第 39 节
作者:浮游云中      更新:2021-02-20 16:28      字数:9322
  of her sunny home at the river。
  Gloomy as Lage usually was; he had his brighter moments; and people
  noticed that these were most likely to occur when Aasa; his daughter; was
  near。    Lage     was   probably   also   the   only   being    whom   Aasa's      presence
  could cheer; on other people it seemed to have the very opposite effect; for
  Aasa   wasaccording   to   the   testimony   of   those   who   knew   herthe   most
  peculiar creature that ever was born。           But perhaps no one did know her; if
  her father was right; no one really didat least no one but himself。
  Aasa was all to her father; she was his past and she was his future; his
  hope and his life; and withal it must be admitted that those who judged her
  without knowing her had at least in one respect as just an opinion of her as
  he;   for   there   was   no   denying   that   she   was   strange;   very   strange。  She
  spoke when she ought to be silent; and was silent when it was proper to
  speak; wept when she ought to laugh; and laughed when it was proper to
  weep;   but   her   laughter   as   well   as   her   tears;   her   speech   like   her   silence;
  seemed to have their source from within her own soul; to be occasioned;
  as it were; by something which no one else could see or hear。                      It made
  little difference where she was; if the tears came; she yielded to them as if
  they were something she had long desired in vain。                 Few could weep like
  her;   and   〃weep   like Aasa   Kvaerk;〃   was   soon   also   added   to   the   stock   of
  parish proverbs。       And then her laugh!        Tears may be inopportune enough;
  when   they   come   out   of   time;   but   laughter   is   far   worse;   and   when   poor
  Aasa once burst out into a ringing laughter in church; and that while the
  minister   was   pronouncing   the   benediction;   it   was   only   with   the   greatest
  difficulty   that   her   father   could   prevent   the   indignant   congregation   from
  seizing her and carrying her before the sheriff for violation of the church…
  peace。     Had she been poor and homely; then of course nothing could have
  saved her; but she happened to be both rich and beautiful; and to wealth
  and beauty much is pardoned。            Aasa's beauty; however; was also of a very
  unusual      kind;   not   the   tame   sweetness      so  common       in   her  sex;   but
  something   of   the   beauty   of   the   falcon;   when   it   swoops   down   upon   the
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  unwatchful   sparrow   or   soars   round   the   lonely   crags;   something   of   the
  mystic depth of the dark tarn; when with bodeful trembling you gaze down
  into it; and see its weird traditions rise from its depth and hover over the
  pine…tops in the morning fog。           Yet; Aasa was not dark; her hair was as fair
  and yellow as a wheat…field in August; her forehead high and clear; and her
  mouth      and   chin   as  if  cut  with   a  chisel;   only   her   eyes   were    perhaps
  somewhat deeper than is common in the North; and the longer you looked
  at them the deeper they grew; just like the tarn; which; if you stare long
  enough into it; you will find is as deep as the heavens above; that is; whose
  depth only faith and fancy can fathom。               But however long you looked at
  Aasa; you could never be quite sure that she looked at you; she seemed but
  to   half   notice   whatever   went   on   around   her;   the   look   of   her   eye   was
  always   more   than half inward; and   when it   shone the brightest; it   might
  well   happen   that   she   could   not   have   told   you   how   many   years   she   had
  lived; or the name her father gave her in baptism。
  Now Aasa   was   eighteen   years   old;   and   could   knit;   weave;   and   spin;
  and     it  was   full   time   that   wooers     should     come。     〃But     that   is  the
  consequence of living in such an out…of…the…way place;〃 said her mother;
  〃who will risk his limbs to climb that neck…breaking rock? and the round…
  about     way    over   the  forest   is  rather   too  long    for  a  wooer。〃     Besides
  handling the loom and the spinning…wheel; Aasa had also learned to churn
  and make cheese to perfection; and whenever Elsie grieved at her strange
  behavior   she   always   in   the   end   consoled   herself   with   the   reflection   that
  after   all  Aasa    would    make     the  man    who    should    get  her   an   excellent
  housewife。
  The   farm   of   Kvaerk   was   indeed   most   singularly   situated。       About   a
  hundred feet from the house the rough wall of the mountain rose steep and
  threatening;   and   the   most   remarkable   part   of   it   was   that   the   rock   itself
  caved inward and formed a lofty arch overhead; which looked like a huge
  door leading into the mountain。            Some short distance below; the slope of
  the fields ended in an abrupt precipice; far underneath lay the other farm…
  houses of   the   valley;   scattered   like   small   red   or   gray  dots;   and   the   river
  wound onward like a white silver stripe in the shelter of the dusky forest。
  There was a path down along the rock; which a goat or a brisk lad might
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  be induced to climb; if the prize of the experiment were great enough to
  justify   the   hazard。     The   common   road   to   Kvaerk   made   a   large   circuit
  around the forest; and reached the valley far up at its northern end。
  It was difficult to get anything to grow at Kvaerk。                   In the spring all
  the   valley   lay   bare   and   green;   before   the   snow   had   begun   to   think   of
  melting up there; and the night…frost would be sure to make a visit there;
  while the fields along the river lay silently drinking the summer dew。                      On
  such occasions the whole family at Kvaerk would have to stay up during
  all the  night   and   walk   back   and   forth   on   either side of   the  wheat…fields;
  carrying a long rope between them and dragging it slowly over the heads
  of the rye; to prevent the frost from settling; for as long as the ears could
  be kept in motion; they could not freeze。                But what did thrive at Kvaerk
  in spite of both snow and night…frost was legends; and they throve perhaps
  the better   for the   very  sterility  of   its   material soil。     Aasa   of   course   had
  heard them all and   knew them by  heart; they had been her friends   from
  childhood;   and   her   only   companions。           All   the   servants;   however;   also
  knew   them   and   many   others   besides;   and   if   they   were   asked   how   the
  mansion of Kvaerk happened to be built like an eagle's nest on the brink of
  a precipice; they would tell you the following:
  Saint Olaf; Norway's holy king; in the time of his youth had sailed as a
  Viking over the wide ocean; and in foreign lands had learned the doctrine
  of   Christ   the   White。     When   he   came   home   to   claim   the   throne   of   his
  hereditary   kingdom;   he   brought   with   him   tapers   and   black   priests;   and
  commanded the  people  to overthrow  the  altars of   Odin   and Thor   and to
  believe alone in Christ the White。             If any still dared to slaughter a horse
  to the old gods; he cut off their ears; burned their farms; and drove them
  houseless   from   the   smoking   ruins。        Here   in   the   valley   old   Thor;   or;   as
  they called him; Asathor; had always helped us to vengeance and victory;
  and   gentle   Frey   for   many   years   had   given   us   fair   and   fertile   summers。
  Therefore the peasants paid little heed to King Olaf's god; and continued
  to bring their offerings to Odin and Asathor。                This reached the king's ear;
  and he summoned his bishop and five black priests; and set out to visit our
  valley。     Having arrived here; he called the peasants together; stood up on
  the   Ting…stone;   told   them   of   the   great   things   that   the   White   Christ   had
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  done; and bade them choose between him and the old gods。                       Some were
  scared; and received baptism from the king's priests; others bit their lips
  and were silent; others again stood forth and told Saint Olaf that Odin and
  Asathor had always served them well; and that they were not going to give
  them  up   for   Christ   the   White;   whom  they  had   never   seen   and   of   whom
  they knew nothing。          The next night the red cock cr