astle; smoke is curling from the galleys. A skipper puts his head out of a companionway and s
th ropes and wheelbarrows are moving around, still half asleep, yawning openly with angular, bearded jaws. And barges are warped
e son is sitting at a desk, all alone; he is sorting mail. A young gentleman is strolling, tired and sleepy, toward the railway square; he comes from a
, Ojen?" asks th
say, I haven't b
" laughs the fir
ng man; his name had suddenly become famous two years ago when he published a lyric drama. His name is Irgens; everyb
he spring sun has browned their faces; they wear heavy mufflers around their necks, and their hands are sinewy and dirty. They are in such a hurry to sell
rom newspaper parcels. A man pushes an enormous load of bundles on a push-cart, he is delivering groceries; he strains like a horse and reads addresses from a note-book as he hurries along. A child is distributing morning papers; she is a little girl who has Saint Vitus'
rise skyward, meeting and blending above the large squares in a booming diapason, a deep-throated, throbbing roar that enwraps the entire city. Telegraph messengers dart hither and yon, scattering orders and quotations f
, is still busy at his desk. His eyes are large and blue, although his complexion is rather dark otherwise; a stray wisp of hair sags untidily over his forehead. The tall, somewhat
ning!" ca
looks up i
re you abroa
say, I haven't
at my desk since five; I have ca
ur trading! There is only one thing I want to discuss w
nriksen pulls a cork hurriedly; his father is expected any moment, and for this reas
an I take the bottle along
, and Irgens, who understands the hint, takes something from the drawer wh