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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14128 ***
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 14128-h.htm or 14128-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/1/2/14128/14128-h/14128-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/1/2/14128/14128-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+TONI, THE LITTLE WOOD-CARVER
+
+by
+
+JOHANNA SPYRI
+
+Author of _Heidi_
+
+Translated by Helen B. Dole
+
+1920
+
+New York
+Thomas Y. Crowell Company
+Publishers
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Toni the Little Woodcarver.]
+
+
+
+
+ +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | JOHANNA SPYRI'S ALPINE STORIES |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | GRITLI'S CHILDREN. Complete Edition. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | HEIDI. Complete Edition. Translated by HELENE S. WHITE. 16 full-page |
+ | illustrations in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | LITTLE ALPINE MUSICIAN. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in |
+ | color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | RICO AND WISELI. Complete Edition. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | UNCLE TITUS. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | VERONICA. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | JO, THE LITTLE MACHINIST. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated |
+ | in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | LITTLE CURLY HEAD. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color |
+ | 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | LITTLE MISS GRASSHOPPER. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in |
+ | color by CHARLES COPELAND. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | MONI, THE GOAT BOY. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in |
+ | color by CHARLES COPELAND. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | TRINI, THE LITTLE STRAWBERRY GIRL. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | TONI, THE LITTLE WOOD CARVER. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | TISS, A LITTLE ALPINE WAIF. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated |
+ | in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | THE ROSE CHILD. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color. |
+ | 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | WHAT SAMI SINGS WITH THE BIRDS. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: In front of him next to the wall, stood a glass case.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+AT HOME IN THE LITTLE STONE HUT
+
+A HARD SENTENCE
+
+UP IN THE MOUNTAINS
+
+IN THE SANITARIUM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIRST
+
+AT HOME IN THE LITTLE STONE HUT
+
+
+High up in the Bernese Oberland, quite a distance above the
+meadow-encircled hamlet of Kandergrund, stands a little lonely hut, under
+the shadow of an old fir-tree. Not far away rushes down from the wooded
+heights of rock the Wild brook, which in times of heavy rains, has carried
+away so many rocks and bowlders that when the storms are ended a ragged
+mass of stones is left, through which flows a swift, clear stream of
+water. Therefore the little dwelling near by this brook is called the
+stone hut.
+
+Here lived the honest day-laborer Toni, who conducted himself well in
+every farm-house, where he went to work, for he was quiet and
+industrious, punctual at his tasks, and reliable in every way.
+
+In his hut at home he had a young wife and a little boy, who was a joy to
+both of them. Near the hut in the little shed was the goat, the milk of
+which supplied food for the mother and child, while the father received
+his board through the week on the farms where he worked from morning until
+night. Only on Sunday was he at home with his wife and little Toni. The
+wife Elsbeth, kept her little house in good order; it was narrow and tiny,
+but it always looked so clean and cheerful that every one liked to come
+into the sunny room, and the father, Toni, was never so happy as when he
+was at home in the stone hut with his little boy on his knee.
+
+For five years the family lived in harmony and undisturbed peace. Although
+they had no abundance and little worldly goods, they were happy and
+content. The husband earned enough, so they did not suffer want, and they
+desired nothing beyond their simple manner of life, for they loved each
+other and their greatest delight was little Toni.
+
+The little boy grew strong and healthy and with his merry ways delighted
+his father's heart, when he remained at home on Sundays, and sweetened all
+his mother's work on week-days, when his father was away until late in the
+evening.
+
+Little Toni was now four years old and already knew how to be helpful in
+all sorts of small ways, in the house and the goat's shed and also in the
+field behind the hut. From morning until night he tripped happily behind
+his mother for he was as content as the little birds up in the old
+fir-tree.
+
+When Saturday night came the mother scrubbed and cleaned with doubled
+energy, to finish early, for on that day the father was through his work
+earlier than other days, and she always went with little Toni by the hand,
+part way to meet him. This was a great delight to the child. He now knew
+very well how one task followed another in the household. When his mother
+began to scrub, he jumped around in the room, with delight and cried out
+again and again: "Now we are going for Father! Now we are going for
+Father!" until the moment came when his mother took him by the hand and
+started along.
+
+Saturday evening had come again in the lovely month of May. Outdoors the
+birds in the trees were singing merrily up to the blue sky; indoors the
+mother was cleaning busily, in order to get out early into the golden
+evening, and meanwhile now outside, now in the house, little Toni was
+hopping around and shouting:
+
+"Now we are going for Father!"
+
+It was not long before the work was finished. The mother put on her shawl,
+tied on her best apron and stepped out of the house.
+
+Toni jumped for joy and ran three times around his mother, then seized her
+hand and shouted once more:
+
+"Now we are going for Father!"
+
+Then he tripped along beside his mother in the lovely, sunny evening.
+They wandered to the Wild brook, over the wooden bridge, which crosses it,
+and came to the narrow foot-path, winding up through the flower-laden
+meadows to the farm where the father worked.
+
+The last rays of the setting sun fell across the meadows and the sound of
+the evening bells came up from Kandergrund.
+
+The mother stood still and folded her hands.
+
+"Lay your hands together Toneli," she said, "it is the Angelus."
+
+The child obeyed.
+
+"What must I pray, Mother?" he asked.
+
+"Give us and all tired people a blessed Sunday! Amen!" said the mother
+devoutly.
+
+Toneli repeated the prayer. Suddenly he screamed: "Father is coming!"
+
+Down from the farm some one was running as fast as he could come.
+
+"That is not Father," said his mother, and both went towards the running
+man. When they met, the man stood still and said, gasping:
+
+"Don't go any farther, turn around, Elsbeth. I came straight to you, for
+something has happened."
+
+"Oh, my God!" cried the woman in the greatest anguish, "has something
+happened to Toni?"
+
+"Yes, he was with the wood-cutters, and then he was struck. They have
+brought him back; he is lying up at the farm-but don't go up there," he
+added, holding Elsbeth fast, for she wanted to start off as soon as she
+heard the news.
+
+"Not go up?" she said quickly. "I must go to him; I must help him and see
+about bringing him home."
+
+"You cannot help him, he is--he is already dead," said the messenger in an
+unsteady voice. Then he turned and ran back again, glad to have the
+message off his mind.
+
+Elsbeth threw herself down on a stone by the way, unable to stand or to
+walk. She held her apron before her face and burst into weeping and
+sobbing, so that Toneli was distressed and frightened. He pressed close
+to his mother and began to cry too.
+
+It was already dark, when Elsbeth finally came to herself and could think
+of her child. The little one was still sitting beside her on the ground,
+with both hands pressed to his eyes, and sobbing pitifully. His mother
+lifted him up.
+
+"Come, Toneli, we must go home; it is late," she said, taking him by the
+hand.
+
+But he resisted.
+
+"No, no, we must wait for Father!" he said and pulled his mother back.
+
+Again she could not keep back the tears. "Oh, Toneli, Father will come no
+more," she said, stifling her sobs; "he is already enjoying the blessed
+Sunday, we prayed for, for the weary. See, the dear Lord has taken him to
+Heaven; it is so beautiful there, he will prefer to stay there."
+
+"Then we will go too," replied Toneli, starting
+
+"Yes, yes, we shall go there too," promised his mother, "but now we must
+first go home to the stone hut," and without a word she went with the
+little one back to the silent cottage.
+
+The proprietor of the Matten farm sent word to Elsbeth the following day
+that he would do everything necessary for her husband, and so she need not
+come until it was time for the service, for she would not recognize her
+husband. He sent her some money in order that she would not have too much
+care in the next few days, and promised to think of her later on.
+
+Elsbeth did as he advised and remained at home until the bells in
+Kandergrund rang for the service. Then she went to accompany her husband
+to his resting place.
+
+Sad and hard days came for Elsbeth. She missed her good, kind husband
+everywhere, and felt quite lost without him. Besides, cares came now which
+she had known little about before, for her husband had had his good, daily
+work. But now she felt sometimes as if she would almost despair. She had
+nothing but her goat and the little potato field behind the cottage, and
+from these she had to feed and clothe herself and the little one, and
+besides furnish rent for the little house.
+
+Elsbeth had only one consolation, but one that always supported her when
+pain and care oppressed her; she could pray, and although often in the
+midst of tears, still always with the firm belief that the dear Lord would
+hear her supplication.
+
+When at night she had put little Toni in his tiny bed she would kneel down
+beside him and repeat aloud the old hymn, which now came from the depths
+of her heart, as never before:
+
+ Oh, God of Love, oh Father-heart,
+ In whom my trust is founded,
+ I know full well how good Thou art--
+ E'en when by grief I am wounded.
+
+ Oh Lord, it surely can not be
+ That Thou wilt let me languish
+ In hopeless depths of misery,
+ And live in tears of anguish.
+
+ Oh Lord, my soul yearns for thine aid
+ In this dark vale of weeping;
+ For thee I've waited, hoped and prayed
+ Assured of thy safe keeping.
+
+ Lord let me bear whate'er thy Love
+ May send of grief or sorrow,
+ Until Thou, in thy Heaven above
+ Make dawn a brighter morrow.
+
+
+And in the midst of her urgent praying, the mother's tears flowed
+abundantly, and little Toni, deeply moved in his heart by his mother's
+weeping and earnest prayer, kept his hands folded and wept softly too.
+
+So the time passed. Elsbeth struggled along and little Toni was able to
+help her in many ways, for he was now seven years old. He was his mother's
+only joy, and she was able to take delight in him for he was obedient and
+willing to do everything she desired. He had always been so inseparable
+from his mother that he knew exactly how the tasks of the day had to be
+done, and he desired nothing but to help her whenever he could. If she
+was working in the little field, he squatted beside her, pulled out the
+weeds, and threw the stones across the path.
+
+If his mother was taking the goat out of the shed so that she could nibble
+the grass around the hut, he went with her step by step, for his mother
+had told him he must watch her so that she would not run away.
+
+If his mother was sitting in winter by her spinning-wheel, he sat the
+whole time beside her, mending his winter shoes with strong strips of
+cloth, as she had taught him to do. He had no greater wish than to see his
+mother happy and contented. His greatest pleasure was, when Sunday came
+and she was resting from all work, to sit with her on the little wooden
+bench in front of the house and listen as she told him about his father
+and talk with her about all kinds of things.
+
+But now the time had come for Toni to go to school. It was very hard for
+him to leave his mother and remain away from her so much. The long way
+down to Kandergrund and up again took so much time, that Toni was hardly
+ever with his mother any more through the day, but only in the evening.
+Indeed he always came home so quickly that she could hardly believe it
+possible, for he looked forward with pleasure all day long to getting home
+again. He lost no time with his school-mates but ran immediately away from
+them as soon as school was over. He was not accustomed to the ways of the
+other boys since he had been constantly alone with his quietly working
+mother and used to performing definite tasks continually without any
+noise.
+
+So it was altogether strange to him and he took no pleasure in it, when
+the boys coming out of the school-house, set up a great screaming, one
+running after another, trying to see which was the stronger, and throwing
+one another on the ground, or wrestling so that their caps were thrown far
+away and their jackets half torn off.
+
+The wrestlers would often call to him:
+
+"Come and play!" and when he ran away from them they would call after
+him: "You are a coward." But this made little difference to him; he didn't
+hear it long, for he ran with all his might in order to be at home again
+with his mother.
+
+Now a new interest for him arose in the school: he had seen beautiful
+animals drawn on white sheets, which the children of the upper classes
+copied. He quickly tried to draw them, too, with his pencil and at home
+continued drawing the animals again and again as long as he had a bit of
+paper. Then he cut out the animals and tried to make them stand on the
+table, but this he could not do. Then suddenly the thought came to him
+that if they were of wood they could stand. He began quickly with his
+knife to cut around on a little piece of wood until there was a body and
+four legs; but the wood was not large enough for the neck and the head; so
+he had to take another piece and calculate from the beginning how high it
+must be and where the head must be placed. So Toni cut away with much
+perseverance until he succeeded in making something like a goat and could
+show it with great satisfaction to his mother. She was much delighted at
+his skill and said:
+
+"You are surely going to be a wood-carver, and a very good one."
+
+From that time on Toni looked at every little piece of wood which came in
+his way, to see if it would be good for carving, and if so he would
+quickly put it away, so that he often brought home all his pockets full of
+these pieces, which he then collected like treasures into a pile and spent
+every free moment carving them.
+
+Thus the years passed by. Although Elsbeth always had many cares, she
+experienced only joy in her Toni. He still clung to her with the same
+love, helped her in every way as well as he could and spent his life
+beside her, entirely at his quiet occupation, in which he gradually
+acquired a quite gratifying skill. Toni was never so content as when he
+was sitting in the little stone hut with his carving and his mother came
+in and out happily employed, always saying a kindly word to him and
+finally sat down beside him at her spinning-wheel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SECOND
+
+A HARD SENTENCE
+
+
+Toni was twelve years old in the winter, and now his school days were
+over, and the time had come to look about for some kind of work which
+would bring him in some money and by which he could learn something
+necessary for future years.
+
+Spring had come and work had begun in the fields. His mother thought it
+would be best to ask the proprietor of the Matten farm, if he had some
+light work for Toni; but every time she spoke about it he would say
+beseechingly:
+
+"Oh, Mother, don't do that; let me be a wood-carver!"
+
+She would have had no objection to this, but knew no way to bring it
+about, and she had known the farmer up on the Matten farm ever since her
+husband had worked there, and ever since his death, from time to time he
+had sent her a little wood or meal.
+
+She hoped that he would employ Toni at first for light tasks in the field,
+so that he would gradually learn to do the heavier work.
+
+So on Saturday night after the day's work was ended and she sat down with
+Toni to their scanty supper, she said once more:
+
+"Toni, now we must take a decided step; I think it is best for me to go up
+to the Matten farm to-morrow."
+
+"Oh, Mother, don't do that!" said Toni quite beseechingly. "Don't go to
+the farmer! If you will only let me be a wood-carver, I will work so hard,
+that I will earn enough, and you will not have to do so much, and then I
+can stay at home with you. Besides you would be all alone, and I can't
+bear it, if I have to be always away from you. Let me stay with you; don't
+send me away, Mother."
+
+"Oh, you good Toni," said his mother, "what wouldn't I give to be able to
+keep you always with me! But that really cannot be. I know of no way for
+you to be a wood-carver; some one would have to teach you, and when you
+had learned, how should we sell the carvings? You would have to know
+people and go about, or else your work wouldn't bring any money. If only I
+could talk with some one, who could give me good advice!"
+
+"Don't you know any one, Mother, you can ask?" said Toni anxiously and
+racked his brain to try to think of some one. His mother too began to
+consider.
+
+"I think I will go to the pastor, who has already given me advice," said
+his mother, delighted to have found a way out of the difficulty.
+
+Toni was quite happy and now was determined that early the next morning
+they should go down to the church and then his mother could go in to see
+the pastor and Toni would wait outside.
+
+Everything was carried out on Sunday morning as they had planned. His
+mother had put two of the little carved animals in her pocket to show the
+pastor as examples of her boy's good ability. The pastor received her very
+cordially, had her sit down beside him and enquired with interest about
+her affairs, for he knew Elsbeth and how bravely she had helped herself
+through all the hard times.
+
+She told him now the whole story, how Toni from a very early age had
+worked at the carving with so much interest and now wished for nothing so
+much as to carry on this work, but how she knew of no way for him to
+learn, nor how, later, the work could be sold. Finally she showed him the
+two little animals as examples of Toni's skill.
+
+The pastor replied to the mother that the plan would be very difficult to
+carry out. Although the two little goats were not badly carved, yet in
+order to perform the work right and to earn his bread by it, Toni would
+have first to learn from a good carver, because making only little animals
+or boxes would not amount to anything or bring in any money, and he would
+only be wasting his time.
+
+However, down in the village of Frutigen there was a very skillful,
+well-known wood-carver, who made wonderful large works which went far into
+the world, even to America. He carved whole groups of animals on high
+rocks, chamois and eagles and whole mountains with the herdsman and the
+cows. Elsbeth could talk with this carver. If Toni studied with him he
+could help him to sell the finished work, for he had ways open for it.
+
+Elsbeth left the pastor with gratitude and new hope in her heart. In front
+of the house Toni was waiting in great suspense. She had to tell him at
+once everything the pastor had said, and when she finally related about
+the wood-carver in Frutigen Toni suddenly stood still and said:
+
+"Then come, Mother, let us go to the place at once."
+
+However, his mother had not thought it over--she made many objections, but
+Toni begged so earnestly, that she finally said:
+
+"We must go home first and have something to eat, for it is very far
+away; but we can do that quickly and then start off again right away."
+
+So they hurried back to the house, took a little bread and milk and
+started on their way again. They had several hours to travel, but Toni was
+so busy with his plans and thoughts for the future, the time flew like a
+dream and he looked up in great surprise, when his mother said:
+
+"See, there is the church tower of Frutigen!"
+
+They were soon standing in front of the wood-carver's house, and learned
+from the children before the door, that their father was at home.
+
+Inside in the large, wainscotted room, sat the wood-carver with his wife
+at the table, looking at a large book of beautiful colored pictures of
+animals which he would be able to make good use of in his handicraft. When
+the two arrived he welcomed them and invited them to come and be seated on
+the wooden bench, where he and his wife were sitting and which ran along
+the wall around the entire room. Elsbeth accepted the invitation and
+immediately began to tell the wood-carver why she had come and what she
+so much desired of him.
+
+Meanwhile Toni stood as if rooted to the floor and stared motionless at a
+single spot. In front of him next the wall was a glass case, in which
+could be seen two high rocks, carved out of wood. On one was standing a
+chamois with her little ones. They had such dainty, slender legs, and
+their fine heads sat so naturally on their necks that it seemed as if they
+were all alive and not at all made of wood. On the other rock stood a
+hunter, his gun hanging by his side, and his hat, with even a feather in
+it, sat on his head, all so finely carved, that one would think it must be
+a real hat and a real little feather, and yet all was of wood.
+
+Next the hunter stood his dog, and it seemed as if he would even wag his
+tail. Toni was like one enchanted and hardly breathed.
+
+When his mother finished speaking, the wood-carver said it seemed to him
+as if she thought the affair would half go of itself, but it was not so.
+
+If a thing was to be done right, it cost much time and patience to learn.
+He was not averse to taking the boy, for it seemed to him that he had a
+desire to learn; but she would have to pay for his board for a couple of
+months in Frutigen, besides paying for his instruction, which would be as
+much as his board, and she herself must know whether she could spend so
+much on the boy. On the other hand he would promise that the boy would be
+taught right, and she could see there in the glass case, what he could
+learn to do.
+
+At first Elsbeth was so disappointed and dismayed she was unable to speak
+a word. Now she knew that it would be absolutely impossible for her to
+fulfill her boy's greatest wish. The necessary expense of board and
+instruction was beyond anything that she could manage, so much so that it
+was quite out of the question. It was all over with Toni's plans.
+
+She rose and thanked the wood-carver for his willingness to take the boy,
+but she would have to decline his offer. Then she beckoned to Toni, whose
+eyes were still so fastened to the glass case that he paid no attention.
+She took him by the hand and led him quietly out of the door.
+
+Outside Toni said, drawing a deep breath:
+
+"Did you see what was in the case? Mother, did you see it?"
+
+"Yes, yes, I saw it, Toni," replied his mother with a sigh, "but did you
+hear what the wood-carver said?"
+
+Toni had heard nothing; all his mind had been directed to one point.
+
+"No, I didn't hear anything; when can I go?" he asked longingly.
+
+"Oh, it is not possible, Toni, but don't take it so to heart! See, I can't
+do it, although I would like to so much," declared his mother; "but
+everything would come to more than I earn in a year, and you know how hard
+I have to work to manage to make the two ends meet."
+
+It was a hard blow for Toni. All his hopes for many years lay destroyed
+before him; but he knew how his mother worked, how little good she
+herself had, and how she always tried to give him a little pleasure when
+she could. He said not a word and silently swallowed his rising tears, but
+he was very much grieved that all his hopes were over, since for the first
+time he had seen what wonderful things could be made out of a piece of
+wood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THIRD
+
+UP IN THE MOUNTAINS
+
+
+The next morning, the farmer on the Matten farm sent word to Elsbeth, to
+come up to see him towards evening, as he had something to talk with her
+about. At the right time she laid aside her hoe, tied on a clean apron,
+and said:
+
+"Finish the hoeing, Toni; then you can milk the goat and give her some
+fresh straw, so she will have a better bed. Then I will be back again."
+
+She went up to the Matten farm. The farmer was standing in the open
+barn-door gazing with satisfaction at his beautiful cows, wandering in a
+long procession to the well. Elsbeth stepped up to him.
+
+"Well, I am glad you have come," he said, holding out his hand to her. "I
+have been thinking about you on account of the boy's welfare. He is now at
+an age to do some light work and help you a little, at least to take care
+of himself."
+
+"I have already been thinking about that," replied Elsbeth, "and wanted to
+ask you, if you could give him a little light work in the fields?"
+
+"That is fortunate," continued the farmer. "I have a little job for him,
+healthy and not very hard, that is to say not hard at all. He can go up to
+the small mountain with the cows. The herdsman with his boys is on the big
+mountain and a man is also there to come every morning and evening for the
+milking, so the boy will not be entirely alone and will have nothing to do
+but watch the cows so that none wander off, that they don't hook each
+other or do anything out of the way. While he sits there on the mountain
+he is master and can have all the milk he wants. A king couldn't have
+anything better."
+
+Elsbeth was a little frightened by the offer. If Toni had been more with
+the farm men, and had been with cows, or if he had naturally a different
+disposition, wilder and more roving and commanding-but as he was so quiet
+and shy, and besides without any knowledge of such things, to be for the
+first time all alone for several months, away from home, up on the
+mountains, watching a herd of cows, this seemed to her too hard for Toni.
+What would the poor boy, who was not particularly strong, do if anything
+happened to him or to the herd? She expressed all her thoughts to the
+farmer, but it made no difference; he thought it would be good for the boy
+to get out for once, and up on the mountain he would be much stronger than
+at home, and nothing could happen to him, for he would be given a horn and
+if anything went wrong he could blow lustily, and immediately the farm man
+would come from the other mountain; in a half hour he would be there.
+
+Elsbeth finally thought the farmer understood it much better than she, and
+so it was decided that the next week, when the cows went up to the
+mountain pasture, Toni should go with them.
+
+"He shall have a good bit of money and a new suit of clothes when he comes
+down. That will be a help for the winter," said the farmer finally.
+
+Elsbeth thanked him as she said good-by, and turned homeward.
+
+Toni was at first opposed to this, when he heard that he would be away so
+long without being able to come home a single time; but his mother
+explained to him how easy the work would be, that he would grow stronger
+up there, so as to be able to do better things later on, and that the
+Matten farmer would give him a new suit and a good bit of money as pay. So
+Toni objected no longer, but said he would be glad to do something and not
+let his mother work alone.
+
+Then it occurred to Elsbeth that, if Toni was going to be away the whole
+summer she could perhaps go to one of the big hotels in Interlaken where
+so many strangers go for the summer. There she could earn a good sum of
+money and meet the coming winter without anxiety. She was already known in
+Interlaken for she had served as chambermaid in one of the hotels for
+several summers before her marriage.
+
+When the day came for the big herd of cows to be taken up to the mountain
+pasture, Toni's mother gave him his little bundle and said:
+
+"Go now, in God's name! Don't forget to pray, when the day begins, and
+when it ends, and the dear Lord will not forget you, and His protection is
+better than that of men."
+
+So Toni started off with his little bundle behind the herd up the
+mountain.
+
+Immediately after this Elsbeth closed her cottage. She took the goat up to
+the Matten farm. When the farmer heard that she was going to Interlaken,
+he promised her to take the goat, and thought when Elsbeth came home
+again, she would give twice as much milk, and what he made from her, he
+would give back to Elsbeth in cheese. Then she started down to Interlaken.
+
+The herd had already been climbing the mountain for several hours. The
+herdsman turned off to the left with the big herd, and the man went with
+Toni up towards the right, followed by the smaller herd, which consisted
+of fewer cows but many young cattle, for not many cows could be kept on
+the small mountain pasture, because the milk had to be carried across to
+the big one where the herdsman's hut stood.
+
+They now reached the highest point of the pasture. There stood a little
+hut. All around there was nothing but pasture, not a tree, not a bush. In
+the hut on one side was a narrow seat fastened to the wall in front of
+which stood a table. On the other side stood a bed of hay. In the corner
+was a little, round stool and on this a wooden jug.
+
+Toni and the man stepped inside. The latter placed on the floor the big
+wooden milk-pail, which he had brought up on his back, took out of it a
+round loaf of bread and a huge piece of cheese, laid both on the table and
+said: "Of course you have a knife," to which Tony assented.
+
+Then the man took the wooden jug, swung the milk-pail on his back and went
+out. Toni followed him. The man lifted a wooden basin out of the big pail,
+seated himself on the little round stool which he had brought out of the
+hut and began to milk one cow after another. If one was too far away, he
+would call out: "Drive her here!" and Toni obeyed. When the basin was full
+he poured it into the big pail and silently went on until all the cows had
+been milked. At the last the man filled the jug with milk, handed it to
+Toni, took the pail on his back, the basin in his hand and saying "Good
+night!" went down the mountain.
+
+Then Toni was all alone. He put his jug of milk in the hut and came out
+again. He looked around on every side. He looked over to the big mountain,
+but between that and his pasture was a wide valley so one had to descend
+in order to climb up to the big one. But all around both pastures great
+dark masses of mountains looked down, some rocky, gray and jagged, others
+covered with snow, all reaching up to the sky, so high and mighty and with
+such different peaks and horns and some with such broad backs, that it
+almost seemed to Toni as if they were enormous giants, each one having his
+own face and looking down at him. It was a clear evening. The mountain
+opposite was shining in the golden evening light, and now a little star
+came into sight above the dark mountains, and looked down to Toni in such
+a friendly way that it cheered him very much.
+
+He thought of his mother, where she was now and how she was in the habit
+of standing with him at this time in front of the little cottage and
+talking so pleasantly. Then suddenly there came over him such a feeling of
+loneliness that he ran into the hut, threw himself down on the cot, buried
+his face in the hay and sobbed softly, until the weariness of the day
+overcame him and he fell asleep.
+
+The bright morning lured him out early. The man was already outside. He
+milked the cows, spoke not a word and went away.
+
+Now a long, long day followed. It was perfectly still all around. The cows
+grazed and lay down around in the sun-bathed pasture. Tom went into the
+hut two or three times, drank some milk and ate some bread and cheese.
+Then he came out again, sat down on the ground and carved on a piece of
+wood he had in his pocket, for although he no longer dared to cherish the
+hope of becoming a wood-carver, yet he could not help carving for himself
+as well as he could. At last it was evening again. The man came and went.
+He said not a word, and Toni had nothing to say either.
+
+Thus passed one day after another. They were all so long! so long! In the
+evening, when it began to grow dark it always seemed terrible to Toni, for
+then the high mountains looked so black and threatening, as if they would
+suddenly do him some harm. Then he would rush back into the hut and crawl
+into his bed of hay.
+
+Many days had passed like this, one exactly the same as the other. The
+sun had always shone in a cloudless sky; always at evening the friendly
+little star had gleamed above the dark mountain. But one afternoon, thick,
+gray clouds began to chase one another across the sky; now and then
+blinding lightning flashed, and suddenly frightful thunder-bolts sounded,
+which echoed roaring from the mountains, as if there were twice as many
+and then a terrible storm broke. It was as dark as night; the rain beat
+against the hut, and meanwhile the thunder rolled with fearful
+reverberations through the mountains; quivering lightning lighted up the
+black, frightful giant-forms, which seemed quite specter-like to come
+nearer and look down menacingly. The cattle ran together in alarm and
+bellowed loudly, and great birds of prey flapped around with piercing
+shrieks.
+
+Toni had long since fled into the hut, but the lightning showed him the
+frightful forms and it seemed every minute as if the rolling thunder
+would overthrow the hut to the ground. Toni was so alarmed he could
+hardly breathe. He climbed up on the table expecting every minute that the
+hut would fall and crush him. The storm lasted for hours, and the man
+never came over. It was now really night but still the blinding lightning
+flashed and new peals of thunder rolled and the storm howled and raged as
+if it would sweep the hut away.
+
+Toni stood half the night stiff with fright, clinging to the table, and
+with no thought, only a feeling of a frightful power, which was crushing
+everything. How he reached his bed he did not know, but in the morning he
+lay stretched across the hay, so exhausted he could hardly rise. He looked
+anxiously out of the window. How must it look outside after such a night?
+Then he went out to see about the cows. The ground was still wet, but the
+animals were peacefully grazing.
+
+The sky was gray, and thick, black clouds were passing over it. Gloomy and
+frightful the high mountains stood there. They had come so near and
+looked more threateningly than ever at Toni. He ran back into the hut.
+
+Many days of thunder storms followed, one after another and if the sun
+came out between, it burned unbearably, and new storms followed so
+unceasingly and violent, that the herdsman, on the other mountain often
+said that he had not known such a summer for years, and if it didn't
+change he wouldn't make half so much butter as in former summers, because
+the cows gave no milk, as they didn't like the fodder.
+
+During this time the man-servant chose the most favorable time to come
+over to the small pasture, milked the cows as quickly as possible and did
+not look after the boy at all; only now and then, when he thought Toni had
+no more milk, he would bring the jug out quickly, fill it and put it back
+again. Then he often saw Toni sitting on his bed of hay, and would call
+out in passing:
+
+"You are lazy!"
+
+But then he ran right away in order to get back without being wet, and
+did not trouble himself further about the boy.
+
+So June had passed, and already a good part of July. The thunder storms
+had become less frequent, but thick fog often so enveloped the mountain
+that one could hardly see two steps away, and only here and there a black
+head appeared, looking gloomily through the mist. The cattle often
+wandered so far that the man found some of them between the two mountains
+and brought them up again. This would not do. He called up to the boy, but
+received no answer. He ran to the hut and went in. Toni crouched in the
+corner was sitting on his bed and staring straight before him.
+
+"Why don't you look after the cows?" asked the man.
+
+He received no answer.
+
+"Can't you speak? What is the matter with you?"
+
+No answer.
+
+Then the man looked at the bread and cheese, to see if Toni had eaten
+everything and was suffering from hunger. But more than half the bread was
+there and the larger part of the cheese. Toni had taken almost nothing but
+milk.
+
+"What is the matter with you, then? Are you sick?" asked the man again.
+
+Toni gave no answer. He seemed not to hear anything and stared so
+motionless before him that the man was quite alarmed. He ran out of the
+hut. He told the herdsman how it was with the boy and they decided that
+when one of the herdsman's boys went down with the butter, he must tell
+the Matten farmer about it.
+
+Another week passed. Then the news was brought to the farmer. He thought
+the boy would be happy again, that the heavy thunderstorms had only
+frightened him a little. But he sent word for the herdsman to go over; he
+had boys of his own and would understand better about this than the hired
+man. If anything was wrong with Toni he must be brought down.
+
+Some days later the herdsman really went over with one of his boys and
+found Toni still crouched in the corner just as the man had seen him. Toni
+made no sound to anything the herdsman said to him, did not move and kept
+staring always before him.
+
+"He must go down," said the herdsman to his boy, "go with him right away,
+but take care that nothing happens to him and be good to him; the boy is
+to be pitied," and he looked at Toni with sympathy, for the herdsman had a
+good heart and took delight in his own three big, healthy boys. The one he
+had with him was a strong, sturdy fellow of sixteen years. He went up to
+Toni and told him to stand up, but Toni did not move. Then the lad took
+him under the arms, lifted him up, like a feather, then swung him on his
+back, held him firmly with both hands, and went with his light burden down
+the mountain.
+
+When the Matten farmer saw Toni in such a sad condition, which remained
+just the same, he was alarmed, for he had not expected such a thing. He
+did not know at all what to do with the boy. His mother was far away, no
+relatives were there, and he himself did not want to keep Toni while in
+this condition. He could take such a responsibility, but he did not want
+to do so. Suddenly a good thought came to him, the same as the people
+there in every difficulty, in every need and every trouble, always have
+first of all:
+
+"Take him to the Pastor," he said to the herdsman's boy, "he will have
+some good advice to give, which will help."
+
+The lad immediately started off and went to the Pastor, who allowed the
+boy to tell him as much as he knew about the details of the case, how Toni
+came to be in this condition and how long it had lasted; but the lad knew
+very little about it all. The Pastor first tried every means to make Toni
+speak, and asked him if he would like to go to his mother, but it was all
+in vain, Toni did not give the least sign of understanding or interest.
+
+Then the pastor sat down, wrote a letter and said to the herdsman's boy:
+
+"Go back to the Matten farm and tell the farmer to harness his little
+carriage and send it to me, and then I will see that Toni goes to-day to
+Bern. He is very sick; say that to the farmer."
+
+The farmer harnessed immediately, glad that further responsibility was
+taken from him and he had only to carry Toni as far as the railway. But
+the Pastor sent down to his sexton, an older, kindly man, who had given
+him a helping hand for years in many matters of responsibility. He was
+commissioned to take Toni with all care to the great sanitarium in Bern
+and to give the letter to the doctor there, a good friend of the Pastor's.
+A half hour later, the open carriage with the high seat drove up in front
+of the Pastor's house. The sexton climbed up, placed the sick boy beside
+him, held him carefully but firmly and thus Toni drove out into the world,
+with a horse, for the first time in his life. But he sat there with no
+sign of interest. It was as if he were no longer conscious of the outer
+world.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOURTH
+
+IN THE SANITARIUM
+
+
+The doctor of the sanitarium was sitting with his family around the family
+table, engaged in merry conversation on various subjects. Even the lady
+from Geneva, who spent several hours a day with the family, seemed to-day
+a little infected by the children's gayety. She had never before taken so
+lively a part in the discussion, which the school-children carried on
+about different interests.
+
+This lady's beloved and gifted son had died not long before; on this
+account she had fallen into such deep sadness that her health had suffered
+greatly and therefore she had been brought to the sanitarium to recover.
+
+The animated conversation was suddenly interrupted by a letter which was
+handed to the doctor.
+
+"A letter from an old friend, who is sending me a patient to the
+sanitarium. He is a young boy, hardly as old as our Max--there, read it."
+Whereupon the doctor handed the letter to his wife.
+
+"Oh, the poor boy!" exclaimed his wife. "Is he here? Bring him in. Perhaps
+it will do him good to see the children."
+
+"I think he is quite near," said the doctor; he went out, and soon came in
+again with the sexton and Toni. He led the former into a bay window and
+began talking with him in a low tone. Meanwhile the doctor's wife drew
+near to Toni, who on entering had pressed into the nearest corner. She
+spoke kindly to him and invited him to come to the table and eat something
+with her children. Toni did not move. Then lively little Marie jumped down
+from her chair and came to Toni with a large piece of bread and butter.
+
+"There, take a bite," she said encouragingly.
+
+Toni remained motionless.
+
+"See, you must do so," and the little girl bit a good piece from the bread
+and held it to him, then again a little nearer, so he only needed to bite
+into it. But he stared in front of him and made no motion. This silent
+resistance frightened Marie and she drew back quietly.
+
+Then the doctor came, took Toni by the hand and went out followed by the
+sexton.
+
+Poor Toni's appearance had made a great impression on the children. They
+had become perfectly quiet.
+
+Later when they had gone to bed and the two women were sitting alone
+together, the doctor came back again. In reply to their urgent questions
+he informed them about all that the sexton had told him concerning Toni's
+illness and his life with his mother, and that no one had ever noticed
+anything wrong with the boy before, only he had always been a quiet,
+gentle child and more slenderly built than any of the other village
+children.
+
+The women asked how he had come into this condition in the summer up on
+the beautiful mountain, and the doctor explained that it was not so
+strange, if one knew how terrible the thunder storms were up in the
+mountains. "Besides," he concluded, "a delicate child, such as this boy,
+all alone without a human being near, for whole weeks, even months long,
+without hearing a word spoken, might well be so terrified through fear and
+horror in the awful loneliness that he would become wholly benumbed."
+
+Then the lady from Geneva, who took an unusual interest in poor Toni's
+fate, exclaimed in great excitement:
+
+"How can a mother allow such a thing to happen to her child! It is wholly
+inconceivable, quite incomprehensible!"
+
+"You really can have no idea," replied the doctor soothingly, "what poor
+mothers are obliged to let happen to their children. But don't believe
+that it causes them less pain than others. You see how many suffer that we
+know nothing about, and how hard poverty oppresses."
+
+"Will you be able to help the poor young boy?" asked the lady from Geneva.
+
+"If I can only bring out the right emotion in him," he replied, "so that
+the spell, which holds him imprisoned, can be broken. Now everything in
+him is numbed and lifeless."
+
+"Oh, do help him! Do help him!" begged the sick lady imploringly. "Oh, if
+I could do something for him!" And she walked to and fro thinking about a
+way to help, for Toni's condition went deeply to her heart.
+
+It was the second week of August, when Toni came to the sanitarium. Day
+after day, week after week passed and the doctor could only bring the same
+sad news to the two women, who every morning awaited his report with great
+anxiety. Not the slightest change was noticed. Every means was tried to
+amuse the boy, to see if he would perhaps laugh. Other attempts were
+devised to disturb him, to make him cry. They performed all kinds of
+tricks to attract his attention. All, all were in vain; no trace of
+interest or emotion was aroused in Toni.
+
+"If he could only be made to laugh or to cry once!" repeated the doctor
+over and over again.
+
+When he had been four weeks in the sanitarium all hope disappeared, for
+the doctor had exhausted every means.
+
+"Now I will try one thing more," he said one morning to his wife. "I have
+written to my friend, the Pastor, and asked him if the boy was very much
+attached to his mother, and if so, to send for her right away. Perhaps to
+see her again would make an impression on him."
+
+The two women looked forward in great suspense to Elsbeth's arrival.
+
+In the first week of September the last guests left the hotel in
+Interlaken where Elsbeth had spent the summer. She immediately started on
+her way home, for she wanted to get everything in order before Toni came
+down from the mountain. She never thought but that he was still up there,
+and had no suspicion of all that had happened. When she reached home, she
+went at once to the Matten farm to enquire for Toni and to bring the goat
+home.
+
+The farmer was very friendly, and thought her goat was now by far one of
+the finest, because she had had good fodder so long. But when Elsbeth
+asked after her Toni, he broke off abruptly and said he had so much to do,
+she must go to the Pastor, for he would have the best knowledge about the
+boy. It immediately seemed to Elsbeth that it was a little strange for the
+Pastor to know best what happened up on the mountain and while she was
+leading home the goat, and thinking about the matter, a feeling of anxiety
+came over her and grew stronger and stronger. As soon as she reached home,
+she quickly tied the goat, without going into the cottage at all, and ran
+back the same way she had come, down again to Kandergrund.
+
+The Pastor told her with great consideration, how Toni had not borne the
+life on the mountain very well and they had been obliged to bring him
+down, and since it seemed best for him that he should go at once to a good
+physician for the right care, he had sent the boy immediately to Bern.
+
+His mother was very much shocked and wanted to travel the next day to see
+for herself if her child was very ill.
+
+But the Pastor said that would not do, but that she should wait until the
+doctor allowed a visit, and she could be sure that Toni was receiving the
+best care.
+
+With a heavy heart Elsbeth went back to her cottage. She could do nothing
+but leave it all to the dear Lord, who alone had been her trust for so
+many years. But it was only a few days later when the Pastor sent her word
+that she was to go to Bern at once, as the doctor wished her to come.
+
+Early the following day Elsbeth started. About noon she reached Bern and
+soon was standing in front of the door of the sanitarium.
+
+She was led to the doctor's living-room and here received with great
+friendliness by his wife and with still keener sympathy by the lady from
+Geneva, who had so lived in the history of poor Toni and his mother that
+she could hardly think of anything else but how to help these two. She had
+had only the one child and could so well understand the mother's trouble.
+She had even asked the doctor to allow her to be present when he took the
+boy to his mother, in order to share in the joy, if the poor boy's delight
+at seeing her again would affect him as they hoped.
+
+Soon the doctor appeared, and after he had prepared the mother not to
+expect Toni to speak at the first moment, he brought him in. He led him by
+the hand into the room, then he let go and stepped to one side.
+
+The mother ran to her Toni and tried to seize his hand. He drew back and
+pressed into the corner staring into vacancy.
+
+The women and the doctor exchanged sad looks.
+
+His mother went up to him and caressed him. "Toneli, Toneli," she said
+again and again in a tender voice, "don't you know me? Don't you know your
+mother any more?"
+
+As always before Toni pressed against the wall, made no motion and stared
+before him.
+
+In tender tones the mother continued mournfully:
+
+"Oh, Toneli, say just a single word! Only look at me once! Toneli, don't
+you hear me?"
+
+Toneli remained unmoved.
+
+Still once again the mother looked at him full of tenderness, but only met
+his staring eyes. It was too much for poor Elsbeth, that the only
+possession she had on earth, and the one she loved with all her heart, her
+Toni, should be lost to her, and in such a sad way! She forgot everything
+around her. She fell on her knees beside her child, and while the tears
+were bursting from her eyes, she poured out aloud the sorrow in her heart:
+
+ Oh God of Love, oh Father-heart,
+ In whom my trust is founded,
+ I know full well how good Thou art--
+ E'en when by grief I am wounded.
+
+ Oh Lord, it surely can not be
+ That Thou wilt let me languish
+ In hopeless depths of misery
+ And live in tears of anguish.
+
+
+Toni's eyes took on a different expression. He looked at his mother. She
+did not see him and went on imploring in the midst of her tears:
+
+ Oh Lord, my soul yearns for thine aid
+ In this dark vale of weeping;
+ For Thee I have waited, hoped and prayed,
+ Assured of thy safe keeping.
+
+
+Suddenly Toni threw himself on his mother and sobbed aloud. She threw her
+arms around him and her tears of sorrow turned to loud sobs of joy. The
+child sobbed aloud also.
+
+"It is won," said the doctor in great delight to the women, who, deeply
+moved, were looking on at the mother and boy.
+
+Then the doctor opened the door of the next room and beckoned Elsbeth to
+go in there with Toni. He thought it would be good for both to be alone
+for a while. In there after a while Toni began to talk quite naturally
+with his mother and asked her:
+
+"Are we going home, Mother, to the stone hut? Shan't I have to go up on
+the mountain any more?"
+
+And she quieted him and said she would now take him right home, and they
+would stay there together. Soon all Toni's thoughts came back again quite
+clearly, and after a while he said:
+
+"But I must earn something, Mother."
+
+"Don't trouble about that now," said Elsbeth quietly; "the dear Lord will
+show a way when it is time."
+
+Then they began to talk about the goat, how pretty and fat she had grown,
+and Toni gradually became quite lively.
+
+After an hour the doctor brought them both into the living-room back to
+the ladies. Toni was entirely changed, his eyes had now an earnest but
+quite different expression. The lady from Geneva was indescribably
+delighted. She sat down beside him at once, and he had to tell her where
+he had been to school and what he had liked to study.
+
+But the doctor beckoned to Elsbeth to come to him.
+
+"Listen, my good woman," he began, "the words which you repeated made a
+deep, penetrating impression on the boy's heart. Did he know the hymn
+already?"
+
+"Oh, my Lord," exclaimed Elsbeth, "many hundred times I have repeated it
+beside his little bed, when he was very small, often with many tears, and
+he would weep too, when he didn't know why."
+
+"He wept because you wept, he suffered because you suffered," said the
+doctor. "Now I understand how he was aroused by these words. With such
+impressions in early childhood it is no wonder he became a quiet and
+reserved boy. This explains to me much in the past."
+
+Then the lady from Geneva came up for she wanted to talk with the mother.
+
+"My dear, good woman, he certainly must not go up on the mountain again.
+He is not fit for it," she said in great eagerness. "We must find
+something different for him. Has he no taste for some other occupation?
+But it must be light, for he is not strong and needs care."
+
+"Oh, yes, he has a great desire to learn something," said his mother.
+"From a little boy he has wished for it, but I hardly dare mention it."
+
+"There, there, my good woman, tell me right away about it," said the lady
+encouragingly, expecting something unheard-of.
+
+"He wants so much to be a wood-carver, and has a good deal of talent for
+it, but the cost of board and instruction together is more than eighty
+francs."
+
+"Is that all?" exclaimed the lady in the greatest surprise, "is that all?
+Come, my boy," and she ran to Toni again, "would you really like to
+become a wood-carver--better than anything else?"
+
+The joy which shone in Toni's eyes, when he answered that he would, showed
+the lady what she had to do. She had such a longing to help Toni, that she
+wanted to act immediately that very hour.
+
+"Would you like to learn at once, go to a teacher right away?" she asked
+him.
+
+Toni gladly replied that he would.
+
+But now came a new thought. She turned to the doctor. "Perhaps he ought to
+recover his health first?"
+
+The doctor replied that he had been already thinking about that. The
+mother had told him that she knew a very good master up in Frutigen. "Now
+I think," he went on to say, "that carving is not a strenuous work, and
+one of the most important things for Toni is to have for some time good,
+nourishing food. In Frutigen there is a very good inn, if he only could--"
+
+"I will undertake that, Doctor, I will undertake that," interrupted the
+lady. "I will go with him. We will start to-morrow. In Frutigen I will
+provide for Toni's board and lodging and for everything he needs." In her
+great delight the lady shook hands with both the mother and the boy
+repeatedly, and went out to instruct her maid about preparations for the
+journey.
+
+When the mother with her boy had been taken to their room, the doctor said
+with great delight to his wife:
+
+"We have two recoveries. Our lady is also cured. A new interest has come
+to her, and you will see she will have new life in providing for this
+young boy. This has been a beautiful day!"
+
+On the following morning the journey was made to Frutigen, and the little
+company were so glad and happy together that they reached there before
+they were aware of it.
+
+At the wood-carver's the lady was told everything that would be needed for
+the work, and after he had showed them all kinds of instruments, he
+thought a fine book with good pictures, from which one could work, would
+be useful.
+
+After the lady had charged him to teach Toni everything in any way
+necessary for the future, they went to the inn. Here the lady engaged a
+good room with comfortable bed, and herself arranged with the host a bill
+of fare for every day in the week. The host promised, with many bows, to
+follow everything exactly, for he saw very well with whom he had to deal.
+
+Then Toni and his mother had to eat with the lady in the inn, and during
+the meal she had much more to say. She was going now, she said, the next
+day, home to Geneva, where there were large shops, in which nothing was
+sold but carvings. There she would immediately arrange for Toni to send
+all his articles, so he could begin to work with fresh zeal. Moreover, she
+insisted that Toni should remain, not two, but three months with the
+carver, so that he could learn everything from the foundation. He could go
+from here to visit his mother on Sundays, or she could come to him.
+
+Elsbeth and Toni were so full of gratitude, they could find no words to
+express it, but the lady understood them nevertheless and bore home a
+happy heart, such as she had not had for a long time.
+
+It came about just as the doctor had foreseen. The lady, who had not been
+able to think any more about her home now desired to return to Geneva. She
+had so many plans to carry out there, that she could hardly wait for the
+day when she was to go back.
+
+The doctor was delighted to consent to her going soon.
+
+Toni, who had hardly begun with his new teacher, applied himself with so
+much zeal and skill to his work, that the carver said to his wife in the
+fourth week:
+
+"If he goes on like this, he will learn to do better than I can."
+
+The three months had come to an end, and Christmas was drawing near. One
+morning Toni waded through the deep snow up to his home. He looked round
+and fresh, and his heart was so happy he had to sing aloud as he came
+along.
+
+But when after a long walk, he suddenly saw the stone hut with the
+fir-tree thickly covered with snow behind it, tears of joy came to his
+eyes. He was coming home, home for all time. He ran to the little house,
+and his mother, who had already seen him, hurried out, and which one of
+the two was the more delighted, no one could tell; but they were both so
+happy, as they sat together again in the cottage, that they could think of
+no greater fortune on earth. Their highest wish was fulfilled. Toni was a
+wood-carver, and could carry on his work at home with his mother. And with
+what blessings besides the dear Lord was still overwhelming them! From
+Geneva such good things kept coming to Elsbeth, that she no longer had to
+dread anxious days, and with each package came new assurance of the ready
+acceptance of Toni's work.
+
+Such a Christmas festival as was celebrated two days later in the stone
+hut, neither Elsbeth nor Toni had ever known before, for the candles which
+his mother had lighted shone out upon a quantity of things, which Toni had
+received to wear, and also a whole set of the most beautiful knives for
+carving and a book with pictures, of a size and beauty such as Toni had
+never in all his life seen before. His master's book was a mere child's
+toy beside it. Elsbeth too was lovingly provided for. The lady from Geneva
+had planned everything, and the bright reflection from it fell back
+radiantly into her own heart.
+
+The most beautiful deer and huntsman and the wonderful eagles on the rock,
+standing in the high show-window in Geneva was carved by Toni, and was
+considered by him to be a particularly successful piece, so it went, not
+to the dealer in Geneva, but to the lady for whom Toni preserved a
+thankful heart all his life long.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14128 ***
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14128 ***</div>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Toni, the Little Woodcarver, by Johanna
+Spyri, Translated by Helen B. Dole</h1>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class='ctrie'>
+<div style='width:453px; margin: 0 auto;'>
+ <a href='images/image01.jpg'>
+ <img src='images/image01_th.jpg' alt='Toni the little Woodcarver' />
+ </a>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style='height: 2pc; clear: both;'><br /></div>
+
+<div class="ctrie">
+<div id="ad">
+<h2 class='frontmatter'>Johanna Spyri's Alpine Stories</h2>
+
+
+<p><b>GRITLI'S CHILDREN.</b> Complete Edition. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS.
+Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>HEIDI.</b> Complete Edition. Translated by HELENE S. WHITE. 16 full-page
+illustrations in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>LITTLE ALPINE MUSICIAN.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in
+color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>RICO AND WISELI.</b> Complete Edition. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS.
+Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>UNCLE TITUS.</b> Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>VERONICA.</b> Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>JO, THE LITTLE MACHINIST.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in
+color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>LITTLE CURLY HEAD.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color
+8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>LITTLE MISS GRASSHOPPER.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in
+color by CHARLES COPELAND. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>MONI, THE GOAT BOY.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color by
+CHARLES COPELAND. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>TRINI, THE LITTLE STRAWBERRY GIRL.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE.
+Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>TONI, THE LITTLE WOOD CARVER.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated
+in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>TISS, A LITTLE ALPINE WAIF.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in
+color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>THE ROSE CHILD.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>WHAT SAMI SINGS WITH THE BIRDS.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated
+in color. 8vo.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<div class='ctrimg'>
+ <a href='images/image02.jpg'>
+ <img src='images/image02_th.jpg' alt='In front of him next to the wall stood a glass case' title='In front of him next to the wall stood a glass case' />
+ </a>
+<p class='ctr' style='font-variant: small-caps;'>In front of him next to the wall stood a glass case</p>
+</div>
+<div style='height: 3pc;'><br /></div>
+<h1 class='frontmatter'>
+Toni<br />
+the Little
+Woodcarver
+</h1>
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<h3 class='frontmatter'>By</h3>
+<div style='height: 1pc;'><br /></div>
+<h2 class='frontmatter'>Johanna Spyri</h2>
+
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<div class='ctr'>
+<p class='frontmatter'>Author of &quot;Heidi&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<h2 class='frontmatter'>Translated</h2>
+<h4 class='frontmatter'>By</h4>
+<h3 class='frontmatter'>Helen B. Dole</h3>
+
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<div class='ctr'>
+<p class='frontmatter'>
+1920</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h6>New York<br />
+Thomas Y. Crowell Company<br />
+Publishers<br /></h6>
+</div>
+
+<div style='height: 4pc;'><br /></div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<ol>
+
+<li> <a href="#AT_HOME_IN_THE_LITTLE_STONE_HUT"><b>AT HOME IN THE LITTLE STONE HUT</b></a></li>
+<li> <a href="#CHAPTER_SECOND"><b>A HARD SENTENCE</b></a></li>
+<li> <a href="#UP_IN_THE_MOUNTAINS"><b>UP IN THE MOUNTAINS</b></a></li>
+<li> <a href="#CHAPTER_FOURTH"><b>IN THE SANITARIUM</b></a></li>
+</ol>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+<h3><a name="AT_HOME_IN_THE_LITTLE_STONE_HUT" id="AT_HOME_IN_THE_LITTLE_STONE_HUT" />CHAPTER FIRST</h3>
+
+<h2>AT HOME IN THE LITTLE STONE HUT</h2>
+
+
+<p>High up in the Bernese Oberland, quite a distance above the
+meadow-encircled hamlet of Kandergrund, stands a little lonely hut, under
+the shadow of an old fir-tree. Not far away rushes down from the wooded
+heights of rock the Wild brook, which in times of heavy rains, has carried
+away so many rocks and bowlders that when the storms are ended a ragged
+mass of stones is left, through which flows a swift, clear stream of
+water. Therefore the little dwelling near by this brook is called the
+stone hut.</p>
+
+<p>Here lived the honest day-laborer Toni, who conducted himself well in
+every farm-house, where he went to work, for he was quiet and
+industrious, punctual at his tasks, and reliable in every way.</p>
+
+<p>In his hut at home he had a young wife and a little boy, who was a joy to
+both of them. Near the hut in the little shed was the goat, the milk of
+which supplied food for the mother and child, while the father received
+his board through the week on the farms where he worked from morning until
+night. Only on Sunday was he at home with his wife and little Toni. The
+wife Elsbeth, kept her little house in good order; it was narrow and tiny,
+but it always looked so clean and cheerful that every one liked to come
+into the sunny room, and the father, Toni, was never so happy as when he
+was at home in the stone hut with his little boy on his knee.</p>
+
+<p>For five years the family lived in harmony and undisturbed peace. Although
+they had no abundance and little worldly goods, they were happy and
+content. The husband earned enough, so they did not suffer want, and they
+desired nothing beyond their simple manner of life, for they loved each
+other and their greatest delight was little Toni.</p>
+
+<p>The little boy grew strong and healthy and with his merry ways delighted
+his father's heart, when he remained at home on Sundays, and sweetened all
+his mother's work on week-days, when his father was away until late in the
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>Little Toni was now four years old and already knew how to be helpful in
+all sorts of small ways, in the house and the goat's shed and also in the
+field behind the hut. From morning until night he tripped happily behind
+his mother for he was as content as the little birds up in the old
+fir-tree.</p>
+
+<p>When Saturday night came the mother scrubbed and cleaned with doubled
+energy, to finish early, for on that day the father was through his work
+earlier than other days, and she always went with little Toni by the hand,
+part way to meet him. This was a great delight to the child. He now knew
+very well how one task followed another in the household. When his mother
+began to scrub, he jumped around in the room, with delight and cried out
+again and again: &quot;Now we are going for Father! Now we are going for
+Father!&quot; until the moment came when his mother took him by the hand and
+started along.</p>
+
+<p>Saturday evening had come again in the lovely month of May. Outdoors the
+birds in the trees were singing merrily up to the blue sky; indoors the
+mother was cleaning busily, in order to get out early into the golden
+evening, and meanwhile now outside, now in the house, little Toni was
+hopping around and shouting:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now we are going for Father!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was not long before the work was finished. The mother put on her shawl,
+tied on her best apron and stepped out of the house.</p>
+
+<p>Toni jumped for joy and ran three times around his mother, then seized her
+hand and shouted once more:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now we are going for Father!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then he tripped along beside his mother in the lovely, sunny evening.
+They wandered to the Wild brook, over the wooden bridge, which crosses it,
+and came to the narrow foot-path, winding up through the flower-laden
+meadows to the farm where the father worked.</p>
+
+<p>The last rays of the setting sun fell across the meadows and the sound of
+the evening bells came up from Kandergrund.</p>
+
+<p>The mother stood still and folded her hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lay your hands together Toneli,&quot; she said, &quot;it is the Angelus.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The child obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What must I pray, Mother?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give us and all tired people a blessed Sunday! Amen!&quot; said the mother
+devoutly.</p>
+
+<p>Toneli repeated the prayer. Suddenly he screamed: &quot;Father is coming!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Down from the farm some one was running as fast as he could come.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is not Father,&quot; said his mother, and both went towards the running
+man. When they met, the man stood still and said, gasping:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't go any farther, turn around, Elsbeth. I came straight to you, for
+something has happened.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, my God!&quot; cried the woman in the greatest anguish, &quot;has something
+happened to Toni?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, he was with the wood-cutters, and then he was struck. They have
+brought him back; he is lying up at the farm-but don't go up there,&quot; he
+added, holding Elsbeth fast, for she wanted to start off as soon as she
+heard the news.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not go up?&quot; she said quickly. &quot;I must go to him; I must help him and see
+about bringing him home.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You cannot help him, he is&mdash;he is already dead,&quot; said the messenger in an
+unsteady voice. Then he turned and ran back again, glad to have the
+message off his mind.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth threw herself down on a stone by the way, unable to stand or to
+walk. She held her apron before her face and burst into weeping and
+sobbing, so that Toneli was distressed and frightened. He pressed close
+to his mother and began to cry too.</p>
+
+<p>It was already dark, when Elsbeth finally came to herself and could think
+of her child. The little one was still sitting beside her on the ground,
+with both hands pressed to his eyes, and sobbing pitifully. His mother
+lifted him up.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Toneli, we must go home; it is late,&quot; she said, taking him by the
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>But he resisted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, we must wait for Father!&quot; he said and pulled his mother back.</p>
+
+<p>Again she could not keep back the tears. &quot;Oh, Toneli, Father will come no
+more,&quot; she said, stifling her sobs; &quot;he is already enjoying the blessed
+Sunday, we prayed for, for the weary. See, the dear Lord has taken him to
+Heaven; it is so beautiful there, he will prefer to stay there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then we will go too,&quot; replied Toneli, starting</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes, we shall go there too,&quot; promised his mother, &quot;but now we must
+first go home to the stone hut,&quot; and without a word she went with the
+little one back to the silent cottage.</p>
+
+<p>The proprietor of the Matten farm sent word to Elsbeth the following day
+that he would do everything necessary for her husband, and so she need not
+come until it was time for the service, for she would not recognize her
+husband. He sent her some money in order that she would not have too much
+care in the next few days, and promised to think of her later on.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth did as he advised and remained at home until the bells in
+Kandergrund rang for the service. Then she went to accompany her husband
+to his resting place.</p>
+
+<p>Sad and hard days came for Elsbeth. She missed her good, kind husband
+everywhere, and felt quite lost without him. Besides, cares came now which
+she had known little about before, for her husband had had his good, daily
+work. But now she felt sometimes as if she would almost despair. She had
+nothing but her goat and the little potato field behind the cottage, and
+from these she had to feed and clothe herself and the little one, and
+besides furnish rent for the little house.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth had only one consolation, but one that always supported her when
+pain and care oppressed her; she could pray, and although often in the
+midst of tears, still always with the firm belief that the dear Lord would
+hear her supplication.</p>
+
+<p>When at night she had put little Toni in his tiny bed she would kneel down
+beside him and repeat aloud the old hymn, which now came from the depths
+of her heart, as never before:</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>
+Oh, God of Love, oh Father-heart,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In whom my trust is founded,</span><br />
+I know full well how good Thou art&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">E'en when by grief I am wounded.</span><br />
+<br />
+Oh Lord, it surely can not be<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That Thou wilt let me languish</span><br />
+In hopeless depths of misery,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And live in tears of anguish.</span><br />
+<br />
+Oh Lord, my soul yearns for thine aid<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In this dark vale of weeping;</span><br />
+For thee I've waited, hoped and prayed<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Assured of thy safe keeping.</span><br />
+<br />
+Lord let me bear whate'er thy Love<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">May send of grief or sorrow,</span><br />
+Until Thou, in thy Heaven above<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Make dawn a brighter morrow.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>And in the midst of her urgent praying, the mother's tears flowed
+abundantly, and little Toni, deeply moved in his heart by his mother's
+weeping and earnest prayer, kept his hands folded and wept softly too.</p>
+
+<p>So the time passed. Elsbeth struggled along and little Toni was able to
+help her in many ways, for he was now seven years old. He was his mother's
+only joy, and she was able to take delight in him for he was obedient and
+willing to do everything she desired. He had always been so inseparable
+from his mother that he knew exactly how the tasks of the day had to be
+done, and he desired nothing but to help her whenever he could. If she
+was working in the little field, he squatted beside her, pulled out the
+weeds, and threw the stones across the path.</p>
+
+<p>If his mother was taking the goat out of the shed so that she could nibble
+the grass around the hut, he went with her step by step, for his mother
+had told him he must watch her so that she would not run away.</p>
+
+<p>If his mother was sitting in winter by her spinning-wheel, he sat the
+whole time beside her, mending his winter shoes with strong strips of
+cloth, as she had taught him to do. He had no greater wish than to see his
+mother happy and contented. His greatest pleasure was, when Sunday came
+and she was resting from all work, to sit with her on the little wooden
+bench in front of the house and listen as she told him about his father
+and talk with her about all kinds of things.</p>
+
+<p>But now the time had come for Toni to go to school. It was very hard for
+him to leave his mother and remain away from her so much. The long way
+down to Kandergrund and up again took so much time, that Toni was hardly
+ever with his mother any more through the day, but only in the evening.
+Indeed he always came home so quickly that she could hardly believe it
+possible, for he looked forward with pleasure all day long to getting home
+again. He lost no time with his school-mates but ran immediately away from
+them as soon as school was over. He was not accustomed to the ways of the
+other boys since he had been constantly alone with his quietly working
+mother and used to performing definite tasks continually without any
+noise.</p>
+
+<p>So it was altogether strange to him and he took no pleasure in it, when
+the boys coming out of the school-house, set up a great screaming, one
+running after another, trying to see which was the stronger, and throwing
+one another on the ground, or wrestling so that their caps were thrown far
+away and their jackets half torn off.</p>
+
+<p>The wrestlers would often call to him:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come and play!&quot; and when he ran away from them they would call after
+him: &quot;You are a coward.&quot; But this made little difference to him; he didn't
+hear it long, for he ran with all his might in order to be at home again
+with his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Now a new interest for him arose in the school: he had seen beautiful
+animals drawn on white sheets, which the children of the upper classes
+copied. He quickly tried to draw them, too, with his pencil and at home
+continued drawing the animals again and again as long as he had a bit of
+paper. Then he cut out the animals and tried to make them stand on the
+table, but this he could not do. Then suddenly the thought came to him
+that if they were of wood they could stand. He began quickly with his
+knife to cut around on a little piece of wood until there was a body and
+four legs; but the wood was not large enough for the neck and the head; so
+he had to take another piece and calculate from the beginning how high it
+must be and where the head must be placed. So Toni cut away with much
+perseverance until he succeeded in making something like a goat and could
+show it with great satisfaction to his mother. She was much delighted at
+his skill and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are surely going to be a wood-carver, and a very good one.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>From that time on Toni looked at every little piece of wood which came in
+his way, to see if it would be good for carving, and if so he would
+quickly put it away, so that he often brought home all his pockets full of
+these pieces, which he then collected like treasures into a pile and spent
+every free moment carving them.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the years passed by. Although Elsbeth always had many cares, she
+experienced only joy in her Toni. He still clung to her with the same
+love, helped her in every way as well as he could and spent his life
+beside her, entirely at his quiet occupation, in which he gradually
+acquired a quite gratifying skill. Toni was never so content as when he
+was sitting in the little stone hut with his carving and his mother came
+in and out happily employed, always saying a kindly word to him and
+finally sat down beside him at her spinning-wheel.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_SECOND" id="CHAPTER_SECOND" />CHAPTER SECOND</h3>
+
+<h2>A HARD SENTENCE</h2>
+
+
+<p>Toni was twelve years old in the winter, and now his school days were
+over, and the time had come to look about for some kind of work which
+would bring him in some money and by which he could learn something
+necessary for future years.</p>
+
+<p>Spring had come and work had begun in the fields. His mother thought it
+would be best to ask the proprietor of the Matten farm, if he had some
+light work for Toni; but every time she spoke about it he would say
+beseechingly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Mother, don't do that; let me be a wood-carver!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She would have had no objection to this, but knew no way to bring it
+about, and she had known the farmer up on the Matten farm ever since her
+husband had worked there, and ever since his death, from time to time he
+had sent her a little wood or meal.</p>
+
+<p>She hoped that he would employ Toni at first for light tasks in the field,
+so that he would gradually learn to do the heavier work.</p>
+
+<p>So on Saturday night after the day's work was ended and she sat down with
+Toni to their scanty supper, she said once more:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Toni, now we must take a decided step; I think it is best for me to go up
+to the Matten farm to-morrow.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Mother, don't do that!&quot; said Toni quite beseechingly. &quot;Don't go to
+the farmer! If you will only let me be a wood-carver, I will work so hard,
+that I will earn enough, and you will not have to do so much, and then I
+can stay at home with you. Besides you would be all alone, and I can't
+bear it, if I have to be always away from you. Let me stay with you; don't
+send me away, Mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you good Toni,&quot; said his mother, &quot;what wouldn't I give to be able to
+keep you always with me! But that really cannot be. I know of no way for
+you to be a wood-carver; some one would have to teach you, and when you
+had learned, how should we sell the carvings? You would have to know
+people and go about, or else your work wouldn't bring any money. If only I
+could talk with some one, who could give me good advice!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't you know any one, Mother, you can ask?&quot; said Toni anxiously and
+racked his brain to try to think of some one. His mother too began to
+consider.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think I will go to the pastor, who has already given me advice,&quot; said
+his mother, delighted to have found a way out of the difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>Toni was quite happy and now was determined that early the next morning
+they should go down to the church and then his mother could go in to see
+the pastor and Toni would wait outside.</p>
+
+<p>Everything was carried out on Sunday morning as they had planned. His
+mother had put two of the little carved animals in her pocket to show the
+pastor as examples of her boy's good ability. The pastor received her very
+cordially, had her sit down beside him and enquired with interest about
+her affairs, for he knew Elsbeth and how bravely she had helped herself
+through all the hard times.</p>
+
+<p>She told him now the whole story, how Toni from a very early age had
+worked at the carving with so much interest and now wished for nothing so
+much as to carry on this work, but how she knew of no way for him to
+learn, nor how, later, the work could be sold. Finally she showed him the
+two little animals as examples of Toni's skill.</p>
+
+<p>The pastor replied to the mother that the plan would be very difficult to
+carry out. Although the two little goats were not badly carved, yet in
+order to perform the work right and to earn his bread by it, Toni would
+have first to learn from a good carver, because making only little animals
+or boxes would not amount to anything or bring in any money, and he would
+only be wasting his time.</p>
+
+<p>However, down in the village of Frutigen there was a very skillful,
+well-known wood-carver, who made wonderful large works which went far into
+the world, even to America. He carved whole groups of animals on high
+rocks, chamois and eagles and whole mountains with the herdsman and the
+cows. Elsbeth could talk with this carver. If Toni studied with him he
+could help him to sell the finished work, for he had ways open for it.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth left the pastor with gratitude and new hope in her heart. In front
+of the house Toni was waiting in great suspense. She had to tell him at
+once everything the pastor had said, and when she finally related about
+the wood-carver in Frutigen Toni suddenly stood still and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then come, Mother, let us go to the place at once.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>However, his mother had not thought it over&mdash;she made many objections, but
+Toni begged so earnestly, that she finally said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We must go home first and have something to eat, for it is very far
+away; but we can do that quickly and then start off again right away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So they hurried back to the house, took a little bread and milk and
+started on their way again. They had several hours to travel, but Toni was
+so busy with his plans and thoughts for the future, the time flew like a
+dream and he looked up in great surprise, when his mother said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See, there is the church tower of Frutigen!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>They were soon standing in front of the wood-carver's house, and learned
+from the children before the door, that their father was at home.</p>
+
+<p>Inside in the large, wainscotted room, sat the wood-carver with his wife
+at the table, looking at a large book of beautiful colored pictures of
+animals which he would be able to make good use of in his handicraft. When
+the two arrived he welcomed them and invited them to come and be seated on
+the wooden bench, where he and his wife were sitting and which ran along
+the wall around the entire room. Elsbeth accepted the invitation and
+immediately began to tell the wood-carver why she had come and what she
+so much desired of him.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Toni stood as if rooted to the floor and stared motionless at a
+single spot. In front of him next the wall was a glass case, in which
+could be seen two high rocks, carved out of wood. On one was standing a
+chamois with her little ones. They had such dainty, slender legs, and
+their fine heads sat so naturally on their necks that it seemed as if they
+were all alive and not at all made of wood. On the other rock stood a
+hunter, his gun hanging by his side, and his hat, with even a feather in
+it, sat on his head, all so finely carved, that one would think it must be
+a real hat and a real little feather, and yet all was of wood.</p>
+
+<p>Next the hunter stood his dog, and it seemed as if he would even wag his
+tail. Toni was like one enchanted and hardly breathed.</p>
+
+<p>When his mother finished speaking, the wood-carver said it seemed to him
+as if she thought the affair would half go of itself, but it was not so.</p>
+
+<p>If a thing was to be done right, it cost much time and patience to learn.
+He was not averse to taking the boy, for it seemed to him that he had a
+desire to learn; but she would have to pay for his board for a couple of
+months in Frutigen, besides paying for his instruction, which would be as
+much as his board, and she herself must know whether she could spend so
+much on the boy. On the other hand he would promise that the boy would be
+taught right, and she could see there in the glass case, what he could
+learn to do.</p>
+
+<p>At first Elsbeth was so disappointed and dismayed she was unable to speak
+a word. Now she knew that it would be absolutely impossible for her to
+fulfill her boy's greatest wish. The necessary expense of board and
+instruction was beyond anything that she could manage, so much so that it
+was quite out of the question. It was all over with Toni's plans.</p>
+
+<p>She rose and thanked the wood-carver for his willingness to take the boy,
+but she would have to decline his offer. Then she beckoned to Toni, whose
+eyes were still so fastened to the glass case that he paid no attention.
+She took him by the hand and led him quietly out of the door.</p>
+
+<p>Outside Toni said, drawing a deep breath:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you see what was in the case? Mother, did you see it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes, I saw it, Toni,&quot; replied his mother with a sigh, &quot;but did you
+hear what the wood-carver said?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Toni had heard nothing; all his mind had been directed to one point.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I didn't hear anything; when can I go?&quot; he asked longingly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, it is not possible, Toni, but don't take it so to heart! See, I can't
+do it, although I would like to so much,&quot; declared his mother; &quot;but
+everything would come to more than I earn in a year, and you know how hard
+I have to work to manage to make the two ends meet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was a hard blow for Toni. All his hopes for many years lay destroyed
+before him; but he knew how his mother worked, how little good she
+herself had, and how she always tried to give him a little pleasure when
+she could. He said not a word and silently swallowed his rising tears, but
+he was very much grieved that all his hopes were over, since for the first
+time he had seen what wonderful things could be made out of a piece of
+wood.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h3><a name="UP_IN_THE_MOUNTAINS" id="UP_IN_THE_MOUNTAINS" />CHAPTER THIRD</h3>
+
+<h2>UP IN THE MOUNTAINS</h2>
+
+
+<p>The next morning, the farmer on the Matten farm sent word to Elsbeth, to
+come up to see him towards evening, as he had something to talk with her
+about. At the right time she laid aside her hoe, tied on a clean apron,
+and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Finish the hoeing, Toni; then you can milk the goat and give her some
+fresh straw, so she will have a better bed. Then I will be back again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She went up to the Matten farm. The farmer was standing in the open
+barn-door gazing with satisfaction at his beautiful cows, wandering in a
+long procession to the well. Elsbeth stepped up to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I am glad you have come,&quot; he said, holding out his hand to her. &quot;I
+have been thinking about you on account of the boy's welfare. He is now at
+an age to do some light work and help you a little, at least to take care
+of himself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have already been thinking about that,&quot; replied Elsbeth, &quot;and wanted to
+ask you, if you could give him a little light work in the fields?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is fortunate,&quot; continued the farmer. &quot;I have a little job for him,
+healthy and not very hard, that is to say not hard at all. He can go up to
+the small mountain with the cows. The herdsman with his boys is on the big
+mountain and a man is also there to come every morning and evening for the
+milking, so the boy will not be entirely alone and will have nothing to do
+but watch the cows so that none wander off, that they don't hook each
+other or do anything out of the way. While he sits there on the mountain
+he is master and can have all the milk he wants. A king couldn't have
+anything better.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth was a little frightened by the offer. If Toni had been more with
+the farm men, and had been with cows, or if he had naturally a different
+disposition, wilder and more roving and commanding-but as he was so quiet
+and shy, and besides without any knowledge of such things, to be for the
+first time all alone for several months, away from home, up on the
+mountains, watching a herd of cows, this seemed to her too hard for Toni.
+What would the poor boy, who was not particularly strong, do if anything
+happened to him or to the herd? She expressed all her thoughts to the
+farmer, but it made no difference; he thought it would be good for the boy
+to get out for once, and up on the mountain he would be much stronger than
+at home, and nothing could happen to him, for he would be given a horn and
+if anything went wrong he could blow lustily, and immediately the farm man
+would come from the other mountain; in a half hour he would be there.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth finally thought the farmer understood it much better than she, and
+so it was decided that the next week, when the cows went up to the
+mountain pasture, Toni should go with them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He shall have a good bit of money and a new suit of clothes when he comes
+down. That will be a help for the winter,&quot; said the farmer finally.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth thanked him as she said good-by, and turned homeward.</p>
+
+<p>Toni was at first opposed to this, when he heard that he would be away so
+long without being able to come home a single time; but his mother
+explained to him how easy the work would be, that he would grow stronger
+up there, so as to be able to do better things later on, and that the
+Matten farmer would give him a new suit and a good bit of money as pay. So
+Toni objected no longer, but said he would be glad to do something and not
+let his mother work alone.</p>
+
+<p>Then it occurred to Elsbeth that, if Toni was going to be away the whole
+summer she could perhaps go to one of the big hotels in Interlaken where
+so many strangers go for the summer. There she could earn a good sum of
+money and meet the coming winter without anxiety. She was already known in
+Interlaken for she had served as chambermaid in one of the hotels for
+several summers before her marriage.</p>
+
+<p>When the day came for the big herd of cows to be taken up to the mountain
+pasture, Toni's mother gave him his little bundle and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go now, in God's name! Don't forget to pray, when the day begins, and
+when it ends, and the dear Lord will not forget you, and His protection is
+better than that of men.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So Toni started off with his little bundle behind the herd up the
+mountain.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after this Elsbeth closed her cottage. She took the goat up to
+the Matten farm. When the farmer heard that she was going to Interlaken,
+he promised her to take the goat, and thought when Elsbeth came home
+again, she would give twice as much milk, and what he made from her, he
+would give back to Elsbeth in cheese. Then she started down to Interlaken.</p>
+
+<p>The herd had already been climbing the mountain for several hours. The
+herdsman turned off to the left with the big herd, and the man went with
+Toni up towards the right, followed by the smaller herd, which consisted
+of fewer cows but many young cattle, for not many cows could be kept on
+the small mountain pasture, because the milk had to be carried across to
+the big one where the herdsman's hut stood.</p>
+
+<p>They now reached the highest point of the pasture. There stood a little
+hut. All around there was nothing but pasture, not a tree, not a bush. In
+the hut on one side was a narrow seat fastened to the wall in front of
+which stood a table. On the other side stood a bed of hay. In the corner
+was a little, round stool and on this a wooden jug.</p>
+
+<p>Toni and the man stepped inside. The latter placed on the floor the big
+wooden milk-pail, which he had brought up on his back, took out of it a
+round loaf of bread and a huge piece of cheese, laid both on the table and
+said: &quot;Of course you have a knife,&quot; to which Tony assented.</p>
+
+<p>Then the man took the wooden jug, swung the milk-pail on his back and went
+out. Toni followed him. The man lifted a wooden basin out of the big pail,
+seated himself on the little round stool which he had brought out of the
+hut and began to milk one cow after another. If one was too far away, he
+would call out: &quot;Drive her here!&quot; and Toni obeyed. When the basin was full
+he poured it into the big pail and silently went on until all the cows had
+been milked. At the last the man filled the jug with milk, handed it to
+Toni, took the pail on his back, the basin in his hand and saying &quot;Good
+night!&quot; went down the mountain.</p>
+
+<p>Then Toni was all alone. He put his jug of milk in the hut and came out
+again. He looked around on every side. He looked over to the big mountain,
+but between that and his pasture was a wide valley so one had to descend
+in order to climb up to the big one. But all around both pastures great
+dark masses of mountains looked down, some rocky, gray and jagged, others
+covered with snow, all reaching up to the sky, so high and mighty and with
+such different peaks and horns and some with such broad backs, that it
+almost seemed to Toni as if they were enormous giants, each one having his
+own face and looking down at him. It was a clear evening. The mountain
+opposite was shining in the golden evening light, and now a little star
+came into sight above the dark mountains, and looked down to Toni in such
+a friendly way that it cheered him very much.</p>
+
+<p>He thought of his mother, where she was now and how she was in the habit
+of standing with him at this time in front of the little cottage and
+talking so pleasantly. Then suddenly there came over him such a feeling of
+loneliness that he ran into the hut, threw himself down on the cot, buried
+his face in the hay and sobbed softly, until the weariness of the day
+overcame him and he fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The bright morning lured him out early. The man was already outside. He
+milked the cows, spoke not a word and went away.</p>
+
+<p>Now a long, long day followed. It was perfectly still all around. The cows
+grazed and lay down around in the sun-bathed pasture. Tom went into the
+hut two or three times, drank some milk and ate some bread and cheese.
+Then he came out again, sat down on the ground and carved on a piece of
+wood he had in his pocket, for although he no longer dared to cherish the
+hope of becoming a wood-carver, yet he could not help carving for himself
+as well as he could. At last it was evening again. The man came and went.
+He said not a word, and Toni had nothing to say either.</p>
+
+<p>Thus passed one day after another. They were all so long! so long! In the
+evening, when it began to grow dark it always seemed terrible to Toni, for
+then the high mountains looked so black and threatening, as if they would
+suddenly do him some harm. Then he would rush back into the hut and crawl
+into his bed of hay.</p>
+
+<p>Many days had passed like this, one exactly the same as the other. The
+sun had always shone in a cloudless sky; always at evening the friendly
+little star had gleamed above the dark mountain. But one afternoon, thick,
+gray clouds began to chase one another across the sky; now and then
+blinding lightning flashed, and suddenly frightful thunder-bolts sounded,
+which echoed roaring from the mountains, as if there were twice as many
+and then a terrible storm broke. It was as dark as night; the rain beat
+against the hut, and meanwhile the thunder rolled with fearful
+reverberations through the mountains; quivering lightning lighted up the
+black, frightful giant-forms, which seemed quite specter-like to come
+nearer and look down menacingly. The cattle ran together in alarm and
+bellowed loudly, and great birds of prey flapped around with piercing
+shrieks.</p>
+
+<p>Toni had long since fled into the hut, but the lightning showed him the
+frightful forms and it seemed every minute as if the rolling thunder
+would overthrow the hut to the ground. Toni was so alarmed he could
+hardly breathe. He climbed up on the table expecting every minute that the
+hut would fall and crush him. The storm lasted for hours, and the man
+never came over. It was now really night but still the blinding lightning
+flashed and new peals of thunder rolled and the storm howled and raged as
+if it would sweep the hut away.</p>
+
+<p>Toni stood half the night stiff with fright, clinging to the table, and
+with no thought, only a feeling of a frightful power, which was crushing
+everything. How he reached his bed he did not know, but in the morning he
+lay stretched across the hay, so exhausted he could hardly rise. He looked
+anxiously out of the window. How must it look outside after such a night?
+Then he went out to see about the cows. The ground was still wet, but the
+animals were peacefully grazing.</p>
+
+<p>The sky was gray, and thick, black clouds were passing over it. Gloomy and
+frightful the high mountains stood there. They had come so near and
+looked more threateningly than ever at Toni. He ran back into the hut.</p>
+
+<p>Many days of thunder storms followed, one after another and if the sun
+came out between, it burned unbearably, and new storms followed so
+unceasingly and violent, that the herdsman, on the other mountain often
+said that he had not known such a summer for years, and if it didn't
+change he wouldn't make half so much butter as in former summers, because
+the cows gave no milk, as they didn't like the fodder.</p>
+
+<p>During this time the man-servant chose the most favorable time to come
+over to the small pasture, milked the cows as quickly as possible and did
+not look after the boy at all; only now and then, when he thought Toni had
+no more milk, he would bring the jug out quickly, fill it and put it back
+again. Then he often saw Toni sitting on his bed of hay, and would call
+out in passing:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are lazy!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But then he ran right away in order to get back without being wet, and
+did not trouble himself further about the boy.</p>
+
+<p>So June had passed, and already a good part of July. The thunder storms
+had become less frequent, but thick fog often so enveloped the mountain
+that one could hardly see two steps away, and only here and there a black
+head appeared, looking gloomily through the mist. The cattle often
+wandered so far that the man found some of them between the two mountains
+and brought them up again. This would not do. He called up to the boy, but
+received no answer. He ran to the hut and went in. Toni crouched in the
+corner was sitting on his bed and staring straight before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why don't you look after the cows?&quot; asked the man.</p>
+
+<p>He received no answer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Can't you speak? What is the matter with you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>No answer.</p>
+
+<p>Then the man looked at the bread and cheese, to see if Toni had eaten
+everything and was suffering from hunger. But more than half the bread was
+there and the larger part of the cheese. Toni had taken almost nothing but
+milk.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the matter with you, then? Are you sick?&quot; asked the man again.</p>
+
+<p>Toni gave no answer. He seemed not to hear anything and stared so
+motionless before him that the man was quite alarmed. He ran out of the
+hut. He told the herdsman how it was with the boy and they decided that
+when one of the herdsman's boys went down with the butter, he must tell
+the Matten farmer about it.</p>
+
+<p>Another week passed. Then the news was brought to the farmer. He thought
+the boy would be happy again, that the heavy thunderstorms had only
+frightened him a little. But he sent word for the herdsman to go over; he
+had boys of his own and would understand better about this than the hired
+man. If anything was wrong with Toni he must be brought down.</p>
+
+<p>Some days later the herdsman really went over with one of his boys and
+found Toni still crouched in the corner just as the man had seen him. Toni
+made no sound to anything the herdsman said to him, did not move and kept
+staring always before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He must go down,&quot; said the herdsman to his boy, &quot;go with him right away,
+but take care that nothing happens to him and be good to him; the boy is
+to be pitied,&quot; and he looked at Toni with sympathy, for the herdsman had a
+good heart and took delight in his own three big, healthy boys. The one he
+had with him was a strong, sturdy fellow of sixteen years. He went up to
+Toni and told him to stand up, but Toni did not move. Then the lad took
+him under the arms, lifted him up, like a feather, then swung him on his
+back, held him firmly with both hands, and went with his light burden down
+the mountain.</p>
+
+<p>When the Matten farmer saw Toni in such a sad condition, which remained
+just the same, he was alarmed, for he had not expected such a thing. He
+did not know at all what to do with the boy. His mother was far away, no
+relatives were there, and he himself did not want to keep Toni while in
+this condition. He could take such a responsibility, but he did not want
+to do so. Suddenly a good thought came to him, the same as the people
+there in every difficulty, in every need and every trouble, always have
+first of all:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Take him to the Pastor,&quot; he said to the herdsman's boy, &quot;he will have
+some good advice to give, which will help.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The lad immediately started off and went to the Pastor, who allowed the
+boy to tell him as much as he knew about the details of the case, how Toni
+came to be in this condition and how long it had lasted; but the lad knew
+very little about it all. The Pastor first tried every means to make Toni
+speak, and asked him if he would like to go to his mother, but it was all
+in vain, Toni did not give the least sign of understanding or interest.</p>
+
+<p>Then the pastor sat down, wrote a letter and said to the herdsman's boy:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go back to the Matten farm and tell the farmer to harness his little
+carriage and send it to me, and then I will see that Toni goes to-day to
+Bern. He is very sick; say that to the farmer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The farmer harnessed immediately, glad that further responsibility was
+taken from him and he had only to carry Toni as far as the railway. But
+the Pastor sent down to his sexton, an older, kindly man, who had given
+him a helping hand for years in many matters of responsibility. He was
+commissioned to take Toni with all care to the great sanitarium in Bern
+and to give the letter to the doctor there, a good friend of the Pastor's.
+A half hour later, the open carriage with the high seat drove up in front
+of the Pastor's house. The sexton climbed up, placed the sick boy beside
+him, held him carefully but firmly and thus Toni drove out into the world,
+with a horse, for the first time in his life. But he sat there with no
+sign of interest. It was as if he were no longer conscious of the outer
+world.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_FOURTH" id="CHAPTER_FOURTH" />CHAPTER FOURTH</h3>
+
+<h2>IN THE SANITARIUM</h2>
+
+
+<p>The doctor of the sanitarium was sitting with his family around the family
+table, engaged in merry conversation on various subjects. Even the lady
+from Geneva, who spent several hours a day with the family, seemed to-day
+a little infected by the children's gayety. She had never before taken so
+lively a part in the discussion, which the school-children carried on
+about different interests.</p>
+
+<p>This lady's beloved and gifted son had died not long before; on this
+account she had fallen into such deep sadness that her health had suffered
+greatly and therefore she had been brought to the sanitarium to recover.</p>
+
+<p>The animated conversation was suddenly interrupted by a letter which was
+handed to the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A letter from an old friend, who is sending me a patient to the
+sanitarium. He is a young boy, hardly as old as our Max&mdash;there, read it.&quot;
+Whereupon the doctor handed the letter to his wife.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, the poor boy!&quot; exclaimed his wife. &quot;Is he here? Bring him in. Perhaps
+it will do him good to see the children.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think he is quite near,&quot; said the doctor; he went out, and soon came in
+again with the sexton and Toni. He led the former into a bay window and
+began talking with him in a low tone. Meanwhile the doctor's wife drew
+near to Toni, who on entering had pressed into the nearest corner. She
+spoke kindly to him and invited him to come to the table and eat something
+with her children. Toni did not move. Then lively little Marie jumped down
+from her chair and came to Toni with a large piece of bread and butter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There, take a bite,&quot; she said encouragingly.</p>
+
+<p>Toni remained motionless.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See, you must do so,&quot; and the little girl bit a good piece from the bread
+and held it to him, then again a little nearer, so he only needed to bite
+into it. But he stared in front of him and made no motion. This silent
+resistance frightened Marie and she drew back quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Then the doctor came, took Toni by the hand and went out followed by the
+sexton.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Toni's appearance had made a great impression on the children. They
+had become perfectly quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Later when they had gone to bed and the two women were sitting alone
+together, the doctor came back again. In reply to their urgent questions
+he informed them about all that the sexton had told him concerning Toni's
+illness and his life with his mother, and that no one had ever noticed
+anything wrong with the boy before, only he had always been a quiet,
+gentle child and more slenderly built than any of the other village
+children.</p>
+
+<p>The women asked how he had come into this condition in the summer up on
+the beautiful mountain, and the doctor explained that it was not so
+strange, if one knew how terrible the thunder storms were up in the
+mountains. &quot;Besides,&quot; he concluded, &quot;a delicate child, such as this boy,
+all alone without a human being near, for whole weeks, even months long,
+without hearing a word spoken, might well be so terrified through fear and
+horror in the awful loneliness that he would become wholly benumbed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then the lady from Geneva, who took an unusual interest in poor Toni's
+fate, exclaimed in great excitement:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How can a mother allow such a thing to happen to her child! It is wholly
+inconceivable, quite incomprehensible!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You really can have no idea,&quot; replied the doctor soothingly, &quot;what poor
+mothers are obliged to let happen to their children. But don't believe
+that it causes them less pain than others. You see how many suffer that we
+know nothing about, and how hard poverty oppresses.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Will you be able to help the poor young boy?&quot; asked the lady from Geneva.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I can only bring out the right emotion in him,&quot; he replied, &quot;so that
+the spell, which holds him imprisoned, can be broken. Now everything in
+him is numbed and lifeless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, do help him! Do help him!&quot; begged the sick lady imploringly. &quot;Oh, if
+I could do something for him!&quot; And she walked to and fro thinking about a
+way to help, for Toni's condition went deeply to her heart.</p>
+
+<p>It was the second week of August, when Toni came to the sanitarium. Day
+after day, week after week passed and the doctor could only bring the same
+sad news to the two women, who every morning awaited his report with great
+anxiety. Not the slightest change was noticed. Every means was tried to
+amuse the boy, to see if he would perhaps laugh. Other attempts were
+devised to disturb him, to make him cry. They performed all kinds of
+tricks to attract his attention. All, all were in vain; no trace of
+interest or emotion was aroused in Toni.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If he could only be made to laugh or to cry once!&quot; repeated the doctor
+over and over again.</p>
+
+<p>When he had been four weeks in the sanitarium all hope disappeared, for
+the doctor had exhausted every means.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now I will try one thing more,&quot; he said one morning to his wife. &quot;I have
+written to my friend, the Pastor, and asked him if the boy was very much
+attached to his mother, and if so, to send for her right away. Perhaps to
+see her again would make an impression on him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The two women looked forward in great suspense to Elsbeth's arrival.</p>
+
+<p>In the first week of September the last guests left the hotel in
+Interlaken where Elsbeth had spent the summer. She immediately started on
+her way home, for she wanted to get everything in order before Toni came
+down from the mountain. She never thought but that he was still up there,
+and had no suspicion of all that had happened. When she reached home, she
+went at once to the Matten farm to enquire for Toni and to bring the goat
+home.</p>
+
+<p>The farmer was very friendly, and thought her goat was now by far one of
+the finest, because she had had good fodder so long. But when Elsbeth
+asked after her Toni, he broke off abruptly and said he had so much to do,
+she must go to the Pastor, for he would have the best knowledge about the
+boy. It immediately seemed to Elsbeth that it was a little strange for the
+Pastor to know best what happened up on the mountain and while she was
+leading home the goat, and thinking about the matter, a feeling of anxiety
+came over her and grew stronger and stronger. As soon as she reached home,
+she quickly tied the goat, without going into the cottage at all, and ran
+back the same way she had come, down again to Kandergrund.</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor told her with great consideration, how Toni had not borne the
+life on the mountain very well and they had been obliged to bring him
+down, and since it seemed best for him that he should go at once to a good
+physician for the right care, he had sent the boy immediately to Bern.</p>
+
+<p>His mother was very much shocked and wanted to travel the next day to see
+for herself if her child was very ill.</p>
+
+<p>But the Pastor said that would not do, but that she should wait until the
+doctor allowed a visit, and she could be sure that Toni was receiving the
+best care.</p>
+
+<p>With a heavy heart Elsbeth went back to her cottage. She could do nothing
+but leave it all to the dear Lord, who alone had been her trust for so
+many years. But it was only a few days later when the Pastor sent her word
+that she was to go to Bern at once, as the doctor wished her to come.</p>
+
+<p>Early the following day Elsbeth started. About noon she reached Bern and
+soon was standing in front of the door of the sanitarium.</p>
+
+<p>She was led to the doctor's living-room and here received with great
+friendliness by his wife and with still keener sympathy by the lady from
+Geneva, who had so lived in the history of poor Toni and his mother that
+she could hardly think of anything else but how to help these two. She had
+had only the one child and could so well understand the mother's trouble.
+She had even asked the doctor to allow her to be present when he took the
+boy to his mother, in order to share in the joy, if the poor boy's delight
+at seeing her again would affect him as they hoped.</p>
+
+<p>Soon the doctor appeared, and after he had prepared the mother not to
+expect Toni to speak at the first moment, he brought him in. He led him by
+the hand into the room, then he let go and stepped to one side.</p>
+
+<p>The mother ran to her Toni and tried to seize his hand. He drew back and
+pressed into the corner staring into vacancy.</p>
+
+<p>The women and the doctor exchanged sad looks.</p>
+
+<p>His mother went up to him and caressed him. &quot;Toneli, Toneli,&quot; she said
+again and again in a tender voice, &quot;don't you know me? Don't you know your
+mother any more?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As always before Toni pressed against the wall, made no motion and stared
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>In tender tones the mother continued mournfully:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Toneli, say just a single word! Only look at me once! Toneli, don't
+you hear me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Toneli remained unmoved.</p>
+
+<p>Still once again the mother looked at him full of tenderness, but only met
+his staring eyes. It was too much for poor Elsbeth, that the only
+possession she had on earth, and the one she loved with all her heart, her
+Toni, should be lost to her, and in such a sad way! She forgot everything
+around her. She fell on her knees beside her child, and while the tears
+were bursting from her eyes, she poured out aloud the sorrow in her heart:</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>
+Oh God of Love, oh Father-heart,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In whom my trust is founded,</span><br />
+I know full well how good Thou art&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">E'en when by grief I am wounded.</span><br />
+<br />
+Oh Lord, it surely can not be<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That Thou wilt let me languish</span><br />
+In hopeless depths of misery<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And live in tears of anguish.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Toni's eyes took on a different expression. He looked at his mother. She
+did not see him and went on imploring in the midst of her tears:</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>
+Oh Lord, my soul yearns for thine aid<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In this dark vale of weeping;</span><br />
+For Thee I have waited, hoped and prayed,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Assured of thy safe keeping.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Toni threw himself on his mother and sobbed aloud. She threw her
+arms around him and her tears of sorrow turned to loud sobs of joy. The
+child sobbed aloud also.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is won,&quot; said the doctor in great delight to the women, who, deeply
+moved, were looking on at the mother and boy.</p>
+
+<p>Then the doctor opened the door of the next room and beckoned Elsbeth to
+go in there with Toni. He thought it would be good for both to be alone
+for a while. In there after a while Toni began to talk quite naturally
+with his mother and asked her:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are we going home, Mother, to the stone hut? Shan't I have to go up on
+the mountain any more?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And she quieted him and said she would now take him right home, and they
+would stay there together. Soon all Toni's thoughts came back again quite
+clearly, and after a while he said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But I must earn something, Mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't trouble about that now,&quot; said Elsbeth quietly; &quot;the dear Lord will
+show a way when it is time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then they began to talk about the goat, how pretty and fat she had grown,
+and Toni gradually became quite lively.</p>
+
+<p>After an hour the doctor brought them both into the living-room back to
+the ladies. Toni was entirely changed, his eyes had now an earnest but
+quite different expression. The lady from Geneva was indescribably
+delighted. She sat down beside him at once, and he had to tell her where
+he had been to school and what he had liked to study.</p>
+
+<p>But the doctor beckoned to Elsbeth to come to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Listen, my good woman,&quot; he began, &quot;the words which you repeated made a
+deep, penetrating impression on the boy's heart. Did he know the hymn
+already?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, my Lord,&quot; exclaimed Elsbeth, &quot;many hundred times I have repeated it
+beside his little bed, when he was very small, often with many tears, and
+he would weep too, when he didn't know why.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He wept because you wept, he suffered because you suffered,&quot; said the
+doctor. &quot;Now I understand how he was aroused by these words. With such
+impressions in early childhood it is no wonder he became a quiet and
+reserved boy. This explains to me much in the past.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then the lady from Geneva came up for she wanted to talk with the mother.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear, good woman, he certainly must not go up on the mountain again.
+He is not fit for it,&quot; she said in great eagerness. &quot;We must find
+something different for him. Has he no taste for some other occupation?
+But it must be light, for he is not strong and needs care.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes, he has a great desire to learn something,&quot; said his mother.
+&quot;From a little boy he has wished for it, but I hardly dare mention it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There, there, my good woman, tell me right away about it,&quot; said the lady
+encouragingly, expecting something unheard-of.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He wants so much to be a wood-carver, and has a good deal of talent for
+it, but the cost of board and instruction together is more than eighty
+francs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is that all?&quot; exclaimed the lady in the greatest surprise, &quot;is that all?
+Come, my boy,&quot; and she ran to Toni again, &quot;would you really like to
+become a wood-carver&mdash;better than anything else?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The joy which shone in Toni's eyes, when he answered that he would, showed
+the lady what she had to do. She had such a longing to help Toni, that she
+wanted to act immediately that very hour.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would you like to learn at once, go to a teacher right away?&quot; she asked
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Toni gladly replied that he would.</p>
+
+<p>But now came a new thought. She turned to the doctor. &quot;Perhaps he ought to
+recover his health first?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor replied that he had been already thinking about that. The
+mother had told him that she knew a very good master up in Frutigen. &quot;Now
+I think,&quot; he went on to say, &quot;that carving is not a strenuous work, and
+one of the most important things for Toni is to have for some time good,
+nourishing food. In Frutigen there is a very good inn, if he only could&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will undertake that, Doctor, I will undertake that,&quot; interrupted the
+lady. &quot;I will go with him. We will start to-morrow. In Frutigen I will
+provide for Toni's board and lodging and for everything he needs.&quot; In her
+great delight the lady shook hands with both the mother and the boy
+repeatedly, and went out to instruct her maid about preparations for the
+journey.</p>
+
+<p>When the mother with her boy had been taken to their room, the doctor said
+with great delight to his wife:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have two recoveries. Our lady is also cured. A new interest has come
+to her, and you will see she will have new life in providing for this
+young boy. This has been a beautiful day!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>On the following morning the journey was made to Frutigen, and the little
+company were so glad and happy together that they reached there before
+they were aware of it.</p>
+
+<p>At the wood-carver's the lady was told everything that would be needed for
+the work, and after he had showed them all kinds of instruments, he
+thought a fine book with good pictures, from which one could work, would
+be useful.</p>
+
+<p>After the lady had charged him to teach Toni everything in any way
+necessary for the future, they went to the inn. Here the lady engaged a
+good room with comfortable bed, and herself arranged with the host a bill
+of fare for every day in the week. The host promised, with many bows, to
+follow everything exactly, for he saw very well with whom he had to deal.</p>
+
+<p>Then Toni and his mother had to eat with the lady in the inn, and during
+the meal she had much more to say. She was going now, she said, the next
+day, home to Geneva, where there were large shops, in which nothing was
+sold but carvings. There she would immediately arrange for Toni to send
+all his articles, so he could begin to work with fresh zeal. Moreover, she
+insisted that Toni should remain, not two, but three months with the
+carver, so that he could learn everything from the foundation. He could go
+from here to visit his mother on Sundays, or she could come to him.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth and Toni were so full of gratitude, they could find no words to
+express it, but the lady understood them nevertheless and bore home a
+happy heart, such as she had not had for a long time.</p>
+
+<p>It came about just as the doctor had foreseen. The lady, who had not been
+able to think any more about her home now desired to return to Geneva. She
+had so many plans to carry out there, that she could hardly wait for the
+day when she was to go back.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor was delighted to consent to her going soon.</p>
+
+<p>Toni, who had hardly begun with his new teacher, applied himself with so
+much zeal and skill to his work, that the carver said to his wife in the
+fourth week:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If he goes on like this, he will learn to do better than I can.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The three months had come to an end, and Christmas was drawing near. One
+morning Toni waded through the deep snow up to his home. He looked round
+and fresh, and his heart was so happy he had to sing aloud as he came
+along.</p>
+
+<p>But when after a long walk, he suddenly saw the stone hut with the
+fir-tree thickly covered with snow behind it, tears of joy came to his
+eyes. He was coming home, home for all time. He ran to the little house,
+and his mother, who had already seen him, hurried out, and which one of
+the two was the more delighted, no one could tell; but they were both so
+happy, as they sat together again in the cottage, that they could think of
+no greater fortune on earth. Their highest wish was fulfilled. Toni was a
+wood-carver, and could carry on his work at home with his mother. And with
+what blessings besides the dear Lord was still overwhelming them! From
+Geneva such good things kept coming to Elsbeth, that she no longer had to
+dread anxious days, and with each package came new assurance of the ready
+acceptance of Toni's work.</p>
+
+<p>Such a Christmas festival as was celebrated two days later in the stone
+hut, neither Elsbeth nor Toni had ever known before, for the candles which
+his mother had lighted shone out upon a quantity of things, which Toni had
+received to wear, and also a whole set of the most beautiful knives for
+carving and a book with pictures, of a size and beauty such as Toni had
+never in all his life seen before. His master's book was a mere child's
+toy beside it. Elsbeth too was lovingly provided for. The lady from Geneva
+had planned everything, and the bright reflection from it fell back
+radiantly into her own heart.</p>
+
+<p>The most beautiful deer and huntsman and the wonderful eagles on the rock,
+standing in the high show-window in Geneva was carved by Toni, and was
+considered by him to be a particularly successful piece, so it went, not
+to the dealer in Geneva, but to the lady for whom Toni preserved a
+thankful heart all his life long.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14128 ***</div>
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Toni, the Little Woodcarver, by Johanna
+Spyri, Translated by Helen B. Dole</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Toni, the Little Woodcarver</p>
+<p>Author: Johanna Spyri</p>
+<p>Release Date: November 23, 2004 [eBook #14128]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TONI, THE LITTLE WOODCARVER***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Michael Ciesielski,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class='ctrie'>
+<div style='width:453px; margin: 0 auto;'>
+ <a href='images/image01.jpg'>
+ <img src='images/image01_th.jpg' alt='Toni the little Woodcarver' />
+ </a>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style='height: 2pc; clear: both;'><br /></div>
+
+<div class="ctrie">
+<div id="ad">
+<h2 class='frontmatter'>Johanna Spyri's Alpine Stories</h2>
+
+
+<p><b>GRITLI'S CHILDREN.</b> Complete Edition. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS.
+Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>HEIDI.</b> Complete Edition. Translated by HELENE S. WHITE. 16 full-page
+illustrations in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>LITTLE ALPINE MUSICIAN.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in
+color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>RICO AND WISELI.</b> Complete Edition. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS.
+Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>UNCLE TITUS.</b> Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>VERONICA.</b> Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>JO, THE LITTLE MACHINIST.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in
+color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>LITTLE CURLY HEAD.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color
+8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>LITTLE MISS GRASSHOPPER.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in
+color by CHARLES COPELAND. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>MONI, THE GOAT BOY.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color by
+CHARLES COPELAND. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>TRINI, THE LITTLE STRAWBERRY GIRL.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE.
+Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>TONI, THE LITTLE WOOD CARVER.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated
+in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>TISS, A LITTLE ALPINE WAIF.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in
+color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>THE ROSE CHILD.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color. 8vo.</p>
+
+<p><b>WHAT SAMI SINGS WITH THE BIRDS.</b> Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated
+in color. 8vo.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<div class='ctrimg'>
+ <a href='images/image02.jpg'>
+ <img src='images/image02_th.jpg' alt='In front of him next to the wall stood a glass case' title='In front of him next to the wall stood a glass case' />
+ </a>
+<p class='ctr' style='font-variant: small-caps;'>In front of him next to the wall stood a glass case</p>
+</div>
+<div style='height: 3pc;'><br /></div>
+<h1 class='frontmatter'>
+Toni<br />
+the Little
+Woodcarver
+</h1>
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<h3 class='frontmatter'>By</h3>
+<div style='height: 1pc;'><br /></div>
+<h2 class='frontmatter'>Johanna Spyri</h2>
+
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<div class='ctr'>
+<p class='frontmatter'>Author of &quot;Heidi&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<h2 class='frontmatter'>Translated</h2>
+<h4 class='frontmatter'>By</h4>
+<h3 class='frontmatter'>Helen B. Dole</h3>
+
+<div style='height: 2pc;'><br /></div>
+
+<div class='ctr'>
+<p class='frontmatter'>
+1920</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h6>New York<br />
+Thomas Y. Crowell Company<br />
+Publishers<br /></h6>
+</div>
+
+<div style='height: 4pc;'><br /></div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<ol>
+
+<li> <a href="#AT_HOME_IN_THE_LITTLE_STONE_HUT"><b>AT HOME IN THE LITTLE STONE HUT</b></a></li>
+<li> <a href="#CHAPTER_SECOND"><b>A HARD SENTENCE</b></a></li>
+<li> <a href="#UP_IN_THE_MOUNTAINS"><b>UP IN THE MOUNTAINS</b></a></li>
+<li> <a href="#CHAPTER_FOURTH"><b>IN THE SANITARIUM</b></a></li>
+</ol>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+<h3><a name="AT_HOME_IN_THE_LITTLE_STONE_HUT" id="AT_HOME_IN_THE_LITTLE_STONE_HUT" />CHAPTER FIRST</h3>
+
+<h2>AT HOME IN THE LITTLE STONE HUT</h2>
+
+
+<p>High up in the Bernese Oberland, quite a distance above the
+meadow-encircled hamlet of Kandergrund, stands a little lonely hut, under
+the shadow of an old fir-tree. Not far away rushes down from the wooded
+heights of rock the Wild brook, which in times of heavy rains, has carried
+away so many rocks and bowlders that when the storms are ended a ragged
+mass of stones is left, through which flows a swift, clear stream of
+water. Therefore the little dwelling near by this brook is called the
+stone hut.</p>
+
+<p>Here lived the honest day-laborer Toni, who conducted himself well in
+every farm-house, where he went to work, for he was quiet and
+industrious, punctual at his tasks, and reliable in every way.</p>
+
+<p>In his hut at home he had a young wife and a little boy, who was a joy to
+both of them. Near the hut in the little shed was the goat, the milk of
+which supplied food for the mother and child, while the father received
+his board through the week on the farms where he worked from morning until
+night. Only on Sunday was he at home with his wife and little Toni. The
+wife Elsbeth, kept her little house in good order; it was narrow and tiny,
+but it always looked so clean and cheerful that every one liked to come
+into the sunny room, and the father, Toni, was never so happy as when he
+was at home in the stone hut with his little boy on his knee.</p>
+
+<p>For five years the family lived in harmony and undisturbed peace. Although
+they had no abundance and little worldly goods, they were happy and
+content. The husband earned enough, so they did not suffer want, and they
+desired nothing beyond their simple manner of life, for they loved each
+other and their greatest delight was little Toni.</p>
+
+<p>The little boy grew strong and healthy and with his merry ways delighted
+his father's heart, when he remained at home on Sundays, and sweetened all
+his mother's work on week-days, when his father was away until late in the
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>Little Toni was now four years old and already knew how to be helpful in
+all sorts of small ways, in the house and the goat's shed and also in the
+field behind the hut. From morning until night he tripped happily behind
+his mother for he was as content as the little birds up in the old
+fir-tree.</p>
+
+<p>When Saturday night came the mother scrubbed and cleaned with doubled
+energy, to finish early, for on that day the father was through his work
+earlier than other days, and she always went with little Toni by the hand,
+part way to meet him. This was a great delight to the child. He now knew
+very well how one task followed another in the household. When his mother
+began to scrub, he jumped around in the room, with delight and cried out
+again and again: &quot;Now we are going for Father! Now we are going for
+Father!&quot; until the moment came when his mother took him by the hand and
+started along.</p>
+
+<p>Saturday evening had come again in the lovely month of May. Outdoors the
+birds in the trees were singing merrily up to the blue sky; indoors the
+mother was cleaning busily, in order to get out early into the golden
+evening, and meanwhile now outside, now in the house, little Toni was
+hopping around and shouting:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now we are going for Father!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was not long before the work was finished. The mother put on her shawl,
+tied on her best apron and stepped out of the house.</p>
+
+<p>Toni jumped for joy and ran three times around his mother, then seized her
+hand and shouted once more:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now we are going for Father!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then he tripped along beside his mother in the lovely, sunny evening.
+They wandered to the Wild brook, over the wooden bridge, which crosses it,
+and came to the narrow foot-path, winding up through the flower-laden
+meadows to the farm where the father worked.</p>
+
+<p>The last rays of the setting sun fell across the meadows and the sound of
+the evening bells came up from Kandergrund.</p>
+
+<p>The mother stood still and folded her hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lay your hands together Toneli,&quot; she said, &quot;it is the Angelus.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The child obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What must I pray, Mother?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give us and all tired people a blessed Sunday! Amen!&quot; said the mother
+devoutly.</p>
+
+<p>Toneli repeated the prayer. Suddenly he screamed: &quot;Father is coming!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Down from the farm some one was running as fast as he could come.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is not Father,&quot; said his mother, and both went towards the running
+man. When they met, the man stood still and said, gasping:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't go any farther, turn around, Elsbeth. I came straight to you, for
+something has happened.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, my God!&quot; cried the woman in the greatest anguish, &quot;has something
+happened to Toni?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, he was with the wood-cutters, and then he was struck. They have
+brought him back; he is lying up at the farm-but don't go up there,&quot; he
+added, holding Elsbeth fast, for she wanted to start off as soon as she
+heard the news.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not go up?&quot; she said quickly. &quot;I must go to him; I must help him and see
+about bringing him home.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You cannot help him, he is&mdash;he is already dead,&quot; said the messenger in an
+unsteady voice. Then he turned and ran back again, glad to have the
+message off his mind.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth threw herself down on a stone by the way, unable to stand or to
+walk. She held her apron before her face and burst into weeping and
+sobbing, so that Toneli was distressed and frightened. He pressed close
+to his mother and began to cry too.</p>
+
+<p>It was already dark, when Elsbeth finally came to herself and could think
+of her child. The little one was still sitting beside her on the ground,
+with both hands pressed to his eyes, and sobbing pitifully. His mother
+lifted him up.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Toneli, we must go home; it is late,&quot; she said, taking him by the
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>But he resisted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, we must wait for Father!&quot; he said and pulled his mother back.</p>
+
+<p>Again she could not keep back the tears. &quot;Oh, Toneli, Father will come no
+more,&quot; she said, stifling her sobs; &quot;he is already enjoying the blessed
+Sunday, we prayed for, for the weary. See, the dear Lord has taken him to
+Heaven; it is so beautiful there, he will prefer to stay there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then we will go too,&quot; replied Toneli, starting</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes, we shall go there too,&quot; promised his mother, &quot;but now we must
+first go home to the stone hut,&quot; and without a word she went with the
+little one back to the silent cottage.</p>
+
+<p>The proprietor of the Matten farm sent word to Elsbeth the following day
+that he would do everything necessary for her husband, and so she need not
+come until it was time for the service, for she would not recognize her
+husband. He sent her some money in order that she would not have too much
+care in the next few days, and promised to think of her later on.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth did as he advised and remained at home until the bells in
+Kandergrund rang for the service. Then she went to accompany her husband
+to his resting place.</p>
+
+<p>Sad and hard days came for Elsbeth. She missed her good, kind husband
+everywhere, and felt quite lost without him. Besides, cares came now which
+she had known little about before, for her husband had had his good, daily
+work. But now she felt sometimes as if she would almost despair. She had
+nothing but her goat and the little potato field behind the cottage, and
+from these she had to feed and clothe herself and the little one, and
+besides furnish rent for the little house.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth had only one consolation, but one that always supported her when
+pain and care oppressed her; she could pray, and although often in the
+midst of tears, still always with the firm belief that the dear Lord would
+hear her supplication.</p>
+
+<p>When at night she had put little Toni in his tiny bed she would kneel down
+beside him and repeat aloud the old hymn, which now came from the depths
+of her heart, as never before:</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>
+Oh, God of Love, oh Father-heart,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In whom my trust is founded,</span><br />
+I know full well how good Thou art&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">E'en when by grief I am wounded.</span><br />
+<br />
+Oh Lord, it surely can not be<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That Thou wilt let me languish</span><br />
+In hopeless depths of misery,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And live in tears of anguish.</span><br />
+<br />
+Oh Lord, my soul yearns for thine aid<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In this dark vale of weeping;</span><br />
+For thee I've waited, hoped and prayed<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Assured of thy safe keeping.</span><br />
+<br />
+Lord let me bear whate'er thy Love<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">May send of grief or sorrow,</span><br />
+Until Thou, in thy Heaven above<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Make dawn a brighter morrow.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>And in the midst of her urgent praying, the mother's tears flowed
+abundantly, and little Toni, deeply moved in his heart by his mother's
+weeping and earnest prayer, kept his hands folded and wept softly too.</p>
+
+<p>So the time passed. Elsbeth struggled along and little Toni was able to
+help her in many ways, for he was now seven years old. He was his mother's
+only joy, and she was able to take delight in him for he was obedient and
+willing to do everything she desired. He had always been so inseparable
+from his mother that he knew exactly how the tasks of the day had to be
+done, and he desired nothing but to help her whenever he could. If she
+was working in the little field, he squatted beside her, pulled out the
+weeds, and threw the stones across the path.</p>
+
+<p>If his mother was taking the goat out of the shed so that she could nibble
+the grass around the hut, he went with her step by step, for his mother
+had told him he must watch her so that she would not run away.</p>
+
+<p>If his mother was sitting in winter by her spinning-wheel, he sat the
+whole time beside her, mending his winter shoes with strong strips of
+cloth, as she had taught him to do. He had no greater wish than to see his
+mother happy and contented. His greatest pleasure was, when Sunday came
+and she was resting from all work, to sit with her on the little wooden
+bench in front of the house and listen as she told him about his father
+and talk with her about all kinds of things.</p>
+
+<p>But now the time had come for Toni to go to school. It was very hard for
+him to leave his mother and remain away from her so much. The long way
+down to Kandergrund and up again took so much time, that Toni was hardly
+ever with his mother any more through the day, but only in the evening.
+Indeed he always came home so quickly that she could hardly believe it
+possible, for he looked forward with pleasure all day long to getting home
+again. He lost no time with his school-mates but ran immediately away from
+them as soon as school was over. He was not accustomed to the ways of the
+other boys since he had been constantly alone with his quietly working
+mother and used to performing definite tasks continually without any
+noise.</p>
+
+<p>So it was altogether strange to him and he took no pleasure in it, when
+the boys coming out of the school-house, set up a great screaming, one
+running after another, trying to see which was the stronger, and throwing
+one another on the ground, or wrestling so that their caps were thrown far
+away and their jackets half torn off.</p>
+
+<p>The wrestlers would often call to him:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come and play!&quot; and when he ran away from them they would call after
+him: &quot;You are a coward.&quot; But this made little difference to him; he didn't
+hear it long, for he ran with all his might in order to be at home again
+with his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Now a new interest for him arose in the school: he had seen beautiful
+animals drawn on white sheets, which the children of the upper classes
+copied. He quickly tried to draw them, too, with his pencil and at home
+continued drawing the animals again and again as long as he had a bit of
+paper. Then he cut out the animals and tried to make them stand on the
+table, but this he could not do. Then suddenly the thought came to him
+that if they were of wood they could stand. He began quickly with his
+knife to cut around on a little piece of wood until there was a body and
+four legs; but the wood was not large enough for the neck and the head; so
+he had to take another piece and calculate from the beginning how high it
+must be and where the head must be placed. So Toni cut away with much
+perseverance until he succeeded in making something like a goat and could
+show it with great satisfaction to his mother. She was much delighted at
+his skill and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are surely going to be a wood-carver, and a very good one.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>From that time on Toni looked at every little piece of wood which came in
+his way, to see if it would be good for carving, and if so he would
+quickly put it away, so that he often brought home all his pockets full of
+these pieces, which he then collected like treasures into a pile and spent
+every free moment carving them.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the years passed by. Although Elsbeth always had many cares, she
+experienced only joy in her Toni. He still clung to her with the same
+love, helped her in every way as well as he could and spent his life
+beside her, entirely at his quiet occupation, in which he gradually
+acquired a quite gratifying skill. Toni was never so content as when he
+was sitting in the little stone hut with his carving and his mother came
+in and out happily employed, always saying a kindly word to him and
+finally sat down beside him at her spinning-wheel.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_SECOND" id="CHAPTER_SECOND" />CHAPTER SECOND</h3>
+
+<h2>A HARD SENTENCE</h2>
+
+
+<p>Toni was twelve years old in the winter, and now his school days were
+over, and the time had come to look about for some kind of work which
+would bring him in some money and by which he could learn something
+necessary for future years.</p>
+
+<p>Spring had come and work had begun in the fields. His mother thought it
+would be best to ask the proprietor of the Matten farm, if he had some
+light work for Toni; but every time she spoke about it he would say
+beseechingly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Mother, don't do that; let me be a wood-carver!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She would have had no objection to this, but knew no way to bring it
+about, and she had known the farmer up on the Matten farm ever since her
+husband had worked there, and ever since his death, from time to time he
+had sent her a little wood or meal.</p>
+
+<p>She hoped that he would employ Toni at first for light tasks in the field,
+so that he would gradually learn to do the heavier work.</p>
+
+<p>So on Saturday night after the day's work was ended and she sat down with
+Toni to their scanty supper, she said once more:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Toni, now we must take a decided step; I think it is best for me to go up
+to the Matten farm to-morrow.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Mother, don't do that!&quot; said Toni quite beseechingly. &quot;Don't go to
+the farmer! If you will only let me be a wood-carver, I will work so hard,
+that I will earn enough, and you will not have to do so much, and then I
+can stay at home with you. Besides you would be all alone, and I can't
+bear it, if I have to be always away from you. Let me stay with you; don't
+send me away, Mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you good Toni,&quot; said his mother, &quot;what wouldn't I give to be able to
+keep you always with me! But that really cannot be. I know of no way for
+you to be a wood-carver; some one would have to teach you, and when you
+had learned, how should we sell the carvings? You would have to know
+people and go about, or else your work wouldn't bring any money. If only I
+could talk with some one, who could give me good advice!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't you know any one, Mother, you can ask?&quot; said Toni anxiously and
+racked his brain to try to think of some one. His mother too began to
+consider.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think I will go to the pastor, who has already given me advice,&quot; said
+his mother, delighted to have found a way out of the difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>Toni was quite happy and now was determined that early the next morning
+they should go down to the church and then his mother could go in to see
+the pastor and Toni would wait outside.</p>
+
+<p>Everything was carried out on Sunday morning as they had planned. His
+mother had put two of the little carved animals in her pocket to show the
+pastor as examples of her boy's good ability. The pastor received her very
+cordially, had her sit down beside him and enquired with interest about
+her affairs, for he knew Elsbeth and how bravely she had helped herself
+through all the hard times.</p>
+
+<p>She told him now the whole story, how Toni from a very early age had
+worked at the carving with so much interest and now wished for nothing so
+much as to carry on this work, but how she knew of no way for him to
+learn, nor how, later, the work could be sold. Finally she showed him the
+two little animals as examples of Toni's skill.</p>
+
+<p>The pastor replied to the mother that the plan would be very difficult to
+carry out. Although the two little goats were not badly carved, yet in
+order to perform the work right and to earn his bread by it, Toni would
+have first to learn from a good carver, because making only little animals
+or boxes would not amount to anything or bring in any money, and he would
+only be wasting his time.</p>
+
+<p>However, down in the village of Frutigen there was a very skillful,
+well-known wood-carver, who made wonderful large works which went far into
+the world, even to America. He carved whole groups of animals on high
+rocks, chamois and eagles and whole mountains with the herdsman and the
+cows. Elsbeth could talk with this carver. If Toni studied with him he
+could help him to sell the finished work, for he had ways open for it.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth left the pastor with gratitude and new hope in her heart. In front
+of the house Toni was waiting in great suspense. She had to tell him at
+once everything the pastor had said, and when she finally related about
+the wood-carver in Frutigen Toni suddenly stood still and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then come, Mother, let us go to the place at once.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>However, his mother had not thought it over&mdash;she made many objections, but
+Toni begged so earnestly, that she finally said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We must go home first and have something to eat, for it is very far
+away; but we can do that quickly and then start off again right away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So they hurried back to the house, took a little bread and milk and
+started on their way again. They had several hours to travel, but Toni was
+so busy with his plans and thoughts for the future, the time flew like a
+dream and he looked up in great surprise, when his mother said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See, there is the church tower of Frutigen!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>They were soon standing in front of the wood-carver's house, and learned
+from the children before the door, that their father was at home.</p>
+
+<p>Inside in the large, wainscotted room, sat the wood-carver with his wife
+at the table, looking at a large book of beautiful colored pictures of
+animals which he would be able to make good use of in his handicraft. When
+the two arrived he welcomed them and invited them to come and be seated on
+the wooden bench, where he and his wife were sitting and which ran along
+the wall around the entire room. Elsbeth accepted the invitation and
+immediately began to tell the wood-carver why she had come and what she
+so much desired of him.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Toni stood as if rooted to the floor and stared motionless at a
+single spot. In front of him next the wall was a glass case, in which
+could be seen two high rocks, carved out of wood. On one was standing a
+chamois with her little ones. They had such dainty, slender legs, and
+their fine heads sat so naturally on their necks that it seemed as if they
+were all alive and not at all made of wood. On the other rock stood a
+hunter, his gun hanging by his side, and his hat, with even a feather in
+it, sat on his head, all so finely carved, that one would think it must be
+a real hat and a real little feather, and yet all was of wood.</p>
+
+<p>Next the hunter stood his dog, and it seemed as if he would even wag his
+tail. Toni was like one enchanted and hardly breathed.</p>
+
+<p>When his mother finished speaking, the wood-carver said it seemed to him
+as if she thought the affair would half go of itself, but it was not so.</p>
+
+<p>If a thing was to be done right, it cost much time and patience to learn.
+He was not averse to taking the boy, for it seemed to him that he had a
+desire to learn; but she would have to pay for his board for a couple of
+months in Frutigen, besides paying for his instruction, which would be as
+much as his board, and she herself must know whether she could spend so
+much on the boy. On the other hand he would promise that the boy would be
+taught right, and she could see there in the glass case, what he could
+learn to do.</p>
+
+<p>At first Elsbeth was so disappointed and dismayed she was unable to speak
+a word. Now she knew that it would be absolutely impossible for her to
+fulfill her boy's greatest wish. The necessary expense of board and
+instruction was beyond anything that she could manage, so much so that it
+was quite out of the question. It was all over with Toni's plans.</p>
+
+<p>She rose and thanked the wood-carver for his willingness to take the boy,
+but she would have to decline his offer. Then she beckoned to Toni, whose
+eyes were still so fastened to the glass case that he paid no attention.
+She took him by the hand and led him quietly out of the door.</p>
+
+<p>Outside Toni said, drawing a deep breath:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you see what was in the case? Mother, did you see it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes, I saw it, Toni,&quot; replied his mother with a sigh, &quot;but did you
+hear what the wood-carver said?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Toni had heard nothing; all his mind had been directed to one point.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I didn't hear anything; when can I go?&quot; he asked longingly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, it is not possible, Toni, but don't take it so to heart! See, I can't
+do it, although I would like to so much,&quot; declared his mother; &quot;but
+everything would come to more than I earn in a year, and you know how hard
+I have to work to manage to make the two ends meet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was a hard blow for Toni. All his hopes for many years lay destroyed
+before him; but he knew how his mother worked, how little good she
+herself had, and how she always tried to give him a little pleasure when
+she could. He said not a word and silently swallowed his rising tears, but
+he was very much grieved that all his hopes were over, since for the first
+time he had seen what wonderful things could be made out of a piece of
+wood.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h3><a name="UP_IN_THE_MOUNTAINS" id="UP_IN_THE_MOUNTAINS" />CHAPTER THIRD</h3>
+
+<h2>UP IN THE MOUNTAINS</h2>
+
+
+<p>The next morning, the farmer on the Matten farm sent word to Elsbeth, to
+come up to see him towards evening, as he had something to talk with her
+about. At the right time she laid aside her hoe, tied on a clean apron,
+and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Finish the hoeing, Toni; then you can milk the goat and give her some
+fresh straw, so she will have a better bed. Then I will be back again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She went up to the Matten farm. The farmer was standing in the open
+barn-door gazing with satisfaction at his beautiful cows, wandering in a
+long procession to the well. Elsbeth stepped up to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I am glad you have come,&quot; he said, holding out his hand to her. &quot;I
+have been thinking about you on account of the boy's welfare. He is now at
+an age to do some light work and help you a little, at least to take care
+of himself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have already been thinking about that,&quot; replied Elsbeth, &quot;and wanted to
+ask you, if you could give him a little light work in the fields?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is fortunate,&quot; continued the farmer. &quot;I have a little job for him,
+healthy and not very hard, that is to say not hard at all. He can go up to
+the small mountain with the cows. The herdsman with his boys is on the big
+mountain and a man is also there to come every morning and evening for the
+milking, so the boy will not be entirely alone and will have nothing to do
+but watch the cows so that none wander off, that they don't hook each
+other or do anything out of the way. While he sits there on the mountain
+he is master and can have all the milk he wants. A king couldn't have
+anything better.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth was a little frightened by the offer. If Toni had been more with
+the farm men, and had been with cows, or if he had naturally a different
+disposition, wilder and more roving and commanding-but as he was so quiet
+and shy, and besides without any knowledge of such things, to be for the
+first time all alone for several months, away from home, up on the
+mountains, watching a herd of cows, this seemed to her too hard for Toni.
+What would the poor boy, who was not particularly strong, do if anything
+happened to him or to the herd? She expressed all her thoughts to the
+farmer, but it made no difference; he thought it would be good for the boy
+to get out for once, and up on the mountain he would be much stronger than
+at home, and nothing could happen to him, for he would be given a horn and
+if anything went wrong he could blow lustily, and immediately the farm man
+would come from the other mountain; in a half hour he would be there.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth finally thought the farmer understood it much better than she, and
+so it was decided that the next week, when the cows went up to the
+mountain pasture, Toni should go with them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He shall have a good bit of money and a new suit of clothes when he comes
+down. That will be a help for the winter,&quot; said the farmer finally.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth thanked him as she said good-by, and turned homeward.</p>
+
+<p>Toni was at first opposed to this, when he heard that he would be away so
+long without being able to come home a single time; but his mother
+explained to him how easy the work would be, that he would grow stronger
+up there, so as to be able to do better things later on, and that the
+Matten farmer would give him a new suit and a good bit of money as pay. So
+Toni objected no longer, but said he would be glad to do something and not
+let his mother work alone.</p>
+
+<p>Then it occurred to Elsbeth that, if Toni was going to be away the whole
+summer she could perhaps go to one of the big hotels in Interlaken where
+so many strangers go for the summer. There she could earn a good sum of
+money and meet the coming winter without anxiety. She was already known in
+Interlaken for she had served as chambermaid in one of the hotels for
+several summers before her marriage.</p>
+
+<p>When the day came for the big herd of cows to be taken up to the mountain
+pasture, Toni's mother gave him his little bundle and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go now, in God's name! Don't forget to pray, when the day begins, and
+when it ends, and the dear Lord will not forget you, and His protection is
+better than that of men.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So Toni started off with his little bundle behind the herd up the
+mountain.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after this Elsbeth closed her cottage. She took the goat up to
+the Matten farm. When the farmer heard that she was going to Interlaken,
+he promised her to take the goat, and thought when Elsbeth came home
+again, she would give twice as much milk, and what he made from her, he
+would give back to Elsbeth in cheese. Then she started down to Interlaken.</p>
+
+<p>The herd had already been climbing the mountain for several hours. The
+herdsman turned off to the left with the big herd, and the man went with
+Toni up towards the right, followed by the smaller herd, which consisted
+of fewer cows but many young cattle, for not many cows could be kept on
+the small mountain pasture, because the milk had to be carried across to
+the big one where the herdsman's hut stood.</p>
+
+<p>They now reached the highest point of the pasture. There stood a little
+hut. All around there was nothing but pasture, not a tree, not a bush. In
+the hut on one side was a narrow seat fastened to the wall in front of
+which stood a table. On the other side stood a bed of hay. In the corner
+was a little, round stool and on this a wooden jug.</p>
+
+<p>Toni and the man stepped inside. The latter placed on the floor the big
+wooden milk-pail, which he had brought up on his back, took out of it a
+round loaf of bread and a huge piece of cheese, laid both on the table and
+said: &quot;Of course you have a knife,&quot; to which Tony assented.</p>
+
+<p>Then the man took the wooden jug, swung the milk-pail on his back and went
+out. Toni followed him. The man lifted a wooden basin out of the big pail,
+seated himself on the little round stool which he had brought out of the
+hut and began to milk one cow after another. If one was too far away, he
+would call out: &quot;Drive her here!&quot; and Toni obeyed. When the basin was full
+he poured it into the big pail and silently went on until all the cows had
+been milked. At the last the man filled the jug with milk, handed it to
+Toni, took the pail on his back, the basin in his hand and saying &quot;Good
+night!&quot; went down the mountain.</p>
+
+<p>Then Toni was all alone. He put his jug of milk in the hut and came out
+again. He looked around on every side. He looked over to the big mountain,
+but between that and his pasture was a wide valley so one had to descend
+in order to climb up to the big one. But all around both pastures great
+dark masses of mountains looked down, some rocky, gray and jagged, others
+covered with snow, all reaching up to the sky, so high and mighty and with
+such different peaks and horns and some with such broad backs, that it
+almost seemed to Toni as if they were enormous giants, each one having his
+own face and looking down at him. It was a clear evening. The mountain
+opposite was shining in the golden evening light, and now a little star
+came into sight above the dark mountains, and looked down to Toni in such
+a friendly way that it cheered him very much.</p>
+
+<p>He thought of his mother, where she was now and how she was in the habit
+of standing with him at this time in front of the little cottage and
+talking so pleasantly. Then suddenly there came over him such a feeling of
+loneliness that he ran into the hut, threw himself down on the cot, buried
+his face in the hay and sobbed softly, until the weariness of the day
+overcame him and he fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The bright morning lured him out early. The man was already outside. He
+milked the cows, spoke not a word and went away.</p>
+
+<p>Now a long, long day followed. It was perfectly still all around. The cows
+grazed and lay down around in the sun-bathed pasture. Tom went into the
+hut two or three times, drank some milk and ate some bread and cheese.
+Then he came out again, sat down on the ground and carved on a piece of
+wood he had in his pocket, for although he no longer dared to cherish the
+hope of becoming a wood-carver, yet he could not help carving for himself
+as well as he could. At last it was evening again. The man came and went.
+He said not a word, and Toni had nothing to say either.</p>
+
+<p>Thus passed one day after another. They were all so long! so long! In the
+evening, when it began to grow dark it always seemed terrible to Toni, for
+then the high mountains looked so black and threatening, as if they would
+suddenly do him some harm. Then he would rush back into the hut and crawl
+into his bed of hay.</p>
+
+<p>Many days had passed like this, one exactly the same as the other. The
+sun had always shone in a cloudless sky; always at evening the friendly
+little star had gleamed above the dark mountain. But one afternoon, thick,
+gray clouds began to chase one another across the sky; now and then
+blinding lightning flashed, and suddenly frightful thunder-bolts sounded,
+which echoed roaring from the mountains, as if there were twice as many
+and then a terrible storm broke. It was as dark as night; the rain beat
+against the hut, and meanwhile the thunder rolled with fearful
+reverberations through the mountains; quivering lightning lighted up the
+black, frightful giant-forms, which seemed quite specter-like to come
+nearer and look down menacingly. The cattle ran together in alarm and
+bellowed loudly, and great birds of prey flapped around with piercing
+shrieks.</p>
+
+<p>Toni had long since fled into the hut, but the lightning showed him the
+frightful forms and it seemed every minute as if the rolling thunder
+would overthrow the hut to the ground. Toni was so alarmed he could
+hardly breathe. He climbed up on the table expecting every minute that the
+hut would fall and crush him. The storm lasted for hours, and the man
+never came over. It was now really night but still the blinding lightning
+flashed and new peals of thunder rolled and the storm howled and raged as
+if it would sweep the hut away.</p>
+
+<p>Toni stood half the night stiff with fright, clinging to the table, and
+with no thought, only a feeling of a frightful power, which was crushing
+everything. How he reached his bed he did not know, but in the morning he
+lay stretched across the hay, so exhausted he could hardly rise. He looked
+anxiously out of the window. How must it look outside after such a night?
+Then he went out to see about the cows. The ground was still wet, but the
+animals were peacefully grazing.</p>
+
+<p>The sky was gray, and thick, black clouds were passing over it. Gloomy and
+frightful the high mountains stood there. They had come so near and
+looked more threateningly than ever at Toni. He ran back into the hut.</p>
+
+<p>Many days of thunder storms followed, one after another and if the sun
+came out between, it burned unbearably, and new storms followed so
+unceasingly and violent, that the herdsman, on the other mountain often
+said that he had not known such a summer for years, and if it didn't
+change he wouldn't make half so much butter as in former summers, because
+the cows gave no milk, as they didn't like the fodder.</p>
+
+<p>During this time the man-servant chose the most favorable time to come
+over to the small pasture, milked the cows as quickly as possible and did
+not look after the boy at all; only now and then, when he thought Toni had
+no more milk, he would bring the jug out quickly, fill it and put it back
+again. Then he often saw Toni sitting on his bed of hay, and would call
+out in passing:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are lazy!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But then he ran right away in order to get back without being wet, and
+did not trouble himself further about the boy.</p>
+
+<p>So June had passed, and already a good part of July. The thunder storms
+had become less frequent, but thick fog often so enveloped the mountain
+that one could hardly see two steps away, and only here and there a black
+head appeared, looking gloomily through the mist. The cattle often
+wandered so far that the man found some of them between the two mountains
+and brought them up again. This would not do. He called up to the boy, but
+received no answer. He ran to the hut and went in. Toni crouched in the
+corner was sitting on his bed and staring straight before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why don't you look after the cows?&quot; asked the man.</p>
+
+<p>He received no answer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Can't you speak? What is the matter with you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>No answer.</p>
+
+<p>Then the man looked at the bread and cheese, to see if Toni had eaten
+everything and was suffering from hunger. But more than half the bread was
+there and the larger part of the cheese. Toni had taken almost nothing but
+milk.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the matter with you, then? Are you sick?&quot; asked the man again.</p>
+
+<p>Toni gave no answer. He seemed not to hear anything and stared so
+motionless before him that the man was quite alarmed. He ran out of the
+hut. He told the herdsman how it was with the boy and they decided that
+when one of the herdsman's boys went down with the butter, he must tell
+the Matten farmer about it.</p>
+
+<p>Another week passed. Then the news was brought to the farmer. He thought
+the boy would be happy again, that the heavy thunderstorms had only
+frightened him a little. But he sent word for the herdsman to go over; he
+had boys of his own and would understand better about this than the hired
+man. If anything was wrong with Toni he must be brought down.</p>
+
+<p>Some days later the herdsman really went over with one of his boys and
+found Toni still crouched in the corner just as the man had seen him. Toni
+made no sound to anything the herdsman said to him, did not move and kept
+staring always before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He must go down,&quot; said the herdsman to his boy, &quot;go with him right away,
+but take care that nothing happens to him and be good to him; the boy is
+to be pitied,&quot; and he looked at Toni with sympathy, for the herdsman had a
+good heart and took delight in his own three big, healthy boys. The one he
+had with him was a strong, sturdy fellow of sixteen years. He went up to
+Toni and told him to stand up, but Toni did not move. Then the lad took
+him under the arms, lifted him up, like a feather, then swung him on his
+back, held him firmly with both hands, and went with his light burden down
+the mountain.</p>
+
+<p>When the Matten farmer saw Toni in such a sad condition, which remained
+just the same, he was alarmed, for he had not expected such a thing. He
+did not know at all what to do with the boy. His mother was far away, no
+relatives were there, and he himself did not want to keep Toni while in
+this condition. He could take such a responsibility, but he did not want
+to do so. Suddenly a good thought came to him, the same as the people
+there in every difficulty, in every need and every trouble, always have
+first of all:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Take him to the Pastor,&quot; he said to the herdsman's boy, &quot;he will have
+some good advice to give, which will help.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The lad immediately started off and went to the Pastor, who allowed the
+boy to tell him as much as he knew about the details of the case, how Toni
+came to be in this condition and how long it had lasted; but the lad knew
+very little about it all. The Pastor first tried every means to make Toni
+speak, and asked him if he would like to go to his mother, but it was all
+in vain, Toni did not give the least sign of understanding or interest.</p>
+
+<p>Then the pastor sat down, wrote a letter and said to the herdsman's boy:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go back to the Matten farm and tell the farmer to harness his little
+carriage and send it to me, and then I will see that Toni goes to-day to
+Bern. He is very sick; say that to the farmer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The farmer harnessed immediately, glad that further responsibility was
+taken from him and he had only to carry Toni as far as the railway. But
+the Pastor sent down to his sexton, an older, kindly man, who had given
+him a helping hand for years in many matters of responsibility. He was
+commissioned to take Toni with all care to the great sanitarium in Bern
+and to give the letter to the doctor there, a good friend of the Pastor's.
+A half hour later, the open carriage with the high seat drove up in front
+of the Pastor's house. The sexton climbed up, placed the sick boy beside
+him, held him carefully but firmly and thus Toni drove out into the world,
+with a horse, for the first time in his life. But he sat there with no
+sign of interest. It was as if he were no longer conscious of the outer
+world.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_FOURTH" id="CHAPTER_FOURTH" />CHAPTER FOURTH</h3>
+
+<h2>IN THE SANITARIUM</h2>
+
+
+<p>The doctor of the sanitarium was sitting with his family around the family
+table, engaged in merry conversation on various subjects. Even the lady
+from Geneva, who spent several hours a day with the family, seemed to-day
+a little infected by the children's gayety. She had never before taken so
+lively a part in the discussion, which the school-children carried on
+about different interests.</p>
+
+<p>This lady's beloved and gifted son had died not long before; on this
+account she had fallen into such deep sadness that her health had suffered
+greatly and therefore she had been brought to the sanitarium to recover.</p>
+
+<p>The animated conversation was suddenly interrupted by a letter which was
+handed to the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A letter from an old friend, who is sending me a patient to the
+sanitarium. He is a young boy, hardly as old as our Max&mdash;there, read it.&quot;
+Whereupon the doctor handed the letter to his wife.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, the poor boy!&quot; exclaimed his wife. &quot;Is he here? Bring him in. Perhaps
+it will do him good to see the children.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think he is quite near,&quot; said the doctor; he went out, and soon came in
+again with the sexton and Toni. He led the former into a bay window and
+began talking with him in a low tone. Meanwhile the doctor's wife drew
+near to Toni, who on entering had pressed into the nearest corner. She
+spoke kindly to him and invited him to come to the table and eat something
+with her children. Toni did not move. Then lively little Marie jumped down
+from her chair and came to Toni with a large piece of bread and butter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There, take a bite,&quot; she said encouragingly.</p>
+
+<p>Toni remained motionless.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See, you must do so,&quot; and the little girl bit a good piece from the bread
+and held it to him, then again a little nearer, so he only needed to bite
+into it. But he stared in front of him and made no motion. This silent
+resistance frightened Marie and she drew back quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Then the doctor came, took Toni by the hand and went out followed by the
+sexton.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Toni's appearance had made a great impression on the children. They
+had become perfectly quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Later when they had gone to bed and the two women were sitting alone
+together, the doctor came back again. In reply to their urgent questions
+he informed them about all that the sexton had told him concerning Toni's
+illness and his life with his mother, and that no one had ever noticed
+anything wrong with the boy before, only he had always been a quiet,
+gentle child and more slenderly built than any of the other village
+children.</p>
+
+<p>The women asked how he had come into this condition in the summer up on
+the beautiful mountain, and the doctor explained that it was not so
+strange, if one knew how terrible the thunder storms were up in the
+mountains. &quot;Besides,&quot; he concluded, &quot;a delicate child, such as this boy,
+all alone without a human being near, for whole weeks, even months long,
+without hearing a word spoken, might well be so terrified through fear and
+horror in the awful loneliness that he would become wholly benumbed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then the lady from Geneva, who took an unusual interest in poor Toni's
+fate, exclaimed in great excitement:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How can a mother allow such a thing to happen to her child! It is wholly
+inconceivable, quite incomprehensible!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You really can have no idea,&quot; replied the doctor soothingly, &quot;what poor
+mothers are obliged to let happen to their children. But don't believe
+that it causes them less pain than others. You see how many suffer that we
+know nothing about, and how hard poverty oppresses.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Will you be able to help the poor young boy?&quot; asked the lady from Geneva.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I can only bring out the right emotion in him,&quot; he replied, &quot;so that
+the spell, which holds him imprisoned, can be broken. Now everything in
+him is numbed and lifeless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, do help him! Do help him!&quot; begged the sick lady imploringly. &quot;Oh, if
+I could do something for him!&quot; And she walked to and fro thinking about a
+way to help, for Toni's condition went deeply to her heart.</p>
+
+<p>It was the second week of August, when Toni came to the sanitarium. Day
+after day, week after week passed and the doctor could only bring the same
+sad news to the two women, who every morning awaited his report with great
+anxiety. Not the slightest change was noticed. Every means was tried to
+amuse the boy, to see if he would perhaps laugh. Other attempts were
+devised to disturb him, to make him cry. They performed all kinds of
+tricks to attract his attention. All, all were in vain; no trace of
+interest or emotion was aroused in Toni.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If he could only be made to laugh or to cry once!&quot; repeated the doctor
+over and over again.</p>
+
+<p>When he had been four weeks in the sanitarium all hope disappeared, for
+the doctor had exhausted every means.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now I will try one thing more,&quot; he said one morning to his wife. &quot;I have
+written to my friend, the Pastor, and asked him if the boy was very much
+attached to his mother, and if so, to send for her right away. Perhaps to
+see her again would make an impression on him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The two women looked forward in great suspense to Elsbeth's arrival.</p>
+
+<p>In the first week of September the last guests left the hotel in
+Interlaken where Elsbeth had spent the summer. She immediately started on
+her way home, for she wanted to get everything in order before Toni came
+down from the mountain. She never thought but that he was still up there,
+and had no suspicion of all that had happened. When she reached home, she
+went at once to the Matten farm to enquire for Toni and to bring the goat
+home.</p>
+
+<p>The farmer was very friendly, and thought her goat was now by far one of
+the finest, because she had had good fodder so long. But when Elsbeth
+asked after her Toni, he broke off abruptly and said he had so much to do,
+she must go to the Pastor, for he would have the best knowledge about the
+boy. It immediately seemed to Elsbeth that it was a little strange for the
+Pastor to know best what happened up on the mountain and while she was
+leading home the goat, and thinking about the matter, a feeling of anxiety
+came over her and grew stronger and stronger. As soon as she reached home,
+she quickly tied the goat, without going into the cottage at all, and ran
+back the same way she had come, down again to Kandergrund.</p>
+
+<p>The Pastor told her with great consideration, how Toni had not borne the
+life on the mountain very well and they had been obliged to bring him
+down, and since it seemed best for him that he should go at once to a good
+physician for the right care, he had sent the boy immediately to Bern.</p>
+
+<p>His mother was very much shocked and wanted to travel the next day to see
+for herself if her child was very ill.</p>
+
+<p>But the Pastor said that would not do, but that she should wait until the
+doctor allowed a visit, and she could be sure that Toni was receiving the
+best care.</p>
+
+<p>With a heavy heart Elsbeth went back to her cottage. She could do nothing
+but leave it all to the dear Lord, who alone had been her trust for so
+many years. But it was only a few days later when the Pastor sent her word
+that she was to go to Bern at once, as the doctor wished her to come.</p>
+
+<p>Early the following day Elsbeth started. About noon she reached Bern and
+soon was standing in front of the door of the sanitarium.</p>
+
+<p>She was led to the doctor's living-room and here received with great
+friendliness by his wife and with still keener sympathy by the lady from
+Geneva, who had so lived in the history of poor Toni and his mother that
+she could hardly think of anything else but how to help these two. She had
+had only the one child and could so well understand the mother's trouble.
+She had even asked the doctor to allow her to be present when he took the
+boy to his mother, in order to share in the joy, if the poor boy's delight
+at seeing her again would affect him as they hoped.</p>
+
+<p>Soon the doctor appeared, and after he had prepared the mother not to
+expect Toni to speak at the first moment, he brought him in. He led him by
+the hand into the room, then he let go and stepped to one side.</p>
+
+<p>The mother ran to her Toni and tried to seize his hand. He drew back and
+pressed into the corner staring into vacancy.</p>
+
+<p>The women and the doctor exchanged sad looks.</p>
+
+<p>His mother went up to him and caressed him. &quot;Toneli, Toneli,&quot; she said
+again and again in a tender voice, &quot;don't you know me? Don't you know your
+mother any more?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As always before Toni pressed against the wall, made no motion and stared
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>In tender tones the mother continued mournfully:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Toneli, say just a single word! Only look at me once! Toneli, don't
+you hear me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Toneli remained unmoved.</p>
+
+<p>Still once again the mother looked at him full of tenderness, but only met
+his staring eyes. It was too much for poor Elsbeth, that the only
+possession she had on earth, and the one she loved with all her heart, her
+Toni, should be lost to her, and in such a sad way! She forgot everything
+around her. She fell on her knees beside her child, and while the tears
+were bursting from her eyes, she poured out aloud the sorrow in her heart:</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>
+Oh God of Love, oh Father-heart,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In whom my trust is founded,</span><br />
+I know full well how good Thou art&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">E'en when by grief I am wounded.</span><br />
+<br />
+Oh Lord, it surely can not be<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That Thou wilt let me languish</span><br />
+In hopeless depths of misery<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And live in tears of anguish.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Toni's eyes took on a different expression. He looked at his mother. She
+did not see him and went on imploring in the midst of her tears:</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>
+Oh Lord, my soul yearns for thine aid<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In this dark vale of weeping;</span><br />
+For Thee I have waited, hoped and prayed,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Assured of thy safe keeping.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Toni threw himself on his mother and sobbed aloud. She threw her
+arms around him and her tears of sorrow turned to loud sobs of joy. The
+child sobbed aloud also.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is won,&quot; said the doctor in great delight to the women, who, deeply
+moved, were looking on at the mother and boy.</p>
+
+<p>Then the doctor opened the door of the next room and beckoned Elsbeth to
+go in there with Toni. He thought it would be good for both to be alone
+for a while. In there after a while Toni began to talk quite naturally
+with his mother and asked her:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are we going home, Mother, to the stone hut? Shan't I have to go up on
+the mountain any more?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And she quieted him and said she would now take him right home, and they
+would stay there together. Soon all Toni's thoughts came back again quite
+clearly, and after a while he said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But I must earn something, Mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't trouble about that now,&quot; said Elsbeth quietly; &quot;the dear Lord will
+show a way when it is time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then they began to talk about the goat, how pretty and fat she had grown,
+and Toni gradually became quite lively.</p>
+
+<p>After an hour the doctor brought them both into the living-room back to
+the ladies. Toni was entirely changed, his eyes had now an earnest but
+quite different expression. The lady from Geneva was indescribably
+delighted. She sat down beside him at once, and he had to tell her where
+he had been to school and what he had liked to study.</p>
+
+<p>But the doctor beckoned to Elsbeth to come to him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Listen, my good woman,&quot; he began, &quot;the words which you repeated made a
+deep, penetrating impression on the boy's heart. Did he know the hymn
+already?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, my Lord,&quot; exclaimed Elsbeth, &quot;many hundred times I have repeated it
+beside his little bed, when he was very small, often with many tears, and
+he would weep too, when he didn't know why.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He wept because you wept, he suffered because you suffered,&quot; said the
+doctor. &quot;Now I understand how he was aroused by these words. With such
+impressions in early childhood it is no wonder he became a quiet and
+reserved boy. This explains to me much in the past.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then the lady from Geneva came up for she wanted to talk with the mother.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear, good woman, he certainly must not go up on the mountain again.
+He is not fit for it,&quot; she said in great eagerness. &quot;We must find
+something different for him. Has he no taste for some other occupation?
+But it must be light, for he is not strong and needs care.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes, he has a great desire to learn something,&quot; said his mother.
+&quot;From a little boy he has wished for it, but I hardly dare mention it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There, there, my good woman, tell me right away about it,&quot; said the lady
+encouragingly, expecting something unheard-of.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He wants so much to be a wood-carver, and has a good deal of talent for
+it, but the cost of board and instruction together is more than eighty
+francs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is that all?&quot; exclaimed the lady in the greatest surprise, &quot;is that all?
+Come, my boy,&quot; and she ran to Toni again, &quot;would you really like to
+become a wood-carver&mdash;better than anything else?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The joy which shone in Toni's eyes, when he answered that he would, showed
+the lady what she had to do. She had such a longing to help Toni, that she
+wanted to act immediately that very hour.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would you like to learn at once, go to a teacher right away?&quot; she asked
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Toni gladly replied that he would.</p>
+
+<p>But now came a new thought. She turned to the doctor. &quot;Perhaps he ought to
+recover his health first?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor replied that he had been already thinking about that. The
+mother had told him that she knew a very good master up in Frutigen. &quot;Now
+I think,&quot; he went on to say, &quot;that carving is not a strenuous work, and
+one of the most important things for Toni is to have for some time good,
+nourishing food. In Frutigen there is a very good inn, if he only could&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will undertake that, Doctor, I will undertake that,&quot; interrupted the
+lady. &quot;I will go with him. We will start to-morrow. In Frutigen I will
+provide for Toni's board and lodging and for everything he needs.&quot; In her
+great delight the lady shook hands with both the mother and the boy
+repeatedly, and went out to instruct her maid about preparations for the
+journey.</p>
+
+<p>When the mother with her boy had been taken to their room, the doctor said
+with great delight to his wife:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have two recoveries. Our lady is also cured. A new interest has come
+to her, and you will see she will have new life in providing for this
+young boy. This has been a beautiful day!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>On the following morning the journey was made to Frutigen, and the little
+company were so glad and happy together that they reached there before
+they were aware of it.</p>
+
+<p>At the wood-carver's the lady was told everything that would be needed for
+the work, and after he had showed them all kinds of instruments, he
+thought a fine book with good pictures, from which one could work, would
+be useful.</p>
+
+<p>After the lady had charged him to teach Toni everything in any way
+necessary for the future, they went to the inn. Here the lady engaged a
+good room with comfortable bed, and herself arranged with the host a bill
+of fare for every day in the week. The host promised, with many bows, to
+follow everything exactly, for he saw very well with whom he had to deal.</p>
+
+<p>Then Toni and his mother had to eat with the lady in the inn, and during
+the meal she had much more to say. She was going now, she said, the next
+day, home to Geneva, where there were large shops, in which nothing was
+sold but carvings. There she would immediately arrange for Toni to send
+all his articles, so he could begin to work with fresh zeal. Moreover, she
+insisted that Toni should remain, not two, but three months with the
+carver, so that he could learn everything from the foundation. He could go
+from here to visit his mother on Sundays, or she could come to him.</p>
+
+<p>Elsbeth and Toni were so full of gratitude, they could find no words to
+express it, but the lady understood them nevertheless and bore home a
+happy heart, such as she had not had for a long time.</p>
+
+<p>It came about just as the doctor had foreseen. The lady, who had not been
+able to think any more about her home now desired to return to Geneva. She
+had so many plans to carry out there, that she could hardly wait for the
+day when she was to go back.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor was delighted to consent to her going soon.</p>
+
+<p>Toni, who had hardly begun with his new teacher, applied himself with so
+much zeal and skill to his work, that the carver said to his wife in the
+fourth week:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If he goes on like this, he will learn to do better than I can.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The three months had come to an end, and Christmas was drawing near. One
+morning Toni waded through the deep snow up to his home. He looked round
+and fresh, and his heart was so happy he had to sing aloud as he came
+along.</p>
+
+<p>But when after a long walk, he suddenly saw the stone hut with the
+fir-tree thickly covered with snow behind it, tears of joy came to his
+eyes. He was coming home, home for all time. He ran to the little house,
+and his mother, who had already seen him, hurried out, and which one of
+the two was the more delighted, no one could tell; but they were both so
+happy, as they sat together again in the cottage, that they could think of
+no greater fortune on earth. Their highest wish was fulfilled. Toni was a
+wood-carver, and could carry on his work at home with his mother. And with
+what blessings besides the dear Lord was still overwhelming them! From
+Geneva such good things kept coming to Elsbeth, that she no longer had to
+dread anxious days, and with each package came new assurance of the ready
+acceptance of Toni's work.</p>
+
+<p>Such a Christmas festival as was celebrated two days later in the stone
+hut, neither Elsbeth nor Toni had ever known before, for the candles which
+his mother had lighted shone out upon a quantity of things, which Toni had
+received to wear, and also a whole set of the most beautiful knives for
+carving and a book with pictures, of a size and beauty such as Toni had
+never in all his life seen before. His master's book was a mere child's
+toy beside it. Elsbeth too was lovingly provided for. The lady from Geneva
+had planned everything, and the bright reflection from it fell back
+radiantly into her own heart.</p>
+
+<p>The most beautiful deer and huntsman and the wonderful eagles on the rock,
+standing in the high show-window in Geneva was carved by Toni, and was
+considered by him to be a particularly successful piece, so it went, not
+to the dealer in Geneva, but to the lady for whom Toni preserved a
+thankful heart all his life long.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TONI, THE LITTLE WOODCARVER***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 14128-h.txt or 14128-h.zip *******</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Toni, the Little Woodcarver, by Johanna
+Spyri, Translated by Helen B. Dole
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Toni, the Little Woodcarver
+
+Author: Johanna Spyri
+
+Release Date: November 23, 2004 [eBook #14128]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TONI, THE LITTLE WOODCARVER***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Michael Ciesielski, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 14128-h.htm or 14128-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/1/2/14128/14128-h/14128-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/1/2/14128/14128-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+TONI, THE LITTLE WOOD-CARVER
+
+by
+
+JOHANNA SPYRI
+
+Author of _Heidi_
+
+Translated by Helen B. Dole
+
+1920
+
+New York
+Thomas Y. Crowell Company
+Publishers
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Toni the Little Woodcarver.]
+
+
+
+
+ +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | JOHANNA SPYRI'S ALPINE STORIES |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | GRITLI'S CHILDREN. Complete Edition. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | HEIDI. Complete Edition. Translated by HELENE S. WHITE. 16 full-page |
+ | illustrations in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | LITTLE ALPINE MUSICIAN. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in |
+ | color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | RICO AND WISELI. Complete Edition. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | UNCLE TITUS. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | VERONICA. Translated by LOUISE BROOKS. Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | JO, THE LITTLE MACHINIST. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated |
+ | in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | LITTLE CURLY HEAD. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color |
+ | 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | LITTLE MISS GRASSHOPPER. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in |
+ | color by CHARLES COPELAND. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | MONI, THE GOAT BOY. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in |
+ | color by CHARLES COPELAND. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | TRINI, THE LITTLE STRAWBERRY GIRL. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | TONI, THE LITTLE WOOD CARVER. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | TISS, A LITTLE ALPINE WAIF. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated |
+ | in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | THE ROSE CHILD. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. Illustrated in color. |
+ | 8vo. |
+ | |
+ | WHAT SAMI SINGS WITH THE BIRDS. Translated by HELEN B. DOLE. |
+ | Illustrated in color. 8vo. |
+ | |
+ +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: In front of him next to the wall, stood a glass case.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+AT HOME IN THE LITTLE STONE HUT
+
+A HARD SENTENCE
+
+UP IN THE MOUNTAINS
+
+IN THE SANITARIUM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIRST
+
+AT HOME IN THE LITTLE STONE HUT
+
+
+High up in the Bernese Oberland, quite a distance above the
+meadow-encircled hamlet of Kandergrund, stands a little lonely hut, under
+the shadow of an old fir-tree. Not far away rushes down from the wooded
+heights of rock the Wild brook, which in times of heavy rains, has carried
+away so many rocks and bowlders that when the storms are ended a ragged
+mass of stones is left, through which flows a swift, clear stream of
+water. Therefore the little dwelling near by this brook is called the
+stone hut.
+
+Here lived the honest day-laborer Toni, who conducted himself well in
+every farm-house, where he went to work, for he was quiet and
+industrious, punctual at his tasks, and reliable in every way.
+
+In his hut at home he had a young wife and a little boy, who was a joy to
+both of them. Near the hut in the little shed was the goat, the milk of
+which supplied food for the mother and child, while the father received
+his board through the week on the farms where he worked from morning until
+night. Only on Sunday was he at home with his wife and little Toni. The
+wife Elsbeth, kept her little house in good order; it was narrow and tiny,
+but it always looked so clean and cheerful that every one liked to come
+into the sunny room, and the father, Toni, was never so happy as when he
+was at home in the stone hut with his little boy on his knee.
+
+For five years the family lived in harmony and undisturbed peace. Although
+they had no abundance and little worldly goods, they were happy and
+content. The husband earned enough, so they did not suffer want, and they
+desired nothing beyond their simple manner of life, for they loved each
+other and their greatest delight was little Toni.
+
+The little boy grew strong and healthy and with his merry ways delighted
+his father's heart, when he remained at home on Sundays, and sweetened all
+his mother's work on week-days, when his father was away until late in the
+evening.
+
+Little Toni was now four years old and already knew how to be helpful in
+all sorts of small ways, in the house and the goat's shed and also in the
+field behind the hut. From morning until night he tripped happily behind
+his mother for he was as content as the little birds up in the old
+fir-tree.
+
+When Saturday night came the mother scrubbed and cleaned with doubled
+energy, to finish early, for on that day the father was through his work
+earlier than other days, and she always went with little Toni by the hand,
+part way to meet him. This was a great delight to the child. He now knew
+very well how one task followed another in the household. When his mother
+began to scrub, he jumped around in the room, with delight and cried out
+again and again: "Now we are going for Father! Now we are going for
+Father!" until the moment came when his mother took him by the hand and
+started along.
+
+Saturday evening had come again in the lovely month of May. Outdoors the
+birds in the trees were singing merrily up to the blue sky; indoors the
+mother was cleaning busily, in order to get out early into the golden
+evening, and meanwhile now outside, now in the house, little Toni was
+hopping around and shouting:
+
+"Now we are going for Father!"
+
+It was not long before the work was finished. The mother put on her shawl,
+tied on her best apron and stepped out of the house.
+
+Toni jumped for joy and ran three times around his mother, then seized her
+hand and shouted once more:
+
+"Now we are going for Father!"
+
+Then he tripped along beside his mother in the lovely, sunny evening.
+They wandered to the Wild brook, over the wooden bridge, which crosses it,
+and came to the narrow foot-path, winding up through the flower-laden
+meadows to the farm where the father worked.
+
+The last rays of the setting sun fell across the meadows and the sound of
+the evening bells came up from Kandergrund.
+
+The mother stood still and folded her hands.
+
+"Lay your hands together Toneli," she said, "it is the Angelus."
+
+The child obeyed.
+
+"What must I pray, Mother?" he asked.
+
+"Give us and all tired people a blessed Sunday! Amen!" said the mother
+devoutly.
+
+Toneli repeated the prayer. Suddenly he screamed: "Father is coming!"
+
+Down from the farm some one was running as fast as he could come.
+
+"That is not Father," said his mother, and both went towards the running
+man. When they met, the man stood still and said, gasping:
+
+"Don't go any farther, turn around, Elsbeth. I came straight to you, for
+something has happened."
+
+"Oh, my God!" cried the woman in the greatest anguish, "has something
+happened to Toni?"
+
+"Yes, he was with the wood-cutters, and then he was struck. They have
+brought him back; he is lying up at the farm-but don't go up there," he
+added, holding Elsbeth fast, for she wanted to start off as soon as she
+heard the news.
+
+"Not go up?" she said quickly. "I must go to him; I must help him and see
+about bringing him home."
+
+"You cannot help him, he is--he is already dead," said the messenger in an
+unsteady voice. Then he turned and ran back again, glad to have the
+message off his mind.
+
+Elsbeth threw herself down on a stone by the way, unable to stand or to
+walk. She held her apron before her face and burst into weeping and
+sobbing, so that Toneli was distressed and frightened. He pressed close
+to his mother and began to cry too.
+
+It was already dark, when Elsbeth finally came to herself and could think
+of her child. The little one was still sitting beside her on the ground,
+with both hands pressed to his eyes, and sobbing pitifully. His mother
+lifted him up.
+
+"Come, Toneli, we must go home; it is late," she said, taking him by the
+hand.
+
+But he resisted.
+
+"No, no, we must wait for Father!" he said and pulled his mother back.
+
+Again she could not keep back the tears. "Oh, Toneli, Father will come no
+more," she said, stifling her sobs; "he is already enjoying the blessed
+Sunday, we prayed for, for the weary. See, the dear Lord has taken him to
+Heaven; it is so beautiful there, he will prefer to stay there."
+
+"Then we will go too," replied Toneli, starting
+
+"Yes, yes, we shall go there too," promised his mother, "but now we must
+first go home to the stone hut," and without a word she went with the
+little one back to the silent cottage.
+
+The proprietor of the Matten farm sent word to Elsbeth the following day
+that he would do everything necessary for her husband, and so she need not
+come until it was time for the service, for she would not recognize her
+husband. He sent her some money in order that she would not have too much
+care in the next few days, and promised to think of her later on.
+
+Elsbeth did as he advised and remained at home until the bells in
+Kandergrund rang for the service. Then she went to accompany her husband
+to his resting place.
+
+Sad and hard days came for Elsbeth. She missed her good, kind husband
+everywhere, and felt quite lost without him. Besides, cares came now which
+she had known little about before, for her husband had had his good, daily
+work. But now she felt sometimes as if she would almost despair. She had
+nothing but her goat and the little potato field behind the cottage, and
+from these she had to feed and clothe herself and the little one, and
+besides furnish rent for the little house.
+
+Elsbeth had only one consolation, but one that always supported her when
+pain and care oppressed her; she could pray, and although often in the
+midst of tears, still always with the firm belief that the dear Lord would
+hear her supplication.
+
+When at night she had put little Toni in his tiny bed she would kneel down
+beside him and repeat aloud the old hymn, which now came from the depths
+of her heart, as never before:
+
+ Oh, God of Love, oh Father-heart,
+ In whom my trust is founded,
+ I know full well how good Thou art--
+ E'en when by grief I am wounded.
+
+ Oh Lord, it surely can not be
+ That Thou wilt let me languish
+ In hopeless depths of misery,
+ And live in tears of anguish.
+
+ Oh Lord, my soul yearns for thine aid
+ In this dark vale of weeping;
+ For thee I've waited, hoped and prayed
+ Assured of thy safe keeping.
+
+ Lord let me bear whate'er thy Love
+ May send of grief or sorrow,
+ Until Thou, in thy Heaven above
+ Make dawn a brighter morrow.
+
+
+And in the midst of her urgent praying, the mother's tears flowed
+abundantly, and little Toni, deeply moved in his heart by his mother's
+weeping and earnest prayer, kept his hands folded and wept softly too.
+
+So the time passed. Elsbeth struggled along and little Toni was able to
+help her in many ways, for he was now seven years old. He was his mother's
+only joy, and she was able to take delight in him for he was obedient and
+willing to do everything she desired. He had always been so inseparable
+from his mother that he knew exactly how the tasks of the day had to be
+done, and he desired nothing but to help her whenever he could. If she
+was working in the little field, he squatted beside her, pulled out the
+weeds, and threw the stones across the path.
+
+If his mother was taking the goat out of the shed so that she could nibble
+the grass around the hut, he went with her step by step, for his mother
+had told him he must watch her so that she would not run away.
+
+If his mother was sitting in winter by her spinning-wheel, he sat the
+whole time beside her, mending his winter shoes with strong strips of
+cloth, as she had taught him to do. He had no greater wish than to see his
+mother happy and contented. His greatest pleasure was, when Sunday came
+and she was resting from all work, to sit with her on the little wooden
+bench in front of the house and listen as she told him about his father
+and talk with her about all kinds of things.
+
+But now the time had come for Toni to go to school. It was very hard for
+him to leave his mother and remain away from her so much. The long way
+down to Kandergrund and up again took so much time, that Toni was hardly
+ever with his mother any more through the day, but only in the evening.
+Indeed he always came home so quickly that she could hardly believe it
+possible, for he looked forward with pleasure all day long to getting home
+again. He lost no time with his school-mates but ran immediately away from
+them as soon as school was over. He was not accustomed to the ways of the
+other boys since he had been constantly alone with his quietly working
+mother and used to performing definite tasks continually without any
+noise.
+
+So it was altogether strange to him and he took no pleasure in it, when
+the boys coming out of the school-house, set up a great screaming, one
+running after another, trying to see which was the stronger, and throwing
+one another on the ground, or wrestling so that their caps were thrown far
+away and their jackets half torn off.
+
+The wrestlers would often call to him:
+
+"Come and play!" and when he ran away from them they would call after
+him: "You are a coward." But this made little difference to him; he didn't
+hear it long, for he ran with all his might in order to be at home again
+with his mother.
+
+Now a new interest for him arose in the school: he had seen beautiful
+animals drawn on white sheets, which the children of the upper classes
+copied. He quickly tried to draw them, too, with his pencil and at home
+continued drawing the animals again and again as long as he had a bit of
+paper. Then he cut out the animals and tried to make them stand on the
+table, but this he could not do. Then suddenly the thought came to him
+that if they were of wood they could stand. He began quickly with his
+knife to cut around on a little piece of wood until there was a body and
+four legs; but the wood was not large enough for the neck and the head; so
+he had to take another piece and calculate from the beginning how high it
+must be and where the head must be placed. So Toni cut away with much
+perseverance until he succeeded in making something like a goat and could
+show it with great satisfaction to his mother. She was much delighted at
+his skill and said:
+
+"You are surely going to be a wood-carver, and a very good one."
+
+From that time on Toni looked at every little piece of wood which came in
+his way, to see if it would be good for carving, and if so he would
+quickly put it away, so that he often brought home all his pockets full of
+these pieces, which he then collected like treasures into a pile and spent
+every free moment carving them.
+
+Thus the years passed by. Although Elsbeth always had many cares, she
+experienced only joy in her Toni. He still clung to her with the same
+love, helped her in every way as well as he could and spent his life
+beside her, entirely at his quiet occupation, in which he gradually
+acquired a quite gratifying skill. Toni was never so content as when he
+was sitting in the little stone hut with his carving and his mother came
+in and out happily employed, always saying a kindly word to him and
+finally sat down beside him at her spinning-wheel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SECOND
+
+A HARD SENTENCE
+
+
+Toni was twelve years old in the winter, and now his school days were
+over, and the time had come to look about for some kind of work which
+would bring him in some money and by which he could learn something
+necessary for future years.
+
+Spring had come and work had begun in the fields. His mother thought it
+would be best to ask the proprietor of the Matten farm, if he had some
+light work for Toni; but every time she spoke about it he would say
+beseechingly:
+
+"Oh, Mother, don't do that; let me be a wood-carver!"
+
+She would have had no objection to this, but knew no way to bring it
+about, and she had known the farmer up on the Matten farm ever since her
+husband had worked there, and ever since his death, from time to time he
+had sent her a little wood or meal.
+
+She hoped that he would employ Toni at first for light tasks in the field,
+so that he would gradually learn to do the heavier work.
+
+So on Saturday night after the day's work was ended and she sat down with
+Toni to their scanty supper, she said once more:
+
+"Toni, now we must take a decided step; I think it is best for me to go up
+to the Matten farm to-morrow."
+
+"Oh, Mother, don't do that!" said Toni quite beseechingly. "Don't go to
+the farmer! If you will only let me be a wood-carver, I will work so hard,
+that I will earn enough, and you will not have to do so much, and then I
+can stay at home with you. Besides you would be all alone, and I can't
+bear it, if I have to be always away from you. Let me stay with you; don't
+send me away, Mother."
+
+"Oh, you good Toni," said his mother, "what wouldn't I give to be able to
+keep you always with me! But that really cannot be. I know of no way for
+you to be a wood-carver; some one would have to teach you, and when you
+had learned, how should we sell the carvings? You would have to know
+people and go about, or else your work wouldn't bring any money. If only I
+could talk with some one, who could give me good advice!"
+
+"Don't you know any one, Mother, you can ask?" said Toni anxiously and
+racked his brain to try to think of some one. His mother too began to
+consider.
+
+"I think I will go to the pastor, who has already given me advice," said
+his mother, delighted to have found a way out of the difficulty.
+
+Toni was quite happy and now was determined that early the next morning
+they should go down to the church and then his mother could go in to see
+the pastor and Toni would wait outside.
+
+Everything was carried out on Sunday morning as they had planned. His
+mother had put two of the little carved animals in her pocket to show the
+pastor as examples of her boy's good ability. The pastor received her very
+cordially, had her sit down beside him and enquired with interest about
+her affairs, for he knew Elsbeth and how bravely she had helped herself
+through all the hard times.
+
+She told him now the whole story, how Toni from a very early age had
+worked at the carving with so much interest and now wished for nothing so
+much as to carry on this work, but how she knew of no way for him to
+learn, nor how, later, the work could be sold. Finally she showed him the
+two little animals as examples of Toni's skill.
+
+The pastor replied to the mother that the plan would be very difficult to
+carry out. Although the two little goats were not badly carved, yet in
+order to perform the work right and to earn his bread by it, Toni would
+have first to learn from a good carver, because making only little animals
+or boxes would not amount to anything or bring in any money, and he would
+only be wasting his time.
+
+However, down in the village of Frutigen there was a very skillful,
+well-known wood-carver, who made wonderful large works which went far into
+the world, even to America. He carved whole groups of animals on high
+rocks, chamois and eagles and whole mountains with the herdsman and the
+cows. Elsbeth could talk with this carver. If Toni studied with him he
+could help him to sell the finished work, for he had ways open for it.
+
+Elsbeth left the pastor with gratitude and new hope in her heart. In front
+of the house Toni was waiting in great suspense. She had to tell him at
+once everything the pastor had said, and when she finally related about
+the wood-carver in Frutigen Toni suddenly stood still and said:
+
+"Then come, Mother, let us go to the place at once."
+
+However, his mother had not thought it over--she made many objections, but
+Toni begged so earnestly, that she finally said:
+
+"We must go home first and have something to eat, for it is very far
+away; but we can do that quickly and then start off again right away."
+
+So they hurried back to the house, took a little bread and milk and
+started on their way again. They had several hours to travel, but Toni was
+so busy with his plans and thoughts for the future, the time flew like a
+dream and he looked up in great surprise, when his mother said:
+
+"See, there is the church tower of Frutigen!"
+
+They were soon standing in front of the wood-carver's house, and learned
+from the children before the door, that their father was at home.
+
+Inside in the large, wainscotted room, sat the wood-carver with his wife
+at the table, looking at a large book of beautiful colored pictures of
+animals which he would be able to make good use of in his handicraft. When
+the two arrived he welcomed them and invited them to come and be seated on
+the wooden bench, where he and his wife were sitting and which ran along
+the wall around the entire room. Elsbeth accepted the invitation and
+immediately began to tell the wood-carver why she had come and what she
+so much desired of him.
+
+Meanwhile Toni stood as if rooted to the floor and stared motionless at a
+single spot. In front of him next the wall was a glass case, in which
+could be seen two high rocks, carved out of wood. On one was standing a
+chamois with her little ones. They had such dainty, slender legs, and
+their fine heads sat so naturally on their necks that it seemed as if they
+were all alive and not at all made of wood. On the other rock stood a
+hunter, his gun hanging by his side, and his hat, with even a feather in
+it, sat on his head, all so finely carved, that one would think it must be
+a real hat and a real little feather, and yet all was of wood.
+
+Next the hunter stood his dog, and it seemed as if he would even wag his
+tail. Toni was like one enchanted and hardly breathed.
+
+When his mother finished speaking, the wood-carver said it seemed to him
+as if she thought the affair would half go of itself, but it was not so.
+
+If a thing was to be done right, it cost much time and patience to learn.
+He was not averse to taking the boy, for it seemed to him that he had a
+desire to learn; but she would have to pay for his board for a couple of
+months in Frutigen, besides paying for his instruction, which would be as
+much as his board, and she herself must know whether she could spend so
+much on the boy. On the other hand he would promise that the boy would be
+taught right, and she could see there in the glass case, what he could
+learn to do.
+
+At first Elsbeth was so disappointed and dismayed she was unable to speak
+a word. Now she knew that it would be absolutely impossible for her to
+fulfill her boy's greatest wish. The necessary expense of board and
+instruction was beyond anything that she could manage, so much so that it
+was quite out of the question. It was all over with Toni's plans.
+
+She rose and thanked the wood-carver for his willingness to take the boy,
+but she would have to decline his offer. Then she beckoned to Toni, whose
+eyes were still so fastened to the glass case that he paid no attention.
+She took him by the hand and led him quietly out of the door.
+
+Outside Toni said, drawing a deep breath:
+
+"Did you see what was in the case? Mother, did you see it?"
+
+"Yes, yes, I saw it, Toni," replied his mother with a sigh, "but did you
+hear what the wood-carver said?"
+
+Toni had heard nothing; all his mind had been directed to one point.
+
+"No, I didn't hear anything; when can I go?" he asked longingly.
+
+"Oh, it is not possible, Toni, but don't take it so to heart! See, I can't
+do it, although I would like to so much," declared his mother; "but
+everything would come to more than I earn in a year, and you know how hard
+I have to work to manage to make the two ends meet."
+
+It was a hard blow for Toni. All his hopes for many years lay destroyed
+before him; but he knew how his mother worked, how little good she
+herself had, and how she always tried to give him a little pleasure when
+she could. He said not a word and silently swallowed his rising tears, but
+he was very much grieved that all his hopes were over, since for the first
+time he had seen what wonderful things could be made out of a piece of
+wood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THIRD
+
+UP IN THE MOUNTAINS
+
+
+The next morning, the farmer on the Matten farm sent word to Elsbeth, to
+come up to see him towards evening, as he had something to talk with her
+about. At the right time she laid aside her hoe, tied on a clean apron,
+and said:
+
+"Finish the hoeing, Toni; then you can milk the goat and give her some
+fresh straw, so she will have a better bed. Then I will be back again."
+
+She went up to the Matten farm. The farmer was standing in the open
+barn-door gazing with satisfaction at his beautiful cows, wandering in a
+long procession to the well. Elsbeth stepped up to him.
+
+"Well, I am glad you have come," he said, holding out his hand to her. "I
+have been thinking about you on account of the boy's welfare. He is now at
+an age to do some light work and help you a little, at least to take care
+of himself."
+
+"I have already been thinking about that," replied Elsbeth, "and wanted to
+ask you, if you could give him a little light work in the fields?"
+
+"That is fortunate," continued the farmer. "I have a little job for him,
+healthy and not very hard, that is to say not hard at all. He can go up to
+the small mountain with the cows. The herdsman with his boys is on the big
+mountain and a man is also there to come every morning and evening for the
+milking, so the boy will not be entirely alone and will have nothing to do
+but watch the cows so that none wander off, that they don't hook each
+other or do anything out of the way. While he sits there on the mountain
+he is master and can have all the milk he wants. A king couldn't have
+anything better."
+
+Elsbeth was a little frightened by the offer. If Toni had been more with
+the farm men, and had been with cows, or if he had naturally a different
+disposition, wilder and more roving and commanding-but as he was so quiet
+and shy, and besides without any knowledge of such things, to be for the
+first time all alone for several months, away from home, up on the
+mountains, watching a herd of cows, this seemed to her too hard for Toni.
+What would the poor boy, who was not particularly strong, do if anything
+happened to him or to the herd? She expressed all her thoughts to the
+farmer, but it made no difference; he thought it would be good for the boy
+to get out for once, and up on the mountain he would be much stronger than
+at home, and nothing could happen to him, for he would be given a horn and
+if anything went wrong he could blow lustily, and immediately the farm man
+would come from the other mountain; in a half hour he would be there.
+
+Elsbeth finally thought the farmer understood it much better than she, and
+so it was decided that the next week, when the cows went up to the
+mountain pasture, Toni should go with them.
+
+"He shall have a good bit of money and a new suit of clothes when he comes
+down. That will be a help for the winter," said the farmer finally.
+
+Elsbeth thanked him as she said good-by, and turned homeward.
+
+Toni was at first opposed to this, when he heard that he would be away so
+long without being able to come home a single time; but his mother
+explained to him how easy the work would be, that he would grow stronger
+up there, so as to be able to do better things later on, and that the
+Matten farmer would give him a new suit and a good bit of money as pay. So
+Toni objected no longer, but said he would be glad to do something and not
+let his mother work alone.
+
+Then it occurred to Elsbeth that, if Toni was going to be away the whole
+summer she could perhaps go to one of the big hotels in Interlaken where
+so many strangers go for the summer. There she could earn a good sum of
+money and meet the coming winter without anxiety. She was already known in
+Interlaken for she had served as chambermaid in one of the hotels for
+several summers before her marriage.
+
+When the day came for the big herd of cows to be taken up to the mountain
+pasture, Toni's mother gave him his little bundle and said:
+
+"Go now, in God's name! Don't forget to pray, when the day begins, and
+when it ends, and the dear Lord will not forget you, and His protection is
+better than that of men."
+
+So Toni started off with his little bundle behind the herd up the
+mountain.
+
+Immediately after this Elsbeth closed her cottage. She took the goat up to
+the Matten farm. When the farmer heard that she was going to Interlaken,
+he promised her to take the goat, and thought when Elsbeth came home
+again, she would give twice as much milk, and what he made from her, he
+would give back to Elsbeth in cheese. Then she started down to Interlaken.
+
+The herd had already been climbing the mountain for several hours. The
+herdsman turned off to the left with the big herd, and the man went with
+Toni up towards the right, followed by the smaller herd, which consisted
+of fewer cows but many young cattle, for not many cows could be kept on
+the small mountain pasture, because the milk had to be carried across to
+the big one where the herdsman's hut stood.
+
+They now reached the highest point of the pasture. There stood a little
+hut. All around there was nothing but pasture, not a tree, not a bush. In
+the hut on one side was a narrow seat fastened to the wall in front of
+which stood a table. On the other side stood a bed of hay. In the corner
+was a little, round stool and on this a wooden jug.
+
+Toni and the man stepped inside. The latter placed on the floor the big
+wooden milk-pail, which he had brought up on his back, took out of it a
+round loaf of bread and a huge piece of cheese, laid both on the table and
+said: "Of course you have a knife," to which Tony assented.
+
+Then the man took the wooden jug, swung the milk-pail on his back and went
+out. Toni followed him. The man lifted a wooden basin out of the big pail,
+seated himself on the little round stool which he had brought out of the
+hut and began to milk one cow after another. If one was too far away, he
+would call out: "Drive her here!" and Toni obeyed. When the basin was full
+he poured it into the big pail and silently went on until all the cows had
+been milked. At the last the man filled the jug with milk, handed it to
+Toni, took the pail on his back, the basin in his hand and saying "Good
+night!" went down the mountain.
+
+Then Toni was all alone. He put his jug of milk in the hut and came out
+again. He looked around on every side. He looked over to the big mountain,
+but between that and his pasture was a wide valley so one had to descend
+in order to climb up to the big one. But all around both pastures great
+dark masses of mountains looked down, some rocky, gray and jagged, others
+covered with snow, all reaching up to the sky, so high and mighty and with
+such different peaks and horns and some with such broad backs, that it
+almost seemed to Toni as if they were enormous giants, each one having his
+own face and looking down at him. It was a clear evening. The mountain
+opposite was shining in the golden evening light, and now a little star
+came into sight above the dark mountains, and looked down to Toni in such
+a friendly way that it cheered him very much.
+
+He thought of his mother, where she was now and how she was in the habit
+of standing with him at this time in front of the little cottage and
+talking so pleasantly. Then suddenly there came over him such a feeling of
+loneliness that he ran into the hut, threw himself down on the cot, buried
+his face in the hay and sobbed softly, until the weariness of the day
+overcame him and he fell asleep.
+
+The bright morning lured him out early. The man was already outside. He
+milked the cows, spoke not a word and went away.
+
+Now a long, long day followed. It was perfectly still all around. The cows
+grazed and lay down around in the sun-bathed pasture. Tom went into the
+hut two or three times, drank some milk and ate some bread and cheese.
+Then he came out again, sat down on the ground and carved on a piece of
+wood he had in his pocket, for although he no longer dared to cherish the
+hope of becoming a wood-carver, yet he could not help carving for himself
+as well as he could. At last it was evening again. The man came and went.
+He said not a word, and Toni had nothing to say either.
+
+Thus passed one day after another. They were all so long! so long! In the
+evening, when it began to grow dark it always seemed terrible to Toni, for
+then the high mountains looked so black and threatening, as if they would
+suddenly do him some harm. Then he would rush back into the hut and crawl
+into his bed of hay.
+
+Many days had passed like this, one exactly the same as the other. The
+sun had always shone in a cloudless sky; always at evening the friendly
+little star had gleamed above the dark mountain. But one afternoon, thick,
+gray clouds began to chase one another across the sky; now and then
+blinding lightning flashed, and suddenly frightful thunder-bolts sounded,
+which echoed roaring from the mountains, as if there were twice as many
+and then a terrible storm broke. It was as dark as night; the rain beat
+against the hut, and meanwhile the thunder rolled with fearful
+reverberations through the mountains; quivering lightning lighted up the
+black, frightful giant-forms, which seemed quite specter-like to come
+nearer and look down menacingly. The cattle ran together in alarm and
+bellowed loudly, and great birds of prey flapped around with piercing
+shrieks.
+
+Toni had long since fled into the hut, but the lightning showed him the
+frightful forms and it seemed every minute as if the rolling thunder
+would overthrow the hut to the ground. Toni was so alarmed he could
+hardly breathe. He climbed up on the table expecting every minute that the
+hut would fall and crush him. The storm lasted for hours, and the man
+never came over. It was now really night but still the blinding lightning
+flashed and new peals of thunder rolled and the storm howled and raged as
+if it would sweep the hut away.
+
+Toni stood half the night stiff with fright, clinging to the table, and
+with no thought, only a feeling of a frightful power, which was crushing
+everything. How he reached his bed he did not know, but in the morning he
+lay stretched across the hay, so exhausted he could hardly rise. He looked
+anxiously out of the window. How must it look outside after such a night?
+Then he went out to see about the cows. The ground was still wet, but the
+animals were peacefully grazing.
+
+The sky was gray, and thick, black clouds were passing over it. Gloomy and
+frightful the high mountains stood there. They had come so near and
+looked more threateningly than ever at Toni. He ran back into the hut.
+
+Many days of thunder storms followed, one after another and if the sun
+came out between, it burned unbearably, and new storms followed so
+unceasingly and violent, that the herdsman, on the other mountain often
+said that he had not known such a summer for years, and if it didn't
+change he wouldn't make half so much butter as in former summers, because
+the cows gave no milk, as they didn't like the fodder.
+
+During this time the man-servant chose the most favorable time to come
+over to the small pasture, milked the cows as quickly as possible and did
+not look after the boy at all; only now and then, when he thought Toni had
+no more milk, he would bring the jug out quickly, fill it and put it back
+again. Then he often saw Toni sitting on his bed of hay, and would call
+out in passing:
+
+"You are lazy!"
+
+But then he ran right away in order to get back without being wet, and
+did not trouble himself further about the boy.
+
+So June had passed, and already a good part of July. The thunder storms
+had become less frequent, but thick fog often so enveloped the mountain
+that one could hardly see two steps away, and only here and there a black
+head appeared, looking gloomily through the mist. The cattle often
+wandered so far that the man found some of them between the two mountains
+and brought them up again. This would not do. He called up to the boy, but
+received no answer. He ran to the hut and went in. Toni crouched in the
+corner was sitting on his bed and staring straight before him.
+
+"Why don't you look after the cows?" asked the man.
+
+He received no answer.
+
+"Can't you speak? What is the matter with you?"
+
+No answer.
+
+Then the man looked at the bread and cheese, to see if Toni had eaten
+everything and was suffering from hunger. But more than half the bread was
+there and the larger part of the cheese. Toni had taken almost nothing but
+milk.
+
+"What is the matter with you, then? Are you sick?" asked the man again.
+
+Toni gave no answer. He seemed not to hear anything and stared so
+motionless before him that the man was quite alarmed. He ran out of the
+hut. He told the herdsman how it was with the boy and they decided that
+when one of the herdsman's boys went down with the butter, he must tell
+the Matten farmer about it.
+
+Another week passed. Then the news was brought to the farmer. He thought
+the boy would be happy again, that the heavy thunderstorms had only
+frightened him a little. But he sent word for the herdsman to go over; he
+had boys of his own and would understand better about this than the hired
+man. If anything was wrong with Toni he must be brought down.
+
+Some days later the herdsman really went over with one of his boys and
+found Toni still crouched in the corner just as the man had seen him. Toni
+made no sound to anything the herdsman said to him, did not move and kept
+staring always before him.
+
+"He must go down," said the herdsman to his boy, "go with him right away,
+but take care that nothing happens to him and be good to him; the boy is
+to be pitied," and he looked at Toni with sympathy, for the herdsman had a
+good heart and took delight in his own three big, healthy boys. The one he
+had with him was a strong, sturdy fellow of sixteen years. He went up to
+Toni and told him to stand up, but Toni did not move. Then the lad took
+him under the arms, lifted him up, like a feather, then swung him on his
+back, held him firmly with both hands, and went with his light burden down
+the mountain.
+
+When the Matten farmer saw Toni in such a sad condition, which remained
+just the same, he was alarmed, for he had not expected such a thing. He
+did not know at all what to do with the boy. His mother was far away, no
+relatives were there, and he himself did not want to keep Toni while in
+this condition. He could take such a responsibility, but he did not want
+to do so. Suddenly a good thought came to him, the same as the people
+there in every difficulty, in every need and every trouble, always have
+first of all:
+
+"Take him to the Pastor," he said to the herdsman's boy, "he will have
+some good advice to give, which will help."
+
+The lad immediately started off and went to the Pastor, who allowed the
+boy to tell him as much as he knew about the details of the case, how Toni
+came to be in this condition and how long it had lasted; but the lad knew
+very little about it all. The Pastor first tried every means to make Toni
+speak, and asked him if he would like to go to his mother, but it was all
+in vain, Toni did not give the least sign of understanding or interest.
+
+Then the pastor sat down, wrote a letter and said to the herdsman's boy:
+
+"Go back to the Matten farm and tell the farmer to harness his little
+carriage and send it to me, and then I will see that Toni goes to-day to
+Bern. He is very sick; say that to the farmer."
+
+The farmer harnessed immediately, glad that further responsibility was
+taken from him and he had only to carry Toni as far as the railway. But
+the Pastor sent down to his sexton, an older, kindly man, who had given
+him a helping hand for years in many matters of responsibility. He was
+commissioned to take Toni with all care to the great sanitarium in Bern
+and to give the letter to the doctor there, a good friend of the Pastor's.
+A half hour later, the open carriage with the high seat drove up in front
+of the Pastor's house. The sexton climbed up, placed the sick boy beside
+him, held him carefully but firmly and thus Toni drove out into the world,
+with a horse, for the first time in his life. But he sat there with no
+sign of interest. It was as if he were no longer conscious of the outer
+world.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOURTH
+
+IN THE SANITARIUM
+
+
+The doctor of the sanitarium was sitting with his family around the family
+table, engaged in merry conversation on various subjects. Even the lady
+from Geneva, who spent several hours a day with the family, seemed to-day
+a little infected by the children's gayety. She had never before taken so
+lively a part in the discussion, which the school-children carried on
+about different interests.
+
+This lady's beloved and gifted son had died not long before; on this
+account she had fallen into such deep sadness that her health had suffered
+greatly and therefore she had been brought to the sanitarium to recover.
+
+The animated conversation was suddenly interrupted by a letter which was
+handed to the doctor.
+
+"A letter from an old friend, who is sending me a patient to the
+sanitarium. He is a young boy, hardly as old as our Max--there, read it."
+Whereupon the doctor handed the letter to his wife.
+
+"Oh, the poor boy!" exclaimed his wife. "Is he here? Bring him in. Perhaps
+it will do him good to see the children."
+
+"I think he is quite near," said the doctor; he went out, and soon came in
+again with the sexton and Toni. He led the former into a bay window and
+began talking with him in a low tone. Meanwhile the doctor's wife drew
+near to Toni, who on entering had pressed into the nearest corner. She
+spoke kindly to him and invited him to come to the table and eat something
+with her children. Toni did not move. Then lively little Marie jumped down
+from her chair and came to Toni with a large piece of bread and butter.
+
+"There, take a bite," she said encouragingly.
+
+Toni remained motionless.
+
+"See, you must do so," and the little girl bit a good piece from the bread
+and held it to him, then again a little nearer, so he only needed to bite
+into it. But he stared in front of him and made no motion. This silent
+resistance frightened Marie and she drew back quietly.
+
+Then the doctor came, took Toni by the hand and went out followed by the
+sexton.
+
+Poor Toni's appearance had made a great impression on the children. They
+had become perfectly quiet.
+
+Later when they had gone to bed and the two women were sitting alone
+together, the doctor came back again. In reply to their urgent questions
+he informed them about all that the sexton had told him concerning Toni's
+illness and his life with his mother, and that no one had ever noticed
+anything wrong with the boy before, only he had always been a quiet,
+gentle child and more slenderly built than any of the other village
+children.
+
+The women asked how he had come into this condition in the summer up on
+the beautiful mountain, and the doctor explained that it was not so
+strange, if one knew how terrible the thunder storms were up in the
+mountains. "Besides," he concluded, "a delicate child, such as this boy,
+all alone without a human being near, for whole weeks, even months long,
+without hearing a word spoken, might well be so terrified through fear and
+horror in the awful loneliness that he would become wholly benumbed."
+
+Then the lady from Geneva, who took an unusual interest in poor Toni's
+fate, exclaimed in great excitement:
+
+"How can a mother allow such a thing to happen to her child! It is wholly
+inconceivable, quite incomprehensible!"
+
+"You really can have no idea," replied the doctor soothingly, "what poor
+mothers are obliged to let happen to their children. But don't believe
+that it causes them less pain than others. You see how many suffer that we
+know nothing about, and how hard poverty oppresses."
+
+"Will you be able to help the poor young boy?" asked the lady from Geneva.
+
+"If I can only bring out the right emotion in him," he replied, "so that
+the spell, which holds him imprisoned, can be broken. Now everything in
+him is numbed and lifeless."
+
+"Oh, do help him! Do help him!" begged the sick lady imploringly. "Oh, if
+I could do something for him!" And she walked to and fro thinking about a
+way to help, for Toni's condition went deeply to her heart.
+
+It was the second week of August, when Toni came to the sanitarium. Day
+after day, week after week passed and the doctor could only bring the same
+sad news to the two women, who every morning awaited his report with great
+anxiety. Not the slightest change was noticed. Every means was tried to
+amuse the boy, to see if he would perhaps laugh. Other attempts were
+devised to disturb him, to make him cry. They performed all kinds of
+tricks to attract his attention. All, all were in vain; no trace of
+interest or emotion was aroused in Toni.
+
+"If he could only be made to laugh or to cry once!" repeated the doctor
+over and over again.
+
+When he had been four weeks in the sanitarium all hope disappeared, for
+the doctor had exhausted every means.
+
+"Now I will try one thing more," he said one morning to his wife. "I have
+written to my friend, the Pastor, and asked him if the boy was very much
+attached to his mother, and if so, to send for her right away. Perhaps to
+see her again would make an impression on him."
+
+The two women looked forward in great suspense to Elsbeth's arrival.
+
+In the first week of September the last guests left the hotel in
+Interlaken where Elsbeth had spent the summer. She immediately started on
+her way home, for she wanted to get everything in order before Toni came
+down from the mountain. She never thought but that he was still up there,
+and had no suspicion of all that had happened. When she reached home, she
+went at once to the Matten farm to enquire for Toni and to bring the goat
+home.
+
+The farmer was very friendly, and thought her goat was now by far one of
+the finest, because she had had good fodder so long. But when Elsbeth
+asked after her Toni, he broke off abruptly and said he had so much to do,
+she must go to the Pastor, for he would have the best knowledge about the
+boy. It immediately seemed to Elsbeth that it was a little strange for the
+Pastor to know best what happened up on the mountain and while she was
+leading home the goat, and thinking about the matter, a feeling of anxiety
+came over her and grew stronger and stronger. As soon as she reached home,
+she quickly tied the goat, without going into the cottage at all, and ran
+back the same way she had come, down again to Kandergrund.
+
+The Pastor told her with great consideration, how Toni had not borne the
+life on the mountain very well and they had been obliged to bring him
+down, and since it seemed best for him that he should go at once to a good
+physician for the right care, he had sent the boy immediately to Bern.
+
+His mother was very much shocked and wanted to travel the next day to see
+for herself if her child was very ill.
+
+But the Pastor said that would not do, but that she should wait until the
+doctor allowed a visit, and she could be sure that Toni was receiving the
+best care.
+
+With a heavy heart Elsbeth went back to her cottage. She could do nothing
+but leave it all to the dear Lord, who alone had been her trust for so
+many years. But it was only a few days later when the Pastor sent her word
+that she was to go to Bern at once, as the doctor wished her to come.
+
+Early the following day Elsbeth started. About noon she reached Bern and
+soon was standing in front of the door of the sanitarium.
+
+She was led to the doctor's living-room and here received with great
+friendliness by his wife and with still keener sympathy by the lady from
+Geneva, who had so lived in the history of poor Toni and his mother that
+she could hardly think of anything else but how to help these two. She had
+had only the one child and could so well understand the mother's trouble.
+She had even asked the doctor to allow her to be present when he took the
+boy to his mother, in order to share in the joy, if the poor boy's delight
+at seeing her again would affect him as they hoped.
+
+Soon the doctor appeared, and after he had prepared the mother not to
+expect Toni to speak at the first moment, he brought him in. He led him by
+the hand into the room, then he let go and stepped to one side.
+
+The mother ran to her Toni and tried to seize his hand. He drew back and
+pressed into the corner staring into vacancy.
+
+The women and the doctor exchanged sad looks.
+
+His mother went up to him and caressed him. "Toneli, Toneli," she said
+again and again in a tender voice, "don't you know me? Don't you know your
+mother any more?"
+
+As always before Toni pressed against the wall, made no motion and stared
+before him.
+
+In tender tones the mother continued mournfully:
+
+"Oh, Toneli, say just a single word! Only look at me once! Toneli, don't
+you hear me?"
+
+Toneli remained unmoved.
+
+Still once again the mother looked at him full of tenderness, but only met
+his staring eyes. It was too much for poor Elsbeth, that the only
+possession she had on earth, and the one she loved with all her heart, her
+Toni, should be lost to her, and in such a sad way! She forgot everything
+around her. She fell on her knees beside her child, and while the tears
+were bursting from her eyes, she poured out aloud the sorrow in her heart:
+
+ Oh God of Love, oh Father-heart,
+ In whom my trust is founded,
+ I know full well how good Thou art--
+ E'en when by grief I am wounded.
+
+ Oh Lord, it surely can not be
+ That Thou wilt let me languish
+ In hopeless depths of misery
+ And live in tears of anguish.
+
+
+Toni's eyes took on a different expression. He looked at his mother. She
+did not see him and went on imploring in the midst of her tears:
+
+ Oh Lord, my soul yearns for thine aid
+ In this dark vale of weeping;
+ For Thee I have waited, hoped and prayed,
+ Assured of thy safe keeping.
+
+
+Suddenly Toni threw himself on his mother and sobbed aloud. She threw her
+arms around him and her tears of sorrow turned to loud sobs of joy. The
+child sobbed aloud also.
+
+"It is won," said the doctor in great delight to the women, who, deeply
+moved, were looking on at the mother and boy.
+
+Then the doctor opened the door of the next room and beckoned Elsbeth to
+go in there with Toni. He thought it would be good for both to be alone
+for a while. In there after a while Toni began to talk quite naturally
+with his mother and asked her:
+
+"Are we going home, Mother, to the stone hut? Shan't I have to go up on
+the mountain any more?"
+
+And she quieted him and said she would now take him right home, and they
+would stay there together. Soon all Toni's thoughts came back again quite
+clearly, and after a while he said:
+
+"But I must earn something, Mother."
+
+"Don't trouble about that now," said Elsbeth quietly; "the dear Lord will
+show a way when it is time."
+
+Then they began to talk about the goat, how pretty and fat she had grown,
+and Toni gradually became quite lively.
+
+After an hour the doctor brought them both into the living-room back to
+the ladies. Toni was entirely changed, his eyes had now an earnest but
+quite different expression. The lady from Geneva was indescribably
+delighted. She sat down beside him at once, and he had to tell her where
+he had been to school and what he had liked to study.
+
+But the doctor beckoned to Elsbeth to come to him.
+
+"Listen, my good woman," he began, "the words which you repeated made a
+deep, penetrating impression on the boy's heart. Did he know the hymn
+already?"
+
+"Oh, my Lord," exclaimed Elsbeth, "many hundred times I have repeated it
+beside his little bed, when he was very small, often with many tears, and
+he would weep too, when he didn't know why."
+
+"He wept because you wept, he suffered because you suffered," said the
+doctor. "Now I understand how he was aroused by these words. With such
+impressions in early childhood it is no wonder he became a quiet and
+reserved boy. This explains to me much in the past."
+
+Then the lady from Geneva came up for she wanted to talk with the mother.
+
+"My dear, good woman, he certainly must not go up on the mountain again.
+He is not fit for it," she said in great eagerness. "We must find
+something different for him. Has he no taste for some other occupation?
+But it must be light, for he is not strong and needs care."
+
+"Oh, yes, he has a great desire to learn something," said his mother.
+"From a little boy he has wished for it, but I hardly dare mention it."
+
+"There, there, my good woman, tell me right away about it," said the lady
+encouragingly, expecting something unheard-of.
+
+"He wants so much to be a wood-carver, and has a good deal of talent for
+it, but the cost of board and instruction together is more than eighty
+francs."
+
+"Is that all?" exclaimed the lady in the greatest surprise, "is that all?
+Come, my boy," and she ran to Toni again, "would you really like to
+become a wood-carver--better than anything else?"
+
+The joy which shone in Toni's eyes, when he answered that he would, showed
+the lady what she had to do. She had such a longing to help Toni, that she
+wanted to act immediately that very hour.
+
+"Would you like to learn at once, go to a teacher right away?" she asked
+him.
+
+Toni gladly replied that he would.
+
+But now came a new thought. She turned to the doctor. "Perhaps he ought to
+recover his health first?"
+
+The doctor replied that he had been already thinking about that. The
+mother had told him that she knew a very good master up in Frutigen. "Now
+I think," he went on to say, "that carving is not a strenuous work, and
+one of the most important things for Toni is to have for some time good,
+nourishing food. In Frutigen there is a very good inn, if he only could--"
+
+"I will undertake that, Doctor, I will undertake that," interrupted the
+lady. "I will go with him. We will start to-morrow. In Frutigen I will
+provide for Toni's board and lodging and for everything he needs." In her
+great delight the lady shook hands with both the mother and the boy
+repeatedly, and went out to instruct her maid about preparations for the
+journey.
+
+When the mother with her boy had been taken to their room, the doctor said
+with great delight to his wife:
+
+"We have two recoveries. Our lady is also cured. A new interest has come
+to her, and you will see she will have new life in providing for this
+young boy. This has been a beautiful day!"
+
+On the following morning the journey was made to Frutigen, and the little
+company were so glad and happy together that they reached there before
+they were aware of it.
+
+At the wood-carver's the lady was told everything that would be needed for
+the work, and after he had showed them all kinds of instruments, he
+thought a fine book with good pictures, from which one could work, would
+be useful.
+
+After the lady had charged him to teach Toni everything in any way
+necessary for the future, they went to the inn. Here the lady engaged a
+good room with comfortable bed, and herself arranged with the host a bill
+of fare for every day in the week. The host promised, with many bows, to
+follow everything exactly, for he saw very well with whom he had to deal.
+
+Then Toni and his mother had to eat with the lady in the inn, and during
+the meal she had much more to say. She was going now, she said, the next
+day, home to Geneva, where there were large shops, in which nothing was
+sold but carvings. There she would immediately arrange for Toni to send
+all his articles, so he could begin to work with fresh zeal. Moreover, she
+insisted that Toni should remain, not two, but three months with the
+carver, so that he could learn everything from the foundation. He could go
+from here to visit his mother on Sundays, or she could come to him.
+
+Elsbeth and Toni were so full of gratitude, they could find no words to
+express it, but the lady understood them nevertheless and bore home a
+happy heart, such as she had not had for a long time.
+
+It came about just as the doctor had foreseen. The lady, who had not been
+able to think any more about her home now desired to return to Geneva. She
+had so many plans to carry out there, that she could hardly wait for the
+day when she was to go back.
+
+The doctor was delighted to consent to her going soon.
+
+Toni, who had hardly begun with his new teacher, applied himself with so
+much zeal and skill to his work, that the carver said to his wife in the
+fourth week:
+
+"If he goes on like this, he will learn to do better than I can."
+
+The three months had come to an end, and Christmas was drawing near. One
+morning Toni waded through the deep snow up to his home. He looked round
+and fresh, and his heart was so happy he had to sing aloud as he came
+along.
+
+But when after a long walk, he suddenly saw the stone hut with the
+fir-tree thickly covered with snow behind it, tears of joy came to his
+eyes. He was coming home, home for all time. He ran to the little house,
+and his mother, who had already seen him, hurried out, and which one of
+the two was the more delighted, no one could tell; but they were both so
+happy, as they sat together again in the cottage, that they could think of
+no greater fortune on earth. Their highest wish was fulfilled. Toni was a
+wood-carver, and could carry on his work at home with his mother. And with
+what blessings besides the dear Lord was still overwhelming them! From
+Geneva such good things kept coming to Elsbeth, that she no longer had to
+dread anxious days, and with each package came new assurance of the ready
+acceptance of Toni's work.
+
+Such a Christmas festival as was celebrated two days later in the stone
+hut, neither Elsbeth nor Toni had ever known before, for the candles which
+his mother had lighted shone out upon a quantity of things, which Toni had
+received to wear, and also a whole set of the most beautiful knives for
+carving and a book with pictures, of a size and beauty such as Toni had
+never in all his life seen before. His master's book was a mere child's
+toy beside it. Elsbeth too was lovingly provided for. The lady from Geneva
+had planned everything, and the bright reflection from it fell back
+radiantly into her own heart.
+
+The most beautiful deer and huntsman and the wonderful eagles on the rock,
+standing in the high show-window in Geneva was carved by Toni, and was
+considered by him to be a particularly successful piece, so it went, not
+to the dealer in Geneva, but to the lady for whom Toni preserved a
+thankful heart all his life long.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TONI, THE LITTLE WOODCARVER***
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