胡適有此書Short story classics: 【短篇小說匯刻】。在 Irene Holm By Hermann Joachim Bang寫:五年正月八日讀此喜之。又題"此乃佳作,頗似白香山【琵琶行】而遠勝之。十二日。" Vol.2
Short story classics : (foreign)
作者: | William Patten |
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出版商: | New York : Collier, ©1907. |
Internet Archive
https://archive.org/details/shortstoryclassi01pattrich
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IRENE HOLM BY HERMANN BANG ONE Sunday morning, after service, the bail- iff's son announced to the gathering at the meeting-stone outside the church that Miss Irene Holm, dancer from the Royal Theatre in Copen- hagen, would open a course for dancing and deport- ment, for children, ladies, and gentlemen, if a suffi- cient number of subscribers could be found. The lessons would begin the first of November, in the inn, and the price would be five crowns for each child, with a discount for several in the same family. Seven names were signed. Jens Larsens put up his three on the discount. Miss Irene Holm considered the number sufficient. She arrived toward the end of October, and stopped in at the Inn with her only baggage, an old champagne basket tied up with a cord. She was little and wearily meagre in form, had a childish face with the lines of forty years in it under her fur cap, and she wore old handkerchiefs wrapped about her wrists, because of the gout. She pronounced all the consonants most care- fully, and said, "Oh, thank you, I can do it myself," for everything, looking very helpless the while. She wanted nothing but a cup of tea, and then crept into her bed in the tiny room, trembling in fear of ghosts. Translated by Grace Isabel Colbron. Copyright, 1907, by P. F. Collier & Son. (619) 620 HERMANN BANG Next morning she appeared with a head full of curls, her figure encased in a tight-fitting, fur-trimmed coat, much the worse for wear. She was going to call upon the parents of her pupils. She inquired the way timidly. Madam Henriksen came out to the door with her, and pointed over the fields. At every step Miss Holm bowed once in her gratitude. "Such a looking creature!" thought Madam Henriksen, and stood in the doorway looking out after her. Miss Holm walked toward Jens Larsens', choosing the dike path to save her shoes. Miss Holm was wearing leather shoes and fancy knit stockings. When she had visited all the parents Jens Larsens gave nine crowns for his three children Miss Holm looked about for a place to live. She hired a tiny whitewashed room at the smith's, the window looking out over the level fields. The entire furnishing con- sisted of a bed, a bureau, and a chair. The cham- pagne basket was placed between the bureau and the window. Miss Holm moved into her new quarters. Her mornings were given up to busy handling of curling tongs and pins, and much drinking of cold tea. When her hair was dressed she tidied up her room, and then she knitted all the afternoon. She sat on her basket in the corner, trying to catch the last rays of light. The smith's wife would drop in, sit down on the chair and talk, Miss Holm listening with a pleasant smile and a graceful nod of her curly head. The hostess spun out her stories until it was time for supper. But Miss Holm seldom knew what shs IRENE HOLM 621 had been talking about. With the exception of dance, and positions, and the calculation for one's daily bread a tiresome, never-ending calculation the things of this world seldom filtered into Miss Holm's brain. When left alone she sat silent on her basket, her hands in her lap, gazing at the narrow strip of light that came in under the door. She never went out. The level, dreary fields made her homesick, and she was afraid of wild horses. When evening came, she cooked her simple supper, and then busied herself with her curl papers. When she had divested herself of her skirts she practised her "pas" beside the bedpost, stretching her legs energet- ically. The smith and his wife clung to the keyhole during this proceeding. They could just see the high kicks from behind, and the curl papers standing up on the dancer's head like quills on a porcupine. She danced so eagerly that she began to hum gently as she hopped up and down in the little room, the whole family outside hugging the keyhole closely. When Miss Holm had practised her accustomed time, she crept into bed. While she practised her thoughts would wander back to the time "when she was at dancing school." And she would suddenly laugh, a gentle, girlish laugh, as she lay still in the darkness. She fell asleep thinking of that time that happy, merry time the rehearsals, when they pricked each other in the calves with pins and screamed so merrily And then the evenings in the dressing- rooms, with the whir and tumult of voices, and the HERMANN BANG silence as the stage-manager's bell shrilled out Miss Holm would wake up in a fright, dreaming that she had missed her entrance. II "Now, then one two" Miss Irene Holm raised her skirt and put out her foot "feet out one two three " The seven pupils toed in, and hopped about with their fingers in their mouths. "Here, lit- tle Jens toes out one, two, three bow one, two, three now once more." Jens bowed, his tongue hanging out of his mouth. "Now, Maren, left one, two, three; Maren turns to the right once more one, two, three " Miss Holm sprang about like a kid, so that one could see long stretches of fancy stockings. The dancing lessons were in full swing, and were held three times a week in the hall of the inn, under the two old lamps that hung from the beams. The long, undisturbed dust in the cold room whirled up under their feet The seven pupils flew about wildly like a flock of magpies, Miss Holm straightening their backs and bending their arms. "One, two, three battement one, two, three battement." The seven bobbed at "battement" and stepped out energetically. The dust gathered in Miss Holm's throat as she called out her orders. Now the pupils were to dance a round dance in couples. They held their partners at arm's length, stiff-armed and embarrassed, and turned in sleepy circles. Miss Holm swung them around, with encouraging words. "Good now around four, five turn again good " She took IRENE HOLM 623 hold of Jens Larsen's second, and little Jette, and turned them as one would turn a top. Jette's mother had come to look on. The peasant women would drop in for the lessons, their cap-bands tied in stiff bows, and sit motionless as wooden figures against the wall, without speaking a word even to each other. Miss Holm addressed them as "Madame/* and smiled at them as she skipped about. Now it was the turn of the lanciers. "Ladies to the right good now three steps to the left, Jette good " The lanciers was more like a general skir- mish than a dance. Miss Holm groaned from her exertions. She leaned against the wall, her temples beating with hammer- strokes. "Good this way, Jette" The dust hurt her eyes, as the seven hopped about in the dusk. When Miss Holm came home after her dancing les- sons, she wrapped her head up in a handkerchief. But in spite of this, she suffered from an everlasting cold, and sat, most of her leisure hours, with her head over a bowl of hot water. Finally, they had music for their lessons Mr. Broderson's violin. Two new pupils, a couple of half- grown young people, joined the class. They all hopped about to the tune of tailor Broderson's fiddle, as the dust flew up in clouds, and the old stove seemed to dance on its rough carved feet. They had spectators, too, and once the young people from the rectory, the pastor's daughter and the curate, came to look on. Miss Holm danced out more ener- getically under the two dim lamps, threw out her 624 HERMANN BANG chest, and arched her feet. "Throw out your feet like this, children throw out your feet " She threw out her feet proudly and raised the hem of her skirt now she had an audience ! Every week Miss Holm sent a package of knitting to Copenhagen. The teacher took charge of the pack- age. Each time it was clumsily wrapped or addressed wrong, and he had to put it to rights himself. She stood watching him with her girlish nod and the smile of faded sixteen. The newspapers that had come by the mail lay ready for distribution on one of the school-tables. One day Miss Holm asked timidly if she might look at the "Berlinske." She had gazed long- ingly at the bundle for a week before she could pluck up courage enough to proffer her request. After that she came every day, in the noon pause. The school- teacher soon came to recognize her timid knock. "Come in, little lady, the door is open/' he would call. She tripped across the schoolroom and took her chosen paper from the bundle. She read the theatrical advertisements, the repertoire, and the criticisms, of which she understood but little. But it was about "those over there." She needed a lengthy time to go the length of a column, following the words with one gracefully pointed finger. When she had finished reading she crossed the hall and knocked once more at the other door. "Well?" said the teacher. "Any- thing new happened in the city ?" "It's only about those over there the old friends " she would answer. IRENE HOLM <J26 The schoolteacher looked after her, as she wan- dered home to her knitting. "Poor little creature!" he sighed. "She's really quite excited about her dancing master " It was the news of a new ballet, by a lately promoted master of the ballet, that had so excited her. Miss Holm knew the list of names by heart, and knew the names of every solo dance. "We went to school together,'* she would say. And on the evening when the ballet was performed for the first time she fevered with excitement, as if she were to dance in it herself. She lit the two candles, gray with age and dust, that stood one on each side of a plaster cast of Thorwaldsen's Christ on the bureau, and sat down on her champagne basket, star- ing into the light. But she couldn't bear to be alone that evening. All the old unrest of theatrical life came over her. She went into the room where the smith and his wife were, and sat down beside the tall clock. She talked more during the next hour than she had talked for a whole year. She talked about the theatre and about first nights; she talked about the big "solos" and the famous "pas." She hummed and she swayed in her chair while she talked. The novelty of it all so excited the smith that he began to sing an old cavalry song, and finally called out : "Mother, shan't we have a punch to-night ?" The punch was brewed, the two candles brought out from the little room, and they sat there and chatted merrily. But in the midst of all the gaiety, Miss Holm grew suddenly silent, and sat still, great tears welling up in her eyes. Then she rose quietly and 626 HERMANN BANG went to her room. In there she sat down on her basket and wept quietly and bitterly, before she un- dressed and went to bed. She did not practise her steps that evening. She could think of but one thing. He had gone to school with her. She lay sobbing gently in the darkness. Her head moved uneasily on the pillow as the remembered voice of the old dancing master of the school rang in her ears, cross and excited : "Holm has no elan Holm has no elan " He cried it out for all the hall to hear. How plainly she could hear it now how plainly she could see the great bare hall the long rows of figurantes practising their steps she herself leaning for a moment against the wall with the feel- ing as if her tired limbs had been cut off from her body altogether and then the voice of the dancing master: "Haven't you any ambition, Holm?" Then she saw her little home, her mother shrunken down into the great armchair, her sister bending over the rattling sewing-machine. And she heard her mother ask, in her asthmatic voice: "Didn't Anna Stein dance a solo?" "Yes, mother." "Did they give her 'la grande Napolitaine' ?" "Yes, mother." "You both entered the school at the same time," she asked, looking over at her from behind the lamp. "Yes, mother." And she saw Anna Stein in her gay-colored skirts, with the fluttering ribbons on her tambourine, so happy and smiling in the glare of the footlights as she danced her solo. And suddenly the little woman in the darkness buried her head in her pillow and sobbed convulsive, IRENE HOLM 617 heart-breaking, unchecked sobs of impotent and de- spairing grief. It was dawn before she fell asleep. The new ballet was a success. Miss Holm read the notices, and two little, old woman's tears fell softly down upon the printed page as she read. Letters came now and then from her sisters, letters about pawn-tickets and dire need. The days such let- ters came Miss Holm would forget her knitting and sit with her hands pressed to her temples, the open letter lying before her. Finally, one day, she made the round of the homes of her pupils, and begged shyly, with painful blushes, for the advance of half her money. This she sent home to her family. So the days passed. Miss Irene Holm went back and forth to her dancing lessons. More pupils came to her, a half -score young peasants formed an evening class that met three times a week in Peter Madsen's big room on the edge of the woods. Miss Holm walked the half mile in the darkness, timid as a hare, pursued by all the old ghost stories of the ballet school. At one place she had to pass a pond deeply fringed with willows. She would stare up at the trees that stretched their great arms weirdly in the blackness, her heart hanging dead as a stone in her breast. They danced three hours each evening. Miss Holm called out, commanded, skipped here and there, and danced with the gentlemen pupils until two deep red spots appeared on her withered cheeks. Then it was time to go home. A boy would open the gate for her, and hold up a lantern to start her on the way. She 628 HERMANN BANG heard His "Good night" behind her and then the locking of the gate, as it rasped over the rough stone pavement. Along the first stretch of the path was a hedge of bushes that bent over at her and nodded their heads. It was nearly spring when Miss Holm's course of lessons came to an end. The company at Peter Mad- sen's decided to finish off with a ball at the inn. Ill It was quite an affair, this ball, with a transparency, "Welcome," over the door, and a cold supper at two crowns a plate, with the pastor's daughter and the curate to grace the table. Miss Holm wore a barege gown much betrimmed, and Roman bands around her head. Her fingers were full of keepsake rings from her ballet-school friends. Between the dances she sprinkled lavender water about the floor, and threatened the "ladies" with the bottle. Miss Holm never felt so young again on any such festive occasion. The ball began with a quadrille. The parents of the pupils and other older people stood around the walls, each looking after his own young ones with secret pride. The young dancers walked through the quadrille with faces set as masks, placing their feet as carefully as if they were walking on peas. Miss Holm was all encouraging smiles and nods as she murmured her French commands. The music was furnished by Mr. Broderson and his son, the latter, maltreating the piano kindly lent for the occasion by the pastor. IRENE HOLM 629 Then the round dances began, and the tone grew more free and easy. The elder men discovered the punch bowl in the next room, and the gentlemen pupils danced in turn with Miss Holm. She danced with' her head on one side, raising herself on her toes, and smiling with her faded grace of sixteen years. After a while the other couples stopped dancing to watcli Miss Holm and her partner. The men came out of the other room, stood in the doorway, and murmured admiration as Miss Holm passed, raising her feet a little higher under her skirt, and rocking gracefully in the hips. The pastor's daughter was so amused that she pinched the curate's arm repeatedly. After the mazurka, the schoolteacher cried out, "Bravo t" and they all clapped hands. Miss Holm bowed the elegant ballet courtesy, laying two fingers on her heart When supper-time came, she arranged a polonaise and made them all join in. The women giggled and nudged each other in their embarrassment, and the men said: "Well let's get in line " One couple began a march song, beating time with their feet Miss Holm sat next the schoolteacher, in the place of honor under the bust of his Majesty the King. They all grew solemn again at the table, and Miss Holm was almost the only one who conversed. She spoke in the high-pitched tone of the actors in the modern society dramas of Scribe. After a while the company became more jovial, the men began to laugh and drink toasts, touching glasses across the table. Things were very lively at the end of the table where the young people sat, and it was not easy to obtain 630 HERMANN BANG quiet for the schoolmaster, who rose to make a speech. He spoke at some length, mentioning Miss Holm and the nine Muses, and ending up with a toast to "The Priestess of Art, Miss Irene Holm!" All joined in the cheers, and everybody came up to touch glasses with Miss Holm. Miss Holm had understood very little of the long speech, but she felt greatly flattered. She rose and bowed to the company, her glass held high in her curved arm. Her face-powder, put on for the festive occasion, had quite disappeared in the heat and exer- tion, and two deep red spots shone on her cheeks. The fun waxed fast and furious. The young people began to sing, the old men drank a glass or two extra on the sly, and stood up from their places to hit each other on the shoulder, amid shouts of laughter. The women threw anxious glances at the sinners, fearing they might indulge too deeply. Amid all the noise Miss Holm's laugh rang out, a girlish laugh, bright and merry as thirty years before in the ballet school. Then the schoolmaster said that Miss Holm ought to dance. "But I have danced." Yes, but she should dance for them a solo that would be fine. Miss Holm understood at once and a great desire grew up in her heart she was to dance a solo ! But she pretended to laugh, and smiling up at Peter Mad- sen's wife, she said : 'The gentleman says I ought to dance," as if it were the most absurd thing in the world. Several heard it, and they all called out in answer, "Yes, yes, do dance." IRENE HOLM 631 Miss Holm blushed to the roots of her hair, and said that she thought the fun was getting just a little too outspoken. "And, besides, there was no music; and one couldn't dance in long skirts." A man some- where in the background called out : "You can lift them up, can't you?" The guests all laughed at this, and began to renew their entreaties. "Well, yes, if the young lady from the rectory will play for me? a tarantella." They surrounded the pastor's daughter, and she consented to lend her ser- vices. The schoolmaster rose and beat on his glass: "Ladies and gentlemen," he announced, "Miss Holm will do us the honor to perform a solo dance for us." The guests cheered, and the last diners arose from the table. The curate's arm was black and blue where the young lady from the rectory had pinched him. Miss Holm and the pastor's daughter went to the piano to try the music. Miss Holm was feverish with excitement, and tripped back and forth, trying the muscles of her feet. She pointed to the humps and bumps in the floor: "I'm not quite used to dancing in a circus." Then again: "Well, the fun can begin now ;" her voice was hoarse with emotion. "I'll come in after the first ten bars/' she said to the pianist; "I'll give you a sign when to begin." Then she went out into a little neighboring room and waited there. The audience filed in and stood around in a circle, whis- pering and very curious. The schoolmaster brought the lights from the table, and stood them up in the windows. It was quite an illumination. Then there came a light knock at the door of the little room. 632 HERMANN BANG The rector's daughter began to play, and the guests looked eagerly at the closed door. At the tenth bar of the music it opened, and they all clapped loudly. Miss Holm danced out, her skirt caught up with a Roman scarf. It was to be "la grande Napolitaine." She danced on toetips, she twisted and turned. The audience gazed, dumfounded, in admiration at the little feet that moved up and down as rapidly as a couple of drumsticks. They cheered and clapped wildly as she stood on one leg for a moment. She called out "Quicker," and began to sway again. She smiled and nodded and waved her arms. There was more and more motion of the body from the waist up, more gestures with the arms; the dance became more and more mimic. She could no longer see the faces of her audience; she opened her mouth, smiling so that all her teeth, a few very bad teeth, could be seen; she began to act in pantomime; she felt and knew only that she was dancing a solo at last a solo, the solo for which she had waited so long. It was no longer the "grande Napolitaine." It was Fenella who knelt, Fenella who implored, Fenella who suffered, the beautiful, tragic Fenella. She hardly knew how she had risen from the floor, or how she had come from the room. She heard only the sudden ceasing of the music, and the laughter the terrible laughter, the laughter she heard and the laughter she saw on all these faces, to which she had suddenly become alive again. She had risen from her knees, raised her arms me- chanically, from force of habit, and bowed amid shout- IRENE HOLM 638 ing. In there, in the little room, she stood, support- ing herself on the edge of the table. It was all so dark around and in her so empty. She loosened the scarf from her gown with strangely stiff hands, smoothed her skirts, and went back again to the room where the audience were now clapping politely. She bowed her thanks, standing by the piano, but she did not raise her eyes. The others began to dance again, eager to resume the fun. Miss Holm went about among them, saying farewell. Her pupils pressed the paper packages containing their money into her hands. Peter Madsen's wife helped her into her cloak, and at the door she was met by the pastor's daughter and the curate, ready to accompany her home. They walked along in silence. The young lady from the rectory was very unhappy about the evening's oc- currence, and wanted to excuse it somehow, but didn't know what to say. The little dancer walked along at her side, pale and quiet. Finally the curate, embarrassed at the silence, re- marked hesitatingly: "You see, miss these people they don't understand tragic art." Miss Holm did not answer. When they came to her door she bowed and gave them her hand in silence. The rector's daughter caught her in her arms and kissed her. "Good night, good night/' she said, her voice trem- bling. Then she waited outside with the curate until they saw a light in the little dancer's room. Miss Holm took off her barege gown and folded it carefully. She unwrapped the money from the 634 IRENE HOLM paper parcels, counted it, and sewed it into a little pocket in her bodice. She handled the needle awk- wardly, sitting bowed over the tiny light. The next morning her champagne basket was lifted onto a wagon of the country post. It rained, and Miss Holm huddled down under a broken umbrella. She drew her legs up under her, and sat on her bas- ket like a Turk. When it was time to leave, the driver ran alongside. The young lady from the rec- tory came running up bareheaded. She had a white basket in her hands, and said she had brought "just a little food for the journey." She bent down under the umbrella, caught Miss Holm's head in her hands, and kissed her twice. The old dancer broke into sobs, and grasping the young girl's hand, she kissed it violently. The rector's daughter stood and looked for a long time after the old umbrella swaying on top of the little cart. Miss Irene Holm had announced a "spring course in modern society dances" in a little town nearby. Six pupils were promised. It was thither she was going now- to continue the thing we call Life.
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内容: | v. 1. Russian. The queen of spades / Alexander Sergeievitch Poushkin -- The cloak / Nikolai Vasilievitch Gogol -- The rendezvous / Ivan Turgenev -- The counting-house / Ivan Turgenev -- The thief / Feodor Mikailovitch Dostoievski -- The long exile / Count Leo Nikolaievitch Tolstoi -- Easter night / Vladimir Galaktionovitch Korolenko -- The signal / Vsevolod Mikailovitch Garshin -- The curse of fame / Ignatiy Nikolaievitch Potapenko -- A work of art ; The slanderer / Anton Pavlovitch Chekhov -- Faust / Eugene Nikolaievitch Chirikov -- The duel / Nikolai Dmitrievitch Teleshov -- Boless / Alexei Maximovitch Pyeshkov -- The love of a scene-painter / Skitalitz -- Valia / Leonid Andreiev. v. 2. Italian. The lost letter / Enrico Castelnuovo -- Cavalleria rusticana / Giovanni Verga -- The silver crucifix / Antonio Fogazzaro -- The little Sardinian drummer / Edmondo de Amicis -- Lulu's triumph / Matilda Serao -- The end of Candia / Gabriele d'Annunzio -- Signora Speranza / Luigi Pirandello -- Two men and a woman / Grazia Deledda ; Scandinavian. Railroad and churchyard / Björnstjerne Björnson -- Björn Sivertsen's wedding trip / Holger Drachmann -- Jalo the trotter / Johann Jacob Ahrenberg -- The plague at Bergamo / Jens Peter Jacobsen -- Karen / Alexander Lange Kielland -- Love and bread / Jean August Strindberg -- Irene Holm / Hermann Joachim Bang --pp.619-36 The outlaws / Selma Lagerlöf. v. 3. German. The broken cup / Johann Heinrich Daniel Zschokke -- Castle Neideck / Wilhelm Heinrich von Riehl -- The young girl of Treppi / Paul Johann Ludwig Heyse -- The stonebreakers / Ferdinand von Saar -- Thou shalt not kill / Leopold von Sacher-Masoch -- The fountain of youth / Rudolf Baumbach -- Good blood / Ernst von Wildenbruch -- Deliverance / Max Simon Nordau -- A New-Year's Eve confession / Hermann Sudermann -- Bric-a-brac and destinies / Gabriele Reuter -- The fur coat / Ludwig Fulda -- The dead are silent / Arthur Schnitzler -- Margret's pilgrimage / Clara Viebig. v. 4. French I. The unknown masterpiece / Honoré de Balzac -- The price of a life / Augustin Eugène Scribe -- Napoleon and Pope Pius VII / Alfred Victor, Comte de Vigny -- Claude Gueux / Victor Marie Hugo -- A bal masqué / Alexandre Davy de la Pailleterie Dumas -- How the redoubt was taken / Prosper Mérimée -- The Vendean marriage / Jules Gabriel Janin -- The marquise / George Sand -- The beauty-spot / Alfred Louis Charles de Musset -- The mummy's foot / Théophile Gautier -- Circé / Octave Feuillet -- The hanging at La Piroche / Alexandre Dumas, fils -- The dean's watch / Erckmann-Chatrian -- At the Pailais de Justice / Alphonse Daudet -- Boum-boum / Jules Claretie. v. 5. French II. La bretonne / André Theuriet -- Which was the madman? / Edmond About -- The grand marriage / Ludovic Halévy -- The accursed house / Émile Gaboriau -- The fête at Coqueville / Émile Zola -- The lost child / Franc̜ois Coppée -- Putois / Anatole France -- Sac-au-dos / Joris Karl Huysmans -- Bonjour, monsieur / Jean Richepin -- The bit of string ; The necklace / Guy de Maupassant -- The wall opposite / Pierre Loti -- The ancestor / Paul Bourget -- When he was a little boy / Henri Lavedan -- A gentleman finds a watch / Georges Courteline -- A young girl's diary / Marcel Prévost -- The sign of the key and the cross / Henri de Régnier -- The telegraph operator / Alphonse Allais. |
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責任: | edited by William Patten. |
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