Selma Lagerlöf

Charlotte Löwensköld


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       Selma Lagerlöf

      Charlotte Löwensköld

       Translator: Velma Swanston Howard

      e-artnow, 2020

       Contact: [email protected]

      EAN 4064066057701

      Table of Contents

       CHAPTER I: THE BARONESS

       CHAPTER II: THE PROPOSAL

       CHAPTER III: WISHES

       CHAPTER IV: IN THE DEANERY GARDEN

       CHAPTER V: THE DALAR GIRL

       CHAPTER VI: THE MORNING COFFEE

       CHAPTER VII: THE SUGAR BASIN

       CHAPTER VIII: THE LETTER

       CHAPTER IX: UP AMONG THE CLOUDS

       CHAPTER X: SCHAGERSTRÖM

       CHAPTER XI: THE LECTURE

       CHAPTER XII: SHORN LOCKS

       CHAPTER XIII: A CHILD OF DESTINY

       CHAPTER XIV: THE FORTUNE

       CHAPTER XV: IN THE DILIGENCE

       CHAPTER XVI: THE BANNS

       CHAPTER XVII: THE PAUPER AUCTION

       CHAPTER XVIII: THE TRIUMPH

       CHAPTER XIX: ADMONISHING CUPID

       CHAPTER XX: THE FUNERAL FEAST

       CHAPTER XXI: SATURDAY MORNING

       CHAPTER XXII: SATURDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING

       CHAPTER XXIII: THE WEDDING DAY

      CHAPTER I

       THE BARONESS

       Table of Contents

      Beata Ekenstedt, born Löwensköld and baroness, was the quintessence of culture and refinement, highly accomplished and delightfully agreeable. She could write verse quite as amusing as Fru Lenngren’s.

      Though short of stature, she had a good bearing, like all the Löwenskölds, and an interesting face. She said charming things to everyone, and those who had once seen her never forgot her. She had exquisite taste in dress, and her hair was always beautifully arranged. Wherever she appeared, hers was the prettiest brooch, hers the choicest bracelet, hers the most dazzling ring. She had a neat little foot, and, whether it was the fashion or not, she always wore dainty high-heeled shoes of gold brocade.

      She lived in the finest house in Karlstad, and it was not wedged in among the jumble of dwellings on a narrow street. Her house stood apart on the shore of the Daläven, and the Baroness from the window of her little cabinet could look right down into the shining river. She used to tell how on clear moonlit nights she had seen the Neckan sitting beneath her window, playing on a golden harp. And no one doubted it. Why should not the River-god, like so many others, serenade the Baroness Ekenstedt?

      All the notables who visited Karlstad paid their respects to the Baroness. They were immediately captivated, and thought it a pity that so adorable a lady should be buried in a small city.

      It was said that Bishop Tegnér had written a sonnet to her and that the Crown Prince had declared she had the charm of a Frenchwoman. Even General von Essen, among others of the Court of Gustavus III, had to concede that such perfect dinners as were given by the Baroness Ekenstedt he had never sat down to elsewhere—either as to the viands, the service, or the conversation.

      The Baroness had two daughters, Eve and Jaquette. They were pretty and amiable girls who would have been admired almost anywhere. But in Karlstad no one even noticed them; they were completely overshadowed by their mother.

      When the girls attended a ball, the young gentlemen all vied with each other for the privilege of dancing with the Baroness, while Eve and Jaquette had to sit as wallflowers. As already mentioned, it was not the Neckan alone who gave serenades outside the Ekenstedt house! But no one ever sang beneath the daughters’ windows. Young poets composed madrigals to B. E., but never a strophe to E. E. or J. E. Persons a bit maliciously inclined said that a young lieutenant who had courted little Eve Ekenstedt was coolly dismissed because the Baroness thought he had shown poor taste.

      The lady had also a husband. Colonel Ekenstedt was a splendid fellow who would have commanded respect and admiration in any society outside his wife’s world. But when seen beside his brilliant spouse, with her lively wit and playful vivaciousness, the Colonel looked like a staid country squire. When he spoke, the guests in his home scarcely listened; it was almost as if he were not there at all. It cannot be said of the Colonel’s wife that she allowed those who swarmed about her any familiarities. Her conduct was unimpeachable. But it never occurred to her mind to draw her husband out of the shadow. She probably thought it suited him best to remain somewhat in the background.

      This charming Baroness, this much-fêted lady, had not only a husband and two daughters, she had also a son. The son she adored. He was pushed forward on all occasions. It would not have done for any guest of the Ekenstedt house to overlook or slight him—not if he entertained any hope of being invited there again.

      The Baroness, however, had reason to be proud of her son. Karl Arthur was a talented youth with lovable ways and attractive exterior; he had delicate features and large dark eyes. He was not, as other spoiled children, forward and brazen. As a schoolboy, he had never played truant, had never “put up any game” on his teachers. He was of a more romantic turn of mind than either of his sisters. Before his eighth year he had made up neat little rhymes. And he could tell mamma that he too had heard the Neckan play and seen the brownies dance on the meadows of Voxnäs. In fact, in every way, he was his mother’s own son.

      He filled her heart completely. Yet she could hardly be called a weak mother. At least Karl Arthur had to learn to work. True, his mother held him as something higher than all