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Wanderers

Chapter 2 No.2

Word Count: 571    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

h gout most times, gets him to cut up a few days' firewood for her cooking before he starts. I've offered many a

he is talking to himself, I steal out of the house to listen. If he makes a false stroke, he takes it patiently, and does not trouble himself; but whenever he knocks his kn

painter at all, the rascal, but Grindhusen, one of t

ask if he remembers

oney enough for that. But when we'd money to spare, then there would be dancing with the girls all Saturday night, and a crowd of our fellow-workers would come along, and the old woman in the house sold u

er the old da

mething of reserve; it is quite a while bef

mbers Skreia

la and 'Spiral

ch o

one that wa

up with her at last." Grindhus

up with he

ose. What was I going to say, now? You've turn

thinking of? You've Sunday clot

ve for those y

as nothing very much. Could

e in astonishment and

member what you

ays: "No, I dare say you wouldn't. No. That's

ing there by the chopping-block wasting time in idle talk

rned painter

w I had said a thing that should no

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Wanderers
Wanderers
“The Wanderer, which consists of two closely related novels, Under the Autumn Star and On Muted Strings, has been acclaimed as one of Knut Hamsun's finest works. The narrator, Knut Pedersen (Hamsun's real name), is an unsimple character in search of the simple life, which he hopes to attain by wandering round the Norwegian countryside doing such work as he can find. His quest is continually frustrated, not least by his susceptibility to the wives and daughters of successive employers. In Under the Autumn Star he joins forces first with Grindhusen, a man blessed with the faith that "something will turn up"; later with Lars Falkenberg, whose dubious talents include the tuning of pianos. Knut and Lars end up as workmen on the estate of a certain Captain Falkenberg (no relation), with whose wife each falls in love. In due course, Knut is laid off and, in futile pursuit of the woman with whom by now he is helplessly infatuated, eventually finds himself sucked back into the city he once fled. "A wanderer plays on muted strings," explains Knut, now six years older, "when he reaches the age of two score years and ten." Among this sequel's qualities is the poignancy with which it conveys that sense of aging. Both novels show Hamsun at the height of his powers: lyrical and passionate, ironic yet deeply humane, master of one of the most original prose styles in modern literature, brilliantly translated here by Oliver and Gunnvor Stallybrass.”