo be still, wonât you?â he growled, for he was in such an irritable mood that he could have beaten them.
But the mumbling continued, and again he called for silence.
âWhen mother went away,â piped a clear little voice, âshe made me promise that every night I would say my evening prayer. I must do this, and Britta Maja too. As soon as we have said âGod who cares for little childrenâ ââ weâll be quiet.â
The master sat quite still while the little ones said their prayers, then he rose and began pacing back and forth, back and forth, wringing his hands all the while, as though he had met with some great sorrow.
âThe horse driven out and wrecked, these two children turned into road beggarsâ âboth fatherâs doings! Perhaps father did not do right after all?â he thought.
He sat down again and buried his head in his hands. Suddenly his lips began to quiver and into his eyes came tears, which he hastily wiped away. Fresh tears came, and he was just as prompt to brush these away; but it was useless, for more followed.
When his mother stepped into the room, he swung his chair quickly and turned his back to her. She must have noticed something unusual, for she stood quietly behind him a long while, as if waiting for him to speak. She realized how difficult it always is for men to talk of the things they feel most deeply. She must help him of course.
From her bedroom she had observed all that had taken place in the living room, so that she did not have to ask questions. She walked very softly over to the two sleeping children, lifted them, and bore them to her own bed. Then she went back to her son.
âLars,â she said, as if she did not see that he was weeping, âyou had better let me keep these children.â
âWhat, mother?â he gasped, trying to smother the sobs.
âI have been suffering for yearsâ âever since father took the cabin from their mother, and so have you.â
âYes, butâ ââ
âI want to keep them here and make something of them; they are too good to beg.â
He could not speak, for now the tears were beyond his control; but he
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