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Village Squire, 1977-01, Page 12hollowness in his empty stomach and the room echoed with bitter finality as the husband and w ife got down onto their knees beside the bed. It was hard, it was hard. He was a farmer and he believed that things should grow higher, taller, come to fruit. He believed that each spring should come to its harvest. and he said bitterly, "1 wish to God that I would never see another German again." It took them a moment to settle on their knees, their old joints aching with weariness for the day's end and weariness for this aching life. He looked at her for a moment, and she said. as she rested her dark eyes on him, "Try not to be too angry Jan?" "Ja," he said, "I'll try." Then they began: "Onze Vader, die in den Hemel zijt; uw Naam worde geheiligd; uw Rijk kome .... The warm black soil moved. the plant went in, the soil was pressed around it. In the air cooling in the late afternoon the first birds of spring sang and the church bells rang in the wind on the water, over the houses and through the grey air. The four boys and their father paused at their work to listen to the tolling bells. It was a sound that made a silence, the bell of Sint Martinus working a silence over the village in its Saturday afternoon quiet of rest after the long week. As a bowl holds water the ringing bell held silence over the water, the trees. the rooftops. Kees spoke. "It's the wedding. Boman's wedding." The father too was distracted from the work, as he looked across the ditches and the trees at the point of the church tower rising above the treetops. "A wedding," he said, with both wonder and sarcasm. "A wedding. in such a time. Who could believe it?" He shook his head and bent to the work again. The boys detected a softer tone in his voice and began to talk among themselves, quietly discussing matters of serving on the alter, which Kees had been asked to do for this wedding. He had to stay home and plant the lettuce, but they discussed anyway the amount of money he might have been given by the bride's father or the bestman, and what he would have done with those visions of wealth. ""Were you ever an alter boy?" the youngest of the boys. Leo, asked Bas. who was fourteen, and from Leo's point of view:. big enough and honourable enough to carry the cross at the front of the processions. "No." Bas said. smiling quietly at Leo's earnest face. "but I used to sing in the choir before the war." "In the choir?" the boy asked, who crouched at his work next to his father. He only kept up with his father because he found half of the plants ahead of hint already done. "You mean with the old people. not with the children?" "Yes." said Bas. smiling because he new Leo was trying to Lind out the value of that accomplishment. "I used to sing with them at weddings too." "How: long ago was that?" Kees asked him. "A year ago was the last one." "Why don't you do it now?" Leo asked with simple curiosity. -Because now 1 work." Bas said. looking across the path a Leo. "and singing doesn't till the stomach." i hey asked no more questions. Even little Leo. working hard to keep up with his father. knew that they were treading on touchy ground. knew that they had reached the uncomfortable line of difference between themselves and Bas Groeneveld; they had a father who could feed them and send them to school. while Bas, who had not only been, the youngest member of the choir, but who the school masters still held up as a legendary scholastic example. spent his days here beside their father. working from dawn till dark for his bed and his food. Besides. now they could see again their father's furrowing brow. There was quiet while the bells ended ringing and they pictured. each of them. the couple walking down the dark aisle while the choir sang and Pater Ferdinand waited for them at the end. Thinking of that young couple the father glanced across his row. at Bas. "What a world." he thought bitterly. thinking of years of work and his back bending. his pipe empty and his wife worrying in the night about mouths to feed. and the tire tread nailed to the bottoms of their wooden shoes so that even they would last longer. 'What a world." The quiet boy worked steadily across from him, oblivious to the shot of eyes across the dirt path. Jan Capel raged against it, while he looked at the boy. raged against the years of his life. work and struggle. made empty for him by the making of a single For over forty years Welcome Wagon hostesses have been making calls on newcomers - whether they be within our own nation or in a foreign country. If you are a newcomer, know of one, or are a businessman desiring representation in the newcomer's home, call your local representative listed below for WELCOME WAGON LIMITED. II II r erg L,D Call your Welcome Wagon Hostess now. WINGHAM 357-3275 EXETER 235-2870 MITCHELL 348-8925 GODLRICH 524-6654 STRATFORD 271-5856 10, Village Squire/January 1977