One of Life's Slaves
ay too. With the exception of one solitary figure, it was black and empty. Outside the door a row of
fter the lawful bank holiday is called "blue Monday";
furious as a Berserk. There were no respectable men and apprentices to be had no
rday. That's how it is: one goes on the spree, and another pinches and is so stingy about his money, that he would willingly lay his soul in the fire for it. The fe
o had entered H?gberg's smithy again t
two men sauntering ove
one's men. He only went up himself and took one of the crowbars out of the forge; and when the two cu
reproaches, and when in silence he flung the crowbar down, and began sharpe
ing up all night, one with a swollen eye, another with a plaster across his nose. Their voices were hoarse, and they
being spoken over the whole smithy. By that time most of the work had be
Day and Midsummer Eve, or it was the general relief at the departure of the master, one man began suddenly to sing, a couple more to yawn and st
e hinge on his probation work than all their Midsummer Eve outings, and
od-stacks and old house-walls that they had burnt, and their d
r rang ab
and seen so many bonfires,[3] both there and on th
on Midsummer Eve to burn large bonfires,
a fellow
er went
flowed down the hill as good as free. Veyergang's son had given the girls at the factory an old boat from Maridal Lake
er rang
stood, anxious and uncertain, listening, and now and again g
off the soot, a
ning pint of milk, when at the gate she met Nikolai. He said he had se
lai!" she said, holding out the can by the handle towa
Grefsen
ow; tell me, ho
ere. But I can't understand how yo
er night. She went to eat St. John's porridge with aunt out at Asker, and I was to stay at home, and iron; but at nine o'clock, I said good-bye and went my way. Oh Nikolai!"-she cl
ave it
t, Nikolai, you won't tell. It was
dee
w, Nikolai, that it was no less a person than young Veyergang! There was a Midsummer party
eated them to p
'Her with the bla
s spoken to yo
ll that my name is Silla. I meet hi
he were bringing down a hamm
ckoned a krone too much in the pass-book, he
d this with something that was meant for laughter. "The cook is v
grown so pretty and elegant, and almost taller since he had seen
expression was one of
see round you! How many of them, I should like to know, will ever come to be the wife of an honest working-man? They manage to dance a few times, and then it's all o
ing of, Nikolai? Do
y the whole month at my probation work, and then let you go up there among that
this tone, downcast and dispirited, her slender f
go wrong, it would have been still easier for you to be twisted by them, for I was strong, you see; but you were weak, and had always to creep like a cat among lies and difficulties. And so-so-I thought
trength of his square-set figure, while he waited for her answer. He gazed at her bent
hen-then it might be that you could get away from the factory dirt and the ordering at home both at once, and be a real smith's wife, Silla. You've never had any one to take care of you as I've done, you know; a
p of your pretty little black head at the room door! In spite of having always been treated like a dog, and worse than that-like a thief, it would all be nothing at all, if that was
been better left unsaid; for, from standing melted and overcome, w
who has never danced, a regular queer bird, that's first been kept in a cage by her mother, and then by--" her voice quiver
f me?-of
me and want to help her, Nikolai. That's right! That's right! Only keep me in! Oh yes, you and m
ry bitterly in
g. You've got some one else to comfort y
up to him, and laid her arm
she said, looking full and ardently into his eyes;
, Silla, you shall
hard every time I've been an errand, and I've always been gone so long. But when I sit darning and patching of an evening, I som
me. She'll have to give in like smoke, if I come on
ew budding leaves, and the sun glittered on the windows here and there? Was he intoxicated, or was it the evening that had taken an extra Midsummer carous
ot at all so unreasonable, even if the lock did sometimes get out of order; and
ou get inside, and so there must be police and ma
thing was rose-colour. The fact that he and the world were becoming reconciled showed in shining characters over
tance in the case was that he never dared make Silla a present of anything, neither handkerchiefs nor anyt
uring part of the town. He carried his hammer and pincers, and an iron plate or a lock in his hand; he must look as if
e cluster of houses where Silla walked several times a day. But what he found more difficult to put up with was, that on those occasions when he was fortunate, she was wa
e was neither old enough nor wise enough to understand what she was getting mixed up in, and what a fine gentleman meant who nod
st come ou
one week's earnings to another, until he had mad
forgot himself in thoughts abou