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Seldwyla Folks: Three Singular Tales

Chapter 14: FOOTNOTE:
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About This Book

Three short tales set in a fictional Swiss town depict comic and ironic encounters that reveal provincial manners and moral pretensions. One story follows three stingy combmakers whose exaggerated sense of decency creates domestic friction; another centers on Dietegen and his confrontations with communal expectations; a third recasts a star-crossed romance in village form. Together the pieces combine whimsical narrative, folkloric detail, and satiric observation to examine how small‑town customs, pride, and superstition shape behavior and produce unintended consequences.


The river flowed through dark woods, shadowing it; it flowed through the fruitful plain, past quiet villages and hamlets and single homesteads; there it broadened out like a still lake and the ship moved but slightly downwards, and here it turned tall rocks and left the slumbering landscape quickly behind. And when dawn broke there was in sight at some distance a town rising with its age-worn towers and steeples above the silver-gray river. The setting moon, red as gold, cast a quivering track of light upstream towards the dim outlines of the ancient city, and into this luminous bed the ship finally turned its prow. When the houses of the town at last approached closely two pale shapes, locked in a tight embrace, glided in the autumnal frost of early morn from off the dark mass of the ship into the silent waters.

The ship itself shortly after fetched up near a bridge, unharmed, and remained there. When sometime later the two bodies, still locked in each others' arms, were found, and details about the young man and his sweetheart were learned, one might have read in the newspapers that these two, the children of two ruined and impoverished families that had lived in bitter enmity, had sought death in the water together after dancing with great animation at a kermess. This event probably was connected with the other fact that a boat laden with hay had landed in town without anyone on board. It was supposed that the young couple had cut loose the boat somewhere in order to hold their godforsaken wedding on it. "Once again a proof of the spread of lawless and impious passion among the lower classes." That was the concluding paragraph in the newspaper report.




FOOTNOTE:

Footnote 1: Vreni, Vreneli, Vreeli; Swiss diminutive forms of Veronica.




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