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Thrond
by
“Now I must play,” thought Thrond, and tried to do so.
But what was this? The fiddle had no longer any sound in it. There must be some defect in the strings; he examined, but could find none.
“Then it must be because I do not press on hard enough,” and he drew his bow with a firmer hand; but the fiddle seemed as if it were cracked.
He changed the tune that was meant to represent the church into another, but with equally bad results; no music was produced, only squeaking and wailing. He felt the cold sweat start out over his face; he thought of all these wise people who were standing here and perhaps laughing him to scorn, this boy who at home could play so beautifully, but who here failed to bring out a single tone!
“Thank God that mother is not here to see my shame!” said he softly to himself, as he played among the people; but lo! there she stood, in her black dress, and she shrank farther and farther away.
At that moment he beheld far up on the spire the black-haired man who had given him the fiddle. “Give it back to me,” he now shouted, laughing, and stretching out his arms, and the spire went up and down with him, up and down. But the boy took the fiddle under one arm, screaming, “You shall not have it!” and, turning, ran away from the people, beyond the houses, onward through meadow and field, until his strength forsook him, and then sank to the ground.
There he lay for a long time, with his face toward the earth, and when finally he looked round he saw and heard only God’s infinite blue sky that floated above him, with its everlasting sough. This was so terrible to him that he had to turn his face to the ground again. When he raised his head once more his eyes fell on his fiddle, which lay at his side.
“This is all your fault!” shouted the boy, and seized the instrument with the intention of dashing it to pieces, but hesitated as he looked at it.
“We have had many a happy hour together,” said he, then paused. Presently he said, “The strings must be severed, for they are worthless.” And he took out a knife and cut. “Oh!” cried the E string, in a short, pained tone. The boy cut. “Oh!” wailed the next, but the boy cut. “Oh!” said the third, mournfully; and he paused at the fourth. A sharp pain seized him; that fourth string, to which he never dared give a name, he did not cut. Now a feeling came over him that it was not the fault of the strings that he was unable to play, and just then he saw his mother walking slowly up the slope toward where he was lying, that she might take him home with her. A greater fright than ever overcame him; he held the fiddle by the severed strings, sprang to his feet, and shouted down to her,–
“No, mother! I will not go home again until I can play what I have seen to-day.”
Contributed by An Oriental Traveller.
“A great, long devil of a Spahi in his red burnous.”
Daudet.