The Emperor of Portugalia eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 229 pages of information about The Emperor of Portugalia.

The Emperor of Portugalia eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 229 pages of information about The Emperor of Portugalia.

This forced colloquy was becoming intolerable.  It made the son feel all the more uncomfortable.

“I’m going over to the stone farthest out,” he said.  “I see a lot of fish splashing round it.”

By that move he was out of earshot of his father, and there was no further conversation between them for the remainder of the forenoon.  But go where he would, he felt that the dim, lustreless eyes of the old man were following him.  And this time he was actually glad when the guests arrived.

The dinner was served out of doors.  When Ol’ Bengtsa had taken his place at the board he tried to cast off all worry and anxiety.  When acting as host at a party, so much of the Ol’ Bengtsa of bygone days came to the fore it was easy to guess what manner of man he had once been.

No one from Falla was present.  But it was plain that Lars Gunnarson was in every one’s thoughts; which was not surprising since this was the day he had been warned to look out for.  Now of course Ol’ Bengtsa’s son had to listen to further talk about the catechetical meeting at Falla, and he heard more about the pastor’s extraordinary dissertation on the duties of children toward their parents than he cared to hear.  However, he said nothing; but Ol’ Bengtsa must have noticed that he was beginning to be bored, for he turned to him with the remark: 

“What do you say to all this, Nils?  I suppose you’re sitting there thinking to yourself it’s very strange Our Lord hasn’t written a commandment for parents on how they shall treat their children?”

This was wholly unexpected.  The son could feel the blood mounting to his face.  It was as if he had done something dreadful, and been caught at it.

“But my dear father!” he protested, “I’ve never said or thought—­”

“True,” the old man struck in, turning now to his guests.  “I know you will hardly believe what I tell you, but it’s a fact that this son of mine has never spoken an unkind word to me; neither has his wife.”

These remarks were not addressed to any one in particular, nor did any one feel disposed to respond to them.

“They have been put to some pretty hard tests,” Ol’ Bengtsa went on.  “It was a large property they were deprived of.  They could have been landed proprietors by this time if I had only done the right thing.  Yet they have never uttered a word of complaint and every summer they pay me a visit, just to show they are not angry with me.”

The old man’s face looked so dead now, and his voice sounded so hollow!  The son could not tell whether he was trying to come out with something or whether he talked merely for talk’s sake.

“Now it’s altogether different with Lisa,” said Ol’ Bengtsa, pointing at the daughter-in-law with whom he lived.  “She scolds me every day for not holding on to my property.”

The daughter-in-law, not in the least perturbed, retorted with a good-natured laugh:  “And you scold me because I can’t find time to patch all the holes in the boys’ clothes.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Emperor of Portugalia from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.