The Goose Girl | Page 4

Harold MacGrath
much squawking on the way down, but when his gandership
saw his more tractable brothers and sisters peacefully waddling up the
road, he subsided and took his place in the ranks without more ado.
"You are a brave man, Herr." There was admiration in the girl's eyes.
"To court danger and to overcome obstacles is a part of my regular
business. I do not know what giddiness is. You are welcome to the
service. It is a long walk from the valley."
"I have walked it many times this summer. But this is the last day.
To-morrow I sell the geese in the market to the hotels. They have all
fine livers"--lightly touching a goose with her willow stick.
"What, the hotels?"--humorously.
"No, no, my geese!"
"What was that song you were singing before the horses came up?"
"That? It was from the poet Heine"--simply.
He stared at her with a rudeness not at all intentional.
"Heine? Can you read?"
"Yes, Herr."
The other walked along beside her in silence. After all, why not? Why
should he be surprised? From one end of the world to the other printer's
ink was spreading and bringing light. But a goose-girl who read Heine!
"And the music?" he inquired presently.

"That is mine"--with the first sign of diffidence. "Melodies are always
running through my head. Sometimes they make me forget things I
ought to remember."
"Your own music? An impresario will be discovering you some fine
day, and your fortune will be made."
The light irony did not escape her. "I am only a goose-girl."
He felt disarmed. "What is your name?"
"Gretchen."
"What else?"
"Nothing else"--wistfully. "I never knew any father or mother."
"So?" This was easier for the other to understand. "But who taught you
to read?"
"A priest. Once I lived in the mountains, at an inn. He used to come in
evenings, when the snow was not too deep. He taught me to read and
write, and many things besides. I know that Italy has all the works of
art; that France has the most interesting history; that Germany has all
the philosophers, and America all the money," adding a smile. "I
should like to see America. Sometimes I find a newspaper, and I read it
all through."
"History?"
"A little, and geography."
"With all this wide learning you ought to be something better than a
tender of geese."
"It is honest work, and that is good."
"I meant nothing wrong, Kindchen. But you would find it easier in a
milliner's shop, as a lady's maid, something of that order."

"With these?"--holding out her hands.
"It would not take long to whiten them. Do you live alone?"
"No. I live with my foster-mother, who is very old. I call her
grandmother. She took me in when I was a foundling; now I am taking
care of her. She has always been good to me. And what might your
name be?"
"Ludwig."
"Ludwig what?"--inquisitive in her turn.
"Oh, the other does not matter. I am a mountaineer from Jugendheit."
"Jugendheit?" She paused to look at him more closely. "We are not
friendly with your country."
"More's the pity. It is a grave blunder on the part of the grand duke.
There is a mote in his eye."
"Wasn't it all about the grand duke's daughter?"
"Yes. But she has been found. Yet the duke is as bitter as of old. He is
wrong, he was always wrong." The old man spoke with feeling. "What
is this new-found princess like?"
"She is beautiful and kind."
"So?"
The geese were behaving, and only occasionally was she obliged to use
her stick. And as her companion asked no more questions, she devoted
her attention to the flock, proud of their broad backs and full breasts.
On his part, he observed her critically, for he was more than curious
now, he was interested. She was not tall, but her lithe slenderness gave
her the appearance of tallness. Her hands, rough-nailed and sunburnt,
were small and shapely; the bare foot in the wooden shoe might have

worn without trouble Cinderella's magic slipper. Her clothes, coarse
and homespun, were clean and variously mended. Her hair, in a thick
braid, was the tone of the heart of a chestnut-bur, and her eyes were of
that mystifying hazel, sometimes brown, sometimes gray, according to
whether the sky was clear or overcast. And there was something above
and beyond all these things, a modesty, a gentleness and a purity; none
of the bold, rollicking, knowing manner so common in handsome
peasant girls. He contemplated her through half-closed eyes and gave
her in fancy the tariffing furbelows of a woman of fashion; she would
have been beautiful.
"How old are you, Gretchen?"
"I do not know," she answered, "perhaps eighteen, perhaps twenty."
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