EVERYTHING IN THE RIGHT PLACE
    
    
        IT is more than a hundred years ago! At the border of the
    wood, near a large lake, stood the old mansion: deep ditches
    surrounded it on every side, in which reeds and bulrushes
    grew. Close by the drawbridge, near the gate, there was an old
    willow tree, which bent over the reeds.
    
        From the narrow pass came the sound of bugles and the
    trampling of horses' feet; therefore a little girl who was
    watching the geese hastened to drive them away from the
    bridge, before the whole hunting party came galloping up; they
    came, however, so quickly, that the girl, in order to avoid
    being run over, placed herself on one of the high
    corner-stones of the bridge. She was still half a child and
    very delicately built; she had bright blue eyes, and a gentle,
    sweet expression. But such things the baron did not notice;
    while he was riding past the little goose-girl, he reversed
    his hunting crop, and in rough play gave her such a push with
    it that she fell backward into the ditch.
    
        "Everything in the right place!" he cried. "Into the ditch
    with you."
    
        Then he burst out laughing, for that he called fun; the
    others joined in- the whole party shouted and cried, while the
    hounds barked.
    
        While the poor girl was falling she happily caught one of
    the branches of the willow tree, by the help of which she held
    herself over the water, and as soon as the baron with his
    company and the dogs had disappeared through the gate, the
    girl endeavoured to scramble up, but the branch broke off, and
    she would have fallen backward among the rushes, had not a
    strong hand from above seized her at this moment. It was the
    hand of a pedlar; he had witnessed what had happened from a
    short distance, and now hastened to assist her.
    
        "Everything in the right place," he said, imitating the
    noble baron, and pulling the little maid up to the dry ground.
    He wished to put the branch back in the place it had been
    broken off, but it is not possible to put everything in the
    right place;" therefore he stuck the branch into the soft
    ground.
    
        "Grow and thrive if you can, and produce a good flute for
    them yonder at the mansion," he said; it would have given him
    great pleasure to see the noble baron and his companions well
    thrashed. Then he entered the castle- but not the banqueting
    hall; he was too humble for that. No; he went to the servants'
    hall. The men-servants and maids looked over his stock of
    articles and bargained with him; loud crying and screaming
    were heard from the master's table above: they called it
    singing- indeed, they did their best. Laughter and the howls
    of dogs were heard through the open windows: there they were
    feasting and revelling; wine and strong old ale were foaming
    in the glasses and jugs; the favourite dogs ate with their
    masters; now and then the squires kissed one of these animals,
    after having wiped its mouth first with the tablecloth. They
    ordered the pedlar to come up, but only to make fun of him.
    The wine had got into their heads, and reason had left them.
    They poured beer into a stocking that he could drink with
    them, but quick. That's what they called fun, and it made them
    laugh. Then meadows, peasants, and farmyards were staked on
    one card and lost.
    
        "Everything in the right place!" the pedlar said when he
    had at last safely got out of Sodom and Gomorrah, as he called
    it. "The open high road is my right place; up there I did not
    feel at ease."
    
        The little maid, who was still watching the geese, nodded
    kindly to him as he passed through the gate.
    
        Days and weeks passed, and it was seen that the broken
    willow-branch which the peddlar had stuck into the ground near
    the ditch remained fresh and green- nay, it even put forth
    fresh twigs; the little goose-girl saw that the branch had
    taken root, and was very pleased; the tree, so she said, was
    now her tree. While the tree was advancing, everything else at
    the castle was going backward, through feasting and gambling,
    for these are two rollers upon which nobody stands safely.
    Less than six years afterwards the baron passed out of his
    castle-gate a poor beggar, while the baronial seat had been
    bought by a rich tradesman. He was the very pedlar they had
    made fun of and poured beer into a stocking for him to drink;
    but honesty and industry bring one forward, and now the pedlar
    was the possessor of the baronial estate. From that time
    forward no card-playing was permitted there.
    
        "That's a bad pastime," he said; "when the devil saw the
    Bible for the first time he wanted to produce a caricature in
    opposition to it, and invented card-playing."
    
        The new proprietor of the estate took a wife, and whom did
    he take?- The little goose-girl, who had always remained good
    and kind, and who looked as beautiful in her new clothes as if
    she had been a lady of high birth. And how did all this come
    about? That would be too long a tale to tell in our busy time,
    but it really happened, and the most important events have yet
    to be told.
    
        It was pleasant and cheerful to live in the old place now:
    the mother superintended the household, and the father looked
    after things out-of-doors, and they were indeed very
    prosperous.
    
        Where honesty leads the way, prosperity is sure to follow.
    The old mansion was repaired and painted, the ditches were
    cleaned and fruit-trees planted; all was homely and pleasant,
    and the floors were as white and shining as a pasteboard. In
    the long winter evenings the mistress and her maids sat at the
    spinning-wheel in the large hall; every Sunday the counsellor-
    this title the pedlar had obtained, although only in his old
    days- read aloud a portion from the Bible. The children (for
    they had children) all received the best education, but they
    were not all equally clever, as is the case in all families.
    
        In the meantime the willow tree near the drawbridge had
    grown up into a splendid tree, and stood there, free, and was
    never clipped. "It is our genealogical tree," said the old
    people to their children, "and therefore it must be honoured."
    
        A hundred years had elapsed. It was in our own days; the
    lake had been transformed into marsh land; the whole baronial
    seat had, as it were, disappeared. A pool of water near some
    ruined walls was the only remainder of the deep ditches; and
    here stood a magnificent old tree with overhanging branches-
    that was the genealogical tree. Here it stood, and showed how
    beautiful a willow can look if one does not interfere with it.
    The trunk, it is true, was cleft in the middle from the root
    to the crown; the storms had bent it a little, but it still
    stood there, and out of every crevice and cleft, in which wind
    and weather had carried mould, blades of grass and flowers
    sprang forth. Especially above, where the large boughs parted,
    there was quite a hanging garden, in which wild raspberries
    and hart's-tongue ferns throve, and even a little mistletoe
    had taken root, and grew gracefully in the old willow
    branches, which were reflected in the dark water beneath when
    the wind blew the chickweed into the corner of the pool. A
    footpath which led across the fields passed close by the old
    tree. High up, on the woody hillside, stood the new mansion.
    It had a splendid view, and was large and magnificent; its
    window panes were so clear that one might have thought there
    were none there at all. The large flight of steps which led to
    the entrance looked like a bower covered with roses and
    broad-leaved plants. The lawn was as green as if each blade of
    grass was cleaned separately morning and evening. Inside, in
    the hall, valuable oil paintings were hanging on the walls.
    Here stood chairs and sofas covered with silk and velvet,
    which could be easily rolled about on castors; there were
    tables with polished marble tops, and books bound in morocco
    with gilt edges. Indeed, well-to-do and distinguished people
    lived here; it was the dwelling of the baron and his family.
    Each article was in keeping with its surroundings. "Everything
    in the right place" was the motto according to which they also
    acted here, and therefore all the paintings which had once
    been the honour and glory of the old mansion were now hung up
    in the passage which led to the servants' rooms. It was all
    old lumber, especially two portraits- one representing a man
    in a scarlet coat with a wig, and the other a lady with
    powdered and curled hair holding a rose in her hand, each of
    them being surrounded by a large wreath of willow branches.
    Both portraits had many holes in them, because the baron's
    sons used the two old people as targets for their crossbows.
    They represented the counsellor and his wife, from whom the
    whole family descended. "But they did not properly belong to
    our family," said one of the boys; "he was a pedlar and she
    kept the geese. They were not like papa and mamma." The
    portraits were old lumber, and "everything in its right
    place." That was why the great-grandparents had been hung up
    in the passage leading to the servants' rooms.
    
        The son of the village pastor was tutor at the mansion.
    One day he went for a walk across the fields with his young
    pupils and their elder sister, who had lately been confirmed.
    They walked along the road which passed by the old willow
    tree, and while they were on the road she picked a bunch of
    field-flowers. "Everything in the right place," and indeed the
    bunch looked very beautiful. At the same time she listened to
    all that was said, and she very much liked to hear the
    pastor's son speak about the elements and of the great men and
    women in history. She had a healthy mind, noble in thought and
    deed, and with a heart full of love for everything that God
    had created. They stopped at the old willow tree, as the
    youngest of the baron's sons wished very much to have a flute
    from it, such as had been cut for him from other willow trees;
    the pastor's son broke a branch off. "Oh, pray do not do it!"
    said the young lady; but it was already done. "That is our
    famous old tree. I love it very much. They often laugh at me
    at home about it, but that does not matter. There is a story
    attached to this tree." And now she told him all that we
    already know about the tree- the old mansion, the pedlar and
    the goose-girl who had met there for the first time, and had
    become the ancestors of the noble family to which the young
    lady belonged.
    
        "They did not like to be knighted, the good old people,"
    she said; "their motto was 'everything in the right place,'
    and it would not be right, they thought, to purchase a title
    for money. My grandfather, the first baron, was their son.
    They say he was a very learned man, a great favourite with the
    princes and princesses, and was invited to all court
    festivities. The others at home love him best; but, I do not
    know why, there seemed to me to be something about the old
    couple that attracts my heart! How homely, how patriarchal, it
    must have been in the old mansion, where the mistress sat at
    the spinning-wheel with her maids, while her husband read
    aloud out of the Bible!"
    
        "They must have been excellent, sensible people," said the
    pastor's son. And with this the conversation turned naturally
    to noblemen and commoners; from the manner in which the tutor
    spoke about the significance of being noble, it seemed almost
    as if he did not belong to a commoner's family.
    
        "It is good fortune to be of a family who have
    distinguished themselves, and to possess as it were a spur in
    oneself to advance to all that is good. It is a splendid thing
    to belong to a noble family, whose name serves as a card of
    admission to the highest circles. Nobility is a distinction;
    it is a gold coin that bears the stamp of its own value. It is
    the fallacy of the time, and many poets express it, to say
    that all that is noble is bad and stupid, and that, on the
    contrary, the lower one goes among the poor, the more
    brilliant virtues one finds. I do not share this opinion, for
    it is wrong. In the upper classes one sees many touchingly
    beautiful traits; my own mother has told me of such, and I
    could mention several. One day she was visiting a nobleman's
    house in town; my grandmother, I believe, had been the lady's
    nurse when she was a child. My mother and the nobleman were
    alone in the room, when he suddenly noticed an old woman on
    crutches come limping into the courtyard; she came every
    Sunday to carry a gift away with her.
    
        "'There is the poor old woman,' said the nobleman; 'it is
    so difficult for her to walk.'
    
        "My mother had hardly understood what he said before he
    disappeared from the room, and went downstairs, in order to
    save her the troublesome walk for the gift she came to fetch.
    Of course this is only a little incident, but it has its good
    sound like the poor widow's two mites in the Bible, the sound
    which echoes in the depth of every human heart; and this is
    what the poet ought to show and point out- more especially in
    our own time he ought to sing of this; it does good, it
    mitigates and reconciles! But when a man, simply because he is
    of noble birth and possesses a genealogy, stands on his hind
    legs and neighs in the street like an Arabian horse, and says
    when a commoner has been in a room: 'Some people from the
    street have been here,' there nobility is decaying; it has
    become a mask of the kind that Thespis created, and it is
    amusing when such a person is exposed in satire."
    
        Such was the tutor's speech; it was a little long, but
    while he delivered it he had finished cutting the flute.
    
        There was a large party at the mansion; many guests from
    the neighbourhood and from the capital had arrived. There were
    ladies with tasteful and with tasteless dresses; the big hall
    was quite crowded with people. The clergymen stood humbly
    together in a corner, and looked as if they were preparing for
    a funeral, but it was a festival- only the amusement had not
    yet begun. A great concert was to take place, and that is why
    the baron's young son had brought his willow flute with him;
    but he could not make it sound, nor could his father, and
    therefore the flute was good for nothing.
    
        There was music and songs of the kind which delight most
    those that perform them; otherwise quite charming!
    
        "Are you an artist?" said a cavalier, the son of his
    father; "you play on the flute, you have made it yourself; it
    is genius that rules- the place of honour is due to you."
    
        "Certainly not! I only advance with the time, and that of
    course one can't help."
    
        "I hope you will delight us all with the little
    instrument- will you not?" Thus saying he handed to the tutor
    the flute which had been cut from the willow tree by the pool;
    and then announced in a loud voice that the tutor wished to
    perform a solo on the flute. They wished to tease him- that
    was evident, and therefore the tutor declined to play,
    although he could do so very well. They urged and requested
    him, however, so long, that at last he took up the flute and
    placed it to his lips.
    
        That was a marvellous flute! Its sound was as thrilling as
    the whistle of a steam engine; in fact it was much stronger,
    for it sounded and was heard in the yard, in the garden, in
    the wood, and many miles round in the country; at the same
    time a storm rose and roared; "Everything in the right place."
    And with this the baron, as if carried by the wind, flew out
    of the hall straight into the shepherd's cottage, and the
    shepherd flew- not into the hall, thither he could not come-
    but into the servants' hall, among the smart footmen who were
    striding about in silk stockings; these haughty menials looked
    horror-struck that such a person ventured to sit at table with
    them. But in the hall the baron's daughter flew to the place
    of honour at the end of the table- she was worthy to sit
    there; the pastor's son had the seat next to her; the two sat
    there as if they were a bridal pair. An old Count, belonging
    to one of the oldest families of the country, remained
    untouched in his place of honour; the flute was just, and it
    is one's duty to be so. The sharp-tongued cavalier who had
    caused the flute to be played, and who was the child of his
    parents, flew headlong into the fowl-house, but not he alone.
    
        The flute was heard at the distance of a mile, and strange
    events took place. A rich banker's family, who were driving in
    a coach and four, were blown out of it, and could not even
    find room behind it with their footmen. Two rich farmers who
    had in our days shot up higher than their own corn-fields,
    were flung into the ditch; it was a dangerous flute.
    Fortunately it burst at the first sound, and that was a good
    thing, for then it was put back into its owner's pocket- "its
    right place."
    
        The next day, nobody spoke a word about what had taken
    place; thus originated the phrase, "to pocket the flute."
    Everything was again in its usual order, except that the two
    old pictures of the peddlar and the goose-girl were hanging in
    the banqueting-hall. There they were on the wall as if blown
    up there; and as a real expert said that they were painted by
    a master's hand, they remained there and were restored.
    "Everything in the right place," and to this it will come.
    Eternity is long, much longer indeed than this story.
    
    
                                THE END
    


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